Years ago when I was teaching an adult
school English Composition course I was having trouble with a rather
arrogant Chinese student. He had insisted on taking a higher level
class than he was ready for and he was keeping the rest of the
students back. I wasn't doing the best job of concealing my
annoyance. He approached me after class trying to make nice and
commented, “You fat. Like to eat a lot, eh?” I was mortified
until I realized that from his cultural perspective he was noting my
prosperity in a complimentary fashion and perhaps trying to illicit a
bit of compassion for his less privileged skinnier self. Despite my
cultural sensitivity I think I probably savored a sense of
comeuppance when I failed him.
When the Volvo was new and didn't stink
of dog and I could still afford to shop at places where's they'd put
the groceries in the car for you, a box boy asked me what I'd paid
for the car. I knew within a dime but he may as well have asked me
what I weighed. I would have flat out refused to answer the poundage
question but in the matter of the car I just muttered inanely, “I
don't know. My husband bought it for me.” It was easier to sound
like a helpless pathetic ninny than provide a dollar figure or get on
some high horse about the vulgarity of asking about what things cost.
Although the price of a Volvo, unlike my weight, is not exactly a
closely guarded state secret. Thank God they don't have scales at the
DMV to nab those of us who interpret “weight” to mean “what I
wish I weighed.”
“See a Little Light,” alternative
rocker Bob Mould's memoir, ain't Proust but Mould is remarkably
candid with regard to money. I am always curious about dollar
amounts pertinent to fields other than my own and Mould is very frank
about how recording deals are structured and how much he's earned for
his music. I wonder if Mould set out intentionally to defy this long
standing taboo against being frank about money or if he is naïve to
the extent that he just doesn't know it's not done. Nevertheless,
he's made more money than I would have thought, even being rock
royalty and all.
I am culturally predisposed not to
discuss fat and money although I am finally getting it into my head
that a surfeit of the former and shortage of the latter do not
evidence a lack of character. I inherited from my mom the
association of feelings of self worth with thinness. Dad's Depression
survivor message was that a person's worth to the universe is
calibrated based on his bank balance. I mastered the art of making
excuses to bill collectors lest I not be perceived as a loser but
have recently discovered that the simple response, “I don't have
the money,” doesn't garner any disrespect. And even if it did,
does it really matter if a debt collector thinks I'm a deadbeat?
Still, my weight is known only by me and the lady who weighs me at
Weight Watchers.
Despite being able to disentangle my
self image from issues of fat and finance to some extent, I'm putting
a lot of energy into losing the fifteen or so pounds that will render
me normal on the BMI scale and I did buy a mega-millions lottery
ticket. I do not consider myself a bad person because I weigh too
much and earn too little but there certainly is lingering neurosis on
both fronts. I try not to lay this on the kids but I embarrass them
by loudly reading nutrition labels for fat and carb content whenever
we go shopping and morph into Ilsa She-Wolf of the S.S. when a light
is left on in an unoccupied room. So many of the little thrifty
gestures my mom made, and I ridiculed, I've now adopted. I am a
coupon fiend and will shop with four or five different purveyors in
order to get the best available prices.
For all the hangups regarding fat and
money that I've inherited from my parents, I have also inherited the
firm belief that hospitality always trumps all and that anyone who
visits my home will find a nicely set table and copious good food.
This is has always been non-negotiable, much to the chagrin of the
introverted Himself who claims that he cannot remember his own
parents ever serving a meal to a guest. This strikes me as
unbelievably weird but probably also for the best because his
mother's idea of a vegetable side dish was to open a can of peas,
stick a spoon in it and throw it on the table. While I cannot
overstate Himself's distaste for entertaining, I will add that after
over twenty years the gigantic force of my will has prevailed and he
adroitly runs through the motions of a genial host.
Joe College was unable to make a
meaningful connection with the work-study office at his school. He
tries to be frugal and apologizes often that we still have to
subsidize him. There have been school and car repair expenses though
and I have been quite unsubtly sending him summer job listings from
Craig's List every day. Actually, a couple times a day. He is off
school this week and reports to me that Redlands is dull as dirt,
which having spent four years there myself, is not an astounding
revelation. The boy intends to stay on campus and work on a project
with some friends but the dining hall is closed, the dorm is empty
and they are all broke. He asks if he can come home with a friend
for a few days. Later in the day this becomes two friends and he
shows up at dinnertime with two boys and a girl.
I prepare a big Mexican feed and it is
obvious that the kids have been on limited rations for a couple days
and plates are heaped high. The guests are gracious, funny and
highly appreciative of homemade eats. Knowing that the dining hall
on campus doesn't open again until Monday I presume our houseguests
will be with us for the better part of a week which means assembling
a big meal every night and making sure that breakfast and lunch
supplies are in the larder. With three guests, Spuds is displaced
from his bed and relegated to the sofa until I get up at 4:30 and he
is sent upstairs to take my spot next to his dad. Due to the limited
capacity of our refrigerator I shop for a dinner at a time and after
taco night comes an enormous bowl of pasta and a platter of Italian
sausages and I mentally plan the feed for the next night. However,
during the slurping up of spaghetti it is announced that the crew is
returning to Redlands directly after dinner. They are terrific kids
and it is a pleasure to have them around. It is wonderful that the
boy, who wasn't sold on college at all, has made such wonderful
friends. I hope his manners are as nice as theirs when he mooches
off their parents. Running the crash pad is a nice distraction from
my careful eating plan (I am too tired to prepare a different meal
for myself and just eat the cheesy/carby stuff I make for the kids)
and my worries about scant receivables at the office. Still, I am
only slightly less relieved than Spuds and Himself when they hit the
road.
I've had a hard day and am driving
Spuds home and griping about a big order that's fallen through.
Spuds sees a grossly obese woman at a bus stop and says, “For all
of the things you worry about, at least you're not fat.” I'd
actually been thinking the same thing myself but how lucky I am to
have someone who wants to make me feel better and understands what's
important to me, even if it is shallow and superficial. I am
reminded of the need to keep my fretting in perspective by another
loved one too. My lovely niece is enduring chemotherapy for breast
cancer. She has lost her beautiful hair but has amassed an enormous
collection of wacky wigs. She reports on her blog that her doctor is
pathetically lacking in bedside manner and that the side effects of
the treatment are ghastly but she poses daily for a portrait,
modeling a different wig, which is posted to Facebook. Who'd have
thought anyone would look so adorable and serene in a blue wig?
Although I've gotten better at it, it
is a challenge still to remain mindful of my blessings. I end another
week with the lights on at the office and a Body Mass Index just a
nonce away from normal but best of all is that I have heroes like
Spuds who knows what makes me tick but does not judge. And his big
brother who was apprehensive about starting college but stuck it out
and flourishes. Plus there's niece Cari in Grass Valley who's turned
unimaginably bad fortune into wig flipping fun. I'm winding up here
now and heading home for the first real Shabbat after a few weeks of
travels and other obligations. The table will be set although the
meal is mainly college kid leftovers. Number one son is back at
school and number two is planning to beat it as far away as humanly
possible next year. I'll still entertain, and although it bristles
every fiber of his being, Himself will be the gracious host,
indulging me in this and in so many other things that must rub him
the wrong way and try his patience. Someday I may be a size eight.
Maybe my ship will come in and there will be extra money to throw
around. And, yes, I would be relieved and happy but now, when I take
a moment to drink it all in, even pudgy and poor I must be the
luckiest person on the planet.
Shabbat Shalom
2 comments:
"Flip Your Wig" is a Husker Du song, which Bob Mould sung, of course, so a nice tie-in to Cari's daily display! I'm glad my parsimonious light-switch patrol has spread to your bailiwick. And, that you're contemplating having Leo earn his own pocket change and gas money. He has three years left, so perhaps he will find a work-study job by then. As for afterwards, well, he has two liberal arts grads to guide his career opportunities, certainly. Keep up those five-mile hikes. The dogs await your formidable leash. xxx me
Smoke and mirrors, my dear, smoke and mirrors. (NOT cigarette smoke!!!)
Post a Comment