I Can Barely Take Care of Myself Jen Kirkman (best books for students to read txt) š
- Author: Jen Kirkman
Book online Ā«I Can Barely Take Care of Myself Jen Kirkman (best books for students to read txt) šĀ». Author Jen Kirkman
āLook,ā I said, āIāve been through worse things than regret and I think Iām old enough to have a pretty good hypothesis on this one. Iād rather regret not having a child than having one.ā
Ali interrupted, āOh, but you wouldnāt regret having one!ā Thatās when her little girl Marta pointed at my face and said, āWhy 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, āSee? Kids keep ya honest and grounded.ā
Honest? Her kid pointed out my PMS breakout. Thatās rude, not honest. And I donāt need a kid to ākeep me groundedā when I have adult acne itself to do that. Oh, boy! Just imagine how much worse off Iād be without kidsāIād be walking around feeling good about myself at a party!
Iām not offended by what a toddler says to me. Her brain isnāt 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, āHoney, we donāt point out things we see on peopleās faces unless weāre helping them.ā For example, āYou have something white and crusty on your chin, I think itās toothpaste. God, I hope itās toothpaste.ā (Dog owners are the same way, incidentally. They canāt stop their animals from behaving badly and they never apologize for their little ones who canāt speak. Meanwhile, Iām left with an unwanted wet nose sniffing around my crotch in public.)
At this point I hadnāt been to a birthday party for a friend that started at two and ended promptly at five since I was a kid. If youāre going to have an afternoon birthday party to accommodate you and your friendsā new lifestyles as parentsājust go all out and have the damn thing at a park or a playground or something. Thereās 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. Letās get the kids all loaded up on sugar and send them outside to hurl their bodies around some lead pipes! Weāll 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 storeāboth only two miles from my houseāand 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 diapersāexcept they wouldnāt be doing it on a quaint cafĆ© table for two in public. Thatās the thing that happens when your friends and acquaintances start to have kids. You have to get on their schedule, like youāre a nurse working in a hospice, or the friendship dies on a slow morphine dripāwithout 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 Rosensteinās bat mitzvah, when a bunch of girls retreated to Eileenās 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 didnāt 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. āNormal? Normal? Having one boob is normal? No. Every girl at school has either some or none but nobody has just one! Besides, if itās so ānormalā to have only one boob, why donāt they sell slings at Victoriaās Secret?ā
At times like this, I feel like I donāt fit in with society. Both in the mideighties with my one boob and now with two very nice boobs that donāt offer sustenance to others, I donāt 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 āgrown-upā things in my life, I still feel like a fraud. Iām always thinking that any day a policeman is going to stop me as I walk down the street and say, āExcuse me, little girl with the big purse? What are you doing? Shouldnāt you be in school right now? Where are your parents?ā
I didnāt 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 partyāit 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 housesāmainly 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 donāt know why Meredith invited me. I had friends but was
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