Nicey Nash Would Kick My Butt

I pride myself on being relatively organized. I like my space clean and simple, not too much junk cluttering my home or office. When things are cluttered I don’t think straight, I can’t focus, and I tend to get a bit crabby (just ask the husband, who is, of course, the most cluttered being on this planet). So today when I spent 10 minutes in downtown KC digging for my keys in my purse, I decided it should immediately be de-cluttered. And holy cow, I carry way to much crap in my purse! I am amazed I don’t have a hernia from lugging this stuff around all day. For example, in my purse right now (along with my keys):

– Small Shinzi Kateh notebook
– Note from Trent asking me to pick up food for dinner
– Lucy’s report card from school
– iPhone (with headphones)
– Package of tissues
– Wallet
– Business cards for work
– A check stub from a work event I attended last week
– Two Kashi cereal bars (mostly smushed from being in my purse)
– One tube of bright red MAC lipstick
– One tube of neutral Lancome lipstick
– One tube of Burt’s Bees lip gloss
– One compact of MAC foundation
– One travel sized bottle of Japanese Cherry Blossom body spray
– One travel sized package of baby wipes
– Two pens
– One bottle of Fekkai dry shampoo
– One iPod Touch (belonging to my mother-in-law)

And seriously, that is way to much crap. Especially considering how often I use some of it (read: never). So I’m de-cluttering. And I have a feeling my shoulders will thank me.

I’m Left Black

The Fake Breakfast Club

When I was sixteen years old, I had a friend. His name was Frank. Frank was one of those “once-in-a-lifetime” people. Smarter than most people I knew, Frank had an exterior that kept some people at distance, but once he spoke two words, you were entranced. I met him on the first day of school in ninth grade. I had just started public school after eight very sheltered years at a small Catholic school, and I knew about three people in a class of over four hundred. For reasons that I can’t quite place right now, I had decided to take a freshman level drama class. I had absolutely no talent whatsoever as an actress, had never taken a drama class before, and when I walked in to the room I had no idea what to expect. The class ended up being a real live Breakfast Club, only there were more of us and no one ever started dancing around the class after smoking pot in the library (okay, maybe they did, but I was shy and insecure and sort of a loser who probably didn’t realize what was going on).

Frank was someone I’m sure I’d have never spoken to otherwise, but in the confines of this particular class, we were forced on a daily basis to interact with people we’d normally steer clear of, and not only interact, but just plain act. We’d have improv sessions where we’d have to come up with characters off the top of our heads, monologues that we’d write ourselves (usually about the total pain and crappiness of being a teenager) and have mini-love scenes (nothing too racy, we were fifteen) with people that wouldn’t think to look our direction in a crowded high school hallway. All of this up-close and personal activity bonded us in a way I honestly haven’t found since. I remember wishing the semester would never end, and in an act of warding off time, we all signed up for Drama II the next semester.

Frank was probably the most interesting and unique person I had ever met. He wore black eyeliner around his beautiful green eyes, fishnet shirts with his thumbs sticking through the holes, and giant jeans with a wallet chain hanging out of his back pocket. He was soft spoken and brilliant, and we spent many classes talking about everything, from his love for his gorgeous girlfriend to politics to music (always, always talking about Nirvana). I ended up briefly dating his best friend, and that led to a whole new level of friendship for Frank and I, especially when his friend threatened to kill himself when I broke up with him. I’d never been around people with such raw emotion, and had no idea what I was dealing with. Frank talked me through it, always calm and cool, his kind eyes and handsome face searching mine to see if I’d be broken, to try and mend any damage. He knew how insecure and lost I was, and was one of a very few who knew that even though I was portraying an exterior that suggested otherwise (popular-ish, captain of sports teams, straight A student), I had no idea what I was doing.

Frank never exploited my trust, never lied to me and never hurt me. I’m not sure if I can say that of any friend I’ve ever had. I only knew him for a year and a half, but he touched my life in ways that still affect me. He was an incredible person, an amazing soul.

Frank took his own life ten years ago today. With my vacation and work and friends and life, this awful anniversary somehow slipped from my mind, until a sweet friend called today to talk about her sad heart and reminded me of the calendar. I found myself driving home from a meeting, pulling in to my parking lot with tears running down my face, as we tried to talk through the bad stuff and remember the good. Trying to remember Frank’s laugh, his neverending support, how he was the first person to teach me how to correctly apply eyeliner and how he helped her through one of the worst years of her life. Remembering how the flyers that hung around our high school on the first anniversary of his death, and how the administration made us take them down because they said it supported suicide. Fucking assholes. I still have one of those flyers hanging up in my bedroom at my parents’ house, and I’ve found my mind constantly picturing it today.

I think of what my life has become, and what has become of the lives of so many of Frank’s friends, and my heart drops even more. What would he have been today? Who could he have been? He and his lovely, incredible girlfriend would still be together, I’m sure of that. They were what someone with a less cynical view of the world would have called soulmates. She is hurting today, I’m sure. Though all of our lives were changed by Frank and his death, hers was affected the most. I’m sending her peace and good vibes today.

I’m so sorry, Frank. I’m sorry I didn’t stay in better touch when you moved away. I’m sorry I wasn’t the same shoulder to lean on that you were for me. I’m sorry you didn’t think you had anywhere to turn. You’ve left an imprint on my life that won’t be diminished. I know you believed in some sort of afterlife, and I hope’s it’s as lovely as I have imagined.

Lovely Frank, I miss you.

This was posted by request and with permission from a few particular people who knew Frank best of all. If anyone has any problems with what was said, please email me at megan@crazybananas.com with your complaint. If you or anyone you know could be considering ending their own lives, please contact the National Hopeline Network at 1-800-SUICIDE or by clicking here.

Wherein I Attempt To Keep My Cool And Not Punch Anyone in the Face

Lucy is a weird kid. When I say that, I know some people (my husband included) get offended, but you have to understand, I don’t think of “weird” in a negative way. I’m weird. My dad’s weird. My niece is weird. I’m sure there is a gene stuck somewhere in my family’s DNA that inevitably makes us strange. But I love that strangeness. I was a weird kid, I’m a weird adult, and I think that one quality is what has made me a success in most facets of my life. When you know that the word thinks you’re nutso, especially at a young age, you don’t really care what people think about you. You take more risks, you learn more and you tend to do better as an adult. Do I have scientific evidence to back that up? No, absolutely not. But looking back on people I’ve known for years and years, it’s the total weirdos that are running Fortune 500 companies in their late 20’s. It’s the nerds that are inventing cures for diseases. It’s the eccentric crazies that have become novelists in London (even if they are, um, romantic novels).

The coolest kid in school? I think he sells insurance or potato peelers or something in our hometown.

So, back on point. Lu’s a bit weird, but along with her awesome strangeness comes a pretty intelligent brain. She can already spell her name (at two-years old….normal?), pick out any color on the rainbow, count to twelve without stopping to think and sing songs she’s heard once in my car with perfect recollection (see Lulu’s iPod on the right hand corner of the homepage to see what she’s singing today). She’s smart. And I know I’m biased, but I think she’s a pretty sharp cookie.

So yesterday, when they put notices in all the kids’ cubbies at school saying whether they would be moving on to the next class level, I wasn’t surprised that Lu was moving up a grade. But apparently, the mother of one other kid was surprised.

Mother: “I don’t understand, Morgan** and Lucy are the same age, only a few days apart, why does SHE get to move up and Morgan doesn’t?”

Note: I’m standing right next to her as she points at my child and spits fire.

Teacher: “Well, Lucy has been potty trained for months now, and she’s already starting to read. Morgan just needs a bit more support, and she can’t move on until she’s out of diapers. All kids are different.”

Mother: “I just don’t understand how you can make that decision. I know my child….blah, blah, blah….grumble….[raises voice]….what message does this send to my daughter……..”

Then I walked out. Very happy that my daughter won’t have to be in a class with that kid anymore, and even happier I won’t have to deal with the mom again.

But when I replay it in my mind, I actually turn to said mother and say:

“My little weirdo, she’s smarter than yours. So suck it.”

Total Weirdo

**Not her real name, obviously

This Roadtrip Destroyed My Brain

Sooooo, I’m back from Dallas.

Well, sort of. My body is back, but my brain and heart keep wandering back to a place where there was zero snow and a pool in the backyard. Not to mention the place where I could play Rock Band until two in the morning AND get to sleep in the next day.

The trip was lovely. Full of fun and friends, a few days to remember who I was, am, and will always be. I think as parents and wives and working professionals, we sometimes forget the piece of us that we left behind in our younger, more naive days. And for me, there are a few wonderful people on this planet that can immediately take me back to my junior year of high school, a place where bad jokes still make me laugh until my stomach hurts and movie nights where the vodka and cuddles seem to go hand in hand. A few of those people were with me in Dallas (plus a new addition that I must say, blended in to our strange circle of friendship quite nicely), and I had forgotten how happy I am when I’m with them.

And how bad the hangover of leaving them always seems to be.

A Desperate Plea

New Soccer Ball

Dear Two and Three Quarters,

How are you feeling today? Tired? I can imagine, as you’ve now decided to get out of your bed twice each night to go potty, then sit on the toilet for 15 minutes laughing about “how the pee pee won’t come out.” Yeah, you know why it won’t come out? Because you don’t actually have to pee. You just wanted an excuse to get out of bed. I’m not Columbo or anything, but that’s not too hard to figure out.

As for the third time out of bed each night morning around 4 a.m., I’m not quite sure what you’re trying to pull. It’s bad enough that you stand two inches from my face, staring at me with crazy “Children of the Corn” eyes, willing me to wake up with your incredibly loud blinking and mouth breathing, but why, oh why do you insist on coming in to my bed? You know I’m too tired to refuse, especially when you snuggle in, informing me three hundred times how much you love me. And really, that part isn’t so bad. But the two hours of kicking and rolling and complaining and randomly getting out of the bed to check on the dog and begging for cartoons? Yes, Two and Three Quarters, I could live without all of that.

Your teachers at school have been informing me lately of your mischievous activities during the day, mostly involving large amounts of pouting and explicit use of the word “no.” They think you might be tired during the day, as it’s not really in your DNA to be a trouble maker. I agree (mostly). You know what might remedy this problem? SLEEP. DURING. THE. NIGHT. You know what won’t fix anything? Climbing out of your carseat while I’m trying to pull out of the school parking lot. All the other parents who stared dumbfounded as I tried to force to writhing body in to the seat are probably going to nominate me for Parent of the Year. Better yet, Parent of the Millennium. I’m that good.

And the lovely lady that stopped when she saw me on the side of the road, pulled over with you sobbing hysterically while sitting in time-out on the curb, she will probably nominate you for an Oscar, your performance was that good. Oh, Two and Three Quarters, you are one Hollywood starlet. I can’t wait for you to be the headlining story on E! News: “Young star admits mother put her in time out on curb, ruined life.”

Oh, and that lovely lady that pulled over on the side of the road? She just wanted to see if I was OK. As I stammered my response (um, she wouldn’t stay in her seat and I didn’t know what else to do and, um, please don’t call Child Protective Services), she just leaned out her car window and said, “Not her, honey, YOU.”

“Um, I’m OK, I think.”

“OK, just thought I’d check. I have three daughters…I understand.”

So, Two and Three Quarters, your Humiliation-of-Mother Quotient has been filled for this month. Let’s try to keep the tears to a minimum until April. And when I say tears, I mean mine.

Yours Truly,
Mommy

P.S. Two and Three Quarters, should you decide to ignore my pleas, I will be forced to ask the dog to eat you. You’ve been warned.

Lucy + Molly

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