Wednesday, January 25, 2012

There's a New Revolution Taking Over

I've forever been looking for ways to link the name of my blog to its content - usually falling tragically far from making even a tangential bridge.  When one thinks of farmers, one doesn't think of forays into better time management, thoughts about bow ties, and lamenting about too many wedding things.  But Family Weekend allowed for some fun ideas to take root.

As previously noted, the family got together in the great city of New York in the most fun ways.  It was a weekend filled with laughter, great food, lots of card games and an old-fashioned, The Last of the Mohicans themed sleepover.  The weekend did start, however, with a trip to Brownsville for some Saturday school.

Those of you lucky enough to be missing the blandest winter ever may not realize that New York has seen little white flakes only twice this season - once early on for Halloween, and again this past Saturday.  Snow means snow blowers, and what did I see being used in my urban paradise?

  John Deere?!  In Brownsville?  It must be a sign!

Then later that day, while enjoying meatballs in the LES, the already hipster-graced Meatball Shop delivered water in milk bottles, was filled with men looking like they were only briefly down from their tree stands, and displayed poultry in their bathroom:

Hmmm... there seems to be a pattern here.  From the trucker hat phenomenon of the early 2000's to the flannel and Carhartt jacket wearing Brooklynites that are moving from Williamsburg to Bushwick as I type, the folks growing our food are sartorially inspiring folks everywhere.  This reminds me of this really great song my dad used to play in the barn -



Sing it, Barbra.  (Also, I'd stand up and cheer on anyone ballsy enough to pull of her sequin-adorned, Big Bird yellow pants-suit.  It's pretty magical, you have to admit...)

Friday, January 20, 2012

Champagne Friday!


Cheers to Friday!  Sure, I have Saturday school tomorrow, but after that comes glorious family time.  Imagine what these beauties look like all grown up:
We're going to be 71% represented in the great city of New York (even though it cost me to coerce my brother into attending.  But I love him, so it's totally worth it) tonight at 10PM.  Tomorrow should be a day full of food, drinks, love and fun.

In the mean time, it is Bow Tie Friday!  I participate wholeheartedly each week, looking for fun ways to dress up the menswear.  This week it looked like
   There's a funny country song that pokes fun at being my own grandpa. While my family is totally on the up and up, my gramps is a stylish dude and I feel pretty great about the bow tie, button up, Mr. Rogers sweater combo.  While my own grandpa I am not, I'm pretty excited about channeling a little patriarch this Bow Tie Friday.

Here's to Bow Tie/ Champagne Friday!

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Thwarted

I have to be honest - 45 minutes ago I was feeling great about my day. I was logging how I was spending my time. I was checking things off of a list. I even wandered into a bookstore before meeting my friend for dinner and shopping (which was unsuccessful, but I'm hopeful for better luck soon in the wardrobe department) and smelled the smell of paper and read snippets of Joyce, Hemmingway, and Faulkner before enjoying farm-to-table goodies with an educational genius. My iPod sent only the best songs, and my day looked like this:
4:53AM - Alarm goes off
5:03 - finally get up
5:03 - 5:24 - shower
5:24 - 5:31 - attempt a new hair style. Fail. Opt for the ponytail option. Do some push-ups to soothe my ego
5:31 - 5:45 - select an outfit. Try on several and settle on one. Do more push-ups. Result is similar
5:45 - 5:58 - cook my egg breakfast, add some kale to my lunch, and apply make up. Rush out the door to catch the...
6:02 - get on the train
6:02 - 6:30 - ride the train. Complete a journal entry to a student, log some ideas for tasks for the day and enjoy a random selection of music that the iPod God sent my way
6:39 - arrive in my office, unload my things and head upstairs
6:45 - 7:15 - make coffee for my coworkers, enjoy my egg sandwich, make myself some green tea, answer some emails, make some copies, and waste some time putzing around on the interwebs
7:15 - 7:45 - teach some kiddos how to sound out words
7:45 - 8:15 - copy 504 paperwork, answer some emails, browse the web looking for motivation
8:15 - 8:30 - work with a co-worker on a joint birthday party (I'm a bit of a big deal in the party department)
8:30 - 9:15 - check in with a fellow SpEducator about their teaching and planning practices
9:20 - 9:40 - draft an email about ManFriend's birthday party (see? Told you. Party planning legend.)
9:40 - 10:30 - update my task list to have a convo with my Uncommon SpEd support person
10:30 - 11:00 - converse with a CSE rep about a student (private, but necessary and important. More so than parties.)
11:00 - 11:30 - have 1/2 of a check-in with my SpEd support person because then I have
11:30 - 12:00ish - lunch duty. The bane of my existence
12:30ish - 12:50 - IVR calls (a waste of time that is required by NYC) while I email and plan. Calling in first-attend dates is mindless
12:50 - 1:10 - review my audit tasks (more Uncommon-y SpEd things - job related, I promise, but super dry)
1:10 - 1:50 - tutor an 8th grader, then problem solve around him with our school social worker
2:00 - 4:00 - Professional development
4:00 - 4:20 check in #2 with my Uncommon support person
4:30 - 5:15 - commute home
5:15 - 5:30 - be home, change into comfortable things (nothing fits anymore) and email ManFriend
5:30 - 6:00 - travel to meet Educator Friend at Chelsea Market
6:00 - 6:15 - Kill time in a bookstore (perfection)
6:15 - 8:30 - spend time eating, drinking, and shopping with Educator Friend (double perfection)
8:30 - 9:ish - ride the subway home, enjoying what the iPod gods send my way
9:20ish - call ManFriend
9:22ish - Tailspin

What a great day, right? I felt great, and really was only missing a good run in the mix of all that happened, but got time with a great friend who I've missed over the past several weeks. I got to smell new books, enjoy the aesthetics of great book stores, boutique-y food shops, and walked in Manhattan in the rain. The music was good, the kids were okay, and the day was productive. Then there was the Tailspin in which I'm currently residing. However, the time-management section of the day was a super-big success, so onward and upwards to tomorrow, when Martha has assigned me the task of Monotasking. Given the 1,000,000 directions my brain is heading in currently, we'll see if I can put my game face on for tomorrow. Huzzah, Thursday!


Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Dirty Little Secret

I've spent the better part of my adolescent and now adult life attempting to hide a lot of things about myself. I think of them as my own personal array of secrets - they help me feel that I'm not oversharing, that there are still things about me that are just mine. Obviously airing them on a public blog (I'm still sure that my grandmother's about the only one reading my sparse entries. But still. Blogs are technically public) defeats the purpose of having secrets, but I'm ready to release one to the world. Despite my outward and vocal abhorrence of so many feminine stereotypes (scrapbooking, calligraphy, flower arranging, etc.) I secretly adore Martha Stewart and her magazine. There. I said it. It started innocently enough - Valentine's Day is a holiday I've always trumpeted, most significantly in my single days when I'd be damned if anyone, let alone Hallmark and Cupid, would make me regret my life sans-man. Martha's magazine always has a great, color-appropriate magazine which I'd purchase. Only once a year. This can't hurt. Man, how much more amazing would my life be if I had time to make individual doilies for my friends? She's just so...crafty and cool and thoughtful and... Okay, recycle the magazine, no one saw me, all remains as it was before.

While I am still not an avid Martha watcher (I have a job. As a teacher. Seriously? Daytime TV will never exist for me) and subscribe only to Vogue and the NYTimes on a regular basis, the internet has given me free, daily access to Martha and all of the ways she holistically, earnestly lives better than I ever hope to be able to. I give you Whole Living (http://www.wholeliving.com/)

Every day, Martha and her team send me a daily challenge. Because what am I? An emotional cutter. My life is pressed to the gills as it is, to the point where I have regular check ins with my administration about how I can possibly squeeze one more drop of efficiency from my time at work. At the end of the day, I run home, flop on the couch and am asleep as soon as my head hits the armrest, only to have my alarm go off at 5AM and the cycle repeats. So what do I need? A daily challenge to remind me how much better I could be living if oooooooonly I were strong enough, smart enough, Martha-enough. I love them.

Today's, however, had a totally different, super-close-to-home message. There's a 14-day challenge set up to help you find a better way to balance your life. And this word - life - haunted me all day. Here I am, 29 years old, living in the most amazing place with a great job and a husband. (Sure, he doesn't live here, but the energy my single friends put into running after a Possible Husband just looks exhausting. That's energy I must have still in my stores!) But do I have a life? Really? That's not clear yet. I have a huge list of things that I want to do - birthday cards to send, friends to call, closets to update, gym sessions to log - it's quite literally an endless list. Yet night after night, week after week I resume the wake-work-sleep-repeat cycle. And it's kinda making me miserable.

So here's my semi-public accepting of Martha and her challenge. Tomorrow begins Day One and I keep a time journal. Let's see if I'm really spending my time as effectively as I think I am.

To Martha and a real, adult life.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Long Time Coming

I had such big plans when I started the summer - much like I always do. I was going to keep a daily blog as ManFriend and I ran around the country together, enjoying both our honeymoon and the longest stretch of uninterrupted time together in over a year. I had big dreams of gorgeous photographs reeking of American joy - the thrill of the road, the joy of New England, our bare feet drenched in the Atlantic Ocean, sunlight glistening through huge refreshing glasses of white wine. I even went out and bought a new camera in the hopes of aiding my quest to bring the kinds of crisp, clean, profound images to the pictures I'd envisioned.

I do this to myself all the time - I create these grand visions of experiences we'll share; I've imagined our entire lives together several times over. I see us in New York City, moving to a Brooklyn brownstone and taking our children to the Met on the weekends. I see us in Buffalo, somewhere downtown while I run a campaign and live a quiet life as a Bills fan. I see us childless, growing old together, completely immersed in our careers and each other. And while I'd love to become the kind of person that I could create if I took all of the best qualities from all of my best friends: social graces, self-discipline, infinite patience, photographic and musical talent - and I'll continue to strive via one self-improvement project after another, every once in a while I'd just like to feel like a married person. As lame as that sounds...

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Wedding Season

With this weekend brings the official start of something new for me in my adult stage – Wedding Season. I’m sure this isn’t a new phenomenon for other people my age, or even younger depending on location (I’ve unscientifically found that the age at which one marries and their distance to an ocean have an inverse relationship; the greater your distance from a coast, the lower your age is likely to be when you cross the threshold into holy matrimony) but I have an unprecedented 8 weddings this season, including my own, and not counting another wedding that falls on the same day as my sister’s Day. Some spring and summer months prior have brought a white dress here and there, but I will be clocking two a month, at least, until October. There’s even the Royal Wedding (which I don’t know why on earth we care about that one – we’ve not been British for over 200 years) getting all kinds of coverage from even totally reputable sources. Needless to say I have, for many reasons, drawn neigh to my Wedding Saturation Point – the unspecific but certainly tangible place I may reach that will no doubt involve me throwing all things white, blue, borrowed, or adorned with tulle out into the East River.

Not to say that I don’t like weddings – I do. I’m a frequent crier at weddings, brought to tears by the physical manifestations of love in the smallest things like napkin rings and picture frames, and larger acts like friends or family singing, reading, or in other ways showing support as two people state publicly that this is For Life. Having now half planned a wedding of my own, I do see the way that the small things tie together…sort of, and am of the frank opinion that no one, no matter how much they love intricate details would spend the hours upon hours debating the value of rose versus champagne napkins, linen versus silk, etc. if they were not overwhelmingly in love.

The thing that seems to be getting to me, just a bit, lately is the emphasis on The Day. I’m older, I admit it, and many of my friends are now marrying people that we all knew were The Ones. There’s no shock as names appear together as parents or parents-in-law invite me to “Share in their joy as they…” bond two names that were always linked. Even with my own wedding, all of the debates about when and where and for how long we’re apart aside, I don’t think even my father, when he’s honest with himself, was at all shocked that this is A Thing. So I’m tickled to witness two perfectly matched people publicly bond their lives legally and depending on their beliefs, in the eyes of God. I just am having a hard time shining it on for the production.

People are allowed to make any choices they want. Some truly spend lifetimes dreaming of the song that would announce their entrance into the view of their loved ones. Others put real time into aligning the meaning of the flowers they’ve chosen with the characteristics that define their relationship. There are flower girls to choreograph, families to arrange, seating charts to consider, paper products to coordinate – depending on the wedding blog you read there is enough to keep you busy for literal years as you assemble the Perfect Day. To me and my own indifference about the matching of anything, however, it all feels just a touch Hollywood for me – directors and retakes and touch-ups and the production crew… No real judgment but man, is it all worth it?

I understand that I am a rare breed of bride – the almost indifferent kind. I didn’t have to decide on a dress, because I’m wearing my mother’s. My bridesmaids have all been instructed to put on a dress. If it can be blue, great, but if not, another color works, too. I am excited about my DJ, but mostly because I like her style (in truth, I want to be friends…so badly!) and am relieved that I won’t have to spend time creating lists of Must Plays and Do Not Plays. The food will be stations, allowing my guests to eat when and what they like. The rehearsal dinner will be beer, pizza, and wings at the boathouse on the Erie Canal. I don’t have a theme, color scheme, any flowers really picked out yet, and am trying to talk my makeup girl into getting all of my girls Done within the span of 90 minutes.
I do feel some kind of way about a few things – I want pictures to be short but as inclusive as possible (read: I want all the family members to have an appearance, but there will be no driving around to get pictures of us casually wandering through the streets of Buffalo looking blissful). The vows will include some variation of what Ruth said to Naomi – “Where you sleep, I will sleep, where you go, I will go…” probably mostly to reassure myself that someday, maybe, those words will actually be true. My childhood pastor will perform the ceremony, and I’ve made almost everything else that I can so that we can afford to feed and entertain as many of our close friends and family as possible.

I do, however, in anticipation of all of this, hate the question that I’m asked multiple times a week: “Aren’t you so excited!?” I dread it because the answer is what people never want to hear, and what I’m never allowed to say for fear of all of the judgment that I anticipate being heaped upon my pending union. Am I excited? Sure… I am excited to have all of my favorite people together. I am excited because ManFriend’s grandmother will finally be able to witness what she’s been plotting for almost a decade. I do want a picture of me in my mother’s dress and a pair of DJ headphones pressed to my ear. But am I SO excited? Meh. He was and is The One. He has been since I was a sophomore in college, describing him to my grandmother who implored from the sunroom table, “Well, you might break up.” And we did, a few times, but never for long. ‘Till death do us part is a lovely sentiment to say in front of my family, but it’s been true for a long time. We’ve got the “for better or for worse” part down and have been living the part of domestic and financial partners for almost 5 years now.

Maybe I’ll feel differently on The Day. But I really don’t expect to – and I certainly don’t want to get caught up in the small things that will invariably go wrong during The Day. Because after all, it is just a day, and as my very wise New Jersey friend likes to remind me, life is long. There will be, if we’re lucky, so many wonderful days to celebrate going forward – and those won’t require monogrammed paper napkins.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

My Longest Love Affair

There are really few things I have loved longer than this man.  Actually, outside of family members, I don't think I've loved anything this long.  Athletics are a close second, but I'm not sure I loved sports at quite this young.  It also may not be the healthiest thing in the world to contemplate decade-long loves months before my marriage, but there are times the Fates conspire.  The love to which I am referring, however, has complimented nearly every life stage since I first heard them in 1993.  At 11 years old, my country music-filled life was literally changed forever.  Dave Matthews with his saxophones, violins, and the two things I would never forget, about which I dreamed  under tables in four different, lovely cities became the soundtrack for what has been the rest of my life thus far.

His solo album is the winter I finally moved out of the dorms, got a puppy, and painted my wall red.  "Two Step" reminds me of the love, patience, and wisdom of a friend when even I didn't know what was good for me.  Everyday was the summer between freshman and sophomore year when I lived on Grand Island and worked with the UB wresting team, playing his tapes on a portable boom box because the Hot Rod Lincoln didn't have a working sound system.  "Grace is Gone" reminds me of how ManFriend and I officially started - an empathetic summer rocked by injury and heartache (his, surprisingly).  "Bartender" is the hills coming out of Malibu after the AV prom I orchestrated.  "Crush" is what I dreamed and now realize is all that New York is for me.   

Dave brought my favorite Uncle and I together.  (Sure, I'm allowed to have a favorite uncle.  The man has a '100 Things to do Before I Die' list that includes a vacation with my grandfather.  THAT man - Grandpa - is by far one of the ten coolest men to walk the planet.  The list, in case you were wondering, includes Jesus, Johnny Cash, and my grandpa.  Oh, Albert Einstein, Pat Riley, Larry Bird, and my dad, Uncle, and William Faulkner are also on that list.  See?  Pretty impressive list.)  Dave brought ManFriend and I together, consoled me through our breakups, and eventually even saw us back together again.  "Stay or Leave" is the song that is my memorial to the puppy he saw me find and raise.  "Sister" predictably, is the best, purest ways I feel about Pigeon. 

And Tuesday, as New York slowly, reluctantly warmed just enough to get me outside for a run, Dave saw me through my first 7 miles of the spring season.  I rode across the Williamsburg Bridge, waved my daily wave at the Chrysler Building, listening to "Dream Girl" and remembered the feel of the warm summer sun on my skin.  As cheesy, white-bread, and disgustingly predictable as it is for someone my age to worship the band that everyone had scrawled across their Mead notebooks while they grunged up their flannels in homeroom, but I know a few things.  I know when Brother and I can agree on nothing else, we can agree that "Live at Red Rock Canyon" is his best album.  I know that the story about ManFriend's arrest at Dave's Saratoga concert is the first Sheffer/Corona family story I'll be able to bring out at future family reunions.  I know the closest friends I have all have a Dave song I listen to when I miss them the most.  I can honestly saw that I truly do look forward to the new, intuitive, and perfectly-worded ways that Dave will find to compliment the new stages of my life.