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March 19, 2008

Dr. Drew

I just finished an exciting interview with Dr. Drew about Obama's brilliant race speech yesterday. Dr. Drew is not only incisive about sexuality and addiction but he had some very interesting things to say about race and politics as well.

I'm still upset with the big bookstore chains. They don't seem to be stocking my book very well. If you'd like to help, please stop into your local bookstore and make sure that they have plenty of copies. If they don't, don't leave until they order some.

This is Columbia's Spring break and I had been flirting with the idea of getting some sun somewhere. Alas, the kids don't have break now and their mom is in Germany visiting her boyfriend so she couldn't fly up from Georgia and watch them so I"m here in Manhattan in the cold rain. Oh well. Spring is coming and Spring in Manhattan is magical.

February 26, 2008

Phew!

The kids have been down visiting their mom, grandparents and cousins in Georgia all week. I've been working like a fiend trying not to miss them too much but when they missed their flight Sunday and didn't arrive till this morning I thought I'd burst. They arrived at 9 in the morning at Newark and it took me an hour and a half door to door to get there. That's exactly how long it took them to fly from Atlanta to Newark. I got up at 6:45, got out of the house at 7, took the #1 to the #2 express subway to Penn Station and then New Jersey Transit light rail to Newark Airport. I brought with me their backpacks for school and four packs of Pepperidge Farms Goldfish because it was Ava's day to bring snacks for the class. At the airport train station I took the monorail to their terminal and picked them up. They always look paler, oddly different after I haven't seen them for more than just a few days. The stewardess said they'd been fantastic on the plane and I beamed. Then I reversed the transit process with them, dropped them off at school and then splurged on a cab to get myself home with all their luggage. Four hours of non-stop action.

Once home I had time to shower, write this, put up a HuffingtonPost blog and now I'm running off to office hours at Columbia and then I teach for three hours and then I pick up the kids from school and they I'm going to a book reading tonight at a place that I will give a reading myself next month.

I'm not complaining. I like being busy. And just the fact that they are back safe with me lets my heart rest a bit.

February 15, 2008

The Day After That Day with All the Hearts

I was a bad dad yet again. On Wednesday night I hunted for Valentine's Day cards for Chet's first-grade class. Ava, at nine, said she was too old. All the drugstores in my New York neighborhood didn't have anymore of those kitschy packs that haven't changed since the '60s: puppies with freakishly large eyes and elongated tongues, blushing little girls in pigtails crossing their legs and their arms. I would have settled for Bart Simpson or Spongebob but everyone was out of everything. Chet said forget it and I was relieved. I figured this being a New York City public school not everyone would have made batches of homemade Valentine mini-scones wrapped in homemade organic paper like the super moms at Ava's star-studded private elementary school back when we were living in L.A.

I was wrong. Well, they weren't as homemade or as organic but everybody but us brought in something. After school, Chet, bless him, didn't berate me, seemed much less embarrassed by our lapse than I was. It's funny, he can flip out, hurl his body to the floor and make like Curly in a shrieking, teary, bicycling circle on the floor, because I decided on spaghetti instead of macaroni and cheese, but being the only cheapskate on Valentine's Day didn't phase him.

And then Ava, who hadn't wanted to do anything special, now asked me what special plans I'd made. I told her every day was Valentine's Day with us but Chet just groaned and said Mrs. Willner the music teacher tried to pull that one too.

Although I'd written a long Valentine to the kids that I was trying to place in the Times or NPR, I hadn't even gotten them a card of their own. The essay is very sweet but not anything a first and fourth grader could understand. In it I say that even after my wife leaving me and after all the romantic misadventures since then, I'm still an incurable romantic. It's just that now I'm an incurable romantic about my kids. The debt that I owe them can't be repaid by chocolates and a card.

Nevertheless, I had to do something. We eat out at restaurants several times a week so that wouldn't be special at all. That's when I had the idea of actually cooking something for them. Ava is addicted to French fries so as I entered the subway I had the bright idea of cooking hamburgers shaped as hearts and her favorite frozen steak fries. Once home Ava helped and shaped the patties. We three ate on the dining room table instead of the kitchen table for perhaps the second time ever. It's usually just the place where they do their homework. I pulled out the cloth napkins and we sipped lemon-lime flavored seltzer in champagne flutes. We held hands and each said a sort of grace. Theirs were quasi-religious copies of what their grandparents say down in Atlanta at Thanksgiving. Me, the Zen Buddhist, I just told them that I loved them very, very much and always would, even when they're screaming and yelling and driving me nuts. Sure, it was all very lovely, but also a little sad. I keep telling myself that we don't need another person to complete our little family and usually, I swear, we don't. But there at that big round table, too big for just the three of us, with Ava east, Chet west and me holding down the north, I felt that someone, somewhere was missing.

February 13, 2008

Slush

And I thought I was used to East Coast winters after my seventeen years in LA. I'd forgotten how these late-winter storms can sap your will to live (or at least go outside). Making matters harder, Chet is in a howling phase. At least once a day he throws a fit about something. This morning I was a cruel monster and his worst enemy and he wasn't making me a Valentine's Day card because I made him wear his snow boots in the slush. He insisted that his sneakers would actually keep his feet drier. Not exactly the way I like to wake up but I tried to remain calm and dump him off at school. Of course ten minutes later he's holding my hand and calm as can be. I wish I could scream and yell and then just let it pass again as easily as he does. His fury is like a storm in the tropics, intense but brief and soon the sun is shining hot again. He and I are also big Star Wars fans so I think the next time he flips out I will pretend to be an evil Sith Lord urging Annikin or Luke to feed on his anger and join the dark side. Let's see if it helps control his rage.

January 30, 2008

Yikes

Being both super busy and broke is an odd sensation. I'm reminded of the old Louis Jordan swing song that used to be on my answering machine when I was in my twenties: "If you're so smart...how come you ain't rich."

I'm doing everything I can to get the word out on the book. I just started a Facebook group, Bedtime Stories, and I wrote a humor piece that I'm hoping Vanity Fair will run and God knows what else. At the same time the semester is just starting up again and my film grad students pay too much money (about $40K a year!) to have one of their profs be absentee. And then there's taking care of the kids.

Oh, yeah. Them.

I'm getting lazier and lazier. I used to get up at seven, make breakfast and take them to school but if I don't get eight hours sleep I'm crankier than Chet when he hasn't eaten or slept. I was up till midnight answering emails and writing after having taught and taken care of the kids after school so at seven I was still wupt. I woke them up then went back to bed for a half hour and at 7:30 when I got up I had Chet get his own breakfast. Actually the pediatrician had just asked if he could already and I kind of assumed that he would slosh milk all over the floor. Instead, he did pretty well (except he poured a lake of milk into his bowl). Ava, meanwhile, never goes anywhere, does anything, without a book in her hand.

January 15, 2008

Back Home

I kept saying, "Back home," in LA and my friends there were convinced that I was talking about my house there (that I am selling, severing my ties to that city for good). They can't seem to realize that I have moved back home to New York, the place I called home throughout my 17 years in LA.

It's thirty degrees here but it feels balmy to me. The 50 degrees in LA with just a sweater is a lot colder than 30 in Manhattan with a down coat.

I've got one more week of vacation before school starts up again and I'm spending it dreaming about my book coming out, finally. Rodale has finished copies but I haven't seen one yet. We've gone back and forth on the cover. I can't wait to see how it finally looks. i've never worked so hard nor so long on a book. Now I really want the world to hear about it.

My kids were besides themselves to see me again. I missed them desperately while I was in LA. Their mom left the next day and she left them each Valentine chocolate hearts on their beds. I was hoping that she would stay longer, a friend had even offered her a free apartment, but the kids loves the chocolate. Moments later Ava run up to me with a paper napkin. I just smiled, didn't get it. Then I noticed that the square was tilted like a diamond and the top corner had been folded in and a notch at the top. She'd made a heart out of the napkin. My own heart swelled. I'll keep it forever. It was such a simple gesture but so pure.

December 26, 2007

Xmas with my Exes

My daughter and my son, now nine and six, have lived with me since my ex-wife left five years ago, but every Christmas since, except the one when I was briefly engaged and forbidden to, we have all spent together with her family in Social Circle, Georgia.

My ex-wife reminded me soon after we separated that Christmases for her as a young girl, after her parents had split up, were forever ruined. No matter how many Growing-Up Skipper dolls she unwrapped she could never forget that her dad's only appearance that day would be by phone.

I spent my first Christmas with my now ex-in-laws when we first started dating, seventeen years ago. My parents had both passed away years before so I had no real family obligations of my own.

My ex in-laws live in a vast log cabin on its own tiny lake and that first year they put me in the room next to their daughter's, far from their own, so they had plausible deniability about my true whereabouts. Christmas Eve four years later I slipped a ring into the bottom of a champagne flute and she very nearly swallowed it till I pointed it out and she shrieked.

We were married for eight years and when we divorced we did our best to separate without rancor, each committed to shielding our children from the worst of the trauma. When she first brought up the idea of me still coming to Christmas I had no idea how I would handle it.
As I did every year I flew out a few days after them, this time cutting it close and arriving on Christmas Eve. My ex and I slipped out to the Mall of Georgia to load up on presents and the drive there was the longest we'd been alone together since she'd moved out.

When we returned home Carmen and I kissed the kids to bed and then wrapped all the presents in front of the television. She hadn't had a TV since she moved out so was wide-eyed at the new reality shows. Finally, we were done and she disappeared up the stairs to her room. I ate most of Santa's cookies and drank almost all of his milk.

I won't say it was easy, that first Christmas Eve apart, sleeping in the guest room again, surrounded by more ghosts of Christmas past than ever haunted Ebenezer Scrooge.
And yet the morning after made it all worthwhile. I immediately recognized in the eyes of my kids the purity of the joy that I knew on that day when I was their age, still untainted by the disappointments that, with time, will meet us all.

Five years later I love my Christmases with my adopted family.

Rabid, runaway reindeer couldn't keep me away.

December 07, 2007

Knocked up

Typical Friday night for me. I'm working feverishly in my office while Ava and Chet and Ava's friend Livia try to decide on what movie to get from pay-per-view. I made the mistake of telling Ava that her old best friend Maude, Judd Apatow's daughter, is in Knocked Up so she was begging me to watch it.

"I wanna see Knocked Up! I wanna see Knocked Up!" she howled.

"Ava," I said. "You're nine. There is no way I will let you watch that film." By the way, the version she had highlighted on the screen was not even the unrated Knocked Up. "You wouldn't like it, it's all about sex."

"But I love sex!" said Chet, who is six. "I was born from it!"

When he figured that out and exactly what he figured out is anybody's guess.

I had them watch License to Wed instead. I usually have a no Barney and no Robin Williams policy in my house that is strictly enforced, but this time I caved.

November 19, 2007

Bad Dad

Chet says that I'm cruel. I try to explain that I am "strict" but not cruel. Cruel implies I take glee in punishing them. He still insists that I"m cruel. Of course whenever he goes on about my cruelty Ava makes a point of telling me how wonderful I am and that I'm the nicest daddy in the world...until she doesn't get exactly what she wants and then she cries and Chet laughs.

So the times when they are both in the same mood I relish. And to be honest they often are. After seeing Mr. Maggorium's Wonder Emporium (it begins wonderfully, is worth seeing, however the ending is lazy and dumb.) the kids rambled down the sidewalk, Ava holding Chet by the hood because he was her horsey. I just love how they love each other.

Ava is 9, Chet 6 and they still take a bath together every Sunday. I told Chet that pretty soon Ava won't want to anymore and he looked devastated. Naked is his favorite state. He flops around his bed with his balls hanging out and I explained to him that his sister didn't need the show. He explained that parents are used to seeing their kids naked. I concurred but said his sister was different and the babysitters could be spared the show as well. He is so cute though, as skinny and busy as a spider.

November 01, 2007

Last Day With the Ex

It is so oddly familiar having her under the roof again, but also I feel so distant. I'm in my office re-working the book that describes the absence of her and yet I hear her in the other room like a ghost making a batch of lentils (the kids favorite). Whenever she comes she makes a lot so we can freeze it. And yesterday she was making a sandwich for herself and offered to make one for me.

It is so odd being so close with someone I was once so close to. Yesterday, trick-or-treating with the kids, we passed a restaurant, Ruby Foos, on the Upper West Side. Back when we'd first met it was called Ernie's and I told her that I had taken her there on our first real date. It was there that we first realized that we had the same birthday. I still remember the chill that went through me.

This time I reminded her and she said, "Aww," but with a hint of forced sarcasm.

In general we don't really speak much even at times like now when we're the only two around. She was watching, "Tell Me You Love Me," on HBO and I just couldn't sit there and watch it with her. Though the show is pretentious and kind of boring (though Ally Walker is one of the great actresses of her generation), it would be too heavy to watch married couples go through their problems and fuck sitting next to my ex. I like a good personal story as much as the next guy but even I couldn't subject myself to that.

October 26, 2007

Alone with the Book

My ex-wife arrived last night. Her plane was supposed to arrive at ten but didn't get in till midnight. I left a key downstairs with the doormen and went to bed but Chet woke me up at midnight, so excited. He had left a note on the Aero bed in front of their bunkbed for his mom to wake him when she got in but she still hadn't showed. I told him to go back to bed. Then at one I was awakened by the front door buzzing. She doesn't have a cell phone so I couldn't have texted her about the key I'd left.

Just as I headed for the door Chet burst out of his room and beat me too it. I heard but didn't see them both squeal when they saw each other. She turned the corner down the hall coming toward me and Chet was reaching up for her to pick him up. At six, he's a little big for her but she bent down, asked him to jump and he did. My ex was crying as she held him and the noise woke up Ava and my ex hugged her too.

I bid them all good night and went back to bed.

In the morning I let her get the kids ready but I helped a bit and pointed out what cereals they liked and how Ava likes granola and honey mixed with her vanilla yogurt. Then I packed my things and drove out here to East Hampton for a marathon session of revising the book. When I told Ava that I was leaving she pleaded with me to stay. I told her I had to get this work done, it is so far behind already, but their mom doesn't leave until after Halloween so the kids will have a lot of days of the four of us together.

I realize how special it is to see the four of us under one roof and am committed to making it fun and sweet for them.

October 13, 2007

Mars 2110

For a guy trying to hide from his forty-fifth birthday tomorrow, what the hell was I thinking taking my kids to Mars 2110? It's a campy, broken down Mars-themed kids' restaurant that might have been a little bit interesting in 1998 when it first opened but now looks about as convincing as a high-school haunted house.

As often happens on Saturdays we didn't leave the house till noon. I worked on my book last night till 1:15 and slept till 9:30. Ava had a sleepover and they were contented in the morning watching the High School Musical sing-along. I've got to tell you the parts that I saw were fantastic. The production numbers spectacular and inventive.

Then I checked the mail and found a small envelope from American Express. Never a good sign. They'd screwed up on one of my convenience checks, this one my rent here in New York. Great.

Then I took the kids to Times Square to buy Ava's keyboard for her new piano lessons. We were starving so I thought we'd duck into Mars 2110. She'd been there for a birthday party and I can never pass up kitsch. The Star Trek ride at the Vegas Hilton is fantastic and I was expecting something like that. Instead a weirdo in a mad-scientist wig named "Dr. Mars" gave us the Vulcan salute and welcomed us in, then we waited in a long line to enter the "teleporter" which was just more silver and gray painted crap. This one was supposed to be a flying saucer but was much worse for the wear. There was a screen in front for the motion ride that was no bigger than a flat screen TV and thirty of us crammed inside. Star Tours at Disneyland it was not. We just took off, flew through a worm hole and landed. WTF? There was no story at all. Did we get lost and end up visiting odd lands or fields of floating meteors? Nope. We just stepped out into a cavernous disco with red-painted walls, half-empty tables, the other half housing long tables of kids, parents, balloons and the odd roving out of work actor in an alien suit posing for pictures. I wonder if furries lust after these jobs? I swear that every table but ours was having a birthday so you couldn't take a bite of your $14 hamburger without having to sing Happy Birthday again.

The tables were chipped, the food uniformly lousy but for some reason my sadness left me and I started to laugh. Besides, they served Pepsi so how bad could it be?

And, my $14 hamburger came with $5 in game coupons so we went over to "cyberstreet" a section of the place with videogames and played air hockey, skateboarding, skiing, Star Wars and Ava rode a Harley. We emerged into the suddenly cold fall air, walked over to Sam Ash and bought Ava her first piano (in this case an electric keyboard).

October 11, 2007

My Kids' Present to Me

This is the first year that Ava, 9, has been old enough to realize when the actual day of my birthday was coming up and plan for it. As I've said earlier, the tricky part when you're a single parent is that you don't have any other grownup out there who can give the kids twenty bucks to buy a present. I'd be happy if they would just make something but Ava, especially, is keen on buying me something.

She had been hinting at what she wanted to get me for a while now but had no idea how much it would cost. The plan she and I devised was to have a babysitter go out shopping with them. When their mom called that night I had Ava ask her how much I would need to give the sitter for my gift. Their mom told them maybe $40. Ava told me that the store was near their school and suddenly I realized that Ava wanted to get me a watch from the watch and sunglass store by the subway. I didn't know she understood my obsession with watches. Nice watches. Really, really nice watches. There is a black dial Rolex Daytona (list price $10,000) out there with my name on it. I'm in love with my 1965 Rolex manual oyster and my Omega Speedmaster. I've got a Russian Submarine commander watch that looks great too.

There isnt' a watch out there for $40 that I'd want to wear but if she bought me one she'd be crushed if I didn't glue it to my wrist.

I pretended that I hadn't guessed and told her that watches OR sunglasses cost a lot more than $40 but that a homemade gift would be wonderful. She and her brother had already decided on homemade gifts for their mom (whose birthday we share).

Then the other day a noose was found on the door of another black professor at Columbia. I spent the entire afternoon reworking a piece for NPR on it. At the last minute they bumped it for space and this rainy day glued to my chair, not working on the book as I'd promised my editor, became a disaster.

The good part was that I had hired a nanny to pick the kids up from school so I could go down to NPR HQ and record. Instead, I'm having her shop with the kids. Chet told her he wants to go to a jewelry store and buy me a ring.

October 08, 2007

COLUMBUS DAY WEEKEND

It was the quintessential weekend of a single, single dad. Ava left Thursday night for a sleepover all weekend long. Chet and I miss her so badly. He asked and I let him sleep in my bed that first night. When I got into my king-sized bed at midnight he looked so adorable on his side my heart broke a little. Then rom around two to six in the morning I regretted my decision. It is very hard to sleep with a six-year-old boy’s feet in your face. I would move his feet away, he would grumble, and move, and yet moments later his feet would return to my nose. Then, just as I finally gave in to sleep I was reawaked by the fast slurping sound of Chet sucking his thumb. We’ve been working on it for years now and he sleeps with a sock on his hand, usually, but this night I forgot. I try so very hard to stay positive with him, as all the books say, but he is so magnificent I just can’t understand why he can’t quit. I get scared for him in the future. My grandfather, whom Chet so resembles, was an alcoholic, (and later diagnosed by his psychiatrist son, my dad as manic-depressive). I know it’s neurotic of me but between my grandfather and my ex-wife (not to mention my own rather eccentric brain) I worry that he and his sister are carrying a hefty amount of crazy genes inside of them.

Then Friday night my friends from LA came into town and wanted to go out. I called the sitter for ten at night, a time, usually, when I’m winding down (or blogging) to be in bed around midnight. Instead I was cabbing downtown to pick them up and then further downtown to pick up their friend Sharon and from there all the way down to the Lower East Side to drink at Schillers and then on to SoHo and La Esquina.

From the outside it looks like a normal taqueria but a guy manning a door inside let’s you inside and down to a basement where you walk through the kitchen and finally find yourself in a very cool club. We had more drinks there. Intermittent pain was radioing from my big toe. My gout, brought on by the cyclosporine I take to keep my kidneys chugging along, forbids a lot of drinking so I sipped a lot but never finished a drink. That’s a probem. Being the only sober person in a club is not very fun. I’m already a snot and the loud drunken braying was none too inviting. Still, a half-dozen Swedish girls picked me to ask for advice on where to go out that night and instead of saying, “Sisters, you’re asking the wrong professor-blogger-novelist-screenwriter,” I faked being a hipster for a good fifteen minutes.

The place was packed when we first arrived (around 1) but twenty minutes later everyone had cleared out. We left with a friend of a friend who works there who marched us across town to their sister joint, The Box. It’s supposed to be the coolest place in town but I found it overpacked and the music very top 40. I left before the burlesque started. I’m told that the night before it was a naked male dwarf.

By three-fifteen I was home. Chet was in his own bed so I got some sleep.

The next day I was wrecked and groggy till two. Then my friend Steve called and said Chet and I could hitch a ride with them apple picking two hours north of the city. It sounded a little late in the day for such a trip but like most New Yorkers without a car, we never pass up a chance to ride in an automobile without a running meter.

I got Chet in a cab down to Riverside Drive and 96th, the mouth of a West Side Highway exit and soon thereafter Steve and his family pulled up in their Volvo SUV. I was in the back with Chet and Mason, their 9 year old. In the way back was Bennie, their five year old math genius and their six-month old black lab, Thor. Thor began just sporadically licking my ear but soon the seventy-pound puppy scuttled over the seat and settled in my lap. I don’t think I ever was a dog person until the hour I spent cradling this very happy, big baby. Traffic was bad and though it was beautiful out of the city, turkey buzzards lazed overhead and the trees were finally starting to change up here, there was absolutely no way that we’d make it to pick apples before the place closed at five. Dominique, Steve’s wife, who was driving, was riding him, justifiably but mercilessly and I loved watching the marital sparks. She had suggested that we all spend the night in a motel but I broke it to her that I had made plans to see my LA friends again that night.

It reminded me of what I used to have. It was clear to me that for the rest of their marriage she would have, “That time you took us apple picking,” ready to pull out any time he acted up.
So there we were racing the setting sun only to arrive at the Weeds Orchard somewhere in Orange County, New York, at 5:15. The parking lot was still full however. Steve and I rushed out with the kids while she parked. I was ready to make up some sort of excuse, have the boys talk funny and tell the farmers that they were slow so have mercy on them.


So as I was trying to slip past the farmers before they stopped us the friendliest guy you ever saw sliced a freakishly large apple for us and offered us slices. Wow. He told us they were Jonagold apples and that they’d be open for another hour for picking. Steve ran back to tell Dom and save his marriage.

I grabbed some sacks and a wagon and raced the kids around the back of the barn but there were a lot of people still he didn’t want to leave the perfect looking farm and the pond and the reddening leaves on a day hot as July in October. The boys raced from tree to tree picking dozens of apples regardless of their state. Dom and Steve and Thor joined us and I bought a jug of cider, the very best cider I have ever tasted and having grown up in Michigan, the land of Autumn, I consider myself an apple cider sommelier. Steve bought huge pumpkins as well as a zucchini as large as a smallish torpedo.

We drove back home and had dinner at a sprawling Greek diner. I was near comatose with happy exhaustion in the car, wondering how I could excuse myself of going out again tonight. That’s when talk of a sleepover erupted. It seemed that Mason and Bennie were spending the night at my house. We’d get in around nine, I’d hurry them to bed and then the sitter comes at ten again.

I was happy for them all and it really was no trouble. Steve and Dom have been so wonderful to my little family that the least I could do was let them get their freak on for a night. Besides, I was curious to see how a roomful of boys differed from the roomful of girls I’ve had when Ava’s had a sleepover.

As soon as we entered the house I ordered the kids out of their clothes and into bed. They were all filthy but it was nine-thirty and bathing them all was beyond my strength.

I went to my office to see about the sale of my car when I heard what sounded like pots clanging or in general a small battle. I tried to ignore them and concentrate. It seemed that the car title that I FedExed to the guy helping me sell my car had disappeared in the bowels of FedEx and my internet, internet phone and cable TV (all connected) were all kaput. When the noises sounded more life threatening I ran to investigate, holding my thumb over my cellphone’s mouthpiece so the FedEx guy would’t hear me screaming.

Chet had light sable, Mason a plastic cutlass and Bennie a Samurai sword and they were all doing their best to draw blood. I hollered but they were so overtired and so amped up that words seemed to have no effect whatsoever. I could sense that they saw that since I was also on the phone, how serious could it be.

I hung up on FedEx and laid down the law. Then the whining and howling and negotiating from everyone erupted. “I’m hungry,” “I’m thirsty,” “I can’t sleep.” I just said no to everything and started to dress for the night and kept saying no after I’d turned off the lights and they took turns coming in to my room with yet another lament. The sitter came at ten and I left at ten-thirty and they were down.

And now the nighttime portion of our show was just beginning. Somehow I got a second wind in the $20 cab downtown. Oh, the cab. It should have cost almost thirty but the cabbie was out of paper so the ride would be off the books. I loved it. Those damn meters stress me out. They remind me of the hourglass the wicked witch of the north uses to see how much time Dorothy has left to live.

Back to La Esquina again and then to yet another of their sister bars, 205, which I loved. Great music as we entered. The night was full of possibilities.

September 30, 2007

October Is the Cruelest Month

I can't tell you for how many years October, my birth month, has brought with it pressure, if not outright crisis. My poor car is still unsold though it shines like a new penny. All my various writing projects are all coming due and at me at the same time. I am without a girlfriend and in two weeks I will be forty-five years old.

My friend Greg Tate shares my birthday and he will be fifty and friends of his are throwing a day-long celebration. Luckily it is not actually on our birthday so I can go. For our birthday I would like nothing more than to hole up in a fleabag hotel room for twenty-four hours with a bottle of vodka and a pocket full of powerbars. I think that could be a great business. Sort of like those love hotels that charge by the hour, these hotels would have birthday specials and Valentine's Day special for singles where you check in on the eve of the event, they give you unlimited use of the minibar for 24 hours, and then at the stroke of midnight after the horror has passed you stumble outside either one day older (or having survived another Valentine's Day).

Oh yeah, I almost forgot. I've got two kids to take care of. I can't exactly leave them a big bowl of food while I pity party.

It is also true that they are very powerful anti-depressants. I was in the middle of cataloging the various stressors on my life right now when I heard Chet rolling my skateboard up down our long hall. He was supposed to be taking his shower. As I prepared to scold him I looked up and saw my six-year-old float by on his knees, very naked, one arm thrust forward as if her were crossing the Delaware.

My friends, especially when their wives are out of town, tell me, "I don't know how you do it." I invariably shrug and say it's just the hand I was dealt. But the truth is more nuanced. It is much harder. Raising my kids is more my full-time job than my other full-time job of teaching at Columbia or my other full-time job of finishing this book, revising that play, re-starting that screenplay. And then there are my part-time jobs of an internet startup that I am crazy about and writing for the HuffingtonPost and NPR. Not to mention my hobbies of yoga, the gym and overseeing my leaky kidneys.

September 24, 2007

Good News/Bad News

I will have to be better prepared in the future for the deluge of responsibilities that fall on me in the fall. The kids and I both begin our school years. Also, I am in the process of selling my house and my car, the lovely car on my home page, is also up for sale.

Funny how I was never more relaxed this summer, living in my old house in staged furniture. I felt like the kids in "The Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. ..." who ran away and lived in the Met. Only it used to be my house.

The big thing I had to do in the fall was go back and see my nephrologist. I see him every two months. A few weeks ago I was feeling super lousy (and wrote about it here) but on Friday when I went to see him I felt swell. The day before I had my blood drawn so that he could tell me how my beans were holding up.

I had been hovering around 20.6% kidney function (for African-Americans, 16% for everyone else). The cut off to be on the transplant list is 20%. My creatinine then was 4.1. Normal is 1 or so. Now it is 4.4. Hooray! I can get on the list now.

I feel fantastic, in general, and don't have time to lay in bed and wait for the new kidney they shove in to heal. Still, it's good to be on the list.

My dad was already on dialysis when his creatinine was my this high. Sword of Damocles.

And yet, if I get (I guess, "when I get" is a little more realistic) I will be able to eat what I want again. That's something. And Alonzo Mourning seems to be doing great. Former San Antonio Spur Sean Elliot too.

I just wish that when they put the new organ inside you it would be somehow better than human. As long as I'm being cut open I'd like to get a little bionic boost.

The kids have no idea what's going on and when friends try to talk to me about it in front of them I shut them up. I'm all they've got on the regular and I can't have them worry that I won't always be around.

They are magnificent and have already been through enough.

September 18, 2007

Summer Is Done

Summer seems like a dream to me. It feels as if a starting gun went off the day after Labor Day and I'm racing and out of breath but I'm in a marathon not a sprint. Not good.

School starts for the kids but it also starts for me and then there the afterschool hell that I am wrestling with. I want so much for them but I don't have anyone to pick them up and take them around from Tae Kwon do to ballet to quantum mechanics for kids. Look, I am determined not to be one of those overscheduling parents but I also don't want to deny them. Juggling it all with my class schedule is boiling my guts.

But I am very proud of the fact that I am feeding them better. It is no longer just leftovers. I actually turned on the oven. All right, I didn't bake anything but the cranberry chicken I bought at the grocery store I heated in the oven instead of the microwave. I also heated some roasted potatoes that the store had prepared. I'm sure I could have done them myself and will. Soon. I swear.

But I did make the caprese myself, the tomatoes were fresh from Ava's friend's grandmother's garden and I bought fresh basil and mozzarella di bufala fresca. It was great and they love it.

When their mom called to say hello (as she does most every evening) I made them tell her how well they were eating. She's a raw vegan.

After dinner we all built Chet's birthday present. A 3D pirate ship puzzle. It was pretty difficult, hundreds of pieces and nothing written just color coded maps. After two hours I realized that I had made a huge mistake and was tempted to crush the thing but then I stopped myself and made myself finish it. I don't want him to abandon things just when they get difficult. I don't want that for myself either.
So, back to the phones. I have to find out when ballet meets and if I can find somebody to take Ava there.

August 26, 2007

Back in the Saddle Again

What a tumultuous summer it has been. I've laid on beaches in the South of France, East Hampton, Martha's Vineyard and Venice Beach. Now, as it is coming to a close I'm realizing that this summer I will never forget.

I am here in LA selling my house and my car. Everything is behind schedule so the car at least won't be sold until after I leave. I have gotten back into yoga, went surfing for the first time since January and have run the streets with friends nearly every night this month.

I also got dumped by Cristina, my girlfriend.

She was here for a week and things were rough. She had brought her friend with her and they were staying in a hotel. They had made these plans for this summer back in the spring when I had broken up with her. Then we got back together and spent a super romantic week together in Manhattan and the Hamptons and another week together with the kids in St. Tropez. When she arrived here in LA, however, something had changed and sure enough, the night before she returned to Italy she broke up with me.

I don't blame her at all. We have been long distance for three years and I am certainly not prepared to get married. She doesn't see herself as a new mom for the kids and she just got a job that will tie her more to Milan.

Still, this city has been the location for the worst heartaches of my life and those emotional memories have come flooding back to me. It was here in LA that my wife moved out on the kids and me. It was to here in LA that my French fiancee emailed me the letter telling me that we were through.

I don't blame Cris but it could not have come at a worse time for me. I feel as if I am in a small village surrounded by raging forest fires. The unsold car, the unsold house, my health, all are out there threatening.

it was a week ago that she told me and I am already better. We still text several times a day and still say I love you. Now, however, she is as free as she has allowed me to be, to find a more suitable and more permanent mate.

It's just that I am so terrible at dating. I really don't know how I will manage. Maybe this time I'll try mail order.

August 17, 2007

Back in L.A.

In general I'm not a big fan of going backward. Every August since the divorce five years ago the kids spend the month down South with their grandma and now with their mother as well. For four weeks I'm suddenly single and free, staying up late just because, seeing any movie I fancy (without having to calculate the entertainment to cost-of-babysitter ratio). I've spent the free time in France and one summer I visited Moscow and St. Petersburg. This year I was torn between Cartagena, Columbia, and Morro de Sao Paolo, Brazil.

So why the hell am I back here in L.A.?

Well I am selling my house and selling my car and Cristina is here for a bit with her friend Alessandra. I feel surrounded by violent tempests however I am actually pretty damn happy. Yes my house hasn't sold yet and I'm about to spend another small fortune and fixing it up some more. Yes my super car looks amazing with the new racing stripes and spoilers but did the distributor and the front suspension have to go out just as I was trying to sell it?

On the plus side I've gone to the gym and yoga twice and eaten the best food. L.A. is a cultural wasteland but a gastronomic wonderland. Last night it was Roscoe's House of Chicken and Waffles. The food is so good you want to weep and freeze time.

And the sun is hot and everywhere. I'm a bit burned out having spent so much time on beaches this summer but two months from now, when the sun is more shy, I'm going to miss this hot late afternoons.

I should be working on the rewrites now however my editor is on vacation and still owes me the last four chapters. I've turned back in the first four and have one here to correct that I am late on. The fall will be a mad dash to get quotes and the marketing machine in gear.

Still, in the midsts of this madness my freedom, the silence of this house that holds so many memories for me, makes every moment so damn poignant.

I miss my kids.

July 24, 2007

Back in the U.S.A.

I'm finally over the jet lag. I have had a wonderful time with the kids this summer but it has been a bit draining. We have been traveling so pretty much it has just been me taking care of them. In St. Tropez they were in a wonderful day camp on the beach half the day for a week out of the two that we were there. Now that we're back I needed a bit of a break so I flew Phaedre, my ex wife, up from Atlanta to see them. it's great for the kids and so much cheaper than paying for a babysitter all day here. I really have to get work done, finishing the book and finishing the rewrite of a script and that wasn't happening when I was on kid duty.

Phaedre, as I write this, is sleeping on the pull out sofa bed in the living room. The kids sleep with her instead of in their bunks when she's here. People keep asking me if it's weird and it's not. Ava hugs me even more than usual and whispers, "You're my best friend." I think she wants to not to feel jealous when she's hugging her mom. I am not at all and love how close they are even though they don't see each other very often. Ava had a sleepover Phaedre's first night here and I went out so it was just Phaedre and Chet for perhaps the first time in their lives. She and he baked together.

This morning I yelled into the other room, "Hey Phaedre...guess what...? We make some wonderful babies."

I said it in front of the kids. I won't them to realize that there is no hatred at all between us. We are partners in raising those two magical beings.

July 14, 2007

Almost Done With France

It's our last full day before flying to London to see a college buddy and his great family. I can't wait to show the kids Buckingham Palace and all that. I haven't seen it myself in years and years. I hear it's pissing rain (as they say there) while here on the Cote d'Azur the weather couldn't be more heavenly.

We spend the morning in the St. Tropez market. You have to get there before ten to get a parking spot but once there it's amazing. Everyone from all the neighboring towns descends on Place des Lices. It's Bastille Day today, the start of the French holiday season and there will be fireworks on the beach tonight. Cris and I will be having dinner on the beach so should get a great view. I'm not ready to go home but I guess all good things must come to an end.

July 12, 2007

A Lot Happening in the States

I guess I should leave the country more often. An NPR piece that I recorded just before i left aired last night. Here is the link if you missed it:

My play, Fly, went up at the Lincoln Center Institute last night and ended to two standing ovations. I'm so sorry I missed it. I can't wait to see the final show when I get back.

As for the NPR piece I played it for the kids on my computer and they were not at all impressed. All they said was, "That doesn't sound like you? Whey did they use someone else's voice." It didn't sound like me to me either. In real life I am much more of a mumbler.

Well, it's ten o'clock here and I need to get to work. Later the kids go for their sleepover. The resulting quiet will freak me out.

The other high point of my day will be la poelee des coquillages, pan-fried shellfish, and a glass of cold rose for lunch at the Moorea beach club followed by a late-afternoon nap on the beach. I'm trying to soak all this up now because a few days from now I'll be back sweating again in Manhattan.

July 11, 2007

Thank You All

I am overwhelmed by the positive response that I have gotten from the reprint of the article I had written for Match.com. MSN put it on their front page yesterday and I have received hundreds and hundreds of kind emails. I want to apologize to all of you to whom I have not personally responded but it is just not possible. I do want to say to all of you who have written that are in the same boat that we do have a special bond. Some very good friends of mine in New York are single parents themselves. Our experiences are so special that singles and co-parents often have a hard time relating.

As I have written here, the rewriting of the book is going well. We are still wrestling over the new title but it will be coming out in February of next year. If you subscribe to my mailing list I promise to keep you informed as to its progress. I try to update this site a few times a week and I try to post on the HuffingtonPost (mainly about politics) once a week.

It's a lovely, hot hot day here on the South of France. Cristina arrived with her maid and I just finished eating an amazing lasagna with the kids. Cris is off at the beach already. I will write for a bit and then join her.

Ava and Chet go to a great kids' camp right on the beach every afternoon and Ava has met a new best friend, an English girl also named Ava. There is talk of a sleepover before we leave.

I hope you all are having a wonderful summer as well.

--Trey

July 10, 2007

The Gang's All Here

The rewrites on the book are going so well! I am very very pleased.

It looks like the book will be called Bedtime Stories. I also love the title Hop on Pop: Dispatches from the Frontlines of Single Fatherhood.

What do you think?

This is one of the best vacations of my life. I feel that the kiddies and I are hitting our stride. In general we work together as smoothly as the Harlem Globetrotters. They are, however, insanely jealous of each other. I buy them an Orangina to share and Ava says, "I get to open it." And Chet immediately counters, "Then I get the first sip."

Cris arrives today with her maid Rupa so no more cooking and clothes washing for me for week. I so wish I could stay till the end of the month but I have to get back to New York to see the closing night of my play. Still, I write so well here, my thoughts as clear as the azure waters below us. I guess everyone loves the summer but I tel you it so turns me on.

July 04, 2007

Vive La France

I'm back here in my favorite place in the world, a beach house outside of St. Tropez in a little medieval village called Ramatuelle. I first came here on my honeymoon and have been coming back for the past thirteen or so years. The place I rent, old furniture, sagging beds propped up by slabs of wood, is still my favorite house ever, my daughter's too. She talks about it all year long. The house, and the vanilla yogurt you get in France. it's the peaches that kill me, all the fruit, really. You sink in your teeth and get a little bit drunk.

The house has held so many different permutations of my family. First my then wife and I and then I invited down a few couples, two of whom got married on the terrace the next summer. I remember sitting on that terrace one summer with Erika, my ex, and our friend Stacy. They were craving pot and we had none, just some herbs de provence, which they sell everywhere around here as souvenirs. It's a mix of oregano, basil and thyme, I think. I tried to convince them that it would have no effect on them but they smoked it anyway, a few puffs, at least and swore to the rest of us that they felt something. We were one big rolling party when we were single and then when Ava came the party continued. Ava had her first ice cream here, right before her second birthday. I insisted on chocolate for her first though seven years later she rarely orders it.

This year it's just Ava, Chet and myself in this big old house overlooking the Mediterranean. I can barely afford it but I don't really drink, don't spend money on anything really during the rest of the year. We three had ice cream today in the same place where Ava had her first and then I worked a bit and then we walked down to the beach at six and swam and played paddle ball and the kids made moats till 7:30. Only then was it getting a little chilly, but still bright out. We changed and drove up into the village for dinner with Caroline and two nice Americans, one named Trey, oddly enough. After the rabbit we finished off the meal with raspberries topped with fromage blanc and a dusting of sugar. It was better than sex.

You'd think I could die happy after a day like that but what weighs on me, stupidly, arrogantly, is that the HuffingtonPost I wrote till two last night and drove into town to post at the internet cafe barely registered on the post and has already disappeared. I wonder sometimes how hard my brain has to try to look past all the miracles in my life to dwell on the what did not go one-hundred percent my way?

June 27, 2007

Chet's Passport

All day long. All day long in the passport office. Four hours in the morning and then back for another hour in the afternoon to pick it up. The place looked like the fall of Saigon. Families of all hues, speaking all languages, camped on the floor, asleep on each other in fiberglass school chairs. All this because the government didn't get me my son's passport before we leave for vacation. They only had eight weeks to get it back to me. The kids had to miss their last day of school and cried and cried.

The highlight was Chet, however who said this to his sister. "You are the meanest sister in the world but I still want to marry you."

June 23, 2007

Ava's Birthday

My daughter has been planning her ninth birthday since she turned 8 and a quarter. If I heard the word, "Build-a-Bear" one more time I was going to scream. Her real birthday is in July so we just celebrated last week while school is still in session. I flew her mom up from Atlanta and we took Ava and four friends and her little brother to the biggest Build-a-Bear in the world, on the corner of 46th and 5th Avenue, the center of the universe. I have to say they treated her like a queen and she was so thrilled to have her parents together again. Chet has said that he wished, "you and mommy got un-divorced." I asked if he even remembered a time when we weren't together (she fled when he was six-months-old). Still, that was his wish.

Walking down Broadway I hold Chet's hand and their mom holds Ava's. There is a new hostess at my favorite French restaurant around the corner who is spectacularly beautiful. Whenever I pass by I try to make her fall in love with me with some variation on a magical glance. When we passed by, the four of us, the other day I dreaded that she will assume that we our marriage is still in tact. I wanted to go up to her and say, "Don't let appearances fool you. She left five years ago."

Her best friend from LA, Maddie, had come in for the party and spent the night. I had thought that she could go to school with Ava the next day but PS 87 didn't allow it, forcing me to play hooky. I took them and Chet to see a matinee of Nancy Drew, which was actually pretty good. Then, continuing my desire to visit New York like a tourist, we had lunch at the Hard Rock.

June 06, 2007

A new title for the book?

The publisher wants to change the title from "Father of the Year" to something that conveys how much the book is also about my (mis)adventures dating. Ideas that I've been tossing around are

Playdate

Cad Dad

Chutes and Ladders

Bedtime Stories, a memoir

I loved Playdate but both they and my agent hate it. For now I'm leaning toward "Bedtime Stories." The book really is about trying to balance my love life with my life as a single parent.

Speaking of dating, I have been going out a bit these days. I'm forty-four years old and I still feel like I'm sixteen when I'm out on a date (though I didn't have anything resembling a real date until I was around twenty). I can't write about any of these experiences now in these pages but my journal is full. I'm already starting to see the shape of my next book.

May 22, 2007

Don't Yuck My Yum

I understand Alec Baldwin's outburst, sometimes. Alice Miller in the Drama of the Gifted Child spells it out clearly, how your kids bring out the kid in you, for better and often for worse. Today I finally dragged myself to yoga and then wrestled on the phone with ordering racing stripes for my 1973 Mustang Mach I. I always thought they were a bit too Neanderthal, a bit too Dukes of Hazard for my taste but the guy helping me sell the car convinced me that I need them.

Then I raced to pick the kids up at school. Ava was so delighted to see me and to learn that Valeria was coming for a picnic with us. At school her name is pronounced Val-eria because her teacher mispronounced it and it stuck. Valeria is from Peru. And Ava was so happy when I took us to Chirping Chicken to get more roasted potatoes. She is potato addicted but I'm trying to ween her off of fries. Then near home I wanted to surprise them with Italian ices from those street vendors, the kind where you push and crumple the paper cup to push the ice into your mouth. The guy wasn't there today so I told them we were taking a little walk.

You would have thought that I had suggested that she shave her head.

"Daddy, nooooooooooooo! I want to go hooooooooome." she planted her feet on the corner and pretzled her arms. I kept walking but found myself having to holler back at her to trot to catch up. I hate yelling on the street but wouldn't go back for her. The mornings, sometimes, are just as loud. Everyone always tells me what a great job I'm doing with the kids, how they are perfect angels. My kids just have the good sense to rarely show their asses, literally and figuratively, to strangers. In the mornings, at least a few times a week, we three end up yelling at each other like a family in a Scorsese film.

O.K., that's overstating it. We don't dig into each other like Jake and Vicki LaMotta but we're yelling across the apartment and then one of them is crying about not wanting to take a shower first or getting a supposedly measurably smaller piece of sandwich. It really doesn't matter what it's about my kids can find a way to make it life or death.

So when I dragged Ava to the new gelato/crepe store I thought she would immediately smile. Instead she dug in her heels and refused to order ice cream while Chet and I dug into our own. Later I broke down and ordered her a crepe and she was happy and now Chet was pissed and I was drained and depressed. When we got home I retreated to my office. Chet was in the shower, Ava ran into my room naked singing "Seasons of Love" from Rent over and over.

Each chorus was driving me further to insanity. I just needed quiet and wanted to will them to bed without dinner, without even drying off, if it meant that I would get to be alone and at peace.

But something in her smile stopped me from snapping at her, stopped me from yucking her yum. She was so happy again and that's all I ever want for her. So I clicked on to Rhapsody, a music service I subscribe to and played the song loud,

"five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes five hundred twenty five thousand moments so dear five hundred twenty five thousand six hundred minutes how do you measure? measure a year"

I don't always take the high road. I've often yucked her yum. Just not tonight.

May 20, 2007

Chet's Wish

The three of us had an amazing Sunday. We met Ava's school friend at Riverside Park and I immediately noticed the kayers out in the Hudson and my heart lept. As a teenager who gazed out from in front of the 78th Street Boat Basin for years, pondering the mysteries of my miserable adolescence, I never once actually got out on the water. Ava and her friend Valeria were begging me to take them out. The only requirement for kids is that they can swim and Chet can't. He was learning well in California but for the last few weeks here at the Columbia pool he has shrieked uncontrollably. He even made himself sick enough to puke at school on the day of a lesson. He loves the water and is terrified of it. "I don't want to drown, daddy," he says. At least three times in his five years he's fallen into water deeper than him and freaked. Once in the Pacific at a birthday party. Phaedre nor the nanny was looking and he, at three, ran right in and gulped water. Another time at his godparents' covered pool he followed an old tennis ball that he thrown on the tarp covering the pool and slipped right in. I fished him out just as his head went underwater. At that same house he was in the hot tub (he loves water that he can stand in) and if he sat around the edge of the hot tub he was half out of the water. Well he jumped into the middle and I saw him completely underwater and yanked him out.

His sister is never more at home than when she's in the water. She's not the most athletic girl on land but in the water she's a mermaid. When she was two and change in St. Tropez she wandered off toward the rocks by the edge of the sea. I hung back enough to let her feel a bit independent, stepping behind her quietly. She toddled up on a rock and slipped in and I caught her hand before she even got her hair wet.

My dream is to for the three of us to surf Hawaii or Mexico together. I think of happiness I would die.

But today in the Hudson I took Ava's friend and then Ava out on the river, just for a quick spin but I was tempted to keep paddling to New Jersey. What a lovely adventure that would be.

Then at home I was shooting for their 8 o'clock bedtime but baths, dinner and Ava's hair kept us up almost till nine. Chet said, apropos of noting, "You know what my big wish is, daddy?"

"No, what?"

"That you and mommy would get un-divorced."

I asked him if even remembers us ever married. He was 8 months old when she left. He says he remembers the big orange house we lived in but I'm not sure if believe him. Earlier in the day he had said, "Raise your hand if you are differently divorced," and he raised my hand. I think Phaedre has told him that our divorce is different in that we're still friendly.

He's the most incredible and most handsome and charming five-year-old on the planet.

May 13, 2007

Mother's Day: A Variant

I loved washing out Chet's underpants today. I did. We'd just come from seeing Meet the Robinsons in 3D with two hot moms and three kids. At first the film was putting me to sleep, reminding me, unfavorably, of how many times I’ve been tortured to sit through crap like that remake of Flicka and Aquamarine. By the end of this new film, however, I was swallowing hard not to cry on myself while Ava snuggled into my bicep. When the lights came up Chet rushed over, his eyes huge, fighting not to cry himself.

"I wet myself."

"That's o.k." I said, and I felt his pants but they weren't wet in the front.

"I wet myself a lot. Poop."

Now Chet is five and three quarters and potty trained himself when he was just two, a full two years earlier than his big sister. This wasn't like him at all. I could smell him and instantly realized that my plan with the moms to go out for ice cream after the film was just horribly kaboshed. Waiting for the cab I asked him, gently, how this could have happened.

"I was just trying to fart. A really big humongous one and..."

"EEEEW!"

"Now Ava,” I told her. “It's no big deal.” Chet and I then reminded her of the time not so long ago that she didn't make it to the bathroom back in our apartment. As I fumbled with the key she peed on herself in the hallway howling and wailiung like blood-soaked Sissy Spacek in Carrie. Once inside I rinsed her off and calmed her down. This time at home I did the same with Chet, rinsing out his Superman underwear in the toilet and hosing him off in the shower. It wasn't all that messy and he didn't even cry.

I loved the moment not for itself but for what it reminded me of. The first thing I think of when I think of my own mother is not how she died young but the image of her hunched over a medieval stone public washroom, rinsing out my underwear in Florence, Italy, on one of the first days of our grand European vacation. I was maybe eight and had eaten something that had run right through me. Somehow I had gotten my pants off in public while she washed out my underwear in the ancient trough flanked by a half-dozen round Italian widows. She had studied Latin for years and as she and they washed she had tried, largely unsuccessfully, to communicate with them.

This Mother's Day the kids' mother is a thousand miles away, living with her own mother but promising to come up to New York soon. I'm forty-four and a half. This is my fifth Mother's Day without their mother, my thirty-sixth without my own. Every year since I've been single and with them it's been embarrassing for me. On Mother’s Day we eat out at any restaurant where we can find an open table and the other families look at the three of us like they want to write us a check instead of saving Sally Struthers’ children in Africa . I want to scream at them, "We're fine, damnit. Just finish your cheesecake and leave us alone."

To quote Rumsfeld, “You go out to dinner on Mother’s Day with the family you have…”

May 07, 2007

120/80

I hadn't checked my blood pressure in weeks although I am supposed to often and have a battery-powered home machine just like an old man. I had assumed that my dizziness, not dizziness, actually but dimness, was due to the anemia that I've been wrestling. Lately I've been feeling as if the blood was only arriving 3/4 up my brain and that was leaving me foggy and unfocused. When i checked the blood pressure cuff (here at my computer, I pull a lever and my Aeron chair descends with a whoosh and I prop my arm on my desk so it will be on the same level as my heart). The machine said 80/50. Normal is 120/80. The good news was that my fragile kidneys love low blood pressure (that's why I gobble three different blood-pressure lowering medicines a day). The better news was that I could have something salty for once. it's been eight years since I've been on a salt-restricted diet. At brunch I was hoping for a salty chicken soup or chicken pot pie, two of my favorites, but they weren't on the menu. Then Nora, my lovely former nanny, who was in town with Sean, the love of her life, ordered a bloody Mary. That's it! Tomato juice is laden with salt. I ordered one myself and felt as wicked as a heroin addict. I hadn't tasted one in about a decade.

Later that night I checked my blood pressure again. 140/70. Terribly, dangerously high. I'd taken all the bp meds I as allowed for the day. I went to sleep vowing to meditate again. I consider myself a Zen Buddhist but since the kids have been born my meditation has been spotty at best. This morning I checked it again: 138/74. Awful. That meant that all night long my poor kidneys were being firehosed from within. But a new day means more meds and an hour later I was down to 112/71.

Tomorrow I get an EKG and a stress test. My last hurdle before qualifying for the transplant list.

April 29, 2007

Back on the Chain Gang

I'm single again and though it was my idea I am not at all sure how I feel about it. I am p