Thursday, September 8, 2016

All that I am and hope to be, I blame on my Mother.


A Biblical Exegesis Honoring My Mother on Her Birthday

Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above rubies.

I have one, and I inherited her. Thank goodness, because I can't even afford a ring pop these days.

The heart of her husband doth safely trust in her, so that he shall have no need of spoil.

I’m not sure that “spoil” is a thing that has a modern day parallel, but if it refers to anything that doesn’t start and end with my mother, my dad couldn’t care less about it.

She will do him good and not evil all the days of her life.

My mom has made my father spaghetti for dinner every Thursday night for 35 years. In my dad’s opinion, this is all the good he needs. One year, when my father was working out of state on a regular basis, my mother served tried to serve soy spaghetti (My grandmother's maiden name is Origlio - "evil" is too weak an adjective for soy pasta). I suspected something was up when she suggested we eat by candlelight, and I knew something was wrong when I saw the amount of sauce covering the pasta (the only area of her life where my mother could be accused of stinginess). Still, the passage doesn’t say anything about doing good to your children all the days of your life, so the argument stands.





She seeketh wool, and flax, and worketh willingly with her hands.

My mother is a genius with a needle and any type of material; I’ve seen her turn a ball of yarn into an elephant in less time than it takes me to do my hair in the morning. And I don’t even blow dry it.

Her endeavors with flax have been slightly less successful, as I recall from a very dark period of my childhood - maybe because in biblical days they wore this material, and my mother seemed to think we should eat it.

She is like the merchants' ships; she bringeth her food from afar.

If we’re talking about “afar from what most people would think passes for food” then, yes.

Once in a rare burst of motivation to eat healthy, I called my mom for some recipe ideas. Her response: “Blend a half of a ripe avocado with organic pumpkin puree and cocoa powder. It tastes just like chocolate mousse.” I don’t know when the last time my mom ate chocolate mousse was, but I think it may have been never.

Also infamous is her “Kermit the Frog” soup, some green vegetable concoction that she named thus to encourage us to eat it - because of course every child dreams about having a beloved character pureed and heated for dinner.

She riseth also while it is yet night, and giveth meat to her household, and a portion to her maidens.

I was afraid of kidnappers as a child, but only at 3 in the morning. In my mind, up to that time people were awake, and after that time, people woke up for the day. Because my mom did. Woke up for the day. At 3 in the morning. She never brought me any meat, though. I think they must have had different eating schedules in biblical times.

She considereth a field, and buyeth it: with the fruit of her hands she planteth a vineyard.

There may have been a time when the Vine Street Expressway was named after the rolling vineyards surrounding it, but I’m inclined to think that West Philadelphia has never been prime real estate for that type of cultivation. So. No planting of vineyards. My mother did have a garden, and one year we harvested some sunflower seeds.

Come to think of it, I planted those sunflowers.

My mother has lots of other talents.

She girdeth her loins with strength, and strengtheneth her arms.

I think running a half marathon every morning might pass as the modern day equivalent of girding loins with strength.

She perceiveth that her merchandise is good: her candle goeth not out by night.

My mother will stay up until 1am writing lesson plans for her students (teacher of the year, every year). Unless she's up until 1am making "Mimi" dolls for her granddaughters.

She layeth her hands to the spindle, and her hands hold the distaff.

My mother unfortunately did not pass these tools onto her daughters. Forewarning to any future suitors - the distaff and spindle stops there.

She stretcheth out her hand to the poor; yea, she reacheth forth her hands to the needy.

One particularly hot summer in Philadelphia, my mother dragged my sister and me to center city to hand out frozen water bottles to the homeless. But heaven forbid any non-poor or needy try to reach or stretch out their hands to quench their thirst.

"Excuse me, sir. SIR?" she tapped her hand and the construction worker turned to face her, towering over her petiteness, face streaked with black sweat. "Excuse me, sir, but are you homeless?! I'm only giving these out to homeless people."

I couldn't say how this episode ended because I had melted away in mortification.

She is not afraid of the snow for her household: for all her household are clothed with scarlet.

If anyone knows the benefits of red clothing for warding off winter precipitation, please include in the comments below and I'm sure my mom incorporated it at some point.

She maketh herself coverings of tapestry; her clothing is silk and purple.

My mother made her own prom dress, among other things. No tapestry involved though. Pretty sure that Maria Von Trapp was the last one to make that sartorial choice. Also I think that tapestries involve weaving. Granted, Urban Outfitters sells tapestries, and I assume they are not handwoven, unless they have a bunch of hipsters chained to a loom in the supply closet that they aren’t revealing to the public, which would explain a lot.

Her husband is known in the gates, when he sitteth among the elders of the land.

Because this is a birthday post for my mom, please refer to previous years for further information about my dad. Also, I’m not sure what “being known in the gates” means. He was on the borough council.

She maketh fine linen, and selleth it; and delivereth girdles unto the merchant.

Belt making is high on the list of things that my mom is successful at, on the list right behind knitted elephants and "Mimi" dolls.

Strength and honour are her clothing; and she shall rejoice in time to come.

If future rejoicing occurs inversely to present suffering inflicted by strong-willed daughters, that party is going to be off the hook!

She openeth her mouth with wisdom; and in her tongue is the law of kindness.

I have never made a decision without first talking to my mom. Except when I drove across the country to live out my hippie dreams in the West. That time, I went with the “better to ask forgiveness than permission” approach.

She looketh well to the ways of her household, and eateth not the bread of idleness.

To a fault. I don’t think my mother realizes the sheer pointlessness of wiping the fingerprints off of the door every time the grandkids put their sticky hands all over it, but she pushes on bravely. There is general agreement that the last time she sat down through an entire meal was in 1982.

Her children arise up, and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praiseth her.
Many daughters have done virtuously, but thou excellest them all.
Favour is deceitful, and beauty is vain: but a woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised.
Give her of the fruit of her hands; and let her own works praise her in the gates.

And here I am, arising up (is it possible to arise in any other direction?) to call her blessed. Due to the geographical ambiguity of these previously referenced “gates,” I’m taking her praise to the blogosphere.


Love you Mom.

Your own work (and what a load of work I was, and am),
Emily Ann

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

The Somewhat Less Than Great, Definitely Not Reliable, Return.

Why haven't I blogged in a year? I can't say.

Plenty of things have happened to me.

I drove to Montana.
I got my master's degree.
I ran a half marathon (in shoes that looked like the mutant offspring of an Oompa Loompa and a Smurf, no less).
I bought a dog.
I spent over $200 replacing electrical cords/chargers of various types (see previous).
I dated a drug lord. (Okay, so he wasn't exactly a drug lord. He just sold his little brother some weed over the phone while we were at dinner, but I hear Al Pacino wants to make a movie about his life).

There's really no good reason why these various life experiences can't furnish such stuff as blogs are made of.

Laziness is a likely culprit. To take a quick example: This morning I planned on eating eggs for breakfast, but there were no clean frying pans. So I had seven chocolate chip cookies instead and about a third of a jar of cocktail olives (I'm a lemon twist girl myself, so no great loss).

When lunch came around I ran into the same problem. Still at a loss for how to prepare an egg without a pan,  I opted for cereal and ate what I can only assume to be the equivalent of two bowls of Cheerios.
(I mean, literally I can only assume this, because I ate them out of the box as I stood and perused the Christmas cards stuck on the fridge).

**On a side note, I thought the rising popularity of Tasty Videos was going to be my salvation in re cooking, until I realized that it does not in fact take a minute and thirty seconds to make Fettucine Alfredo. And while these videos may give the impression that the hands are disembodied, effortlessly mixing and preparing gourmet meals in under 2 minutes, they are in actuality still very much attached to the cook (me), and that cook is still the girl who doesn't know how to work a toaster oven.**

So I don't want to tout this post as "The Great Return." If my commitment to posting regularly on my blog goes anything like any diet I've ever tried, it will be more like "The Great Return With No Guarantees of Remaining Especially If I'm Supposed to Stop Eating Hummus." (Seriously, what white girl in her right mind can be expected to follow a diet that cuts out one of her major food groups?)

Maybe the question shouldn't be "Why haven't I blogged in a year?" but rather, "Why blog today? Why is Tuesday, August 30, the day for a resurgence of everyone's favorite blog with no unifying principle and nothing inspirational to say about lifestyle, dieting, or cooking?" (And by "everyone", of course I mean my mother. Although she has recently admitted to being an indifferent fan on certain occasions, which in my opinion seems to violate some sort of intrinsic mother/daughter contract. It remains a point of contention.)

It is possibly because I have no time to write blog posts. Which, as anyone who knows me well will tell you, is the time when I get all the things done. Wondering why I haven't thrown a party in a while? It's because subconsciously I am waiting for the weekend when I have a stack of exams to grade and a 30 page paper to write. (This may raise the question in your mind of why the frying pans are still sitting in the sink, as cleaning dishes would seem to be a productive outlet for procrastination, but I make it a rule never to do anything truly practical or necessary in these moments.)



It is definitely not because I have anything to say about the current state of politics, have any dog in the fight with the 1% (or any of the other 99, for that matter), or want to weigh in on the latest Avengers or X-Men movie (I actually don't know if there IS a recent Avengers or X-Men movie, but I'm making valiant efforts to sound culturally relevant and it seems like a safe bet that one of those movies came out in the not too distant past, since they are essentially the millennial equivalent of the Land Before Time movies with their absolutely necessary 22 sequels).

I do want to take a quick minute to acknowledge the courageous steps being made in my professional field of academia, though. Resmiye Oral, a pediatrics professor at the University of Iowa, is making great strides in the fight to bring emotional diversity to college mascots, starting with ameliorating the perpetual grimace of Herky the Hawkeye. (Stay tuned in upcoming posts for updates about my continued battle with the Notre Dame administration over the aggressive stance of the Leprechaun and his shillelagh, not to mention the microaggression to short Irishmen everywhere.)

I think ultimately, I am blogging to redirect my wanderlust as I settle back into the reality of being a starving grad student, on the budget of a starving grad student who now also has to feed a dog. It's the re-channelling of my nomadic desires. **Insert something cheesy about writing being a door into a new land full of possibility and adventure. The Imagi-Nation, if you will.**

The following conversation occurred today:

"I need to go on an adventure."

My roommate glanced over the outfit that I've been wearing for two days, and her brows raised slightly as her eyes traveled over the collection of water glasses, tissues, blankets, and books that have, along with me, ceased to have a separate existence from the amorphous mass of green upholstery that passes for a couch in our house.

"Maybe you should go on an adventure to the shower."

So maybe I could stand to redirect my wanderlust to other things as well, but in the meantime consider this a tentative promise to return to the blogosphere.