FRESH
YARN presents:
Twenty
Minutes
By Dee
Ryan
I've wandered
for far too long through Larchmont Village looking like the Billy Goat
Gruff. So I'm paying a stranger to smear hot wax on my face and rip off
my facial hair. This cosmetic torture is the closest I get to a spa moment
these days. I close my eyes and take in the moment. Peace. Quiet. Heat.
Pain! Then she says it -- the birdlike co-ed with the spray-on tan. "It
only takes twenty minutes a day to take better care of your skin. You
can find twenty minutes!?"
Excuse me?
What do you know about me? What do you know about my time? Who are these
people that have "twenty minutes every day to apply a thin layer
of cleansing soap, facial scrub and night cream
gently moving your
fingers in a circular motion
all over your..." Just the pace
of her instructions is a waste of my time. Nothing is gently manipulated
or achieved in my new life as a mommy.
It only takes
twenty minutes a day to take care of your hands, feet, face. To work on
your sagging abs, hips, bust, buttocks. To read more fiction, to keep
a dream journal, to improve your world-view, to learn how to knit, or
play the guitar. The secrets of origami can be yours in just twenty minutes.
Be a self-starter,
they'll suggest -- those people with all the time in the world. Start
a book club, babysitting co-op, mommy group, cooking group, neighborhood
watch, political action group.
I want them
to know that I already have a small start-up company called My Family
and like eight out of ten small businesses, it's a losing proposition
which will surely end in bankruptcy and disgrace.
Twenty minutes
to focus on your goals, increase your typing speed, love your children,
have sex with your partner, examine your life choices.
Let's see,
there are 24 hours in a day. There are three twenty-minute segments in
each hour. That's 72 segments of twenty minutes a day. Let's assume I
get seven hours of sleep (if I'm lucky). That leaves me with...is that
the baby? I think I heard the baby.
What do I
do all day? I haven't seen a movie or gone to the theater or listened
to a new band in months. Thank God for TiVo. Reading a novel is a rite
of passage worth bragging about at the co-op. "Guess what? I read
a book without pictures to myself!"
There's precious
little Me time in Mommy world. One doesn't find twenty minutes; one has
to take it. And the best-laid plans get changed. There's always a 104-degree
fever on the weekend you've made a reservation at a Bed and Breakfast.
Get a babysitter and you'll discover a sobbing child who needs you. Mommy
time always trumps Me time -- which is why the airlines have to tell you
to put your oxygen mask on before you put on your child's. The children
always come first.
Something's
got to give and let's face it: it's me. My hair? A mess. My toenails,
with the remnants of last summer's polish, poke through the holes in my
socks. I've pubic hair down to my knees. I have to reach down, wrap it
up and tuck it into my bathing suit when I swim -- which is always now
with children jumping off my back and lunging into me full force. Before
children, swimming was a joy -- a meditative return to the womb floating
in the flotsam with all the time in the world. Now, I'm a pool toy.
I tried keeping
a daily journal of how I spent my day. Maybe I'd find twenty empty minutes.
Wednesday:
5:30 AM -
Wake out of deep REM sleep to wailing baby.
5:35 AM - Change screaming baby's diaper. When did she eat that?
5:40 AM - Feed baby Right Breast, try to slumber.
5:50 AM - Shift to Left Breast, try to slumber.
6:00 AM - Watch another perfect sunrise with fussy baby.
6:15 AM - Solid food time, get hose, mop and protective eye-gear.
6:30 AM - 7:30 AM - Rest of house wakes, eats, starts their day.
7:30 - 8:00 AM - Clean breakfast dishes, while outlining the great American
novel I will write someday -- when I have the time, of course.
8:00 - 8:10 AM - Check e-mail, send messages to people I haven't seen
in years, but once knew BC (Before Children). "Hey, I'm still here.
I still matter. Remember me?"
8:10
AM - Announce to children it's time to go to preschool. Can't be late
today because the toddler reminded me that today is the most important
day of the week. Today is share day at the pre-school co-op.
8:15 AM - Demand children get into car for preschool.
8:20 AM - Scream at children to get into car for preschool.
8:20 - 8:30 AM - Struggle to put now crying children into car seats.
8:30 AM - Drive to co-op preschool still in pajamas -- hope the other
mother's think it's a fashion choice.
8:40 AM - Arrive at pre-school late.
8:50 AM - Finally release children from the prison restraints known as
car seats.
9:00 AM - Realize I forgot today's share toy. Panic.
9:15 AM - Console inconsolable toddler.
9:20 AM - Have toddler use the baby for share toy.
Or maybe I
wouldn't find twenty extra minutes. But the next time someone tells me
I should, I'll shove my journal in their puss. "Here, you're so good
at organizing my schedule -- pencil it in!"
Alas, vengeance
takes a low priority to the obligatory twenty minutes of gossip at the
pre-school, or Mommy's high priority twenty minutes of wine time at the
end of the day.
So, I may
not have the empirical evidence to prove to you that I can't find twenty
minutes of my time for Iyengar yoga, or transcendental meditation, or
strengthening my vaginal muscles, or actualizing a better tomorrow. You'll
please forgive me as I roll my eyes and bite my tongue at your scheduling
suggestions. In the future, save your careless words for someone without
children.
My twenty
minutes are up.
©All
material is copyrighted and cannot be reproduced without permission |