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Hilary With One L

Hilary With One L

Hilary With One L

Hilary

Enough’s Enough

So school is all but here. I mean, it’s not even leaping out at me. It’s all up in my face like I owe it some money, plus interest. I find myself doing a nesting of sorts. In pregnancy, around month six or seven, the uncontrollable urge to clean, to prepare, to tie up loose ends and organize your existence overwhelms any other rational thoughts an expectant mother may have. I’ve got the uncontrollable urge to fill up my days doing things — something, anything, occasionally nothing.

I’ve pulled out recipes I’ve been wanting to try. I’ve baked, grilled, and fried, filling the fridge with all kinds of goodies for us to pick on throughout the week. I’ve gone to the zoo, the Botanical Gardens, Busch Gardens, and made a circuit of the outdoor YMCA pools. I’ve gone to the malls, the library, the variety of parks at our disposal. I’ve trolled all over Norfolk looking for mermaids. I’ve read at least half a dozen books in the past eight days. I’ve dug out old journals, deciphering my coded chicken scratch, amazed at my taut angst, quick wit, and ferocious vocabulary. I pulled a wad of love letters from DH down from the shelf and read one each night before I slammed down into sleep.

I’ve written more blog entries in the last couple of days than I did in the first half of the summer. I don’t have anything witty or interesting to say; I just want to feel as though I’ve done something these past several months.

April 24th, 2009. The last day of classes, my nursing school pre-requisites have been completed. The summer stretched out before me, a promise of beaches, lazy days, and shimmering heat. Nothing but potential and possibility. I know that when it’s all said and done, no one is tallying up how much time you spent organizing playgroups, how many trips to the bay you managed, how entertained and occupied you and your family were. There are no prizes for the most overstimulated, over scheduled family. I somehow can’t shake the feeling that I could have done something else, that we should have piled in the car and taken another mystery ride or trip to the zoo. I know there is one more mermaid that we haven’t discovered.

As school approaches, my GI tract starts pairing off and doing the pasodoble. My anxiety is steadily climbing in conjunction with the temperatures of late. I’m wondering if we’ve done enough? Did we have enough fun? Did we get enough sun and drink enough pool water? Did we hang out with our friends enough? Did we get bitten by mosquito as we chased the ice cream truck down the street? Did we eat enough ice cream? Did we grill as many steaks as we could have? And even if when the answer is yes, yes, and again, yes, would I really think it’s enough?

See, when school starts, my defense mechanism for this stress is to shut down and focus solely on the responsibilities at hand: the girls, DH, the house, myself (note the order there — what would Freud or Gloria Steinem say?). Until I can figure out what I need to do and the amount of effort I need to do it well, everything else falls to the ground. When my responsibilities start settling around me, when we turn the clocks back and everything gets thrown into darkness at 3:30 in the afternoon, I’m going to reach into my sack of summer memories. I’ll pull out our first foray into mermaid finding, our margarita and munchies night with the neighbors. I’ll wrap my hands around that brief glimpse of DH whirling the girls in the air, of Mo finally getting the hang of how to peddle her trike, of Co catching her first firefly. Those memories are going to have to sustain me until the next stretch.

It’s going to have to be enough.

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IN: ON: August 12, 2009 TAGS: just do it, life, nerves, reminiscing, school BY: Hilary
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Barbie Chronicles

It’s funny how Tar-jay has become the hang-out of the toddler set. You are bound to see other mom’s and the occasional nanny making endless circuits of the aisles when our list of activities has reached its unfortunate end. We found ourselves in and among that group just the other day. Meandering from the women’s department into and through shoes, we found ourselves in the toy department. As we passed by rows of puzzles and Bratz and Matchbox Cars, Morgan declares, “Um, Mommy. I need Barbie as Rapunzel.”

“Oh, you don’t say,” I keep pushing our cart down the aisle glancing. “You have a mermaid Barbie at home that you don’t even play with.”

Exasperated sigh that I didn’t expect to hear for at least another 12 years. “She’s broken, so I need Barbie as Rapunzel!”

Ugh, I regret the day that Barbie ever crossed our threshold. I thought I would be able to stave her off for another few years, but no. In fact, I actually invited her in when I brought Barbie as Princess of the Nile home from a consignment shop.

Interesting side note: Barbie a Princess of the Nile was sold to us for $3 at this consignment store. Her box was missing the top and bottom, but she was secured to the packaging, had all of her accessories and everything. Mo was desperate to play with her, so I “freed” her from her restraints using my house key, pretty much obliterating the box. By the time we got home, her crown was snapped in two, her decorative neck ware hanging askance. At home, I put Mo and Co down for a nap – this was around Halloween 2007 — and as I had never heard of such a doll, I googled Barbie as Princess of the Nile online. New, in the box, mint condition, the doll retails at $129.97. I just bought one for $3. Wow.

But, I digress. The Princess moved in and has brought with her Barbie Mermaid, Barbie Ballerina, Barbie Prima Ballerina (totally different from the former), and several other variations of Barbie as mythical, fantastical, and princess-ified. Oh, what have I done?

Back in my formative years, I fancied myself a poet and truly found a voice in sestinas, acrostics, haiku and free verse. I spent a better part of a college semester writing poetry about Barbie and her flaws and faults. I haven’t looked at these in about 10 years put the recent deluge of Barbies underfoot has made me revisit some pieces. I submit for your perusal. . .

Reality Check Barbie

I didn’t know Barbie’s hair was made of plastic
’til I tried to curl it with a curling iron.
Layers of long, luxurious locks
wrapped around the barrel,
sizzled and popped, blistered and hiccuped.
Sounded like bacon frying.
Smelled like driving with my brother —
burnt rubber and hot asphalt.
Looked as though Barbie was going to get a new ‘do,
a much shorter ‘do.
Real short.

So Barbie wasn’t like me after all,
with her dunes of plastic
contained by no bra.
Sold separately
She doesn’t even have nipples!
And what kind of woman shaves her pubic hair,
leaving a cameo as slick as a bald head?

She’s disproportionate.
Any real woman with those dimensions
would topple over,
chest first,
all internal organs pinched, cinched, and punctured.
She has bovine eyes that never close,
biceps perpetually contracted,
fingers that don’t waggle “hello”, make a fist or flip you off,
feet that are arched to fit only the highest of heels,
and a mouth that never frowns.

Is she really happy?
If I had Barbie Dream House
Barbie Jacuzzi,
Barbie 5th Avenue Wardrobe,
Barbie Limited Edition Mercedes Benz Convertible
I might smile, too.

But I like to pout and frown
and blink,
and have breasts that don’t give me back pain.
I like to cut my hair and have it grow back,
even raise my arms to dance.
And way back when, when I was Barbie’s
personal assistant
dressing, undressing, styling, combing
I didn’t kow she wasn’t like me. . .
Isn’t like me. . .
Not. Me.

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IN: ON: August 11, 2009 TAGS: dolls BY: Hilary
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Chip Nazi

So you know you need to change your dietary intake when Weight Watchers uses your photo in their advertising.

New Moms Find Time for Fitness
Article By: Keren Dudescu–Besner

Yes, that’s Mo-dizz at about 8 weeks and she was quite put out, despite her commanding hourly rate.

And I will be the first to admit that I have horrible self-image issue and have wrangled with my weight for as long as I can remember. Let me back up for a second, though — this post is by no means a solicitation for compliments. I’m just trying to relate a story within its proper context. So let us continue.

Back in May, when it was unseasonably cool for a period of several days, I went to put on a pair of jeans. Shockingly, this same pair of jeans that I had worn just a few short weeks before had shrunk while waiting idly in the closet. I mean, really, imagine my surprise when I go to hoist those jokers over my hind parts and am met with considerably resistance! I couldn’t believe it. The combination of lack of use plus an as yet to be identified microorganism that nests in the fabric of individuals favorite articles of clothing, rendering them at least a size too small is the only explanation I have as to why these jeans didn’t fit.

I tried to suck in the gut, lay flat on the bed and fight my way into the jeans, but no haps. And after trying every trick in my book to get into those bad boys, I pulled out my last trick — I cried. Oh, how I cried. I cried so hard that DH came running upstairs thinking that I had slammed my hand in the closet door or lopped off my foot trying to shave that tricky space where your foot and leg connect. Imagine his surprise. Wife crying over jeans that don’t fit — sounds like Miller time to me.

Suffice it to say, DH very diplomatically and very chivalrously suggested several ways to make peace with the jeans and even get back into them. Hence the return to the double W. So, for the last 17 weeks, I have been increasing the fruit and veggies, reducing the junk, working out and have been met with some good results. It’s not rocket science, but it burns me every time because I just want to have the metabolism of a fruit fly, eat a Cinnabon or two and not feel like I could balance a tray on my bloomin‘ onion riding behind me.

17 weeks is a long time. DH has really been a trouper, going so far as to read labels, inquire about portion sizes and such when he’s in the kitchen. For the most part, I eat what I want, just less of it. I am a sucker for the 100 Calorie packs and our pantry is a Nabisco who’s-who of cookies and crackers. I make lunch for me and the girls everyday, our standard fare consisting of sandwiches, fruit, goldfish for them and some lo-cal chips for me, which brings me to the point of this whole diatribe.

I don’t ask for much. I just want to eat my own breakfast/lunch/dinner by myself. I know you moms out there know where I’m going with this. My own mother used to say, “If I had $#!t on a stick, you’d want to have some.” Oh, truer words were never spoken! I always was cajoling for a taste of this, or a bite of that. Not once did I think that roles would be reversed. Everyday, at almost every meal:

Breakfast for Mo and Co:
Buttered Toasted Oat Nut Bread (mmmmm, oat nut bread)
Yo-Baby Yogurt
sliced apple with Peanut butter

Breakfast for Me:
Buttered (spray butter) Toasted Nature’s Own White Wheat bread
Weight Watchers Yogurt
sliced apple, plain

Their bread is squ-oval, my bread is square. Evidently they are traditionalists because they want square toast. I cut theirs into a square. Nothing doing — they want mine.

Mo: Hey Co, want some of Mommy’s yogurt?
Co: Yes! Yes!

Waiiiiiit! How are you going to offer up my yogurt?!

Lunch is just a variation on a theme. Sandwiches for us all, goldfish for them, Light Ruffles for me. Guess what they want to have? This story wouldn’t have to be told had I not had to take them to task about it while we were out with friends at the pool. All the kids are water-logged and sun-screen slick, sitting at the picnic table while moms dole out juice pouches, quartered sandwiches, goldfish and sliced fruit. The kids are grubbing, and the moms start to take bites and nips of their food. I reach for my little bag of chips and Co’s voice floats on over, “Some? Some. Chips. Mommy?” And knowing the re-direction is a cardinal rule in parenting, I redirect the little dickens over to her goldfish. Nope. Again — “Some. Chips. Mommy?” and again, the redirect followed with a firm, “No, Co. You eat your lunch. These are Mommy’s.” Back and forth, we do this dance, my partner inevitably becoming Mo before it’s all said and done. Throughout it all, I don’t relent, a fact that does not go unobserved by my friend we are breaking bread with.

Since that episode, I know she’s humorously regaled at least two other people with how I denied my own children food I had reserved for myself. It’s not as though these chips were $20 a bag or the last bag on Earth. The bottom line was, I was hungry and I wanted to eat something that I knew wasn’t going to be detrimental to my eating plan on the double W. A few goldfish wouldn’t have killed me, but those who know me know that I like dinner and I love dessert. Why blow it at lunch on goldfish when there’s much better stuff to be had later?

At any rate, I have since shared the coveted chips with the girls at lunch at a later time. And after chomping down a fistful, my two sweeties said, “I don’t like these. Can I have goldfish?”

Of course.

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IN: ON: August 11, 2009 TAGS: motherhood, sharing, the things you just do BY: Hilary
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Rumble at the Play Area

Well, not exactly, but it sure came close. I took Mo and Co to the play area at the local mall the other day in order to satisfy several needs at once: My need to return and re-purchase items, their need to run around and all of our need to get out of the heat. The play area has had a face-lift in the last few months, but the erstwhile security guards are still more concerned with preventing moms from bringing in their ristretto tall non-fat extra-hot no-whip half-sweet sugar-free gingerbread latte from Starbucks than keeping out children with facial hair and acne.

Gone is the picnic theme from when we we first started going to this play area. Gone, too are giant hot dog, cupcake, and slice of watermelon. The whole area has become Looney Toon/Port Norfolk amalgamation. Bugs Bunny and pals feature prominently over the playscape, which also includes a container ship, freight trains, cargo boxes, and a huge tug boat. And the whole joint has motion detecting sound elements so that once a child’s foot runs past the boat, you get honest to goodness tug boat sounds. In the beginning, there were a few moms who scratched their heads between covert sips of lattes, wondering, “Good gracious, will that infernal fog horn never end?!” — yeah, sorry ladies.

Anyway, we’re at the play area. The girls are playing amidst the throng of other children whose mother’s think like me and I am pinching grapes from my ziploc bag in my purse into my mouth out of the eyeline of the security guard. We’ve been here for a good while and I’m really enjoying that both Mo and Co are old enough to play together and to play independently. I’m not saying I can just sit back and re-read “Twilight” while the run around, but I don’t have to be shadowing them as they meander here, there, and everywhere.

I see this one little girl, a toddler really, atop one of those climbers shaped like a hybrid freight train. The rear of the train flattens out into a slide ramp and as she makes her way towards it, I know exactly what is about to happen. Off balance, unstable toddler feet, lots of other kids weaving in and out — little girl takes a faceplant on the slide. Adding insult to injury — she doesn’t slide down, just kind of bounces on her face onto the floor. And lays there, crying. I start looking around wondering whose kid this is because clearly she’s hurt and scared. Just as I start to get up, this woman, who has some kind of genetic abnormality where her Apple iPhone has been fused onto her ear and shoulder, strolls on over, hoists the girl up under her armpit and walks away to sit back down. Okayyyyyyyyy. I mean, could you put the phone down for a second and make sure your kid’s facial features are in the same place you last left them?

Fast forward about 15 minutes. Mo is playing with some little girl on this climber shaped to look like Daffy Duck rowing a crate towards the port. The girl is standing on Daffy’s chest, Mo is laying on her stomach atop the crate and the conversation is involving pirates, mermaids, and who knows how to use the toilet all by themselves. Co, desperate to be where the action is, starts to insert herself onto the boat. The little girl, oblivious to the relationship between Mo and Co, begins to tell Co, “No, you can’t be on here. No, you can’t play here. No. No.” Now, I don’t like it when Mo does that to Co and vice-versa, and I doubly don’t like it when some little knock-kneed, buck-toothed, five year old waif does it to either of them. Still, I can’t get all mama bear up in here, so I call out to Mo, “Hey, Mo! You tell that girl that Co can play with you guys!” to which she says, “OK” and then resumes her position on the crate. Gee, thanks. And so for the next minute or two, there is this conversation dance of sorts between the girl saying no, Co saying yes, me calling Mo for reinforcements, and Mo just saying, “OK“.

Finally, Co decides enough is enough and really starts to maneuver her way into the boat. Ol‘ girl ain’t havin‘ that and in her infinite five year old wisdom, begins to pick Co up under her armpits to hoist her off of the boat. OH HAYLE NO. I couldn’t have been more than six to eight feet away from this, but I covered that ground in about 2 steps.

“Excuse me!” I said in my best-Homey-don’t-play-that-voice, crossing over to the boat. “Do not pick her up. Put her down. Now, ” and I gave her the stink eye so bad, her little hands just released Co and hung in the air, unsure of what they were and what they should be doing.

Now, a mom can’t roll up on somone else’s child like that without the offending child’s mother sensing a disturbance in the force. Sure enough, a voice calls out, “Emma (or you can insert your own overly popular name here)!” and head cocked to the side, maintaining proper shoulder to iPhone to ear connectivity, here comes cell phone mom from the faceplant incident. It was clear that this girl was her daughter — not only did they look alike, but the toddler did call her “mom”. Still, all I could do was look at this woman and wonder, who do you have on the phone that is so important, you can’t even pocket that thing to tend to your children? I mean, just tell the person, “Hey, let me call you right back.” What about a “Hang on a sec!” — you don’t even have to hang up. The woman didn’t even look in my direction, barely looked at her kid, but I’d like to think her mumbled, “Sorry about that,” was directed at me and not to the conversationalist on the other end of the phone.

I felt myself getting all Bruce Banner right in the play area, ready to unload an acerbic diatribe on her ass, but the feeling was short-lived. Mo decided she needed to use the potty — now. And when you gotta go, you gotta go. So, we went.

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IN: ON: August 5, 2009 TAGS: aww HAYLE no, motherhood, play area madness, the things you just do BY: Hilary
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Back in the Running.

Here’s how I know I’m back in the running for Mother of the Year.

Insert Tyra Banks voiceover: “(Name), you are still in the running towards becoming America’s Next.Top.Model.” Man! She kills me with that most awkward of sentences.

Anyway, here it is.

I just sewed a strap, the diameter and length of a piece of floss, back onto a Barbie dress the size of thong sized panty liner. Got out my needle and thread, and not just any ol‘ thread, mind you. I actually coordinated the thread to the rest of the stitching. Purple.

I am totally setting myself up for irrational demands going forward. But isn’t that motherhood is about?

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IN: ON: July 27, 2009 TAGS: motherhood, the things you just do BY: Hilary
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photography projects & DIY

That’s a Wrap. . .I think

All good things must come to an end, a phrase that dates back to 1374, and one that I am pretty sure applies to us and our quest to find the Mermaids on Parade. I have to admit, it’s been a good run. We’ve found 29 mermaids, not including the three that were missing, and the nine that we couldn’t reach due to their perch on the side of buildings. Altogether that makes 41 mermaids.

And then, I spotted one more today. I was conflicted for a brief second about whether or not to point it out to the girls because we were on a tight schedule today already. The mermaid was on the opposite side of the street from us and traffic was already slowing down, and clogging up due to some road work. Still, I said, “There’s a mermaid! Look out Co’s window!” and the girls squealed and giggled. Yet, neither one of them asked to stop. I guess the promise of the cool embrace of Target was far greater than any chipped, sun-faded mermaid in the blistering heat. Of course, I may in fact swing by them by there at another time because knowing me and my anal retentive personality, that mermaid will be my own personal great white whale. I can just see it now. . .me, handing the girls their own copies of our mermaid adventure book and having that niggling itch in the back of my mind about the one I just didn’t get.

Mirror Mosaic I on Boush Street

Mirror Mosiac II also on Boush Street
The store that houses this one was closed

Jealous Mistress in the Monticello Arcade
Go Diva (look at her tail) in the MacArthur Center

Bon Secours at DePaul Medical Center


DH came home early this day and the family went on some errands. I have been looking for this particular mermaid on two other occasions as she used to be housed on the median of Granby Street across from the medical center. Anyway, we’re driving down Granby, headed downtown and something tells me to just scan the sidewalks as we approach. Nothing, nothing, nothing and then right as we pull up to the intersection, BAM! I see it. And I yell, “There it is! Pull over! Pull over!” and DH is like, “Huh? What?” We almost clip a Norfolk City Bus, and we definitely tangled up the lanes behind us, but hey! I promised my girls mermaids, as many as we can find. Guess that means we’ll be going back to VA Beach Boulevard after all. . .

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IN: photography projects & DIY ON: July 26, 2009 TAGS: activities, honesty, Mermaids, my girls, photography, projects, summer BY: Hilary
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photography projects & DIY

Back on the Hunt

Would you believe that we’ve found about 25 mermaids since starting this project just a few weeks ago. They seem to be multiplying as we go along. Either that or I just never knew how many were truly sprinkled around the city. Just when I think we’ve found as many as we have been able to, one more pops up. There are three more that I can snap photos of with the girls.

In addition to the ones I’ve posted, there are at least a dozen more that we’ve seen that we have been unable to photograph due to their precarious positions affixed to the sides of and roofs of buildings. When we were driving today, we passed by one mermaid that is situated on top of the rolling marquee of the Scope. Both Mo and Co shouted, “Mommy! There’s a mermaid!” and I was tempted to fish my camera out of my bag and snap a shot while we idled at the red light, but safety and better judgement won out. When Mo asked why we couldn’t see that one, I told her that there are some mermaids that are just out of reach and there wouldn’t be any place for her or Co to stand in order to see it. Not five minutes later, as we drove through town, Co called our attention to a mermaid sitting atop a consignment shop on 21st Street. “Mermaid, Mommy!” she called. Mo promptly replied, “We can’t see it Co, there’s no place for us to stand!” It’s like having my own little voice recorder. Hey, at least she’s paying attention.

Palace Princess Beatrice at the Palace Shops

Miss Nato at the Willard Model School

Rowena at Rowena’s on 22nd Street

Siren at Ward’s Corner

Unknown Mermaid at Mary D. Pretlow Library

Unknown Mermaid at Mary D. Pretlow Library

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IN: photography projects & DIY ON: July 21, 2009 TAGS: activities, honesty, Mermaids, my girls, photography, projects, summer BY: Hilary
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Hilary With One L

© 2015 Hilary Grant Dixon.