(*Slightly re-vamped and completely regurgitated from a previous blog post. To my very kind and faithful readers—all my you-go-girl!ers and even to my I-read-your-blog-because-I-love-to-hate-youers— my apologies for being redundant.)
I don’t know what got into me with Ruby’s birthday festivities this year, but I put it in my head that I had to perform like a principal dancer for the Martha Graham Dance Company. If you know anything about Graham technique, then you know it’s all about contractions. As a dance major in college, I worked long hours on getting that perfect I-just-got-punched-in-the-stomach scoop, my upper body curved into a breathless “C.” I don’t dance anymore, except once in a while when I decide to see if I can still do a Grande Plié in open fourth (barely) or when I want to throw a birthday party. In which case, bring down the house lights! It’s all canes and tap shoes and top hats.
I figured 3 was the perfect age to begin memorable traditions, and by that I don’t mean hiring clowns or, worse, participating in the absurd trend of chauffeuring 12 toddlers in a limo to a day at the spa. No, I wanted something born of my own elbow grease, something meaningful yet simple enough so as to be repeatable. The simple thing I fixated on was baking a cake. A box cake, mind you. I know my limits.
I have dreamy aspirations that my child won’t hate me when she’s in high school; that she’ll never roll her eyes at me, talk back or sneak out with her boyfriend; that she won’t drink my vodka and replace it with water; that she’ll always appreciate my sacrifices. Someday, in my imaginary future, she’ll speak lovingly of me with her college roommates as they smoke a joint and eat one of my fabulous cakes that I’ve sent in a care package, complete with rolling papers.
Thanks to my perpetual state of delusion and—I’ll be honest here—my need to overcompensate for those times when I’ve regretted my choice to be a parent, I did the frenetic birthday tap dance that I swore I’d never do. I planned that party and baked that cake, despite a schedule that was more double-booked than a plastic surgeon’s office in Los Angeles before Oscar season.
In roughly 48 hours, I made trips to Children’s Land, Target, Bed Bath & Beyond and the UTC mall; I attended a cocktail party, hosted a swim play-date, received delivery men—not in a housewife-fantasy kind of way, either—made the requisite gift bags, took my kid for a hair appointment, met two work deadlines, baked cupcakes for the kids at school and baked that motherf*#@ing cake.
Did I feel accomplished? Did I feel like the Woman Who Has it All? No. I felt like a Woman on the Edge who’d done 231 things, none of them well. It’s hardly even necessary to mention that tears flowed after I dumped a pan of cupcakes face down on the kitchen floor while removing them from the oven.
But dammit! That cake turned out like no cake ever has before.
Temperatures at Pepper Grove Park hovered around 100 degrees the day of the party, and all the shaded tables were taken. Beverages were rationed because we hadn’t brought nearly enough and because we’d forgotten juice boxes for the kids and because Sam, the guy in charge of packing the cooler, has a penchant for all things mini, including miniature cans of Diet Coke. Now, I understand that he prefers a 6-ounce beverage (they are very cute). But most people? Most of us like our sodas super-sized, thank you very much. I bit my tongue and didn’t say anything about the puny drinks. He had been a huge help, actually, and didn’t deserve my wrath.
I couldn’t disguise my angst, however, when I realized that in the throes of my cake-baking obsession, party snacks never once crossed my mind. There wasn’t an Elmo cracker or a raisin or a fruit leather or a slice of watermelon to be seen at our party. All the other mothers’ parties had ’em. But not mine. Mine just had the homemade cake.
Pizzas arrived eventually, but I was already in full cardiac arrest at that point. I’m pretty sure veins were bulging from my neck as I tried to politely smile my way through the misery. (When I got home, I had boob sweat on my tank top, and unless I’ve just run three miles on the treadmill, boob sweat is against my religion.)
When it was finally over, we loaded the car as fast as possible and made for home. It was unfortunate that all of my efforts to be The Perfect Mother led me to distraction: In my haste to get out of there, I’d forgotten to buckle Ruby into her car seat. Which was extra-unfortunate since Sam decided to take the on-ramp to the freeway like Javier Bardem would surely take me if we ever crossed paths one summer night on a quiet side street off La Rambla (lord help me if I’m wearing a skirt).
Sam had almost completed the turn when he said to me, “How’d you like those mad skillz, baby?” Then he looked in the rearview mirror. “Oh, shit!” I turned around to see my kid being violently dumped to the floor. She landed there on all fours with the strap of a Pike Place Market canvas bag wrapped around her neck.
She was startled and crying. I checked for injuries and stood soothing her in my arms among the fallen eucalyptus leaves at the freeway on-ramp. Then I handed the human missile her blankie, fastened her seatbelt and quietly apologized to Sam for not latching it in the first place. I let a few beats of silence pass and then let loose with screamed expletives about how best to improve his “mad skillz.” It took everything I had not to bring up the 6-ounce Diet Cokes.
When we got home, I curled up in bed, feeling like I’d just been punched in the stomach, my body in the shape of a perfect “C.”
I don’t think I’ll try another party like this for a long while. Perfection doesn’t really suit me. I’m way more of a flailer, and the sooner I embrace that the better. I’ve come to the conclusion that all the training and technique in the world doesn’t make a bit of difference anyway. Despite my performance, there are certain inevitabilities.
The kid’s gonna hate me in high school. She’s gonna roll her eyes and talk back and sneak out with her friends. She’s gonna drink my booze and try to trick me into thinking she didn’t. And she’ll probably talk to a therapist about the time we didn’t strap her down in the car seat and why it was that she never, ever got to have a normal cake from Costco like all the other kids.
16 responses so far ↓
1 Jamie // Jun 24, 2008 at 2:57 pm
Gawd I love you.
2 BeanPaste // Jun 24, 2008 at 3:37 pm
Honestly, I think everyone has forgotten the buckle-in at least once. And then promptly donned the hairshirt.
3 AzronMcF // Jun 24, 2008 at 3:44 pm
Trust me, Chuck E. Cheese is no stress reliever… it’s like Vegas for the 5 to 13 crowd. It’s bright and loud, everything is kind of sticky, and there are no free cocktails.
Pepper Grove is one of our favorite kid party places.
That and the trusty backyard!
(or there’s always the party room at The NEW Children’s Museum.
4 Smalltown Mom // Jun 24, 2008 at 5:22 pm
Chuck E. Cheese is pretty darn terrifying for adults, at least for me. Stick to backyard parties (if you have one) with a pinata and easy food.
I’m discovering my kids don’t remember much before they started kindergarten. So I don’t think your daughter will remember the car seat incident.
5 Katie the Gardner // Jun 24, 2008 at 6:48 pm
Keep your Vodka in the freezer. That way you’ll know if she puts water in it because it will freeze.
6 Mrs. G. // Jun 24, 2008 at 7:39 pm
While I am sad for Ruby’s fall and mad at Sam for the puny diet cokes, it is the image of you and Javier that will be with me for the week-and, girl, you are wearing a skirt.
7 Jenn @ Juggling Life // Jun 24, 2008 at 10:37 pm
No, not the Chuck E. Cheese! Never the Chuck E. Cheese.
I remembered to buckle the baby in the car seat, but not the car seat in the car. Yes, 4 month old upside down on the floor of the car. I’m almost past the guilt.
8 Cheri @ Blog This Mom! // Jun 24, 2008 at 10:49 pm
“boob sweat is against my religion”
Since religion is against your religion, that makes boob sweat a pretty serious deal.
This is soooooo good Aaryn. This is CityBeat good. Every parent shares such a birthday party experience, but nary a one tells it so well.
9 Christine // Jun 24, 2008 at 10:56 pm
I can totally relate. It is so frustrating to get to the park a few hours before the party starts only to find someone else has been there since dawn and is hogging all of the shaded tables just in case. It’s not like it would hurt them to share.
After spending a lot on DIY parties, I finally understood why people shell out ~$250 at the venues. I don’t do gift bags, but don’t mind buying them. (I still don’t get gifts at weddings, but maybe I just don’t appreciate jordan almonds the way the rest of America must). I’ve never done Chuck E. Cheese (scary to me too), but I can endorse Ice Skating and Boomers. My favorite birthday party was the one the few of us spent overnight at Disneyland.
I have vivid memories of birthday parties and am sure Ruby will too. She won’t remember the boob sweat or 6 oz. cans either ;)… just parents who adore her.
Thank you Katie the Gardner for the tip!
10 aaryn b. // Jun 24, 2008 at 11:43 pm
Okay, so, for the record, there will be not sticky-icky Chuck E. Cheese for this girl. That was creative license, but I totally get why parents would go there. Azron is on to something when he points out they don’t serve alcohol. I’m just going to lower my expectations the next time around. I’m thinking Ruby and a friend, check into a hotel with a pool. Room service. Videos. Stay up late. When she’s older, she’ll be convinced we took her to St.Thomas for her bday.
11 aaryn b. // Jun 24, 2008 at 11:47 pm
Oh! And Mrs. G?
Rawr!
12 stacy // Jun 25, 2008 at 12:53 am
Did I ever tell you about the time GL and I were driving up La Brea, Meena in the back (an only child then), babbling away about something. It was a sunny day and I was feeling fine, and I said to him something along the lines of, “You know, Honey, I don’t mean to brag or whatever, but I feel really good about the kind of parents we’ve turned out to be. I mean, our girl is spirited and smart, and happy. I feel like we’re doing a good job, you know?” Before he answered, I tuned in to whatever she was still yammering about back there–she’d grown kind of insistent. She was saying, “Mommy! Daddy! You forgot to buckle me!”
13 Blondish // Jun 25, 2008 at 8:54 am
boob sweat: only acceptable in the contexts of having just busted your ass on the treadmill, OR having encountered Javier Bardem on a swelteringly hot night on a quiet side street in La Rambla.
14 bordtodth // Jun 25, 2008 at 6:17 pm
Three down….. only 13 more to go…. that is, if she decides to have a “Sweet 16″ party!
15 T.D. // Jun 26, 2008 at 11:16 am
We were just talking last night about how there’s no avoiding the teenage years. All children roll their eyes at their parents. It’s as much a part of growing up as potty training and summer vacation. The best you can do is brace yourself. (My sister-in-law tells me that wine helps.)
And if Ruby sneaks a bit of vodka, that’s probably OK too. In my family, I threw out all the booze when I saw it. My step dad was a wonderful man, before he died of complications related to alchoholism. So… I dumped out any alcohol that I found in the house because I was afraid he’d start drinking again. It never worked.
If Ruby doesn’t have to hide the vodka from you, then you’re in good shape!
16 Clarissa // Jul 11, 2008 at 5:03 pm
Aaryn! I think this is the same A I’ve met/know from Bunco and Jess and Rachel?! Anyway, what a small world that I run into you in blog world. I loved this post and laughed out loud because we have SO. ALL. BEEN. THERE. Screw perfection. We do these things so we can feel like the uber-super-mom and create these great memories for our kids when all they remember is, um, at 3…Nottamuch. See you at Jess’s next Thursday?
Leave a Comment