FRESH
YARN presents:
Loser
Mom
By Wendi
Aarons
I am a teenage
mother. Oh, not chronologically. Let's be serious, I couldn't even get
a date in high school, much less find some horny 16-year-old to knock
me up in the backseat of his parents' Ford Escort. No, age wise, I'm not
even close to being a teenager. But social skills-wise, I'm just one lousy
retainer and a bottle of Clearasil away from being shoved into a locker
and sent crying to the guidance counselor.
After surviving my first set of awkward years, I grew into a charming
adult. I had good interpersonal skills. I was witty, verbose, well-informed.
I made people laugh with me. Not at me. My career in the film business
and later, advertising required that I talk to all kinds of people, from
movie stars to janitors, and I did it well. Then I reproduced and any
ability I'd had to make new friends disappeared as abruptly as my flat
stomach, perky breasts and freedom to go to the bathroom alone. For I
had become not only a mother, I had become a social nightmare.
The Dinner:
I was thrilled
when my friend Dena invited me to have dinner with two of her friends
from Seattle. I went to college in Oregon, so Pacific Northwesterners
are my peeps -- pasty vegetarians who stay indoors all day listening to
The Grateful Dead and suppressing suicidal thoughts. I couldn't wait.
The night
started off well with the women all lovely, and me my old, likable self.
Then someone brought up movies and suddenly all bets were off. Thrilled
with the chance to discuss films that didn't star talking animals, I breathlessly
launched into a 10-minute-long diatribe about the superiority of '70s
filmmakers that was so loud and impassioned, even Tarantino would have
said, "Man, she's obnoxious." Concluding with what I thought
was a rather brilliant comparison between Apocalypse Now and Must
Love Dogs, I sat back, looked proudly around the table and saw three
stunned faces staring at me like I was an escapee from a Lord of the
Rings convention. I took a deep breath and braced myself for a wedgie.
In my panicked
state, I looked for a way to divert attention. Pointing to the person
in the booth next to us, I quietly offered that he looked like "Mick
Jagger, circa 1978." This got a small laugh. Encouraged, I continued,
"I don't know," I said, "but whenever I look at him, I
hear 'Sympathy for the Devil'. Ah-yah!" This garnered even more amusement.
I was back, baby. Then Mick got up and two horrifying things were immediately
evident: 1) Mick was a woman 2) Mick had Multiple Sclerosis. Which, of
course, I would have figured out sooner if I'd been looking at her "Walk
for MS" t-shirt rather than her wavy Rolling Stones hair. As she
slowly limped past our table, everybody's eyes went to the floor. My entire
body burning with embarrassment, I looked to Dena, my only friend at the
table, for some reassurance. She scooted her chair away.
The Park:
One warm
spring day, I took my two-year-old son, Jack, to the park to ride the
little train. He was really excited to ride the little train, until I
bought the non-refundable tickets to ride the little train. Then he started
frantically screaming "NO RIDE WITTLE TWAIN!! NO RIDE WITTLE TWAIN!"
(If Jack wore a mood ring, it'd explode from overuse.)
Unused little
train tickets in hand, I approached a friendly-looking woman with a young
daughter, and asked if she could use them. This led to a very pleasant
conversation about our kids, ourselves, and the world in general. (Your
typical park/birthday party/Gymboree conversation: "Yes, I agree
that we should consider trade sanctions with North Korea. JACK STOP THROWING
ROCKS!! I MEAN IT, MISTER! Do you think the UN will be able to intervene?
OWW! DID YOU JUST AIM THAT AT ME? YEAH, YOU'D BETTER RUN, WHITEBREAD!
What are your thoughts on the issue?").
Discovering we were both in the writing field, I told her about some of
my projects and she was very enthusiastic. She then graciously invited
me to the next meeting of her "woman's group," which included
Harvard graduates, novelists and other local literary professionals. I
was delighted at the prospect of being included in such lofty company
and thus responded with all of the social grace of Screech from Saved
By The Bell. "That sounds great," I said. "But it's
not a pyramid scheme, is it?" I'm still waiting for her e-mail.
The Jeans:
It was my
son Sam's first T-ball practice and I was dressed in what I thought any
suburban mother would wear to a Little League field on a Friday night
- a slightly stained t-shirt, old Levis and a cat hair covered baseball
hat. Then I saw the other mothers milling about in their size-4 designer
jeans, silk tank tops and strappy sandals and once again, I was a 7th
grade loser in JC Penney corduroys while everyone else knew Gloria Vanderbilt
jeans were now de rigueur. Hiding behind an equipment bag, I tried to
figure out why they looked like they lived in The O.C. and I looked
like a reject from Blue Collar TV. Had I missed the coach's e-mail
that said, "Bring a bat, a glove and cocktail party attire?"
Was there going to be a jazz band in the dugout after grounder practice?
Or was this just how mothers, at least in our neighborhood, dressed these
days?
Caving into
peer pressure faster than a preacher's daughter at a hip hop concert,
I hauled it to Nordstrom the next day and shakily plunked down $150 for
a pair of jeans that were so stylishly low, you could see how I delivered
my children. Back at home, I modeled the jeans for my husband. "They
look good," he said. "How much did they cost?" I gulped
and told him the truth. His eyes widened, he took one more look at the
jeans, then muttered, not unkindly, "They make your ass look big."
I returned them the next day and spent the money on five pairs of Gap
jeans and a sandwich.
After these
horrifying incidents, I tried to figure out why motherhood had caused
me to socially regress. Sure, most of my conversations these days are
with people under three feet high whose favorite words are "booger,"
"diarrhea," and "Chex Mix," but still
Maybe
the brain cells that control witty banter were somehow attached to my
long lost placentas. Maybe repeated viewing of The Wonderpets gives
you the personality of a chronic pot smoker. But more likely, maybe it's
just the sad, simple fact that making new friends is hard at any stage
of life.
Eager to
lose my pariah status, I launched a calculated campaign to fit in better.
I no longer referred to my kids and myself as "playdate sluts"
when talking to other moms. I stopped openly making fun of scrapbookers,
Christian rock and conversion vans. I kept most of my thoughts, and cracklin'
personality, to myself. And it actually worked. I met a lot of other mothers
and struck up tentative friendships. I was mature and composed and finally
felt like one of the in-crowd. It was time for me to make my triumphant
walk down the staircase to a round of slow, meaningful applause and head
off into a night of bliss at the prom.
And then
my Molly Ringwald moment came. You know, the one where she defiantly yanks
off her Homecoming Queen tiara because she finally sees that she hasn't
been (all together now) "true to herself"? I came to realize
that while I had a lot of new friends, I really didn't like them so much.
They weren't funny. They weren't weird. And I like weird. I am weird.
And that's when I decided I was no longer going to surrender my personality
just so I could be that beautiful, popular cheerleader at the football
game. I'd rather be one of the dorks under the bleachers making fun of
her, anyway.
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