Saturday, December 17, 2005

My Face

What is it about a face? I have an oozing sore on my face, but if it appeared on my arm, or my neck, even, women everywhere would not flinch, followed by the attempt to hide the flinch, upon seeing the herpes (yes, you call any sore in or on your mouth herpes) on my face. The problem with the oozing is no one can actually see that part, but I can feel it. It creates a little crust on there so it drives me a bit batty as I imagine the monstrosity that is my lip. Sure, I joke, I call it my alien, or a botched piercing. But a casual gander in the mirror, and despite the fact that it is nary a centimeter wide, and my otherwise rather decent face becomes an atrocious offense to females everywhere, including me. Probably only me. Once out of doors, I have no companion mirror to confirm that it's bad, but not flaking or dripping, so I'm a boat with one oar, a kite with no string? This paranoia is especially potent when traipsing through a cosmetics aisle, past the many gleaming bottles of cover-up, the women reading carefully, as if from the talmud, or perhaps a nutrition label. The face and I feign indifference to such concerns, as we aim toward the prescription counter to get the pills to retard the growth of the offending invader. Why fuss over a lollipop red third eye emanating from my upper lip; its golden crust occasionally accumulating, hardening, and flaking off? I want it gone, now.

Back to the original question: what is it about a face? Despite research and literature and revelations about the misguided emphasis on beauty, the fact remains that no one, no one is cavalier about having an open sore or a huge zit or any sort of growth on one's face. The face is the mechanism through which we present our selves - our feelings, our thoughts - to the world. Plus: everyone looks at your face! If your shoes don't match, you could go all day without a sole -haha - noticing. But! If you have a piece of green something in your teeth, I will watch it the whole time we are talking. Unless we are absolutely transcendent, and I absolutely am not, we really truly care about the face.

The lesson here is, um, that it's important to be open about our faces because, unlike more serious maladies, everyone can see them anyway? An open-face sandwich is actually a political statement? Don't kiss a frog if she has an oozing sore? Dare to go out-of-doors, even when you look like a dermatology textbook photo? Or perhaps, in this one instance, grow a moustache.


A caveat: I am quite sure that having herpes on one's face is preferable to having genital herpes, and that is a topic that I am unqualified to write about. Nevertheless, sex is a natural part of being alive and STDs happen - to the brave, the smart, the good, the bra-less, and the young preppies.

Friday, December 16, 2005

Bad Brains

This is not a long post. This is hardly a post at all because it is hard to write anything, or do anyting, when one is depressed, very sad, unmotivated, unclear, or in a fog. I am not referring to regular sadness, but to the level of depression that interferes with the quality of one's life, as they say. The type that makes everything seem gray and drab. Right now everything is truly gray and drab, but even if it were sunny outside, it would be a sooty sun. It is hard to write about depression without kvetching - complaining - but then the point of this blog is to say the stuff we usually keep hidden. So on behalf of depressed women everywhere, I am going to lie down under a blanket. A gray, sooty blanket.

Saturday, December 10, 2005

The Revenge of My Conscience

Fate will not allow it. It is unquestionably in poor taste for me to reminisce about my teen (and later lapses) - years as a smoker - and also a fundamentally unhappy person with halitosis and stinky fingers - on my blog about being open about women's health. Not to mention the lying bastards who try to convince children to smoke. So while my tongue was obviously in my cheek, the body rebelled. Two nights ago, a canker sore on my lip, actually a mongo herpes sore, sprouted and was itchy, burning, tingling and bubbling. Fortunately, my dermatologist is also one of my best friends, and it is through her generosity that I received quick treatment. But as many ailments do, the itching and swelling and discomfort returns as the day ends, right in the center of my upper lip. A mere millimeter away from the very spot where a cigarette would dangle. I do not believe that everything happens for a reason; I do not think I believe in signals; but I do believe that my conscience may have slapped a big fat puss-ball on my mouth.

Friday, December 09, 2005

Why Can't I?

Following a recent loss, many people have told me to take care of myself. Lovely, thoughtful, intelligent people, who know from their own experiences that one must pamper one's self and slow down some to stay sane. They are concerned and compassionate, and I do feel slightly stricken when I hear it because I know I am not doing it. I am a mother, I work full time, and I'm not sure how to squeeze in the taking care of myself part. If I do go to the gym, or manage some yoga - which, in honesty, I am just getting back to after months as a sloth, eagerly saying I'll probably go and then never going - I am so goddamn tired that I take a bath and sleep. It is definitely caring for myself but I am more not doing it than doing it. I also have to not do all of the other things I'm supposed to do but I'm not, like organize my clothes, clean my bureau, help the children organize their rooms, and sort through the many piles of varied things I accumulate everywhere, at home and at work. I am really busy not doing a lot of stuff.

Plus there is a part of me - not the poor-me part, I'll skip that - but another, brazen, immortal part that truly believes I should do whatever the hell I wanna do. Why can't I smoke a fucking cigarette for crissake? I used to smoke, I enjoyed it immensely, and then something overtook me - a tiny moment of forward thinking? - and I realized I could not do that. But why? It is so much fun. Why am I of the age that I must know that some things are good for me and others are not? I hate knowing. I don't wanna know. I would like to eat a chocolate donut and dip it in coffee and I would like some fried chicken and I would like to watch more television, and go to more movies. I would like to have several naps a day.

Perhaps the best solution to the time crunch plus resistance-to-self-care would be a healthy-vitamin aromatherapy cigarette! I have time to smoke, definitely. It's easy as breathing, you just have to have two free fingers. Some people dangle it and don't even use a hand, like Clint Eastwood, and they let the ashes fall here and there, charming little specks of dust. I could smoke and brush my teeth at the same time; I could read, clean my bureau, drive children anywhere. I'm not sure about flossing, but I could sacrifice. My Whole-Body Cigarettes would increase lung power, lower cholesterol, and do the dishes at the same time. Okay, that might be a bit much to ask. Back to reality: the second-hand aroma would relax my children with the scents of chamomile and orange, and magically increase my body's ability to maintain vigor on 5 hours of sleep per night. I'll use the extra time to take a walk, a run, go to yoga class, or meditate. Alas, since society is not ready for many of my ideas (just wait, you'll be begging your grandchildren to light up), I am planning on yoga at 8 a.m. We'll see if I make it.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Hair Scare

I'm hairy. Not as hairy as some other gals, but a lot hairier than I used to be. When I first got hair in my armpits, there were a few long strands and I was utterly disgusted. It looked like an old guy's comb-over under my arm. When we went on a vacation, my mother quietly told me it was time to shave. Now I was really disgusted. When had she seen my pits? Wasn't body hair a male thing? Didn't that stuff belong on my father's chest or my uncle's back? I can't say too much about hair before mentioning that mine - the stuff on my head - is curly and frizzy and it's the usual sob story of how weird-looking I was as a kid because I had this weird Jewish hair, and then of course, I grew to love it. Except only on my head.

The teen years were manageable - if you'll pardon the expression - in regard to hair. I could wear a bikini and reveal nothing; I could be groovy and shave or not shave my legs; my face was pristine, in regard to hair. The hair on my head became a matter of vanity. People complimented me for my natural curls, all long and wildish. I was a body hair virgin then. I thought I knew the meaning of the word hairy, but I hadn't a furry clue.

In my early twenties, a coupla hairs peeked out my bikini, but they were barely visible. At 27, I got pregnant. Coarse black hair sprouted all around what were once my thighs, and now, apparently, were a pair of brillo pad forests. Maybe small creatures would live in there. As my belly grew, so did the hair. Maybe I was going to give birth to a gorilla?

How ridiculous to be concerned about body hair. I went to a women's college. I had worn a menstruation bracelet to symbolize my oneness with womanhood. I had let the pit hair grow. (Never braided it.) Why could I not love my self in my natural state? Because my new self reminded me of a man, for crissake. A man named Larry! A man with hair on his stomach. Yes, it was on my belly, too, in a line from navel to crotch. I became a symbol of natural preganancy, womanhood, round and growing, yet dreading the sideburns and moustache that seemed like they might appear any day. I was utterly hair-phobic and pathetically acculturated. I was, truly, mortified. A man named Larry!

How are we supposed to accept this stuff if no one ever tells us? My mom told me a helluva lot more than her mom told her, but also - my mom is not hairy. My father is hairy. Hairy like Dad. Blech! Hairy like fucking Larry. Then comes the hair on my chin. I'm plucking wildly now. And the lowest point: hair on my otherwise lovely pale pink nipples. What an outrage. A humiliation, a shock. Every time I hear someone say 'that'll put hair on your chest,' I think don't bother, I've got it already. Of course I am so uptight about it I pluck those out. Because what if I forget and I go to the doctor or I remove my shirt in front of someone, and there, protruding from my nipple is a hair, a black, curly hair?! I'm shamed, I'm repressed, I shoulda been a fair-haired Swede. If you haven't figured it out yet, I am still, this very day, backwards in regard to my body hair. I'm luck a fucking Cosmo article, a Teen People, a guy named Larry.

About two years ago, the hair on my head started falling out. After a shower, I'd comb it, and there was this little swirly packet of hair. I panicked at some point, and my doctor told me I was peri-menopausal in my late thirties. I made a plan: save all waxed, shaved, plucked (oh the self-mutilation) and otherwise removed hair for later plastering on top of head. My hair's frizzy - some of it could definitelty pass for pubic hair. I knew of course that that would never work, but a girl can wish. A forty-year-old woman can wish.

I do, on rare occasion, accept all of my hairiness, in tiny philosophical winter all-covered moments of reflection on hirsutism. My hair does not fall out so much anymore, and I am an expert plucker. Besides, once my brothers became adults, they both got hairy too. So I can be hairy like my brothers instead of hairy like my dad. If my eyebrows meet I'll post it.

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Messy Menstruation

Is there a way to menstruate without making a mess? Particularly at menarche, when one's first period begins, a sort of natural anarchy, striking a girl's vulnerable frame at any unknown moment? When I first got my period I believed that a drop of blood would come out of my vagina - supposedly a hole from my insides to my outsides - and that would be that. Mama and I had had a little communication glitch and I did not comprehend the weight - or volume - of the situation. She was actually away at the time, and so I managed the mess myself. She had foreseen the inevitable, however, and left some maxi-pads in the cabinet. They were mega-maxi. I took out the box, careful that no one was lurking around to discover - oh no oh no oh no me with a big weird not-cereal box of "feminine napkins" - and I crept back into the bathroom. But hold on! It was like a diaper. It was huge. Super-duper-deluxe-extra-double-bundled. It was a napkin I could have used for innumerable dinners. How the hell could I fit the behemoth into my pants? (A variation on that question would come up later in a much different context, but that's another blog.) In addition, the stuff coming forth from my alleged vagina looked like blood but also, clearly, had other stuff mixed in. This was not a paper cut or even a big scrape with nice thin red blood. This was something akin to perhaps a female pudding. And, and, well, yuck. I was not yet at one with the complexity of the female body, and I found the materials leaking out of my female body to be repugnant. My menstrual distress also came with diarrhea.

I did stick the pad into my pants and I walked around, even had a stilted conversation with my dad, and then proceeded back to the bathroom, and took the thing out. I examined the box all over. Something was wrong. The blonde box lady smiled, and the helpful diagram showed how the tape worked, but surely this creation was intended for a different use - perhaps a different species? It felt like a massive wad of diaper in my pants, and I was sure that other people would actually see that there was a massive wad of diaper in my pants. I spent a lot of time working my neck muscles to check out my ass in my corduroys. I had to be sure the pad was lodged properly in the very center.

Eventually, months later, I experienced the joy of first leakage: two big brown spots on the back of my beige pants, discovered after school; also, the thrill of being exposed: a maxi-pad I'd hidden in my sock fell out, directly at the feet of a boy in my class; and catharsis: in college, when I opened my dorm-room door for my straight-laced brother and his even straighter friend, one of my female cohorts had left a pad stuck - eye-level - to the door. Fortunately, it was unused.

Mama gave me a big hug when she returned from her overnight away. I felt disgusted with myself. She told me that I was a woman now. She did, mysteriously, tell me that I would need to shower every day henceforth. She did not say why, though, and I did not ask. Was it because of the pudding, or had something else occurred, too, which had to be soaped away daily? Before my little sister got her period, having grown my ovaries a bit, I directed my mother to tell her everything. Not convinced that she would, my best friend and I sat my sister down, with a tampon, and held forth with the facts. Fact number one: you don't wanna walk around in a diaper, so learn how to use a plug.

Saturday, December 03, 2005

Women Keeping Secrets

I am just starting this blog because I am tired of feeling like I need to keep all these secrets and the secrets of my friends because we are all so embarrassed to be women, goddammit. Our bodies are multi-faceted, and sometimes multi-fauceted and there is no point in pretending that we are like those plastic dolls with no pee-hole. Why oh why is it a crime to have depression? Urinary tract infection, anyone? How's about migraine, myopia, miscarriage, menopause, manic depression - okay, bipolar - or just plain self-diagnosed mania? My neighborhood is quite lovely with all sorts of friendly people and then one by one as I got to know the gals around, I discovered whoa! Some of them were really hurting but there was this sort of code regarding psychiatric, gynecological and other types of health. Is it really that bad to just say "I have diarrhea?" We're all like "I had a little upset tummy," as if we're pre-schoolers - even to our good friends.

I guess I gotta walk the walk here so I'll tell you I have depression, I have anxiety, I have migraine, probably epilepsy, a bad back, something called hypertonic pelvic floor, which involves being, basically, in a permanent kegel exercise, and is only remedied by invasive physical therapy (by an absolute goddess of compassion, but still). Perhaps you're thinking - holy shit! This chick's a mess! Well, no! I work full time, I have 2 kids, a healthy relationship, and an excellent dog. No one really knows about all this crap put together except my husband who is like 'what the hell is goin' on?' when I have to see, say a uro-gynecologist, or an endocrinologist.

I go into the medical office, though (or alternative medicine - but that's pricey), and there are all of these other women sitting there, and the chances are - I know from the compassionate goddess physical therapist - some of them are young as 16, others are senior citizens, and plenty are smack-dab in the middle like me - 40 fucking years old with a list of maladies that I would like to burn with the end of a Marlboro cigarette that I cannot smoke because it's bad for me while I drink some red wine which I cannot drink because it's bad for me but I do sometimes anyway.

So tell me, tell me. Why are we so quiet? Why did my mother - a devoted mama through all sorts of crap - never tell me about vaginal discharge? Did yours? That stuff comes out daily. Didja know that that itching might be a yeast infection, or did you wait, like me, until it was unbearable? No one ever said! How to use a tampon? I walked around with that thing just inside so it really hurt because that's where the muscle pulls in. No one ever said. My feeling is: say it, sister. Goddammit.