Saturday, February 27, 2010

SAILING LESSONS by Lisa Duggan


The year I was twelve my father bought a boat. It was a twenty-foot speedboat with an outboard motor and we kept it at Great Kills Marina in Staten Island. It was blue and white and had seating for ten passengers, with skinny vinyl seat cushions that did not sufficiently protect ones bottom on a choppy ride. It was a modest little boat but large in our lives. Daddy took my brothers for boating lessons; they learned all about nautical knots, buoys, driving, and how to pull into the dock without wrecking the boat. My age, and I guess my gender, kept me from taking lessons too.

Coincidentally, it was the same year Jaws was in theatres. I remember one instance where I looked down and my heart stopped when I thought a shark was following us. (It turned out to be the shadow of the boat’s awning on the water.) A greater danger turned out to be the wind, which would tie my long hair in inextricable knots and coat us, boat and all, with sea salt by day’s end.

My father took us on day-long excursions that included faraway (Jersey) shores, the coastline along Far Rockaway, and Coney Island, the beach of his and my mother’s youth. All the cousins and some friends and neighbors came along for rides that summer. Kids on the block would vie for my attention in new ways and I enjoyed the bump in status the boat gave me. The boat was a unique source of pleasure and pride for my hard-working father, who had grown up without many luxuries in life.

One afternoon he picked me up from school and took me down to the dock. It was the end of September and I kept my sweater on against the chill. I don't know where my mother and the boys were. It was just Daddy and I, a rare treat.

We set out about three, the sun already waning. He pointed the boat south, down along the Staten Island coast towards Princess Bay. We didn’t speak about anything special and really couldn’t anyway, for the wind. But then my father and I never had long conversations. We were joined in our enjoyment of the boat and in the freedom of having no particular agenda.

At some point I asked if I could sit up front, perched on the bow. He said yes; as long as I kept my lifejacket on, held on tightly and promised not to tell my mother. I scooted up to the front and sat with my legs stretched out, my bare feet and the blue water before me.

He started out slowly but upped the throttle bit by bit, just enough for the bow to tip up slightly and make for an exciting ride. He cruised like that for a good twenty minutes and it was an extraordinary feeling; to be so anchored and so free all at once. I couldn’t see my father’s face and he couldn’t see mine – but I was smiling and laughing all the way.

As we came closer to the end of the island he cut our speed until it was safe for me to move again and he called me back into the boat. I think he let me steer for a while. We drove back to the dock in silence. I knew my father was letting me do something forbidden and dangerous that day but I trusted him, and what’s more, he trusted me.

In many ways the 'summer of the boat' was the last time my family was carefree, and together. Like the hard salt that stuck to the hull, the realities of life wore away at my parent's marriage. By the time I finished high school they were separated, the boat put up for sale.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Stoopit Quped 2010


Quped is not reel
Quped is very fack
if I saw him
it is my mastack


translation:
Cupid is not real
Cupid is very fake
If I saw him
It is my mistake.


Dear Alice,

Quped is very real.

When you fall in love the first time, and nothing I say will ease your own pierced heart, I will show you my scars.

Only your father failed to leave a mark — his arrow pierced me fatally but came clear through.

It became, you.

Happy Valentine's Day, my darling girl.

Love,

Mommy

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

BABY, I'M BORED by Lisa Duggan

Last Sunday morning the hubby and I played another round of My Reason to Leave The House Is More Urgent Than Yours. Winning entries have included Desperate for Dry Cleaning and I Have a Prescription To Fill. The victor — usually the first person to get dressed and find their car keys — gains a few parenting-free hours. Two or three hours where one might drink coffee while it's still hot, play The Stones, not The Wiggles, as loud as you like, or read an entire article and actually remember what you read.

It ain't easy being part of the iParent generation, the 'i' here meaning imperative. "But Lisa!" you might say, "We worked so hard to have children!"
Injecting, in-vitro-ing, adopting, pumping, cutting-back, or cutting out our careers, altogether. Is it really okay to admit that we're not thrilled to be a parent every barf-stained minute?

And I'd answer that it's more than okay to be honest with yourself, and your children, about the daily realities of parenting —
it's the healthier alternative. Consistently masking, or denying, your (temporary) frustration or fatigue is bad for you and bad for your kids. It sends the message that some emotions are more acceptable than others, and urges them to ignore, hide or deny their own anger and frustration.

Let's show this generation that being a parent can sometimes be difficult, lonely or just boring — so they might know what to realistically expect when they're expecting — and not still be playing games when they become parents.