FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
My
Mother-In-Law's Vagina
By
Meredith Gordon
I'm
looking at my Cabaret Singer-In-Law's vagina. My Cabaret Singer-In-Law
is actually my Mother-In-Law who dreams of being a cabaret singer.
At 70, she's still "hoping to have her moment." Regardless,
right here, right now, I'm looking at her vagina, which she has
"accidentally" shown to me by way of lifting her dress
to show me her shoes.
"Look,
my first Jimmy Choos," she says as she parts the thigh high
slit of her dress to reveal her newest accessories. Unfortunately,
shoes aren't the only accessory she has revealed. While she has
been thoughtful enough to wear underwear, they're the lacy and sheer
kind, worn more for decoration than for the coverage they provide.
Personally,
I would understand her revealing her privates while showing me her
shoes were she a midget or a woman suffering from Dwarfism, but
my Cabaret Singer-In-Law is a 5'4" Manhattanite. Her shoes
and her labia aren't that close together.
I can
guarantee you that most humans have some idea when a private, rarely
seen the light of day body part has been let free, but apparently
my Cabaret Singer-In-Law's vagina is immune to temperature changes,
breezes, and the beating sun. So that's how, in Mexico, on my wedding
day, I am looking at my Cabaret Singer-In-Law's vagina.
Now,
two years later, I'm standing in my Cabaret Singer-In-Law's Manhattan
townhouse and that story comes to mind. My husband and I have brought
our son to New York to visit his grandparents. Unfortunately, my
Cabaret Singer-In-Law isn't happy. She's not spent her pre-decided,
yet undisclosed to me, amount of time with her grandson. She's angry.
She's frothing. She's yelling. I fear she'll break into song.
It
all started with me asking my Father-In-Law if he wanted to go for
a walk with the baby and me. "Nope," he says without looking
up from his newspaper. "I don't want to spend time with you."
He pauses and then reveals the conspiracy theory he's concocted
that I've kept his grandchild away from him. "I woke up at
8:00 this morning just to spend time with the baby," he tells
me.
"Remember,"
I tell him for what might be the 30th time, "the baby is on
L.A. time so he sleeps until 9:00 am here." Thinking this will
end the conversation and my Father-In-Law will apologize for assuming
my child and I should have developed some form of telepathy and
gotten up earlier to play with Grandpa, I turn to leave the room.
But my Father-In-Law is dead set on telling me that I've kept the
baby from him. Fine, everybody is entitled to his or her opinion,
they're just not entitled to my baby.
While
my Father-In-Law is animated, he's not personally attacking me.
But animation turns into a Me Crusade when my Cabaret Singer-In-Law
enters the room. She doesn't just want to tell me that she feels
like she's been kept from her god-given right to spend all her time
over-stimulating my child, she wants to tell me what's wrong with
me as a human. As an aging housewife long since suffering from empty
nest syndrome, she's spent her later years trying to figure out
what she wants to be when she grows up. In addition to singing she's
tried various hobbies, careers, and groups hoping to find her place.
There was her stint in an Off-Connecticut play which she quit due
to "creative differences" with the director. She tried
being an extra in films, but was fired after telling the star "he
didn't seem emotionally connected." And she searched for answers
in a new age church, but left after remembering she's Jewish Finally,
at 70, she's figured out that the best way for her to spend her
life is telling others how to fix theirs.
"You're
very tightly wound," she begins. "You're very defensive
and you're rude."
Stunned
by her outburst, I attempt to keep my cool and respectfully reply,
"I'm just trying to do a good job for my baby and at the same
time be a good houseguest and stay out of your way."
She
interrupts. "Well you're a terrible houseguest. You're rude."
In addition to being rude, she tells me, I have obvious issues with
life and obvious issues with my child.
continued...
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