Monday, February 28, 2011

No In 152 Languages Is Still





I want to write some story of ridiculous redemption or raunchy reflection or whatever I am suppose to write but all I can see right now is the boo hoo and the dark and the no. So much good has been happening around me but I can’t even write about it. Two weeks ago I got back on stage for the first time in four years and read a piece I wrote with a peppering of stand-up. I had a wonderful time. Great people performed, even better people came to support and I got face-raped by a stranger.

Then, my oldest and dearest friend from childhood came into town last Thursday and we spent eighteen laugh-filled, freak-frolicking hours together. It was magical. I felt safe and protected and light.

And all this time I actually thought I was fighting the decent fight. Although my entire household, including our aging, decrepit cat, was on the cusp of sickness I thought for sure it would all work out and the birds would keep chirping. But it didn’t happen that way. The writing got harder by the hour as each sentence felt like pounding nails into a metal wall. The days were painfully weighed down by anticipation and aggravation. And finally, that little bit of rain on the horizon came bursting through and the week slammed into Friday and it all fell apart. Our life, again, was a hailstorm of no, no thanks and not this time.

The world is filled with disappointment. That is part of life. I get it. It makes you stronger and teaches you lessons and helps you grow into the person you are suppose to be. Thank you, Oprah for that quick trip down bumper sticker lane. I know all of that shit. Please add these bright, blithering gems of wit and wisdom to the list. What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger and… it all happens for a reason. I promise to put those in my bummer box along side shit happens, life sucks and then you die and finally, my husband’s favorite, more meat for the butcher.

But I am tired. Not sleepy tired but life force tired. I am like a cheerleader left in the rain after a big game with only one bobby sock and a wet pair of pom-poms. I have no ride home, no change of clothes and no idea how to get up off my soaking wet skirt and start over again. Sure, the little claymation, red head always sang, “Put One Foot In Front Of The Other” but someone stole my shoes and punched me in the knee and I don’t have the slightest clue how to start my slow march toward yes.

How do you do it when it all feels pointless? How do you get up and brush off the bad and slip into the awesome? I know a lot of people do not like to comment. My comment section is a pain in the ass because it takes a few steps and you have to choose a name and go through Google. But please, if you have any words of wise or a funny anything or just a good old slap on the back, tell me. Be anonymous. Use a fake name. Yell at me to get it together and stop my sniveling. But please, I need to hear something other than the din of disappointment in my skull and Gwyneth Paltrow’s country wrong.


Saturday, February 19, 2011

Happy President's Day

This little glob of goodness was sent to me by my other half, Chrissy. Here's to sharing and caring.


Thursday, February 17, 2011

Quick, Before It Grows Up



When walking with a cute kiddo, and yes, I am that gross, disgusting, self-absorbed loony mom who thinks her kid is pretty cute and yummy, people who actually care say one of two things.

 “Are you having another?”

Or

 “Enjoy it now because they grow up so fast!”

The first statement, as you all know, is one that curls my toes and crinkles my anus. I find asking anyone about their reproductive situation rude and insensitive and all around grotesque. There are a myriad of reasons why people choose to have one, two, three or eight children and it is nobody’s bag of shit to peak into and sniff.

Now, as far as the growing up fast comment, I usually smile and nod in apathetic agreement and make a weird joke and giggle and walk away. Why the joke and the banter, you ask? I love to talk and have been known to converse with a brick wall and a garbage pail if they’ll listen.  So, talking will always be part of any equation I happen to write on the chalkboard. Back to the growing up fast part, I know.

I think about it in little bursts here and there and sure, I occasionally get misty. But that precipitation doesn’t last long. I’m too busy. There is too much to do. If I’m not writing or trying to write or pulling myself out of a hole of blackness because I didn’t have enough time to write I am doing a load of wash or cleaning the kitchen or making a grocery list or buying the grocery list or folding some dishtowels or replacing the toilet paper or mopping up a small puddle of errant urine that could have been left by one of three males in my house.

Yes, the cat is VERY old and VERY hung and any mystery piddle I find anywhere could be just as easily cat piddle as it is Otto piddle or Dave piddle. Men, your anatomy makes it a wonderment that you can stand up and urinate. We get it! But why, in God’s great land of agnostics, is there always a little left over on the floor or around the base of the porcelain pooper or on the ledge of the crapper? Clorox Wipes are bad for the environment and soaked in toxic chemicals but until you learn to shake it off properly and wipe the floor yourself, gentlemen, including cat and small child, I insist on at least buying the natural, earth-friendly wipes to assist me in my mission of extricating the pee-pee puddle from my life.

Stay on point, Dotty, I know. Growing up fast. I remember now.

Every time someone says the growing up fast stuff to me I catalogue it and stick it in my back pocket or in the basket of mail next to the door. My brain says I should really stop and think about the small moments while my body rushes forward like a giant wave racing to get ashore. All the things I need to do scream at me from all corners of my life. The dishes, for instance, will most certainly crumble and crack if I do not put them in the dishwasher. Isn’t that how it works? And the drawers cluttered with coupons and crayons and old rubber bands? They will procreate and multiple until I am buried under meaningless junk and found breathless and braless weeping behind the High Boy. Right?

But sometimes, when the world is too fast and the lists too long, a tiny, little pebble of calm and light is tossed into your lap. And when the pebble lands, grab it and enjoy it because it will happen less and less.

My little moment came yesterday, as unexpectedly as a double rainbow on a dark day. I picked Otto up from school and we drove to In-N-Out Burger simply because I have a bad cold and that cheeseburger is my packaged penicillin, Otto loves French fries and it was a Wednesday.

After an awesome big boy, booth hang, we drove home in a blissful, full-bellied quiet. About a mile from our apartment I looked in the rear view mirror and saw Otto fighting the good fight to keep his eyes open and his wits about him. This may sound normal to other parents out there whose kids sleep when they need to sleep. But my child, my wild kingdom cub, NEVER NAPS. He dropped that ball almost two years ago and has been awake and alert ever since.

Seeing this little man nodding off meant only one thing. His body was whipped and he needed this nap. By the time I pulled up in front of our door he was knocked out and snoring like a bear in a cave. If I carried him into the house he would wake up and run around in circles and I knew he needed rest like I needed nasal spray.

I sat in the car for the following hour and a half, writing an article I had due for the school newsletter and listening to the sounds of my son breathing and recharging. When he finally woke up he was sweaty and disoriented and not sharing the frosted, feel-good moment I was immersed in.  I rubbed his leg and asked him how his nap was, thinking it would calm him and bring him back to a happy place.
But, no, he began crying and shaking as if the nap had slapped him in the face and stolen all his toys. I unbuckled him and lifted him onto my lap in the front seat, caressing his head and trying my best to calm him. When I thought he was ready to go inside the house, I looked down and he was passed out again, like a frat boy and a freshman kegger.

For the next hour, he lay in my arms as I gazed into his beautiful, breathtaking face. Sure, I read some of the new Entertainment Weekly I happened to have in my bag and, of course, I got excited when I stumbled upon the article about Charlie Sheen, the dregs of his drug-riddled debauchery and his love of all things porn-a-rific.

But, I have to say, holding Otto like a loaf of Challah filled me with a feeling of overwhelming peace and potential I haven’t felt in a long time. He was never a cuddler, never a lap-sleeper and has never sat still long enough for me to stare him down and make a map his face. He was and always has been, running a million miles an hour, just like his mom, never slowing down and never taking that extra second to drink it all in.

Just when I noticed my left arm cramp up, both legs fall asleep and my neck start to spasm, it happened. I was cradling an almost, four-year boy like a newborn and suddenly, all the voices of all the strangers who told me to enjoy the moment, chimed in all at once like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, in stereo, on 11. It was loud, it was high-pitched and I listened. And, it was awesome!

My little pebble turned out to be a big-ass boulder but I can’t wait for the next reflective moment to come barreling down the laundry shoot of my life. Oh, shit the laundry. I gotta go.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Pistols and Popcorn - Valentine of the Week



Okay, peeps, I know I keep asking you for blog love. Go see Never Say Never, the Bieber fever flick, vote for My Mommy Bites CLICK HERE for Best Mom blog of 2010 on Babble.com. And yes, the voting still counts and I would love your love. And make fun of mean people with ugly shoes. Gwyneth at The Grammy's? Come on, lady. Melted crayons on red carpet? What was that?

But, I want you kids out there to show a little more love this Valentine's week to my favorite parenting blog, Pistols and Popcorn. I consider this gal a mentor, an inspiration and lucky me, a friend. The minute you read her you will too. She is up for BEST PARENTING BLOG FOR THE 2011 BLOGGIES and that, my cats and kittens, is a huge-ass deal. She is, Jodi, the uber-cool, Brooklyn babe who is also the mother of three boys, two newborn twins (ahhhhhhhh,ohhhhhhhh,myyyyyyyyy) and one amazingly gorgeous six year old. Give her a read and then give her your vote and blog reader love hugs.

CLICK HERE and scroll down and vote for PISTOLS AND POPCORN as best parenting blog and shower some of your magic on a lady who rocks out with her socks out!

Voting closes February 20th so you have a little more time to be sublime!


Huge High Fives and Here Here's To You All,


Dotty

Sunday, February 13, 2011

I Have Bieber Fever - Catch it!




PLEASE GO see this film. It is awesome, awe-inspiring and so well directed, edited and produced you will think you are watching a documentary on World War II and the women it loved! And who doesn't want a little fever?

And, my friend Jane who is a super star produced it! Let's support a sister!


Thanks!

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

My Man/The Shit



My husband is the shit. I mean, a real fucking catch, like a big-ass, blue fin tuna on the end of a fishing line, the kind that everyone freaks out over when you drag it on to the deck and gut it like a pig, except it’s a fish, on a boat with no hooves. So, it’s very un-aquatic. You get my drift.

Even Dave’s insides are great just like the blue fin’s guts yet much less fishy and much more meaty. Well, that part I am just assuming but he loves steak and sausage and brains and liver. Dude could win Survivor for no other reason than he will eat anything and try everything. That, and he loves the outdoors and is super-skilled with twine and can go days without water or food or conversation and relishes in competition and nudity and is nearly impossible to get mad at, or at least, stay mad at for long.

I am rambling on about him because I love him with the fierceness of a lioness at a lunch counter. He has done a million things for me for a millions years and I will never tire of his generosity, support, encouragement and cooking. The dude is epic in the kitchen like Julia on jet fuel except tons sexier and tons hairier and tons messier. And she is manly in all the wrong ways. There, I said it.

Maybe I feel like telling everyone all of this because Valentine’s Day is coming up and Dave and I both equally HATE V.D. like a teenager hates a test. I will not go on and on about my reasons for disliking this Hallmark holiday of winners vs. losers or the fact that love does not come in a twelve-pack of hot house flowers and a stale sampler of high fructose corn syrup.

NO, I will simply say that a valentine can be whatever you want it to be as long as it is shows that special someone you love that you hear them and respect them and well just love them. My valentine came in an email today and it is greater than any bottle of toxic celebrity-centric perfume or heart-shaped hand job or gold-sprinkled gobstopper could possibly be.

Dave is a writer, an amazing, prolific and profound writer who sometimes loves his job, sometimes loathes his job and will forever do his job to support his family on words and ideas that he finds hiding in the air around his head and stuck in deep, dark corners of our asymmetrical apartment we call our crazy artist colony. Writing is one of the hardest professions in the world, up there with sub-zero temperature waste removal, cat grooming and being Lindsay Lohan’s lawyer’s legal secretary.

So, this morning, as I struggled with a writing project that I have been working on for a few months and walked around my living room in circles beating my head with Otto’s red wiffle ball bat (true) while talking to myself about why women are so fucking crazy and mean to one another (also sometimes true) and where was/is my jumping off point, (oh so very true) I get this little note from Dave.
Any story begins at the beginning. A tall dangerous stranger walks into town. A spaceship picks up a strange signal. A guy catches his wife cheating on him. A guy is going to Vegas with his buddies. If none of those opening scenes ever happened then there wouldn't be a story to follow. 
So find your opening scene and layer it with the relationship stuff that matters. 
Just make sure that your scene is the beginning of the story and not the end or middle or pointless juncture of another story that doesn't matter. 
We live fifty stories a day, but the one you're writing is the only one that matters.
And that, folks, is why I married for love and why I love my valentine!

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Going Into Business Sale Extravaganza Blow Out Giveaway

Note to readers and biters: The promotion below is NOW running from Feb 9th to Feb 28th and the big winner will be notified shortly after the end of the shortest month of the year. Good luck!!!


Dear Biters,

This is my first bloggity blog giveaway and it is for something that every man, woman and celebutante really needs, a luxury spa treatment at the famous Burke Williams. So, this is what you need to do. Click HERE or at http://www.redtri.com/newsletter-signup  to register at Red Tricycle. Red Tricycle is a free bi-weekly newsletter that offers ideas for cool things to see in your neighborhood. Sign up and in the referral box put My Mommy Bites and you may just win a super awesome spa treatment worth bazillions of kopecks and hours of happiness.


Now, when I think of Burke Williams I think of hot rocks and lotions and cucumber eye covers and deep tissue hand play and my homely habit of drooling inappropriately through the massage table face hole as a large, strong woman named Helga redirects my shoulder muscles away for my earlobes and rubs away years of animalistic anger, frumpy frustration and regurgitated rejection.

When I googled Burke Williams to find a cute, appropriate photo to better entice you cats and kittens to try and win something I found this photo.



I mean, how perfect is that? A massage, on a tropical beach with a glass bottle of tap water on a folding tray table from Bed, Bath and Beyond's sale section and cleanish towels and a weepy willow tickling your bunions. Okay, I mean my bunions. My feet are like two deflated footballs but I can own it. I just can't wear 6 inch heels. Or walk barefoot in front of strangers. Or ice skate like Michelle Kwan or a three year old. It's cool. Maybe in another life.

As I was about to click off I scrolled down and there it was, a perfect representation of what anyone who goes to Burke Williams will feel like after one of their many star treatments. A pigeon-toed Eva Longoria Parker trying to escape from the paparazzi outside the Burke Williams private elevator while carrying an overpriced mystery handbag of the moment filled with loads of craft service candy and wearing yesterday's Juicy Couture sweatsuit the color of a blueberry smoothie. Who doesn't want a slice of that blueberry pie?



But then, as I was feeling so Burke to the Williams, a photo of the real human person Burke Williams popped up and I thought, "No, this is not a good spa day treatment feeling I'm getting here. This is a bad, yucky, just got arrested for drunk and disorderly conduct or my girlfriend just caught me doing something bad that rhymes with Jack or Seth or geez, I need a change in direction and my friends made me do "it", whatever "it is. And the hoodie dude is the guilty one and I need new friends, maybe?"


So go ahead! Give it a shot. Support a great new website, learn about the local activities for your kiddos and try and win something that will exfoliate your foibles and scrub away your scandals!

Peace and Pedicures!

http://www.redtri.com/newsletter-signup

Friday, February 4, 2011

Search keywords this morning = creepy + fabulous

So, this is how they found me today. Elementary, my dear Watson. Elementary.

fringe sucks


puke


mommy sucks


my mommy bites


my mommybites blogspot.com


anime girls fighting


baby gates dwell


bad back


farrah fawcett pee pee tickle


mom sucks and swallows

















Thursday, February 3, 2011

I stand for Phyllis Lillian Smart Young. Who do you stand for?



Tomorrow is World Cancer Day, a day that most people wish was not necessary. Please take a moment to honor those people you love who have lost their lives to cancer by clicking HERE or the link below.

The Stand Up to Cancer website will allow you to donate, share and learn how you can make a difference in the fight to eradicate a disease that 1 in 2 men and 1 in 3 women will face in their lifetime. You can also donate your Facebook page and get the message out. Take a minute and take a bow!

And Grandma, we miss everyday in every way.

 http://wcd2011.standup2cancer.org/


Thanks!

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Fly The Ferocious Skies






This past weekend I was lucky enough to fly on Southwest Airlines, the casual cotton-poly blend airlines that specializes in stale pretzel bites and bitter, bar room flight attendants. It had been years since I washed myself in the lovely scent of re-circulated farts and cheap perfume that Southwest is famous for. And to be clear, I have purposely flown only Jet Blue since Otto’s birth because of the individual TV screens and the high quality of their body odor-masking air fresheners and their general zest for life, even in the face of a tragic and terrifying potential plane crash while watching Direct TV’s coverage of said accident waiting to happen.

When Otto and I got to the airport on Friday I had no idea that the new policy for travelling with children was as follows. Hello, parents! You have now entered hell on wings. Small children and parents of small children who must schlep a car seat so the small tot does not careen upward or forward during a terrible turbulent episode, as well as carry a duffle bag filled with the foodstuffs that Southwest will not serve, must board AFTER at least sixty other people who happen to have purchased their cheap-ass tickets a few hours before the people who have decided to procreate and migrate with their Chiclet-sized charges.

When I tried to ask the gate keeper of mediocrity if I could get on the plane, a very angry, Bermuda short wearing, pomade-slicked trash receptacle told me that in no way could I get on before the throngs of office casual cattle that stood in the line marked “A” without a special pass and that next time I have to ask for the pass at the ticket counter. I tried to explain to Desi Arnaz, Jr. that I had a car seat that could not fit down the aisle without knocking the elbows and skulls of the cattle in question and that if I waited until the plane was full I would hold everyone up and cause a group of middle management Mastodons to start foaming at their McDonald’s munching mouths, whereby they would most likely pummel me with a sack of stink eyes and miss their happy hour meet and greet at Applebee’s in Redwood City.

I did indeed have to wait and of course, caused a major traffic jam in the aisle of white after begging two stewards, one male and one female, to help me with the car seat. When I explained that I could not get to the back of the plane without assistance the Queer Eye and the failed college gymnast, Brad and Brandy respectively, both rolled their poorly drawn eyes at me and shoved one another under the customer service bus, not wanting anything to do with helping me or doing their jobs. Brad finally relented, but not before saying in a voice filled with the exasperated and nasal undertones reserved only for a Rachel Zoe flunky or a Liberace impersonator, “I’ll carry this thing but I have NO IDEA how to install it. You’re on your own there.”

We arrived safely and were the last ones off the plane due to hostile natives and bad real estate. And it was no surprise that when we got to the barren baggage claim, another sullen Southwest uniform was attempting to cart away my small, sad suitcase that I decided to check at the last minute because I knew in my motherly gut that I would never be able to manage a kid, a car seat, a carry-on and a criminally negligent cabin crew as well as a rolling bag filled with stretched out sweatpants and cheap, machine knit cardigans.

When I returned to the airport at the end of the weekend I arrived early with a sweet and cooperative Otto looking as cool and hip as a Gossip Girl boy toy in his Adidas sweat suit and his slip-on fake Carter’s Crocs. I walked up to the counter with a smile and a calm sheen and asked the woman wearing the most attractive polyester Southwest sweater vest I had ever seen for the special pass to board early.

I sent the following text to Dave after my instantly infuriating conversation with the wash and wear wicked witch of the west whose tone was as smug and hostile as an Al-Qaeda kidnapping video on grainy Beta Max.

Dave,

I hate Southwest. They won't let us pre-board with the car seat and the skag, white-trash, fatty, painted-on-tan, high school drop-out told me to check the car seat and have Otto sit in the regular seat. At his size that is ludicrous and dangerous and her face looked like a three day-old bruise after her trash-collecting boyfriend donkey punched her into a nap.

Love,

Dotty


I miss the 70’s.