Putting your kindness to good use

Just got this IM from my friend, Jenny – the friend we raised money for to get a laptop:

Just a quick note…..I’m on my mac in the cafeteria right now! Shes in surgery and I updated the website with details. I should be able to post updates from the recovery room later today.

They were able to get a MacBook with the money we raised, which I believe also came with a printer and a copy of Parallels. Zoe is in the hospital for a routine biopsy to check the health of her heart, a procedure that’s been delayed for many months because she’s been sick.

You can read Jenny’s latest update – made from the laptop! – here.

to have and to hold

memorial bush

Friends gave me this bush three years ago in honor of Gordy after he died. It came in a five gallon bucket, and just look at it now. It grows like a weed, but I couldn’t be happier about it, because when pruned I bring the clippings inside and display them in a vase. The leaves smell like pine and sweet oregano when you rub them, and it freshens up any room.

The bush sits to the left as you walk up my front steps, and I really do think of Gordy every time I pass by it. I’m certain that if I ever moved out of this house, I would take the bush with me. I just don’t part that easily with Things That Mean Something.

What do you hold in your hand, or in your pocket, what treasure to you look at to remember someone or something by?

Book Review: A Girl Named Zippy

zippy.JPGThe first time I ever met my blogging friend, Heidi, in person, she brought me this book. And now that I’ve gotten to know her a little better, I can see why she liked it so much. It’s clever, it’s dry, and it’s ironic. I couldn’t help but imagine Heidi’s face when I read lines like, “Decoupage hit Mooreland pretty hard.”

A Girl Named Zippy
, by Haven Kimmel, is a memoir of her childhood in Mooreland, IN during the 70’s, and as far as memoirs go, this one lacks the drama and tragedy and depressive nature of most books in the genre.

But I wouldn’t call it lighthearted or uplifting. There are undercurrents of dysfunction as you read between the lines: the poverty of the area, her father’s gambling habits, and the lack of attention paid to her that borders on neglect. Zippy – nicknamed so because once she started walking, she zipped around like crazy – was an “oops child” as I call it, or a caboose kiddo, as another friend calls it, which is to say she came unexpectedly, ten years after her sister. The family house was not prepared for her, nor did they make room for her, so she slept on a cot next to the wood burning stove (and to think I felt bad for sitting at a t.v. tray off the corner of the dining table at family holiday dinners).

As a writer, this aspect of the memoir is fascinating, and I’ve actually spent quite a bit of time thinking about it. I think her humor and wit are brilliant, and could be taken one of two ways. Either she’s the class clown type who avoids the confrontation of stress by telling a joke, or she is able to look back on her small town dysfunctional life in a glass half full sort of way. I’m leaning more toward the latter interpretation. She doesn’t avoid the dark upbringing, nor does she cheapen it with shallow humor. She alludes to it by telling the story through the eyes of a child who doesn’t fully comprehend the life she’s living.

Although she pokes fun at her friends, and her friends’ parents, and the old lady across the street, and everyone else she writes about, she does so with the honor and respect of someone who generally thinks fondly of those days. I never get the impression that someone is stupid, or simple, or anything cruel like that – only that she likely imagined, as she grew up, that her absurd life would make the most excellent t.v. sit com – a cross between The Wonder Years and Married With Children.

There are scenes so outrageously funny, I laughed out loud and woke up Bryan. Her brother finally gets fed up with her sister’s monopoly of the bathroom and unhinges the door from the frame, only to find her sitting on the edge of the bathtub, fully clothed and ready for school, busted in the act of passive aggression. Her sister convinces her she was adopted, and when she asks her mom about it, the woman doesn’t skip a beat and tells her she traded a handbag to the gypsies for her. When she asks her dad about the gypsies, he also doesn’t skip a beat and simply says, “you been talkin’ to your mother, then.” She has an entire chapter devoted to things her father won and lost while gambling. And then there’s the showdown between her father and the neighbor which involved a yard full of howling coon hounds.

It’s funny, and charming, and quick to read, yet poignant if you give yourself opportunity to let its reality soak in. I definitely recommend it for a good laugh while at the beach this summer.

On dining with strangers

I had dinner last night with a new friend at a new (to me) restaurant in the Big City. I parked my car a block away so as to not completely embarrass her with my well used, dented, unwashed mini van in need of a good decluttering – no sexy single girl wants to be seen out on the town with THAT.

(Truth be told, neither do I).

She arrived first, and when I got there she says we can either wait for a table or sit at the community table. With a smile, I masked a flash of panic at talking to strangers all night on a first date, and agreed it would be FUN! YEAH, THAT SOUNDS FUN! THAT WOULD BE GREAT! YEAH, LET’S DO THAT!

Within 30 seconds of sitting down my new Friend Who Talks to Strangers introduced herself to the other couple sitting at the table, and as it turns out they know each other. Kind of. They both ride Dressage horses in Redmond – which I’m told is like horse ballet, so I can imagine it’s like a five katrillion to one chance we would end up sitting in a tiny Seattle restaurant together.

Octopus with clams and chick peasA third couple was seated next to us who turned out to be either sisters or friends – I can’t remember which one. We spent the evening ooooo-ing and aaaaahhhh-ing over each others’ plates of food, and actually passed one of ours around to be smelled by the others.

I had octopus for the first time, and Bryan is going to kill me for this because he’s always trying to get me to try octopus. But like everything else that is important to him, I only acquiesce if a chick friend also suggests it (Remember Freakonomics? Remember Iron Man? Remember white water rafting? Chicks all told me to do it). But it’s like I had no choice. My Friend Who Talks to Strangers was all, if you like mussels and if you like scallops, you will like octopus, which to me sounded like a triple dog double dare. Of course I loved the octopus. But this place cooked everything to such perfection, and in the most exquisite sauces, that I think I would have died and gone to heaven had they served me snow tires for dinner.

By the time we reached the chocolate crepes and dessert wine portion of the meal (!!!) we were all exchanging business cards with one another. I was fascinated by the gal sitting across from me who bought land with her husband about an hour north of Seattle and started a winery. They are attorneys. They are city people. They’ve never done this before. I was all, YOU HAVE TO START A BLOG!

Their first harvest after five years of growing will be this October, and I suggested she host a special wine tasting for Seattle bloggers to help spread the word. In fact, I now think she should host a special wine tasting for Seattle moms for which I can hook her up with some extra special Mommy Needs A Glass of Wine shirts. If you’re reading this, New Friend from the Community Table Whose Name I Didn’t Catch, please pull out that card I gave you and email me, because I would love love love love love to visit your winery.

As it turns out, I still have a brain. I am very happy with the life choices I’ve made, staying home with my kids. But sometimes when I find myself dining at a table with marketing directors, physicians and attorneys, I feel a slight stage fright when introducing myself as a stay at home mom – I assume the other person is making assumptions about me. But last night as we discussed Twitter and blogs and our kids and horse riding and pilates and wine making, I feared no assumptions. We were just six people brought together randomly by a unique dining experience, and we enjoyed the evening all the more because it.

As we parted for the night my new friend said I should pick the restaurant next time, and I was all, YOU MEAN WE GET A SECOND DATE? I think it was the new sexy jeans I was wearing. All I know is, I plan to call every restaurant in Seattle to find out who else has a community dining table.

On Self Medicating

A year or more ago, I was talking with a friend about how I had taken to self medicating my visits to Funkytown with alcohol. I know that sounds bad, but hear me out. After Thomas was born, which was two months after losing Gordy to cancer, I experienced postpartum depression that was severe enough for me to seek help, and I began taking Zoloft.

After a year on this medication I decided to wean off. I never intended for it to be a permanent solution, and it just seemed like a good time. I should mention that my depression brought out the reality of my rage issues, and during the time I was on medication I was getting some awesome therapy, plus participating in a regular group discussion regarding the same issues. In other words, I was having some very real, very vulnerable, very intimate conversations with others on the State of Jen.

As I continued to work through my issues with rage and what triggers my anger, exercise became a vital element to prevention. So did deep breathing.

When I find myself entering into a rage state of mind, it feels a lot like an anxiety attack. I feel it in my chest – it tightens, my heart is racing, and I’m tense all over. My adrenaline kicks in, and in my attempt to assert my control over the Universe I say and do things that make me feel powerful and others weak.

One day, as I found myself entering into this unhealthy place, it occurred to me there was one thing that would slow the physical aspects of my anger – a shot of vodka. So I chugged one back, and stood in my kitchen breathing deeply. As I felt the warmth wash down through my body, the relief overwhelmed me, and I burst into tears – the kind of tears that come, for instance, after you swerve your car on the freeway express lanes to narrowly avoid a sedan that pulls into your lane from a dead stop, right in front of you.

I came to a screeching halt, just inches from the concrete jersey barrier.

And here began my sporadic self medication. I don’t make a party out of it by mixing it into a cocktail, and I don’t come close to even being tipsy – I simply chug it back like a dose of Nyquil. It takes the edge off, so to speak, so I can get ahead of the physical rage and get to the emotional core of what triggered it.

I know this will cause a low rumble among some, and I’m not saying it’s ideal or even right – though, maybe it’s just fine, and only causes a stir because of America’s unhealthy view of alcohol. I am also not – I repeat, I am NOT – suggesting you do this, or that I think it’s way cool that I can. As a follower of Christ, I know his peace is the answer to all our emotional struggles. As a follower of Christ, I know his blood covers all our sin, and I don’t need anything else to deliver me from anger. As a follower of Christ, I know we are not to place any idols above him.

Yet, at this point in the process it’s the tool I choose to use. I anticipate this will not be the case for much longer – in fact, I can’t really recall the last time I used alcohol in this way.

In a group setting, someone once asked a very wise drug-addict-turned-Christian-therapist what he thought of alcohol consumption. His response was that unless you have a healthy way of working through and getting to the core of your issue, you should really stay away from alcohol.

I think about this often as I drink, both in self-medicating situations as well as social situations. I consider what I may be trying to accomplish, if anything, and whether I am using alcohol to mask or escape. But most of the time it’s just good to enjoy good food and good drink with a friend.

I’m not sure what prompted me to post these long-processed thoughts today, especially since I haven’t once thrown back a shot of vodka during this last episode through Funkytown. I have lost my temper during this time. In fact, I just unleashed an unreasonable verbal tirade on my kids about five minutes ago, and do not feel the need to imbibe.

Perhaps this is precisely the reason: I’ve already outgrown my need to self-medicate, and I want to remember how far I’ve come.

Funkytown

It occurred to me this week that I’ve been in a depressive funk lately. When I sat down and calculated just how long I’ve been saying to myself that I’m just PMSing, it turned out to be several weeks.

I brought this up with Bryan yesterday over morning coffee, and we talked about how much things have changed in this area.

I told him how the realization I’m in a funk didn’t cause me to panic or sink deeper into my hole. In fact, I think I subconsciously saw it coming, because in looking back I noticed how I’d changed my schedule around and lowered my expectations of myself, without even realizing what I was doing. I was sluffing off all the extra curricular stuff of my life, and saving all my energy just to get the basics done.

IMG_6376.JPGHaving just gone white water rafting, I was provided with the best visual of how I’m seeing things. As we spent the day on the river, there were many areas of calm water that were almost like a lake. Sometimes we would even jump in and swim. Then as we approached a rapid, we would tighten up a bit on our life jackets, adjust our hats, and wedge our feet into the raft for a better grip.

We could see the rapid coming, and we prepared for it.

Then, after the rush of adrenaline and the squealing and the tossing about, we came out safely on the other side and gave each other paddle high fives as we entered the calm water once again.

It’s no fun to be in the funk I’m in – I struggle with all sorts of issues regarding what a failure I must be for my inability to get the most simple and mundane things done. A clog in my vacuum renders me powerless, for instance – I just don’t have the mental capacity to figure it out.

But knowing this is not likely a permanent state, that I’m just riding the next rapid and will soon come out into the calm waters, this is what keeps me going. If I can just wedge my feet into the boat and paddle like a muthafucka, I think I’ll be okay.

You can participate in my 15 minutes of fame… maybe.

I’m going to the Blogher conference this summer in San Francisco. I’m glad it’s back on the West coast, because I went two years ago, but missed it last year when it was held in Chicago. Looking forward to seeing everyone again.

I just learned of a potential opportunity to read one of my essays at the closing keynote of the first day – twenty essays will be chosen across the five categories of Best Rant, Blogging About Blogging, Humor, Letter to My Body, and Parenting (details here). I need to submit my entries by Friday, so I’ve been poking around my archives, looking for something to send in.

My best work does not really fit into any of these categories, but alas, they did not supply a category of Best Downer or Most Likely to Make You Need a Drink. Nonetheless, I scraped together a few options to submit, and I wondered if you, dear readers, had any opinions on their quality? Be honest, because we all know I don’t need any more help making a fool of myself.

So if you can, please leave a comment here, or email me directly at jenzug (at) gmail (dot) com.

In the category of Parenting:
Secure Your Own Mask Before Assisting Others

In the category of Letter to my Body:
He should really teach all young men everywhere how to extract the truth from tired, chubby, stay at home moms.

In the category of Humor:
Cue Eerie Music in the Background of this scene (I hate this title, by the way)

In the category of Blogging about Blogging:
Blogging = fear + failure

If you can think of anything else I’ve written that might apply, please let me know. Not that I expect you think about it every day, and recite it to yourself in the shower. I’m sure that phase of fan-girl will come much later.

Friday Link Love: Sex and the City edition

Link Love BadgeI love it when something happens to get mainstream Christianity’s undies all in a bunch. The Sex and the City movie is getting a mixed bag of reviews – both on its quality and on its morality – and as these things usually go, there is a faction of flame throwers leading the pack who have never even seen an episode of the series, much less the movie.

This sort of thing reminds me of the time Jeffrey Overstreet was invited to be interviewed for a talk show addressing the question of whether the media was anti-religious, only to have his invitation withdrawn because his opinion wasn’t extreme enough (you can read his account of that here).

I’m not suggesting you have to like the movie in order to be cool or a well-educated Believer – I’m not even saying you have to go see it. All I’m asking is that we exercise the mind God gave us to think critically about why we believe what we believe and why we hold certain opinions, rather than spouting of dogmatic reactions.

Anyhow, as you can see, I got sucked into this one big time. It all started when I left this comment on Jeffrey’s blog. He appreciated my thoughts, and asked if I would be interested in writing a review since he hadn’t seen the movie.

I obliged.

I also had these thoughts (spoiler warning).

And here are a few other links for you to peruse, in no particular order…

Other reactions compiled by Jeffrey Overstreet.

My review on Looking Closer Journal

Corrupting soon at a theater near you?

Discussion on the Arts and Faith forum.

From Hollywood Jesus – Can Sex and the City be Biblical?

From Hollywood Jesus – a movie review.

From Past the Popcorn – a review.

From Christianity Today – a review.

Feedback regarding the Christianity Today review.

And of course, how could I forget the man I have a review-crush on, Roger Ebert.

Vacation in Satan’s Cesspool.

It is June 5th, and I’m wearing jeans, socks, a sweater, and I turned my heat on for a couple hours today just to take the edge off. Yesterday the kids asked for hot chocolate, my seeds are not sprouting in the garden, and I’m sick of being cold.

So you know what? I’m giving Seattle the finger. Buh-bye.

mariah wilderness expeditions.jpg

Bryan and I are headed down to somewhere outside of Sacramento for a family reunion done Zug style, which is to say I’ll be hurling my body down a treacherous, rock infested river through rapids they lovingly call Satan’s Cesspool, with only a blow-up raft between myself and certain death. I’m not sure what frightens me more – the potential for hitting my head on a rock, or the fact I won’t be taking my laptop.

I wasn’t originally planning to raft. I was going to sit quietly next to the river with my book and my sunscreen, waiting to collect on the life insurance. But after several people convinced me I might actually have fun and not die, and when I remembered the whole point of going was to spend time with Bryan’s family, I thought I would suck it up and get on board.

Besides, how can I fear certain death if this is what my last day will look like?

California Weekend Forecast

That, my friends, is a far cry from what Seattle will look like this weekend. So have yourself a merry little weekend wherever you are. A special edition of Sex and the City Link Love will post in the morning, because I know how much you’ll miss me when I’m gone.

Works for Me: The “Mom, I’m bored!” Edition

IMG_9549.JPGIMG_9550.JPGIMG_9548.JPG
IMG_9555.JPGIMG_9554.JPG

Rocks in My Dryer is hosting a themed WFMW this week to collect ideas for keeping kids busy during the summer. Never mind that the entire rest of the country is now on Summer vacation while Seattle kids continue through most of June.

Since my kids are still preschool age, I feel like I need the “Mom, I’m bored!” edition every day. But I did get this great idea from a book of activities, and my kids love it. Give a kid a paint brush and a cup of water, and he’s occupied for half an hour (that’s a long time for a preschooler, by the way). Today I had three extra kids over, and they were all out there “painting” my deck.

Hey, it works for me.

Check out all the great ideas here.

New Muxtape*

Muxtape CassetteI’m so forever in love with Muxtape.com. Even though my last mix was accidentally deleted by a software error, I’m still a fan. Because really, how fair would it be for me to put up with all the consistent Twitter outages, only to slam Muxtape for one mistake? They seem to be on the ball with more frequent back-ups, so I’m still on their side.

To listen to my latest mix, click here (remember to open in a different window or tab), then come back to check out the song list. As before, the mix will be available to listen to for a limited time only. But if you like it, leave a comment for a chance to win the mix on a CD. Contest ends Sunday at noon, and the winner will be drawn randomly.

Thievery Corporation – Warning Shots
I first heard this song on KEXP a long time ago while driving in the car – it was the first time I ever downloaded a song after looking it up on the station’s playlist. I love it when I can get Ruthie to sing, “AND IN COMES THE TWO TO THE THREE AND ONE, AND IN COMES THE TWO TO THE THREE AND ONE…”

Mocean Worker – Only the Shadow Knows
We have two albums by Mocean Worker – Enter the Mowo, and Cinco de Mowo! – and they’re both favorites. They’re jazzy and festive, and we usually end up playing them at parties or on weekends when we’re all hanging out in the kitchen together. You should really buy one of these albums.

Blind Boys of Alabama – Way Down in the Hole
I have an entire post to write about watching thirteen episodes of HBO’s The Wire over Memorial Day weekend, how we stayed up until 1am to fit it all in AND still be outside in the sun all day. This was the opening credits song, and we never fast forwarded through it.

Poncho Sanchez – Watermelon Man
I have no idea where this song came from – only that Bryan just started playing it one day. It makes me happy, and it makes my kids dance.

Bishop Allen – Click Click Click Click
I heard this song on KEXP, and it became the theme song to the first of (hopefully) many slide shows done of Ruthie’s pictures.

Katy Bowser – All of My Friends
I think Katy has to be one of the sweetest people I’ve never met – she sings every year at a summer music festival we go to and she’s one of the highlights for me. Her voice and sweetness sound like the radio singers from the forties.

The Parson Red Heads – Out to Sea
I heard this on KCRW.com, and listened to a sample of the album on iTunes. This was the stand-out tune for me. Maybe because it reminds me of the Grateful Dead’s Uncle John’s Band? I don’t know why I just said that – it’s just a feeling in my gut.

M83 – Graveyard Girl
This came off our latest Paste Magazine music sampler. It massages me with the 80’s without causing me to relive that horrible prom night hair spray incident.

Cloud Cult – Chemicals Collide
Stop what you’re doing RIGHT NOW and buy this album – The Meaning of 8. I love every song on it, and so should you.

My Morning Jacket – I’m Amazed
Bryan and I really liked their last album, particularly the single, Gideon. This is a single off their yet-to-be-released new album. If you can figure out what he’s saying, you’ll be curious about the worship-nature of the song.

Moby – I’m in Love
I’ve always been a Moby fan – I just sometimes forget it. I heard him interviewed on KCRW.com, and he talked about his first love: DJ-ing for a crowd of 150 in a club. It’s what he prefers over concert tours played for thousands.

Tom Baxter – Skybound
I first heard of him last year through someone’s blog (I can’t remember now), and fell in love with his very mushy Better. Just a few weeks ago I heard this breathy song on KCRW.com and recognized his voice. It’s a pretty song, and I love its theme of just putting one foot in front of the other.

*I know – completely lacking in creativity.

Friday Link Love

Link Love Badge

Mommyblogging and the water well
This is the best, most clearly communicated case for blogging and online community that I have read to date. It explains my love for all the people I’ve met online in a way that I’ve never been able to articulate. The next time someone tells me that online community is not real community, or that the internet is a time waster, I will reference this post. Because no, it does not replace in-person, intimate friendships, but we have many levels of relationship needs, and the internet does serve a significant purpose for many people. By the way, I just discovered this blog yesterday, and plan to add it to my reader. She’s an amazing communicator.

Writing and Living
I can’t remember how I found this blog, but I saw it in my feed reader one day with over 40 unread posts and decided to check it out. I am now hooked, and read her posts the instant I see them appear in my reader. She reads a lot of Christian non-fiction books, and writes great reviews and thoughts on them. I also appreciate her discussions on theology and issues of women in the church. It’s nice to see an intelligent, articulate, Christian woman on the internet.

We Testify: Stories of Hope
Speaking of articulate women on the internet, my friend Amy is collecting stories of hope, faith, endurance, salvation, and the like, for a new blog project called We Testify. She explains her vision on her blog here. If you have a story to tell, you should check it out.

Can women alone make Sex and the City a hit?
Thanks to Amy for sending this article to me – we have plans to see the movie together on opening night. As the title indicates, the article speculates whether Sex and the City can be successful without an appeal to a (non-gay) male audience. The male-dominated discussion over the Arts and Faith forum speculates as well.

It’s Business Time

Things are backing up here at This Pile because I’ve been busy living life, which is what we all hope for, right? So here are a few things I need to update you on:

  • My blog peeps gone done me proud. When Zoe’s dad, Paul, thanked me for taking on this fund raiser for a laptop, I reassured him I had no idea how it would turn out, that I could very well be handing him a check for thirty-five bucks when all is said and done. But you? You, Internet, made me cry. You raised $1,065 for the Faultner family, and I can’t even imagine how I could thank you for your participation in this. As soon as I figure out how to get Paypal to shake out all that money into my piggy bank, they will have their laptop. I’ll keep you posted.
  • As promised, everyone who donated will be receiving a CD mix from me, so hopefully you all added legit addresses to the paypal transaction. The winner of the random drawing for a t-shirt from Mommy Needs a Cocktail, is (drum roll….) Jenny! I’ll email you about how to get that, darlin’.
  • And lastly, the winner of the random drawing for my last Muxtape is Elisabeth! Be looking for that in the mail next week. As for the rest of you, the bad news is Muxtape experienced a database error that deleted this mix online, so you actually can’t listen to it anymore. The good news is, I’ll be posting a new mix on Sunday, so be sure to check back in!

Works for Me: Do the next thing.

Works for me WednesdayBryan says this to me all the time, and it usually makes me want to pull his hair out. It makes me want to pull his hair out because by the time he gets the opportunity to say this to me, I’m already in some sort of panic stricken state about a large Pile of Things Left Undone, and I hardly know where to begin.

And I don’t know about you, but when I get into a panic stricken state over a deadline or a huge Pile of Things Left Undone, I need you to tell me what I want to hear, and I need you to do it yesterday, and I need you to do it without the commentary. I am like Hammy, the crazy squirrel from Over the Hedge, zipping around with my screechy voice, wondering where all the nuts are.

This is not the Way of Bryan.

Bryan is calm. He is collected. He is rational. And he always says to me, “Baby, just do the next thing.”

I’m getting to be this way, slowly, and usually not of my own accord. I still need someone (ahem, Bryan) to tell me to slow down and just do the next thing.

And by the time I sheepishly pick his torn tufts of hair up off the ground, I usually have a clue what that Next Thing might be.

Hey, it works for me.