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horrified, like if someone whom she is six degrees of friendship separated from ever regrets not having a baby, sheā€™ll be personally affected and have to go on Prozac to deal with her feelings.

ā€œLook,ā€ I said, ā€œIā€™ve been through worse things than regret and I think Iā€™m old enough to have a pretty good hypothesis on this one. Iā€™d rather regret not having a child than having one.ā€

Ali interrupted, ā€œOh, but you wouldnā€™t regret having one!ā€ Thatā€™s when her little girl Marta pointed at my face and said, ā€œWhy do you have ugly red dots on your cheek?ā€ Ali and the Mommies shared a mutual chuckle. Ali acted as if her child pointing out my acne was just the revelation I needed to change my mind. She said, ā€œSee? Kids keep ya honest and grounded.ā€

Honest? Her kid pointed out my PMS breakout. Thatā€™s rude, not honest. And I donā€™t need a kid to ā€œkeep me groundedā€ when I have adult acne itself to do that. Oh, boy! Just imagine how much worse off Iā€™d be without kidsā€”Iā€™d be walking around feeling good about myself at a party!

Iā€™m not offended by what a toddler says to me. Her brain isnā€™t fully developed yet. And judging from the behavior of her mom, it probably never will be. But some parents become so rude once they have kids. How about a simple teachable moment for little Marta? Could Ali not have said, ā€œHoney, we donā€™t point out things we see on peopleā€™s faces unless weā€™re helping them.ā€ For example, ā€œYou have something white and crusty on your chin, I think itā€™s toothpaste. God, I hope itā€™s toothpaste.ā€ (Dog owners are the same way, incidentally. They canā€™t stop their animals from behaving badly and they never apologize for their little ones who canā€™t speak. Meanwhile, Iā€™m left with an unwanted wet nose sniffing around my crotch in public.)

At this point I hadnā€™t been to a birthday party for a friend that started at two and ended promptly at five since I was a kid. If youā€™re going to have an afternoon birthday party to accommodate you and your friendsā€™ new lifestyles as parentsā€”just go all out and have the damn thing at a park or a playground or something. Thereā€™s nothing fun about trying to drink a hot tea while toddlers crawl underneath me as though my legs are a jungle gym. (And speaking of jungle gyms, when I was a kid all I saw when I saw that thing on the playground was a death trap. Letā€™s get the kids all loaded up on sugar and send them outside to hurl their bodies around some lead pipes! Weā€™ll build it over some brain-busting concrete to catch their fall!)

SATURDAYS ARE MY day to write or run errands, and in Los Angeles if I time it just right, I can hit the dry cleaner and the grocery storeā€”both only two miles from my houseā€”and it only takes six hours with traffic. I had to basically lose a day, like some punishing form of daylight savings, just to see my friend on his birthday. The mothers in the crowd were doing what they would be doing on a Saturday anyway, breast-feeding their babies and changing diapersā€”except they wouldnā€™t be doing it on a quaint cafĆ© table for two in public. Thatā€™s the thing that happens when your friends and acquaintances start to have kids. You have to get on their schedule, like youā€™re a nurse working in a hospice, or the friendship dies on a slow morphine dripā€”without the fun of a morphine drip.

By this point I felt self-conscious staying at this party without my boob hanging out. It reminded me of an after-hours party I went to in 1986, following Eileen Rosensteinā€™s bat mitzvah, when a bunch of girls retreated to Eileenā€™s room to show one another their burgeoning breasts. Mine were yet to grow. I actually got one boob at age twelve and the other one didnā€™t grow until age fifteen. Every year I went to my pediatrician and asked her what the hell was going on. She always told me that to have one boob grow at a time was normal. Every year I took exception. ā€œNormal? Normal? Having one boob is normal? No. Every girl at school has either some or none but nobody has just one! Besides, if itā€™s so ā€˜normalā€™ to have only one boob, why donā€™t they sell slings at Victoriaā€™s Secret?ā€

At times like this, I feel like I donā€™t fit in with society. Both in the mideighties with my one boob and now with two very nice boobs that donā€™t offer sustenance to others, I donā€™t quite feel like a real woman. Even though I drive a nice car and have a job, a manager, a few agents, an accountant, an entertainment and a divorce lawyer, and other ā€œgrown-upā€ things in my life, I still feel like a fraud. Iā€™m always thinking that any day a policeman is going to stop me as I walk down the street and say, ā€œExcuse me, little girl with the big purse? What are you doing? Shouldnā€™t you be in school right now? Where are your parents?ā€

I didnā€™t even feel like I was acting like a normal kid when I was a kid. In sixth grade, the most popular girl in school, Meredith Renner, had a slumber party. Not just a slumber partyā€”it was a costume party/slumber party. And she was rich. She lived in a mini-mansion before they were called McMansions. My mom never let me sleep over at my working-class friendsā€™ housesā€”mainly because the working-class people always had one parent (usually Mom) working some kind of night shift, leaving the other home to supervise. Everyone knows that kids could start a nuclear missile program in the basement while Dad snores away upstairs in front of an episode of Nightline, skillfully clutching a can of Bud Light that never spills.

I donā€™t know why Meredith invited me. I had friends but was

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