Yesterday, I turned 39. It wasn’t a birthday for the record books, I’ll tell you that for free, but it did prompt some useful reflection. And so I present: Things I’ve Learned in 39 Years:
- An air popcorn maker really does make the best popcorn. Plus the butter tray on top. Come on.
- Fish emulsion is the very best fertilizer for my garden, introduced to me by my friend Rick. Warning: it smells and looks exactly like it sounds. Mix it with water in an old water jug so it doesn’t stink up your bucket and doesn’t splash on your leg when you pour it. You don’t want that stuff on you.
- Watching a great movie, one that lets you re-evaluate, immerses you in art and makes you feel like maybe even you can produce some, is always a worthy way to spend your time. Best ones I’ve seen lately: “The Big Short,” “The Revenant,” “The Hateful Eight,” “Carol.”
- A lilac bush will make you happy every spring and remind you what the end of the school year smells like.
- Always freeze more strawberries than you think you should. And eat as many as you can with your stepdaughter when they’re in season.
Well don’t I feel like a princess. I’m sitting upstairs in Gabrielle’s playroom at what is now my desk. I’ve got my pens. I’ve got my daytimer. I’ve got my dictionary. And post-it notes have started breeding on the wall in front of me.
Today is my husband’s birthday and, as such, it will be a busy one in the kitchen. But I have all of my grocery shopping done, which is always such a cozy feeling, and now it’s just me, a humming oven and my cookbook.
A few weeks ago, I sat in the passenger seat of my little car and held on to my hat. Beside me sat my stepdaughter Gabrielle with her hands on the steering wheel, looking like she was about to burst. It was her first lesson in learning how to drive standard and we were in the parking lot of a nearby golf course.
It’s been four weeks since you’ve been dumped, and you’ve managed to hold on to your pride and not call him. And then, on a sunny day so innocent it might have been invented by Anne of Green Gables, he calls you. Out of the blue, after senior yearbooks have been passed out, inside of which is a photo of you looking slim, fine and glossy in your graduation dress. You are proud of that picture. You will continue to be proud of it 21 years later.
So you’ve been dumped. It’s been 24 hours, almost 25, and you’ve managed by the skin of your teeth not to do anything about it. Not to mail out the long letter that you have written on the pages of your notebook, the cover of which has a picture of two elderly people holding hands as they walk into the ocean nude, the same two people you imagined would be yourself and your love in 65, make it 100, years.
Twenty-one years, folks. Twenty-one years, eight months, six weeks, four days, two hours. In that time, nearly 11 years of column writing. Magazine and newspaper articles. A book. Short stories. And it’s only just now I feel recovered enough to write about the subject of all subjects: the breakup.
Of all the errands in the history of errands, my very least favorite is going to the bank. You can tell me to find a flapper for the toilet at Lowe’s. You can tell me to bring a pile of shirts to the drycleaners. You can even make me take old paint cans to the solid waste department on sanitation day (actually I like doing this). Just please, please don’t ask me to deposit a check.
Yep, it’s car maintenance time and that means I’m sitting in a waiting room on a burgundy pleather banquette with Fox News and a coffee pot for company. My husband’s front passenger tire has a nail in it, so I had to go to the nearest place possible: a place called Big O, whose name, I think we’ll all agree, is begging for explanation.
Over the years, as my 20s have graduated into my late 30s, what comes churning out of my kitchen has changed. Gone are the days where I made homemade fettuccine alfredo, with its luscious butter, cream and Parmesan, on a monthly basis. Gone too are regular perogy dinners and every recipe, no matter how three-cheesy, out of my potato cookbook.