Busted:MindyRobertssmoochesMr.Whipple

I swear, he was all over me. I didn’t start it.

(Thanks, Elizabeth!)

He could at least look happy about it.

q&a:april2004:thequestions

Memes are so 2004, but I found one I’d been looking for but unable to find because all the links are broken and it’s on the wrong server. One or the other problem would be enough, but hey, why just have one problem, you know? It’s all about the comfort zone, baby.

This is a meme I did for Q&A: The Photographic Review in 2004, and looking back, I’m pleased to report that absolutely nothing has changed.

one. who am i?: a mother
two. who knows me best? mom
three. how old am i? (or how old do i feel?) old enough to risk my life for someone, but not old enough to take it seriously
four. the most important thing in my life is spending time with family
five. i always carry keys, wallet, cell phone, lipstick
six. something i always do check e-mail
seven. i’m at my happiest when i get the feeling we’ve done the important things well
eight. on a monday morning, you can find me staring at my closet
nine. my favourite mode of transport: my trusty Volvo
ten. my eyes are: green
eleven. my favourite material posession: my heart choker
twelve. to relax, i like to read a little
thirteen. the town i live in is neighborly
fourteen. my worst habit: retail therapy
fifteen. my guilty pleasure: McD’s
sixteen. when i look at someone, the first thing i see is their eyes
seventeen. i think friendship is beautiful
eighteen. one thing i can live without: unfinished business
nineteen. one thing people don’t know about me: i’m a rebel
twenty. my life is controlled chaos

Wait! One thing's changed: I have a Mac!

FamilyMatters-HiringaChildCareProvider

Tracey Serebin of FamilyMatters Talk Radio interviewed my along with Genevieve Thiers from SitterCity.com on hiring a child care provider.

One of the most important decisions a new parent makes is choosing someone to take care of their child when they are working. This week I am speaking with Genevieve Thiers, Founder of Sittercity.com, America’s largest and most trustworthy online souce for caregivers, about what new parents need to be aware of when hiring a child care provider for their new baby. Also joining me is Melinda Roberts, mother of three children and author of TheMommyBlog.net, sharing her experiences in hiring a nanny for her first two children.

Listen now.
Guess I'd better go listen, too!

PampersParentingInstitute;Or,ThisIsNotYourMother’sDiaperCompany

Let me just state for the record that there’s nothing quite like being called out as the train wreck in the crowd. I know! So surprising.

One of the introductory talks was at the Pampers Parenting Institute at P&G headquarters, in the archive room. I wanted to stay there the whole day–the place was full of memorabilia from decades of advertisements and collectibles, from Norman Rockwell’s original painting for the “Look, Mom, no cavities!” campaign to a tiny envelope holding a lock of John Wayne’s hair from back when a division of the company (or one of the principals) used to create wigs for Hollywood stars. They also had a lock of Elizabeth Taylor’s hair, but that stayed in the back. We were fascinated by the descriptions of how they would use tracings of hair patterns that were placed on wooden heads so that most of the wig making could take place before the stars came in for fittings to confirm the hairlines and color. We all gasped when the archivist casually opened JW’s envelope and spilled the hair out for us to see. “Nobody sneeze!” was the first thing I thought.

After a tour of the archives, which ended with a peek at the carve-it-yourself kits they used to sell (two bars of Ivory Soap, with carving knives) to kids along with instructions on how to turn that bar of soap into a Schnauzer. I love it. Try selling an awl and a knife today along with a bar of soap and see how long before you’re vacationing at Gitmo.

When Jane Wildman, Global Vice-President, Pampers, introduced herself, she asked, “Who was it that fell in the rose bush?” I held my hand at half-mast. Thank you. But! It did show that they read our blogs before meeting us! At another talk, the first question was, “Who was the one running through the Chicago Airport to get on a last minute plane?” “That would be me.” Gah. Can someone else have a story? I was the Train Wreck du jour. But then there was a much deserved round of applause for the PR wunderkind who managed to get me on another plane in time to join everyone for the tour. We had a lovely dinner across the river in Kentucky ("We’re goin’ to Kentucky; we’re goin’ to the fair!"), after which I checked into my room and passed out from sheer exhaustion.

It was up again at seven to get ready for the first meeting–although I’d been awake since six (three my time) for some cruel reason after only five hours of sleep. I brewed coffee in the room, showered, dressed, packed, and checked out. And left my coffee in the room. In the lobby, I met with another blogger on the way to get coffee in the lobby, and she asked about the mishaps as I put cream and sugar in my cup. “Oh, yes, we have a running joke about a family curse,” I said, “Someone always has a mishap near a holiday and it’s my son’s and brother’s birthday on Friday.”

“But you’re the only one here.”

Yes. Yes, I am. Thank you, we now have the common denominator, I thought, as I picked up my coffee, popping the lid off on one side and scalding my hand. This was a little too much revelation for one morning.

I’m not even sure how to go about describing what we saw and heard today. I wasn’t really sure what it would be – a product pitch, a focus group setting, mommy blogger brain-picking–but it wasn’t any of those things. (Although we DID get to see someone make a diaper from scratch. People, I will never toss one of those little wonders into the bin quite so casually ever again. Those puppies are engineered.) Kailani at An Island Life wrote a wonderful post (and I’m pleased that she got the same vibe as I did) and posted lots of photos. I brought my camera, but alas, the battery was dead. Of course.

They just wanted to show us who they were. And they were, to a person, extremely passionate about their mission their work, and what they could do to help moms and babies. Help a mom, help a child. Make a mom healthy and make a healthy child. An educated mom gives a child a leg up. Every single one of them believed it; each of them was building the cathedral. I was blown away.

For one thing, you have no idea the range of brands collected under the Proctor & Gamble name. When I saw the scatter gram of brands, I identified at least seventeen that were in my house this minute. Wipes, Swiffers, soap, you name it.

And since I haven’t had occasion to buy diapers in a while, I wasn’t aware of something else Pampers was doing: the One Pack = One Vaccine Program. For each marked package of Pampers diapers people purchase, they will buy one tetanus vaccine for a mother or child at extreme risk of developing tetanus during birth or shortly thereafter. Last year, 140,000 babies and 30,000 mothers died of this highly morbid disease, which can be prevented with a five-cent vaccination.

Five cents. Good God.

They are working in partnership with UNICEF USA, and we had the privilege of meeting with the CEO herself, Caryl Stern-La Rosa. After hearing abut their efforts and what people were so passionately trying to accomplish ("I believe in zero” as in, zero deaths from tetanus, someday, hopefully soon) and were well on the right trajectory.

It’s unacceptable that children die of preventable causes. Join UNICEF’s fight for child survival

It didn’t make me want to run out and buy diapers. It made me want to work there, to be a part of it. And you all know what a cynical little snot I am, so that’s really saying something. Caryl’s words and palpable dedication to her work was a staggering close to the event, and we all drifted out of the building and into the waiting cars on a wave of promises to be in touch with ideas for outreach, cards changing hands and suggestions that it not end there.

Oh, and as I was picking up a copy of Caryl’s new book, Hate Hurts, she glanced at my proffered card and said, “I read your book.” Bug Eyes. “You did? How on earth did you stumble on a copy of my book?” “I’m not sure - but I recognize the tagline on your card: Mommy Confidential: Adventures from the Wonderbelly of Motherhood.” I couldn’t believe it. But she read it! I should have asked if she liked it, but I was too stunned to get past the fact that she sat through all five hundred pages.

Thank you, Jane and all your colleagues, for having us.

Anyway, I was looking forward to getting online at the airport and then SLEEPING the entire way home. We were about five hundred yards away from the hotel when WonderGirl called. She misses me! Already! No. “Mindy, I can’t believe I’m saying this, but your flight’s been canceled.”

“No.”

“But we got you on another one that leaves in four hours.”

“Fuck me.” Heads turned for a moment in the van. “Thank you so much for getting me on another flight. I can’t believe the hustling you’re doing to make this smooth.”

Know what was REALLY smooth, though? My connecting flight was not in Houston anymore, oh no, it was in CHICAGO, and the connecting gate? Was ALL THE WAY ACROSS THE DAMN AIRPORT again.

At least this time I could walk. And when I got on the plane, I sipped a very nice glass of cabernet while the flight attendant hoped for more paying customers so she could break my twenty. Finally, she tried to give me back the money because she couldn’t get change, and I said, “Oh, hell, just give me a couple more bottles and I’ll take them home.” You would have loved the looks when she handed me three more bottles and whispered, “Now it just looks like you drink too much,” as I tried to stuff them into my bag without them clinking.

I can't wait to get home to my own bed, and to be woken by the children in the morning.

Ifyoucan’tunderstandthis,perhapsit’sbecauseI’mnotwearingmyglasses

You know what’s worse than being offline for twenty-one hours? Being offline AND unable to access your parental shrine of self-absorption.

Sixteen hours ago, I rose at 4 a.m. to catch a car to the airport, where I would fly to Cincinnati for the Pampers Parenting Institute. So exciting!–and a small group, manageable, intimate, we can all hang out and get to know each other.

Enter me, stage right.

First thing I did was trip over a sprinkler getting to the car, and then spill powder on myself trying to put on makeup in the back seat. Then, we found that the airport traffic was re-rerouted in a crazy-eight such that you couldn’t get there from here without first going over there and back here. We still got there in time. JUST in time, but in time.

And that was when I exited the car and did a full-on Miss Congeniality pratfall on the sidewalk, dropping my two novels (who brings two novels on an overnight?) on the floor of the car and schmushing my glasses. Gaaarrghh. I popped right back up again a la Sandra Bullock and marched right up to a check in machine and collected my boarding pass. And then? In band camp? I tried to bend my eyeglasses back in shape, popped out a lens and snapped off one of the stems. Jesus H. Ebeneezer Christ in a sidecar eating a donut.

We all shuffled toward security, past where the food court used to be, and all the way to the first baggage carousel to get to the end of the line, which then snaked back around past one, then two, then three baggage carousels, back past the food court, to the first of three amusement park cattle courses and then finally to one of the six (six!) lines to go through the metal detector. Where the woman in front of me was in a wheelchair.

I thought, oh, she’ll go right through the little gate. No, she was going to stand. She got up, shakily, while half of us readied to catch her or jump away and the other half winced. She baby stepped all the way up to the gate where she stood, flapping her hands, terrified of stepping up and over the little rise of the metal detector’s frame. Her attendant, an airline employee, stood at the ready, watching the woman inch her way across the threshold and not setting off any alarms to our collective relief.

But then the attendant had trouble getting the wheelchair through, and then seemed confused about going through the detector herself. Presumably, being an airline employee pushing a wheelchair for a passenger, she had permission to cross the threshold as well. But she wasn’t entirely sure. Perhaps she was surer before her charge nearly fainted negotiating the thing. Finally, she grasped her employee badge and held it up in front of her like an amulet and I SWEAR TO GOD closed her eyes before ducking through. These are the crackerjack security folks keeping America safe? I’m sorry, but standing there, barefoot and juggling two bags, a laptop, my shoes and three bins, it felt like the terrorists were winning.

Anyway, the flight to Chicago… was a flight to Chicago. What can I say? I hate flying into O’Hare. I lived there for fifteen years and am no longer charmed by the flashy lights and New Age music in the tunnel connecting the United terminals. On the flight, I bought one of those mini meals to stop the growling in my stomach (and to help keep my internal organs down), and as soon as I ripped open the box, I dropped the little plastic knife. No matter, I’d eat the applesauce first. And that was when I discovered that I could neither find the knife, move anything out of the way to look for it, nor open a single bloody packet without it. The peel-off lid on the Rondele? Would not peel. I tried pressing and then jabbing lightly on the foil with the spoon. The spoon broke. At that point it was either start crying or go to sleep. I slept.

To my great joy, we landed at Concourse B! No tunnel! I could hardly believe my luck. I still had about fifteen minutes to board my connection but, alas, it was cancelled. They had put me on standby in three hours.

PR WonderGirl to the rescue! I phoned my contact and agreed I’d started walking toward the later flight’s gate (in Concourse C! Newman!) while she checked to see if she could get me on another airline. I cursed the entire way through the tunnel, refusing to look up and go oooohooh, and hoofed it all the way Back to C. At which point WonderGirl called to say I was confirmed on another flight! Woohoo! Oh, but it was boarding in five minutes On Delta Fucking Airlines, in Concourse L. For Loser.

Does anyone know how far that is? I made a map of my journey. See for yourself.

I jogged over to the nearest information kiosk to confirm L’s location, where I had a small heart attack, took off my shoes, and pelted the mile or so across the airport. I OJ’d my way through seven concourses, skirting every single security line in the place. People stepped quickly out of my way. Children clung to their mothers’ skirts. I was going to make that flight.

One the way, clutching the phone to my ear, I scrambled for something to write the flight number on. How can I not have a pen? Who goes out of town without a PEN? What kind of a writer AM I? Jeebus.

I found a pale blue colored pencil deep in my bag, whipped it out, and asked WonderGirl to repeat the information. That was when the pencil flew our of my grasp, landed exactly on the point, and then the tip snapped off and did a full gainer with a twist before rolling under a door marked AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY.

There was nothing to do but dig out my DS and pictochat with myself to retain the gate and flight number. Yeah, I know.

Five minutes later, sweat pouring down my forehead, back, and arms, I was still only halfway there. I was that guy in the Olympics who could only make it to the finish line in bare feet. Shoes couldn’t help me now. Actually, if my heart gave out it wouldn’t matter.

Finally, I skidded to a halt and collapsed at the counter at the gate, heaving and gasping. “My flight was cancelled… GASP… and they put me on…GASP…this flight…GASP… and I should have a boarding…GASP… pass!”

“Let me see.” Her nails clacked over the keyboard. Back and forth. Typity type, ENTER. Tyyyyypity typeeeee ENTER. Was she playing Tetris? “Yes, you’re confirmed. Let me just print your boarding pass and then you can have a seat until we begin boarding.”

WHAT?

They were supposed to be in the air already, I lost seventy percent of my lung capacity in the sprint over, the rose thorn lacerations all up my leg were on fire, and the plane was late taking off. I had like ten minutes to relax. WHICH I COULDN’T because my heart rate was through the roof and my knees were giving out but wouldn’t bend so that I could sit. Not that anyone really wanted me sitting there.

It must have all been for a reason, because my seatmate in the emergency row was a scream, and we talked and laughed all the way to Cincinnati. I didn’t even know we’d been in the air until the beverage cart came and he bought me a glass of wine for breakfast and a Jack and Coke for himself. We traded kid stories, talked about work, and realized that we knew a whole slew of the same people in Chicago, Colorado Springs, and California. We even knew some of the same places in Tijuana. You don’t even want to know. And then he said he’d once played for the A’s, The baseball team Logan idolizes! If he’s not wearing a Shark’s jersey, he’s decked out in green and gold, head to toe. I got an autograph. He said, “There won’t be a baseball card.”

“Just sign it. To Logan.”

“ I was only on for like five minutes, and then I got cut.”

“The point is that you were THERE. You wore the uniform. Logan is going to love this.”

Best of all, he and his son had just returned from Beijing, where Phil and I are going in two weeks! It was a great trip except for the cough that lasted ten days after he landed. The air’s a little thick over there.

There was sooo much more to this day, but I’m beat and have to check out at 08:30 tomorrow. My dogs are barking and my head’s telling me that the second martini at dinner really wasn’t all that necessary

Nite, all.

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