IMG_2200…in which I babble about anything and nothing, but maybe sometimes something.

It is Monday, December 23rd. I have just wiped down the fridge prior to bringing home a whacking great prime rib roast to cook for my family on Wednesday. I can’t remember the last time I cooked a standing rib roast. Maybe in 1968, the summer I was a new bride and had a generous food budget? Standing rib roast is what my mother always made for Christmas dinner, which is why I’m making it too. Except I haven’t a clue what she did with it–and she’s not exactly here for me to ask. Something about onions, I know. And garlic? Heaven forbid that garlic should waft even near the nose of my father. Except when he was eating out and didn’t realize there was garlic in his food. So no garlic. Salt? Pepper? ??? I’m going to wing it with the help of Bon Appetit et al.

December 25th – The roast is in the oven…now it’s out…now it’s being carved…sheesh, it’s bloody. Is this what they mean by Medium Rare?

December 26th – Put the leftovers to cook some more in the over. Cooked them some more and then some. Is this what they mean by Well Done?

December 27th - Gnawed on the bones of the well-done rib roast. Too much salt. When they say to salt the rib roast all over, shouldn’t they give you some sort of measurement or at least a visual guide?

December 28th - One rib of the original rare rib roast left. I will delicately cook it this afternoon, hoping to at last get that perfect state of roast medium rareness. If I fail, the question must be: should I try again (only this time paying less that $29 a pound for Prime)…or should I give up and go back to bologna sandwiches.

 

 

 

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So–the surgery is scheduled for January 6. At 1 p.m. Can I tell you how much it pleases me that I don’t have to get up early that morning? Really, such is my horror of rising early that the afternoon scheduling is actually going a long way toward assuaging my feelings about having the operation in the first place.

Those feelings do have to be assuaged. Of course I realize that using the word “assuaged” is my way of distancing myself from the actual fact that I’m going to walk into that hospital of my own free will and let them flip me on my belly and slit open my neck. Makes it sound like a fish being filleted, doesn’t it? Which is why assuaged is such a preferable word.

I guess I’ve assuaged a lot of my feelings about that pesky ruptured cerebral aneurysm back in 2003 as well because I don’t remember much about the weeks that I spent at Cedars Sinai tethered to all sorts of machines, unable to do anything but lie there. Funny that, considering that at the time I was sure I would remember every day, minute by minute. Instead, odd things float up every once in a while.

Like the popsicles they kept in the freezer for me. They were sent up from the kitchen and somewhere along the way, they would melt. When they came to me each night as a special treat, they were frozen solid again, but now misshapen with odd lumps and bumps. And the middle of the night visits from the respiratory therapists. One was a handsome cowboy–or did I hallucinate him? Another was an M.D. who had fled Mao’s China with incredible stories of the the Cultural Revolution. He I definitely didn’t hallucinate.

Never a patient person–now! I want it now!–I found in myself some deep reserves that I didn’t know I had. It’s almost like there was a switch that I could flip that enabled me to just lie there and let go. If you’d asked me then–and now–I’d say that I really didn’t see that I had a choice. I either found a way to get through it–or, what?

I don’t see that I have a choice now either. Cervical stenosis with cord compression is a medical condition and it has sent me into an early old age. It’s as if I’ve suddenly had to don one of those age simulation suits that researchers use when studying the experience of the elderly. Like it or not, I’m face to face with the vagaries of being old. The inability to walk very far without having to rest. The constant need to be vigilant about where and how I’m walking because I’m so unsteady on my feet. The fact that I can’t use my hands and arms as I’ve always done because they’re so lacking in strength. I cancelled a trip to New York because I knew I couldn’t maneuver around the Big Apple in the way I’m used to. I’ve shut the door on career opportunities because I know I simply don’t have the energy required to do the job.

I am at sixty-eight less capable of physical activity than my mother was at eighty-eight. I am, physically, old before my time. But mentally I’m not. Mentally, emotionally–I’m still full of beans and piss and vinegar and that energy that has kept me on the move all of my life. And that’s why I have no choice but to have the surgery. At best, with hard work in PT, I’ll regain some or much of what I’ve lost. At worst, the degeneration will be stopped in its tracks. Without the surgery, how far and how fast the degeneration can progress, the doctors can’t tell me. All they can promise is that it will progress.

Photo credit: http://www.kokenmpc.co.jp/english/products/life_simulation_models

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Beyond MLB4

 

Or at least, I am. Or at least, MidLifeBloggers is. After almost six years, I believe I’ve said and published everything I have to say on midlife.

I’ve moved on. Gotten older, and all that conversation about perimenopause and hitting fifty and empty nests just isn’t relevant to me any more.

The online scene has changed as well. In 2008, midlife was not a blogging category; in 2013, it very much is. I’m proud to have been an integral part of the battle to make that happen.

What does this mean to you, the reader of MidLifeBloggers? Maybe nothing. The site won’t go away, but it will have a new focus. 

Beyond MidLifeBloggers: The Other Side of Sixty

Enough of my friends are 60 plus that I know how the conversations change on the other side of sixty. I want to chronicle that change. So yes, once again, I want to speak for and to those who are not yet a real part of the online conversation.

At the same time, however, I want to scale back from the drive to be a voice and to create a platform for others to have a voice. One thing that has become clear to me over the years–and which was hard for me to finally admit–is that I’m not an entrepreneur. I’m an idea person, but the follow-up necessary to realize those ideas is beyond my interest and, frankly, attention span. I see this when I look at the several midlife sites that have come into being–and then some–over the past year or so. So I am, in a word, de-professionalizing MidLifeBloggers.

That means I will stop thinking first of what is right for the site as a brand. I will stop thinking first of myself as a brand. Sounds odd perhaps to those of you who haven’t participated in the blogger branding rat race, but those who have know exactly what I mean. I want to write for an audience of readers, my readers, not marketers and PR reps.

I’m also ending  the part of MidLifeBloggers that was devoted to publishing other midlife writers. That doesn’t rule out the occasional guest post; certainly, if a writer has  something to say about the other side of sixty, I want to see it.  But I’m no longer soliciting for the fifty percent of MidLifeBloggers that was once other bloggers’ posts.

And now it’s time to move on.  To…

  • Concentrating on my own writing. During the Writer’s Workshop this Fall, I found myself envying the workshop participants the time and space they were giving to their writing.
  • The Writer’s Workshop, which will continue. The new session begins in February.
  • Blogging, the day-to-day, no-particular-topic, here’s-what-I’m-thinking blogging that I started with way back nine years ago on ByJane.

This is really a change in mind set for me, and I’m not sure how it will turn out for you. Let me know….

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Several months ago, as part of the Writers Workshop, we published poet and novelist Kim Triedman’s essay  about the how and why of using multiple points of view in her novel, The Other Room.  ”Making the choice to use multiple points of view for my novel was one of the most important – and serendipitous – decisions I made.” Now, we’re pleased to offer MidLifeBloggers’ readers an excerpt from that book, which is, as Kim described it, “a character-driven narrative, a tale of family dynamics and relationships strained to the breaking point by the trickle-down of grief.”    

 

By Kim Triedman, award-winning poet & novelist

 

Sometimes I wonder: Is my life better or worse for having had her? In the dark of night I do not always know. For months after I could not settle, could not find a place in our big, old house where I could sit myself down, listen to my breaths or watch the minutes tick themselves carefully around the clock. Every noise I heard spoke only of the stillness, the way an echo describes space. And this is what they said to me, every creak of every door: there is nobody here but you.

I understand now about that house, why neither of us could finally live there anymore. When we came back, weary and wrung, our insides turned out, it sat there, snug and compact, two newspapers stacked neatly by the front door. The garbage had been put out at the curb, and the neighbor’s cat sat contentedly atop the fence post, licking his fat double-paw. The air smelled of melting ice, and the ground beneath it. Up on the second floor, the shades were all tightly drawn, as though the family that lived there had been away on vacation. It was then I understood how long the rest of my life was meant to be.

I followed Josef up the stoop, watched him bend down to pick up the newspapers and fumble for the key ring in his pocket. I do not know how he did these things. It was all I could do to take air into my lungs and bring it out again, to place one foot squarely in front of the other. Maybe that is when I knew: that we could not survive it. Maybe it was the way he stooped over that morning to pick up the papers.

When the door opened, I stood for a long moment, looking in, testing it with my eyes the way a child might touch the bath water—gingerly, anticipating pain. And this is what I saw: everything was as it had been. The jackets still hung in a crowded heap by the door, one stray pink mitten on the carpet beneath the coat rack. The mail lay in the basket on the table, unopened, and down at the end of the hallway the answering machine flashed its urgent red light. I waited there for what seemed like a very long time, not moving, not breathing, and all that I could feel of my body were the pupils in my eyes, growing wider and wider. Somewhere, far beneath us, I heard the burner kick on and then off again, and I watched bewildered as Josef rounded the corner to check on the thermostat.

“Shit, it’s 54 degrees in here. We must be out of water.” He said it just like that, just like he had a thousand times before, not understanding what he was doing to me with those words. I looked over at him as he placed the newspapers by the door, willed him to see the panic rising in my eyes.

“I’m going down to fill it, okay? I’ll be right up.” He turned as he said it and that was that, the beginning and the end. I pulled my winter coat tightly around me and stepped up into what had once been my home, closing the door gently behind me, setting my purse down carefully on the hallway table. These things I did slowly, watching myself from a safe distance, feeling each muscle as it clenched and slackened in the service of these small movements. When I turned to find Josef once again walking down the hall toward me, I felt as though I was moving through water, or walking on ice.

“I filled it,” he said. “We’re lucky the pipes didn’t break.” And I thought about that for several minutes, rolling it around sluggishly in my mind, wondering if he felt lucky. Wondering if he felt anything at all.

I can’t say how I made it through those first few hours. There are places where my mind still won’t go, and that is one of them. That day I made it to the house, to the door, into the hallway, and then it is a blank, a place I know I may never return. I do not know if we ate, scanning our freezer for something we had made another night, a lifetime ago, laughing with one another or crying together above chopped onions. If I were to guess, I would have to say that Josef did and I did not. Already I could see that these were the things he needed to do: to open a freezer, or fill the boiler, or brush his teeth, as though the very dailiness of these acts could somehow protect him like a thick layer of gauze. I knew it the moment he bent over to pick up the paper, that those were the places he would go for succor.

For me it was quite the other way: those things that kept him anchored to the earth as it spun faster and faster were the very things that sent me reeling off in time and space. They were the enemy, all those things that people do in a day, the tiny victories. I could not do them. I did not see them as things that needed to be done. They terrified me—the refrigerator, the light switches, the laundry that piled up in the corners of our room. All these things I stared at without moving and they stared back at me: waiting, taunting, mocking me with their eyes and their crooked half-smiles.

The Other Room was published in October, but we held onto this excerpt because we think it will make a fantastic holiday gift for the writer and/or reader on your list. Here’s the link to buy it: http://www.amazon.com/The-Other-Room-Kim-Triedman/dp/0983476470

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LuluIf you are a Facebook friend of mine, then you know the truth: I’m passionate about the welfare of animals, especially dogs. Horses too. And elephants. Okay, cats as well.

But the latter seem relatively able to fend for themselves when they get stuck in a bad situation and horses and elephants aren’t sold at your local pet store. But dogs–sweet little puppy dogs are. And most of those cuties come from puppy mills.

You know, puppy mills, places where bitches are kept in crates bearing litter after litter purely for profit.  Some puppy mills are backyard affairs: just a bitch or two giving birth season after season. These dogs are not pets and they’re not treated as such. Puppy mills are called mills because they’re in essence factories in which the machines are actually living, breathing, sentient beings.

That little dog in the photo above? That’s Lulu. She was a backyard breeder dog who was abandoned when she stopped being profitable. She was found wandering the streets of the San Fernando Valley with infections in her breasts. She weighed well under nine pounds and she was about nine years old. Bichons and Buddies took her in, got her the necessary medical care (including spaying her!) and put her up for adoption.

She came to me and I can read her history in what she can and can’t do. For one, she can’t walk on a leash because, obviously, no one ever taught her how or took her for a walk. I have to buy softer treats for her because she’s missing a number of teeth, including several in the front. Her hair was short, wispy, and very dry, which turned out not to be its natural state.  She wasn’t really housebroken when I got her because she had never lived in a house. She wouldn’t move from one room to another without specific invitation, yet she couldn’t bear for me to be out of sight and her favorite place to be was on my shoulder, riding high like Long John Silver’s parrot.  It’s been a year now and increasingly its been clear that Lulu survived the puppy mill and survived her time on the streets because she is, as was said of my late mother-in-law at her funeral,”a tough old broad.”

Which brings me to the reason for this post. The ASPCA has a campaign to end puppy mills by stopping people from buying anything  at pet shops that sell puppies.  To that end, they’ve created the video below, What Not To Buy, that makes the connection between pet stores and puppy mills clear. Also, they know we’re dotty about our pets and that we insist Santa visit them as well, so they’ve put together a Holiday Gift Guide and well as a number of suggestions for homemade gifts for your dog or cat.  

If you want a puppy, go to a shelter. There will be a busload of them there after Christmas–the ones who didn’t make it home from the pet store. If you already have a dog or cat, the ASPCA has put together a Holiday Gift Box Giveaway, and they’ve given me the opportunity to offer it to one of you lucky readers. All you have to do to enter the giveaway is Watch the video and Offer your honest response to it in the Comments of this post

  • You have until Monday, December 16, 2013 at 11:59 p.m. PDT to enter.
  • Only one entry per person, please.
  • You must be 18 to enter, but really why are you even reading MidLifeBloggers if you’re not in midlife?
  • On December 17, 2013, the magic of random.org will select the lucky commenter, which I’ll announce here. Then I’ll need your snail mail address so that the ASPCA can send you your Holiday Gift Box.

ASPCA is providing the prize for this giveaway, but I was not compensated in any manner for doing this post. It’s all for the love of the dogs…!

Edited to add: Ho, Ho, Ho! Amy was the lucky winner of the ASPCA Holiday Gift Box Giveaway. Any–email me your snail mail address: jane(at)midlifebloggers(dot)com

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