Hair Raising

It’s fitting, I suppose, that I have unruly hair.  I’m a pretty unruly woman.  But, sometimes, I think it’s my mother’s fault…

Some of my earliest memories are of my hips wedged between my mother’s ample thighs atop our ultra-chic, avocado green, vinyl couch.  For reasons known only to her, she insisted on using a comb on my hair.  And, not just any comb, but one of those barber’s combs with skinny, pointed teeth that were so close together a dime wouldn’t pass through them.  As she raked those teeth across my scalp, I gritted my own and prepared for the blood that was sure to start running into my eyes just any minute.  Occasionally, I howled, until I realized that only made her angry, causing her to plow even deeper.

The only respite from the raking came when she found what she referred to as a “knot”.  I don’t know how it happened or why.  I only know that every single time my mother raised a comb to my head she found the hair at the nape of my neck to be a tangled morass that inspired her to mutter mild epithets between groaning tugs.

There was lots of “I’ve never seen anything like this in my life!”, even though we both knew she’d seen it just last Saturday.  And she whined a lot.  Occasionally, the comb she extracted contained more than hair.  The mass more resembled a bird’s nest than a knot, with wisps of lint and the occasional tiny scrap of paper woven into the mix.

And then there were the permanents…

For years, my mother lined us up on linoleum that was scored to resemble stone, if you were willing to allow that stone could possibly be tinged the same avocado green as the couch.  By now, she’d invested in detangler which allowed her comb to slice through our tresses, unfettered.  It was pretty smooth sailing, really, until it came time to roll.  Because, rolling required wrapping, and wrapping involved small wisps of tissue paper, and, once again, she met her match at my nape.

At this point, she turned us over to my grandmother who owned a beauty shop on the ground floor of what would now be termed an assisted living high-rise.  The real money, however, was made styling hair for regular customers who no longer required a return appointment.  She spent Saturday mornings at the funeral home.  Mother dropped us off after lunch and picked us up several hours later.

“Remember now!”, my grandmother called from the porch where she stood with one waving hand raised.  “Don’t wash it for at least two days, so you don’t wash it out!”

I spent the ride home calculating how I could gain entry of the bathroom before my sister. 

I drove myself the last time my grandmother curled my hair.  By that time, I was compelled by more than style.  By that time, the trek across town, and the smelly chemicals, the pulling, the tugging, and hot minutes spent under the hood of a hair dryer were a trade-off.  Because, after she curled my hair, we could visit.  She took me outside to her sun porch.  She showed me her plants, some of which were decades old.  She talked to me about them, told me how to grow them, and pulled up tiny samples for me to root when I returned home.  It was worth the thirty minutes or so I would spend with my head in the sink later that evening.

The last time my mother tackled my hair involved one of those new-fangled curling irons; the kind encased in plastic bristles, the kind that not only curled your hair but brushed it, too.  She was dolling me up for some kind of event.  It may have been Easter.  Easter was big deal at our house.  It was one of two times, each year, that my parents would accompany us to church.  We dressed in new dresses and wore pantyhose from freshly cracked eggs.

My mother separated a swath of hair from the crown of my head, twirling it around the plastic-bristled, metal shaft.  Steam billowed from the contraption in her hand as she marked time.  Time came, and she rolled her hand in an attempt to un-wrap.  But, it wouldn’t.  The curling iron, with its rows of plastic bristles, had a death-grip on my hair.  Steam billowed from the crown of my head as my mother pulled and whined, pulled and whined.

“I’ve never seen anything like this in my life!”

Whines turned to whimpers as we both imagined what I would look like after she cut the hair at the scalp in order to remove it from the shaft.  My mother cursed.  My sisters watched in horror.  Finally, the hair loosened.  I never saw the curling iron again.

Two weeks later, my mother made an appointment for both of us at the hair salon she frequented.  Despite odiferous armpits at the end of her pendulous arms, Sandra could feather with the best of them.  Kristy McNichol had nothing on me…    

I was in the eleventh grade.  I don’t know why I remember that, but I do.  I drove quite a distance to the salon and was somewhat taken aback by the pumping, bass-driven beat of the music that greeted me as I entered.  “Toto?  We’re not in Kansas anymore…”   

 A tall man with sallow skin under his brush cut rushed, as fast as his leather pants allowed, to reach me.  I left with what amounted to a crew cut.  And, I loved it…but I never did it again.

Since then, I’ve been shorn by a tattooed biker chick, one Valley Girl, a middle-aged woman with an unfortunate spiral perm, and one really nice Vietnamese man.  He didn’t try to talk to me.  I like that in a stylist.

Several weeks ago, I got the urge.  You know the one; that feeling that you have to have your hair styled…NOW!  Several weeks ago, the Valley Girl had sent me home looking like something the cat had dragged in, and it wasn’t the first time.  As I left work, I made the decision to stop at the first salon I passed.

It took longer than I anticipated.  I was almost home.  The sign on the marquee read “Famous Hair”.  The fact that it occupied a space just two doors down from the market was a huge selling point. 

She was introduced as “Nancy”, but I’m willing to bet her green card reads “Tran” or “Nguyen”.

“What you want?”, she asked, whipping a black, nylon robe round my neck, matador-like.

I produced a copy I’d made of a style I’d found on the internet.  Nancy laced tiny fingers through my hair as she studied the picture, frowning.

“But it doesn’t matter…”, I laughed.  “I gave up a long time ago.  My hair does what it wants to do…and I let it.”

Pompless Circumstance

Shane’s long-time baby-sitter, Christin, invited us to her graduation ceremony.  The invitation, and the opportunity it presented, seemed timely. 

Shane will start eighth grade in the fall or, as he puts it, he’ll be the “Big Dog”.  So many facets of Shane’s life serve to accentuate the fact that the upcoming school year will be a period of transition, a stepping stone if you will, from one phase of life into another.  As high school graduation should be the pinnacle of this next phase, attending the event seemed an opportunity to plant a seed, to secure a goal, to expose him to all the pomp and circumstance afforded scholastic achievement.

He balked only slightly when I insisted he wear dress shoes and the imagined pain of buttoning his button-down was assuaged by the mirror over my shoulder, as a slight jerk of his head almost produced the coveted swish of Justin Bieber hair.

“Hey, Mom!  I look kinda good!”  He’s a slightly pudgy thirteen-year-old.  “Kinda” IS good.

Christin had called earlier in the day.  Her words were punctuated by a distinctive “click”   as she released long golden curls from the clutches of a steaming curling iron.  Her usually swift cadence was enhanced by excitement as she shared ticket information and encouraged early arrival.

“You’llbesittinginbleachersIt’sgoingtobehotbutthey’resellingChick-fil-asothereisthat.”

We parked at the church next to the high school and walked a down-hill block to the stadium.  Shane’s baseball coach met us as we circled the football field.

“Luke’s up there somewhere.”, he shaded his eyes against the burning twilight, searching for his son.  “There!”, he pointed.

Shane asked the question with a lift of his eyebrows.  I answered with a blink and a nod, and he began a clumsy ascent towards his friend

We were early.  There were plenty of seats to choose from.  I headed for an empty metal bench in the center, and as I climbed towards my perch, overheard someone make reference to the fifty-yard-line.  It felt out of place

Easing onto a very warm aluminum bench, I was disappointed to realize that the stage had been set up facing the opposite side of the field.  They were, apparently, playing to the “home” crowd.  A handful of people scurried to and fro around the stage as though assigned a very important task, but no one actually seemed to do anything.  A golf cart sped past the bleachers several times.  The sun had dipped below the treetops, but left her heat behind.

A group of people wearing black caps and gowns approached the stage area.  It took me a minute or so to realize that they were teachers and not really old looking students.  Mentally, I chastised myself for the mistake.  It’s not as though I’d never attended a graduation before.  I’d seen those same caps and gowns at my own graduation. 

Of course, my graduation took place downtown, in the air-conditioned comfort of the Municipal Auditorium.  And the event was actually a culmination of events that had taken place over the preceding two weeks.  Parents feted their children with parties that felt a lot like bridal showers feel today.  An assortment of gifts flowed in from my parents friends, many of whom I’d never met.  Most sent money, but one relative sent a boxed set of Anais-Anais perfume.  I was so impressed!  It seemed so…continental!  I wonder if it’s still available…

Crimson colored caps and gowns were delivered to the school two weeks before graduation and taken to the music room for fittings.  We stood in line with our friends, waiting our turn while sharing our enthusiasm and an occasional joke at the expense of students whose heads measured extra-large.  Afterwards, a group of us went out to lunch and, later, to the mall.  It didn’t matter that we would be wearing calf-length gowns.  The occasion called for a new dress.  And shoes, of course.

Something about the prospect of walking down an aisle prompts profuse primping.  Not until I married would I again spend so much time in front of a mirror.  I emerged from the bedroom I shared with my sister to find my family waiting in the den.  My father wore a suit and tie, my sisters, their Easter shoes, and my mother, heels under a skirt that probably hadn’t seen the light of day more than once or twice since she’d owned it.  We all piled into Mom’s Vista Cruiser station wagon and headed downtown.

The auditorium was dark except for tiny lights imbedded in the aisle seats.  My family went inside while I followed a beckoning, black-shrouded teacher whose job it was to herd graduates backstage.

The noise we made as we assembled ourselves upon the risers behind the curtain seemed deafening.  I was sure our parents could hear.  The relative darkness only served to accentuate the heavy blanket of expectancy that fueled our collective state of giddiness.  Several robed teachers stood in front of the risers alternately moving students who had yet to master the alphabet and threatening rowdy boys by addressing them as “Mister”.

And the music began…daaaa, dadada, daaaa-da, daaaa, dadada, daaaaaah.  A nervous silence fell over my class.  Even the rowdy boys stood a little taller.

“Excuse me…”

I woke from my reverie to the face of a young father wearing cargo shorts with a baby dangling off one arm.  He looked pointedly at the bleacher beneath my feet.

“Oh!  I’m sorry!”  I turned towards the aisle, allowing him passage.  A young African-American man climbed the steps towards me.  He wore blue jeans under a t-shirt which exposed carefully cultivated biceps.  Very large basketball shoes bloomed beneath his pants.  Loosened laces allowed for a protruding tongue.  The toddler perched in the crook of his right arm made repeated attempts to dislodge his doo rag.

Behind him, a middle-aged woman in tank top and shorts, pushed a mop of unruly blonde curls from her face as she searched for a bench long enough to contain her similarly clad contingent.

I shifted on the bench that was becoming harder and more uncomfortable by the minute to see that two rows of black robes were filing in towards the stage. 

The man sitting next to me leaned in, “Why are some of the kids wearing black robes, while the others are wearing white?”  I felt so vindicated…

The presence of a tiny sea-foam-suited woman waving her arms, frantically, in front of a small group of students wielding instruments was the only indication that music was playing.  The air around me was filled with the cacophony of mixing voices, frequent laughter, and the occasional baby crying.  Suddenly the fifty-yard-line comment seemed less inappropriate.

This time I leaned in.  “Are these people just going to talk through the entire ceremony?  It’s bad enough we can’t see.  We aren’t going to be able to hear either?”

My position granted me a line of sight though which I could see Shane.  His eyes were focused as he sat immobile save for his thumbs, which danced rapidly over the controls of Luke’s Gameboy.

Four rows down, a slightly overweight, middle-aged man sat in a suit and tie.  His hands folded and unfolded a program as he surveyed the crowd.

Frayed Strings

 

No one loves their children more than I do.  My youngest is thirteen now, which only goes to prove that all the minutes I spent wishing he could be my baby forever were for naught.  But I knew that…

To my credit, I’ve turned those mournful minutes into reasons to be grateful.  When he recounts an exchange with another student in school, I pay attention.  The day will come when sharing won’t be so easy.  When he calls “Mom”, as I walk past his darkened room, I stop and listen before reminding him, again, to go to sleep.  When he allows me to take his hand as we walk, I feel it as I hold it.  And, when he wraps his arms around my waist, and rests his head against my chest I thank God for the blessing.  Every little boy hug, every little boy kiss, could be the last.

He turned thirteen last week, three days before school let out for summer. 

“Do you want a party?  You could invite your friends from school, the guys from your baseball team, and some of your football friends.  We could go to the park.  You guys could play baseball, and we could cook-out.”

Shane sat silent, looking through the window to the backyard.  Movement in his eyes told me he was considering the offer.  He’d attended several birthday parties this year.

Valerie invited him to his first boy/girl, night-time party.  There was dancing, which led to sweating, which provoked Shane to stealthily comb the health and beauty aids aisle during our next visit to the grocery store.

Chelsea’s mother went one better and rented a pool-side clubhouse.  As we pulled up, the outer walls of the building seemed to vibrate in time with the disco ball sparkling through an upper-floor window.  Expecting hesitation from Shane, I turned in my seat to offer words of encouragement from someone who has personally experienced countless disco balls.  The backseat was empty, the car door slammed, and by the time I turned around Shane had mounted the walk towards the door without so much as a wave good-bye.

A pattern began to develop, and I saw my mistake.

“Oh…I just realized all the parties you’ve gone to this year were given by girls.  Boys your age don’t have birthday parties, do they?”

Relief colored his face.

“Not really…”, he smiled, lowering his head.

“Ok!  So what do you want to do?  We could go out to dinner.  Your choice!  Or we could go to the movies.  You could take a friend….You tell me.  What do you want to do?”

“I want to spend the weekend with Josh.”

Josh is his oldest brother.  He married just before Shane’s birthday.  He and his wife live in a rural area seventy-five miles away.

Shane left on Friday.

Friday night I had dinner out, and for the first time in a long time, no one offered me a children’s menu.  My companion and I enjoyed uninterrupted adult conversation.  And when we left, there were no tell-tale crumbs beneath our table.

Saturday I slept in, and woke to a quiet house.  I never realized how much noise is generated by the simple act of breathing until mine was the only breath drawn.  I took my coffee to the patio and never felt compelled to grab at the table beside my chair in hopes of steadying it.  Birdsong fell on my ears without accompaniment.  No one asked me any questions.

I spent the rest of the day doing as I pleased.  I shopped without uttering the word “no”.  I turned my Ipod up as I gardened, never giving a thought to what might be going on inside the house.  I gutted the playroom, and in so doing generated quite a pile for the next charity pick-up.  He hasn’t touched those toys in years…

I organized his dresser, and added several threadbare t-shirts to the aforementioned pile.  The one with the hole in the collar has bothered me for months.

I baked cookies for the neighbors and no one whined, “You always make the good stuff for other people!”  I watched tennis on TV without giving advance warning of an imminent takeover of the den.  Music wafted from speakers mounted beneath the eaves as we grilled on the patio and no one asked me sardonically, “Why don’t you like rock music anymore?”

As I turned out the lights above the mantle and closed the sunroom door against the night I thought, “So this is what it will be like when he is gone.  I can do this…”

The phone rang and I jumped to answer it.

“Hello?!”, I never gave a thought to sounding casual.

“Hey, Mom.” 

Those two words began tales of Clydesdale horses, front flips from diving boards, and a dog Shane loved enough to bring home.

“I’m glad you’re having a good time.”

“Ok, Mom.  Gotta go.”  Male voices parried in the background.  I understood the distraction.

“Ok…”  Silence in the line told me he had hung up already.

For the first time in thirteen years Shane hung up without saying “I love you.”

But he does…

No Air

Stagnant air hung hot and heavy around our heads as we squirmed inside metal chairs in an effort to find a modicum of comfort.

“Sorry! Didn’t get the air on soon enough. It’s kinda stuffy in here.” Madame Secretary scuttled back into the main room, taking her chair beside Madame President at the head table.

As we waited for the usual stragglers, a general moan filled the room.

“I had to sit down before I opened my power bill.” Janet sat two chairs away, and spoke as she rifled her purse for her “personal fan”.

“How much was it?” Several of us turned to look at Debra as though to challenge, “Did you really mean to ask that?”, and then swiveled just as quickly in anticipation of the answer.

A general conversation ensued amidst the waving of notebooks and the whir of hand-held air-movers. During a break in the complaining, I spoke.

“I haven’t turned my air on yet.”

Quiet befell the room. Newly arrived stragglers stopped in mid-stride. The clock ticked, and fans whirred over held breaths.

“Really?” Debra composed herself first.

“Yes, really.” I stirred in my chair, uncomfortable under the spotlight.

“Aren’t you hot?” Debra challenged.

“Well, we do have an attic fan…” Unheeded, the words formed an apology.

“Yes, but…” Debra finally failed to find the words.

When I woke this morning, I thought today would be the day. For the first time since I turned the heat off, I didn’t feel the need to add another blanket in the middle of the night. This afternoon, as I greeted the sitter while warding off the advances of my hundred-pound puppy, I marveled at the coolness in the air.

I live in “Hot-Lanta”. It’s the middle of June. And, I haven’t turned on my air yet. The power bill I paid last Friday was the equivalent of a bill I usually receive during the autumn months. I could get used to this…

As economic uncertainty ruled the airwaves, the print media, our over-filled heads, and our war-weary hearts, I made a decision to return to what I knew. I haven’t poured crystallized soap into the soap dispenser of my dishwasher in several months. Every night I bathe stoneware, glassware, and plastics bought in an effort to actually have drinking glasses despite housing a prepubescent boy. I love results oriented tasks, and nothing is more results oriented than wiping the remnants of a spaghetti dinner off my favorite set of dinnerware to reveal the hand-painted artwork underneath.

The clothesline Roger reluctantly strung between two stalwart pines is filled daily. Sheets whip, towels undulate, and blouses dance with pants in summer breezes.

As a comment was made about my decision to live in a house filled with summer breezes, I remembered the first house I lived in. It was small by today’s standards, and encased in red brick. Air-conditioners might have purred in other neighborhoods, but we subsisted on the air God gave us.

And, we did just fine…

© Copyright 2007-2009 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

Skinned Cats


She opened the conversation by announcing herself.

“This is Dixie Lee Shapiro.” And, for a moment I was lost in a swirl of images.

A bleached blonde beehive swirled above heavy, dark eyebrows and a prominent nose. As she spoke, the image changed. Dixie still sported the haystack upon her head, but the exclamatory eyebrows and prominent proboscis belonged to the gentleman at her side. Either stereotype was implausible.

A rise in the tone of Mrs. Shapiro’s voice regained my attention. Her words shook in a manner that bespoke age and infirmity, as she explained her dilemma while begging my response. Her problem was not unique. I ferried several of these calls every day, and the pile of paper on my desk seemed much more pressing. I answered her questions in a clipped, business-like manner, steering the conversation towards conclusion. But, Mrs. Shapiro was having none of it. She wanted answers. She pulled out the big guns.

In a quavering voice, she explained that the check she’d written should have allowed her to receive telephone calls from her son who was incarcerated. It had been cashed, but they claimed not to have it. She hadn’t heard from her son in an awfully long time. Was there nothing I could do to help her? Mrs. Shapiro’s hair shrunk considerably as she spoke, and the image of her buxom figure alongside Mr. Shapiro was replaced by the creaking sound made by her rocking chair as it rode wooden floors that had, long ago, lost their sheen. Her worry, anxiety, and loneliness were palpable.

Empathy kicked in, and I went the extra mile, tracing her funds and forgiving the fee usually charged for such service. Her payment had been received. She had a legitimate complaint, and as I shared the information, I embellished with some advice in hopes that the lines of communication between she and her wayward son would soon be open.

“That’s what I thought, and I didn’t especially like it.” Her response was spoken in a voice I hardly recognized. The quiver was missing, and the tenor now carried smoke, and whiskey, and something more, something hard. She spoke for several seconds of her son’s girlfriend, who managed to speak to him “some kinda way”, before thanking me for my assistance and agreeing with my conclusions.

“Let’s start there and see what happens, ok, kid?”

I hung up with a smile.

© Copyright 2007-2009 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

Unmentionables


Most women like frilly underwear. We’re hard-wired that way.

Today’s girl starts out in stylish diapers emblazoned with feminine cartoon images. The accomplishment of potty training is rewarded by a whole new level of chic, as floral patterns and ruffles become available. I challenge you to offer an image sweeter, or more feminine, than a peek of ruffled panties under a pint-sized, smocked dress. And, at that age, we are generally proud of our hard-earned undergarments. We like looking at them, and we want you to notice, too.

The real fascination with femininity doesn’t start, in earnest, until the money handed the clerk behind the Victoria’s Secret counter is hard-earned, and your own. Having a parent accompany you to Victoria’s Secret would be something akin to being fifteen and having to ask your Dad for a ride to the drug-store and hearing him ask,“Why? What do you need?”. This situation is avoided whenever possible.

When I was a teen, “Days of the Week” underwear was all the rage. On first glance, this seemed like a very practical approach to underwear. Should you not remember whether or not you had changed, you could always consult a calendar for reassurance. Due to my mother’s insistence on waiting until she had a “full load” to launder however, this never worked for me.

All my friends preferred bikini-style, and I really tried to follow suit. But, after years of feeling the constancy of a cotton-elastic waistband riding upon my naval, I struggled with the feeling that I was losing my coverage. Giving up, I rode the “Granny Panties”, and there was no shame in this. Many girls made this choice. I know, because my reluctance to shuck my clothing in the showers after PE forced me to find someplace to put my eyes, as everyone around me stripped to the skin. Many pairs of “Granny Panties” hit the red tile floor as their wearers danced and giggled their way towards raining shower heads. “Days of the Week” emblazoned across the backside of “Granny Panties” was just wrong. I settled for a nice honey-comb weave.

They make underwear for pregnant women, though I’ve never fully understood why. Bikini underwear don’t infringe upon the protuberance, and “Granny Panties” can be worn bikini-style, until such time as the baby is born and mother has recovered sufficiently to drive to the mall to buy the larger size she will now require.

Though surely always present, panty-lines suddenly became a big issue in the eighties, and no-show underwear became all the rage. Whisper thin, they were seamless, and constructed of a sheer, elastic, nylon that morphed into a hopelessly pilled, knotted mess after just a few washings. Fortunately, I only bought and very quickly tossed, two pair.

As a more direct approach to the problem of panty-lines, thongs burst upon the scene in the 90’s. I remember the first time I saw a woman on the beach wearing a thong bikini, and thinking, “Why bother?”, followed closely by, “She really shouldn’t be wearing that.” Truthfully, very few women have the physique required to pull this look off, without reminding everyone behind her of what it would look like if you tied two, rather misshapen, beach-balls together and drug them through wet sand. Unfortunately, it is usually those who should avoid this fashion faux pas who seem most likely to parade past.

Being realistic about my body, I’ve never been tempted to string on a thong bikini. I did, however, attempt to solve my previously unsolved panty-line problem by wearing thong underwear, or as I refer to it, “heiney floss”. The experiment was short-lived as I soon discovered that they do, indeed, feel much as one might imagine they would feel given the unnatural nature of their construction. While standing, my panty-line problem was solved. Unfortunately, I spend very few days simply standing. Most days I feel the need to walk or, heaven forbid, sit. It is difficult for me to say which experience is more uncomfortable when thonged, sitting or rising from a sit. Either exercise may result in an elastic wrenching, requiring an increasingly painful walk to a private setting in order to make the necessary corrections. Despite the discomfort, I kept several pair of thong underwear after realizing that their value sprung not from the wearing of them, but rather in sharing the fact with someone whose imagination, alone, allowed him full view.

I love browsing the Victoria’s Secret catalogue. As I retrieve it from my mailbox, I always wonder if the postman enjoyed it, before sliding it into the box. For years, I’ve ordered the same type of panties. They are cotton, as good health dictates, and usually patterned or solidly, softly, pastel. Recently, as I leafed through the pages, I noticed an intriguing new style I’d yet to try.

It seems I’m not alone in my dissatisfaction with previous efforts to solve the panty-line debacle. Boy-shorts have hit the scene, and it seems everyone is wearing them. And, I can see why. Whereas the seamless, flimsy, nylon panties disintegrated, almost on contact, and thongs made ordinary movement excruciating, boy-shorts appeared to suffer neither of these traits. And, minus the confining elastic usually comprising the leg-hole of ordinary panties, the material rides along the bottom of one’s bottom, allowing a tiny peek of cheek. They are cute, bordering on sassy, and after some consideration, I placed an order.

Last weekend, I attended one of my favorite types of event, a garden party. The weather was warm without being hot, and a soft breeze was the perfect accompaniment to my crinkly, gauze, long skirt. I’d yet to wear my newly purchased boy-shorts, and decided this was the perfect occasion. The first pull came upon alighting from the vehicle in front of the house. Several minutes later, after climbing the steps to the deck, my hand went again to the back of my skirt. As I was directed to a table with filled plate in hands, I felt again a need to tug at the back of my underwear, but realized waiting until moving to sit might camouflage what had become a repeated movement. As I tugged again, I envisioned wearers of leotards, ballerinas and gymnasts, and their constant repositioning of their garments, and I knew I’d discovered the downfall of the latest trend in women’s underwear.

Next day, as I dressed in a similar manner for the office, I chose an older, more reliable pair of underwear while making a mental note to place an order for more. The boy-shorts though, will remain in my lingerie drawer. After all, they are cute, bordering on sassy, and there are times when a peek of cheek is more important than comfort.

© Copyright 2007-2009 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

Pieces of Me


I live in a 70’s era brick ranch which was built in a time when closets and bathrooms were allowed the same amount of square footage, and neither is generous. The only extra closet in the house is filled, year-round, with suit jackets and winter coats which won’t bear folding into plastic storage bins. So twice a year, once in spring and again in the fall, I make the climb up complaining, collapsible stairs, into my attic to retrieve our stored clothes.

“Changing out the closets”, as I’ve come to refer to this laborious task, is not a chore I enjoy, which serves to explain why I’ve worn the same two pairs of sandals for the better part of the last two weeks. But, as April wanes into May, spring has taken hold with plans to hang around for at least a couple of weeks before summer begins, in earnest. I’ve spent two full days in my shirt sleeves, with no need for a jacket or shawl of any kind. The time has come. It’s a solitary task, affording lots of time to think, and lots of open space for memories to fill.

This year I am especially surprised by the number of shirts I possess that carry the University of Florida logo. I have one fleece vest, three sweatshirts, three long sleeved tees, two baseball jerseys, and countless t-shirts. Over the years, Roger has expressed his relief in the knowledge that when his imagination fails him, he can always go to the sporting goods store to buy my gift. Perhaps I should help him with more hints.

I wavered this year over whether or not to keep the brown suede skirt. It’s cut on the bias, western style, and the one time I wore it I felt a little like Annie Oakley. The only acceptable shoe to wear with this skirt is, of course, a western boot. Fortunately, I own three pairs. Unfortunately, the skirt doesn’t quite meet the boots and I find that swath of skin, hosed or not, unsightly. But, it’s a great skirt. I’m keeping it.

I bought a pair of boots last year on Ebay. They were fawn colored, high-heeled, and designed by Tommy Hilfiger. When they arrived, I found the heel to be just a little higher than I’d imagined, but they were beautiful. I wore them this winter to a lunch date with my father. As the host beaconed me follow him to the corner where I saw my father sitting, I surveyed the twenty feet of uneven stone flooring and prayed I wouldn’t land in a heap at someone’s feet. Each step felt like I was walking on tip-toe on a very slick surface. At the time, I made a mental note to wear them more often to accustom my feet while scuffing the slick off the bottoms. I didn’t. But, I might next year.

A red and white sailor’s top went directly from bin to the charity pile. My sailor girl days are long over…

I removed a gauzy black jacket from the hanger while admiring it, yet again. It is one of my favorite pieces of clothing. Sheer black nylon is accented by the pinks and greens of hand painted flowers on splotches of black velvet. Beads of differing sizes hang from the hem, continuing up both sides and around the neck. I realized today that, at first glance, one might think it a piano shawl. Loath to knowingly perch upon glass beads, I have worn the jacket very little. Perhaps with some alterations, I might find a place to drape it.

When I ordered the black and gold, ruffled blouse, I had no idea it was constructed of netting. It has ridden the rail in my closet for almost a year. I can’t imagine wearing it anywhere other than a dark bar. I can’t imagine myself in a dark bar.

I kept the blue turtleneck, though I haven’t worn it in several years. I don’t like the feeling of anything against my neck. But blue is one of Shane’s team colors, and some of those football games are played in frigid weather. I might wear it underneath something else…

It saddened me to find my blue and pink, argyle sweater. I bought it new in the fall, and wore it just once before it got lost amidst the racks. It really is cute. I wish I’d worn it more. There’s always next year…

And, that’s when the thought popped into my head, “What if this is the last time you pack these clothes? What if the next time this bin is opened by someone else who won’t appreciate the style in your gray patent lace-up pumps, or the cuteness of your sweaters? What if the next person who opens this bin just sees you, the memory of you?”

I allowed myself just a moment of sadness, more for the person left to collect my effects than for me, and then just one more, one more moment to lament my loss; the loss of invincibility. Life, now, is finite. The end, whether it be ten, twenty, or even fifty years away is as real as the breath I’m breathing right now. For the rest of the day I’ll be looking for a place to store that.

© Copyright 2007-2009 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

From First to Last


I’ve had occasion, lately, to consider my “firsts”; my first kiss, my first sleep-over, my first job…

Days after completing the survey, I find myself still considering. While applying make-up, my first pair of boots walk through my mind. They were black patent leather, and the sound of those heels on institutional tile transformed me from a twelve year-old, angst-ridden seventh-grader into a confident, edgy, prepubescent force. While driving to work, I hear the sound of horses’ hooves on pavement as I relive my first carriage ride. It was mid-afternoon. We were in Chattanooga, on streets packed with tourists. But, the fact of him beside me dimmed the sun, stilled the crowd, and isolated our love to a single point in the middle of a busy thoroughfare wherein we were the only two souls that mattered.

I wish I’d appreciated my “firsts” more. I wish someone had reminded me, before I turned back to make sure no one was watching through a front window, that I would be allowed just one first time to surrender to Jimmy’s embrace. I wish someone had been there to whisper in my ear, “This will be your only first date.” It would have been helpful if, before placing her into my arms for the first time, the nurse had looked at me knowingly as she said, “This is your first, and only, daughter.”

I’ve reached the age when thinking of “firsts” leads, naturally, to consideration of a growing number of “lasts”. I’ve birthed all the children I will ever bear. I will never again feel the sweet pull of infant lips upon my breast, or feel the rush of emotion in realizing the miracle inherent in our relationship.

Since the age of twenty-one, sex has been a repetitive act. And, while each encounter offers a new and wonderful experience, nothing is like the first time; the virgin time. As synthetic fibers scratched against my bare back, I wish I’d had the wisdom to consider; is this the right place, the right time, the right man? Are you ready to be a mother?

What if, before you first stepped onto your college campus, a guide stopped you, taking you by the arms? “Stop!”, he might have said. “Stop, and look around. This is the only first time you will walk upon the ground that will change your life. Your next step will forge your destiny. The decisions you make now will determine your life course, because tomorrow will be your second time.”

I enjoyed driving my first car, but might I have enjoyed it more if I knew that I’d never see another one like it? Would I have relished the feeling of pumping the clutch, and finding the gears, if I knew I’d never feel that again?

I will never again reap the harvest from my first garden. I can never again get my first perfect score in English, or Math, or Spanish, or bowling. I have already baked my first birthday cake.

I know there are more “firsts” ahead of me; my first stress test, my first colonoscopy, my first AARP card. And, I hope for more; my first published book, my first trip overseas, my first healthy dill plant. I can’t grow dill. I’ve tried, and tried.

One day, I know I’m going to find just the right spot…

© Copyright 2007-2009 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

Pondering Ponds

I can’t begin to guess how many times I’ve passed that pond.

I’ve run by it.

I’ve walked around it.

I’ve gazed upon it, distractedly, while talking on the telephone, or giving my son directions, or parking my car.

Yesterday, I saw the pond.

The sun was amazing; a true spring sun whose soft rays never quite breached the fabric of my tee shirt. Breezes blew from several different directions at once, playing havoc with my hair and Chevy’s nose, dancing, merrily, on the end of his long, narrow snout.

As we rounded the bend, several geese gathered on one side of the pond. Realizing Chevy had never seen geese up close and personal, I seized the opportunity, and I guided him closer to the clearing in which they had gathered. Apparently accustomed to visits, the geese held their ground. The largest of the group sat upon the bank, and without turning, hissed comically. I laughed softly before cooing my assurance, while Chevy ignored her.

And, then I saw the reason for her anxiety. A mother duck, sporting a single striking blue feather amongst her brown and white mottle, swam into view ahead of four tiny, fuzzy ducklings. The goose took a step into the water as they passed. as if to ensure a barrier between us and them. No sooner had the first duck passed when another mother duck, with several chortling ducklings, swam into view. The goose squawked softly as if to say “Hurry along, now!”, and the family glided past. Satisfied, their long-necked protector retook her position on the bank and settled into her feathers.

Feeling we had disturbed the serenity of this part of the pond long enough, I urged Chevy up the hill and around to another arc of the pond. Without a sound, a pile of turtles sunning themselves upon the bank, poured into the water as we approached; the only sign of their retreat a collection of ever-widening circles.

I knew geese stopped here. There were signs of them everywhere, and particularly upon the walking track which they seemed to target with their deposits. In summer, when the sun’s rays swelter, the smell is enough to force me to another part of the track.

But, I hadn’t seen the ducks. And, I didn’t know the turtles. I hadn’t realized that within a very busy county park, these animals had seen fit to create a home in which to procreate. I had never seen the pond as a place of caring that required caring for.

We left the pond, and headed in the direction of Shane, and the batting cages. I thought, again, of the goose; of her protective fervor for those unlike her, and I appreciated the irony.

We have much to learn…

© Copyright 2007-2009 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

Service Sector Sagacity


Our trip was unexpected, unplanned, and unbudgeted, which helps to explain my presence in the drive-thru line at McDonald’s at 11:47 a.m. We rolled to a stop in front of a daunting menu of gastronomic atrocities too crowded to read. I allowed my eleven-year-old to order for both of us.

“Please drive around to the first window.”

A heavy-set girl with long brown hair manned the register, behind a small glass door that seemingly opened and closed of its own accord. I hit the mute button on the stereo as she logged another order. She turned in our direction, and the door opened as she extended her hand, palm up. I laid several bills inside with a smile that went unnoticed as she stashed them before collecting my change while focusing, intently, on the LED display of the register. Her left hand extended again, dropping my change while her right hand hit a button on her head set, and I rolled to the second window.

A hundred miles or so later, my cup was empty, but my bladder wasn’t. I searched large, green, roadside signs for another iconic fast-food restaurant that would offer relief for both. As I rolled into the Krystal’s parking lot, my son sat forward on his seat.

“Are we going to eat again?” Shane’s voice sounded exactly like you would expect it to sound, given his usual diet of whole grains, fish, and fruit.

“No, honey. Just the bathroom and a drink!”

As I entered the bathroom, I was accosted by an odor that said “Turn back!” in a deep, unnerving voice. Shaking it off, I pushed open the painted metal door, expecting the worst. I considered myself lucky in not uncovering the source of the odor and attended to the matter at hand, post-haste. I rinsed my hands hurriedly, and opened the door with my elbow. Shane was waiting outside.

The counter was clear of customers, allowing us to stand, unimpeded, in front of the register. A large woman, whose hairstyle must have cost at least a day’s pay, approached from the back of the restaurant throwing one hand in the direction of another woman as her eyes glazed mine.

“You got customers.”, she said as she walked by, carrying a sheaf of paper cups.

The woman she addressed stood at the other end of the counter, bent at the middle, her face just inches above a laminated paper.

“You really got her worried ‘bout that schedule!”, the female voice came, complete with laughter, from the grill area.

A painfully thin, uniformed young man approached from the dining area.

“Whatchew doin’?” He mimicked her posture so that their visored heads met.

Shane and I stood with necks arched; studying a menu we had no intention of ordering from, until a man wearing a white shirt that said “I Am The Manager” approached, carrying a bundle of bags.

“Can I take your order?” I was relieved to hear self-consciousness in his voice.

Sunlight did nothing to enhance the pallor present on my friend’s skin as we sat around her picnic table. We sipped, and laughed, and talked, and laughed. The telephone rang, and she answered it. I made my decision while she assured our friend I had made the trip safely.

As she pressed “End”, I eased myself off the weathered, wooden bench.

“We’re going to get a room.”

She argued despite my tone of finality.

“It’s just two miles away….” I ended the conversation.

I hit the button, locking my son safely inside the car before walking towards the lobby. A blonde woman who hadn’t yet accepted the reality of her morbidity manned the desk.

Her expression never changed as she managed, “You want a room?”

I leaned both arms on the desk as she typed, wondering if she knew that the boxed-blonde curtain hanging down either side of her haggard face failed to hide the collection of chins the years had provided her.

Tiny cowbells rang, and we both turned. Shane entered, mute. He approached a display of brochures while I felt validation.

“How old is the child?”

“Eleven.”

Several minutes and colorful invectives later, I tapped Shane’s shoulder and left with credit card-shaped “keys”.

“Mom?” I pulled my sweatshirt closed as we walked against a cool breeze.

“Yes.” Shane hurried to catch up to my stride.

“Aren’t there a lot of people looking for jobs?”

“Yes.”, I answered, not sure where he was going.

“Then why does everybody act like they hate their job? Don’t they know they’re lucky to have one?”

From the mouths of babes…

© Copyright 2007-2009 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved