My Big Boy Moves To The Big City

Today is Father’s Day and tomorrow would have been my late husband M’s 61st birthday. I’m missing M. So much has changed since he passed away almost five years ago, especially our son D, who graduated from college last month, who got a job in NYC and who moved into Manhattan yesterday.

“We missed the exit to the Lincoln Tunnel,” said D as we drove around Jersey City. “My bed is scheduled for delivery between noon and 4:00 p.m,” he added as we turned the car around and headed back to the NJ Turnpike to find the Lincoln Tunnel. It took us over two and a half hours to get to Manhattan, but I was zen and just kept breathing.

I had been running around the day before to get everything on D’s list for his new bachelor pad that he will be sharing with two other bachelors – mattress cover to protect his mattress from bed bugs, mattress pad to make his bed more comfortable, bed skirt to cover his new box spring, sheets for his new full size bed, towels for the bathroom, pots and pans for the kitchen, and an air conditioner for the bedroom (since there is no central air in his apartment).

“He is leaving me with an empty nest again, this time for the real world. He is leaving me with an empty nest, this time for a teeny tiny bedroom in a walk-up tenement in NYC. He is leaving me, just as I left my parents more than 30 years ago, when I moved to the big city to start my career.

“We’ll never find a parking space,” said D as we arrived on his street on the east side of Manhattan. “There is a police station on my block so there is no place to double park.” Surprise, surprise, surprise – there it was, right opposite the police station, an open spot. (“I know your dad is looking out for us,” I muttered as I thought of my late husband M. After I met M in the early ’80s, we lived almost exactly one block away from where D is now about to live.)

D emptied out the car. Carrying boxes and clothes up the three flights of stairs. His sister A came along for support. She too moved to NYC almost four years ago. It felt like just yesterday that D and I were moving A into her apartment.

“I’m here to help,” said A as she dropped her purse in the car and pulled out a few items to carry. “What number is D’s apartment?” “Eleven,” I said and off she went.

“Where is A?” asked D when he came back to the car for more stuff. “I don’t know, I thought she took things up to your place,” I replied somewhat perplexed. D tried to call A, until we both realized that her smartphone was in her handbag which was in the car. She had left about five minutes ago, so I wondered where she was.

“WTF,” yelled A as she stomped out of another building. “I thought you said it was apartment 11. I was ringing the doorbell and knocking on the door wondering why no one was answering. “Ooh, ooh, ooh, close call, glad no one was home. That was the wrong building, how did you even get through the front door?” I said. “A girl let me in,” said A.

I sat in the car under the bright sunshine as D and A emptied the car until only one pair of dress shoes was left for the taking. “I want to see your apartment before I take off,” I said. I walked up the three flights. There was the small kitchen (which D said can fit a table for two or three). There was the small bathroom (it was long and narrow and the medicine cabinet almost came off the wall when I opened it). There were the three teeny tiny bedrooms (D took the mid-sized bedroom, although I couldn’t really tell the difference between the three bedrooms – but I didn’t say that.) There was the tiny living room (which will eventually fit two futons and a coffee table). “Yes, this will be a fine new home,” I said to D.<

I walked back down the three flights of stairs being careful not to trip on the one step that was uneven.  I got back into my car that was parked illegally in front of the police station. I drove back across 34th Street from the east side to the west to enter the Lincoln Tunnel (my heart was beating fast and thank you M, I know you were looking out for me – I didn’t hit anyone while driving across town).

I made it through the Tunnel and I drove back to New Jersey with an empty car. I wanted to scream and yell at the landlord and realtor who charged, as M would have said, “an arm and a leg” for this apartment. I wanted to scream and yell that this apartment “could fit inside my master bedroom, yes the entire apartment could likely fit inside my master bedroom. Okay, maybe inside my master bedroom and my loft area.”

Instead, I called D and I said, “Hi sweetie. I love your new apartment. It reminds me of my first apartment in NYC. I had some of the best years of my life back then and so did your dad. I know you are going to have great times in your new apartment.”

“Empire State of Mind” came on my iPod when I was exercising at the gym this afternoon. I couldn’t resist singing along in dedication to D’s new digs:

One hand in the air for the big city
Street lights, big dreams all looking pretty
No place in the world that can compare
Put your lighters in the air
Everybody say yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
(Come on, Come on)

In New York, concrete jungle where dreams are made, oh
There’s nothing you can’t do, now you’re in New York
Big lights will inspire you, let’s hear it for New York
New York, New York

M and I loved New York when we were young. I still love New York. I do. I do. I’m so glad my daughter A and my son D love it too.

Judi

Quintessential Anna Quindlen

I have always loved journalist and author Anna Quindlen’s writing. I used to read her Life In The 30s column in the New York Times each week when I was in my 30s. I loved the way she wrote about balancing work and life and how the two often collide. I loved her stories because I could connect with them – it was as though she was describing my unbalanced life with two kids, a husband and a full-time job.

While I am a little further away from 60 than Anna is now, I so enjoyed reading her new book, “Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake.” This time I read Anna’s book on my Kindle, although I wish I had a hardcover copy. I found myself constantly wanting to highlight various phrases and pages so I could re-read them again and again. (Instead I used the Clippings tool on my Kindle, to clip and save various sentences and pages.)

“This is me, I agree,” I wanted to tell Anna as I read and re-read each essay. “I feel the same way about aging, I do, I do.”

As Judith Newman said in her review of the book in the New York Times Review, “Each chapter muses on a different aspect of the way Anna’s life (and, by inference, ours) has changed as she moves from her 50s toward her 60s.”

Anna talks about taking greater risks as we get older.  She talks about conquering fears.  When I read about how she finally conquered a headstand, I wanted to send her a note and say “Bravo.”  Anna quotes business guru Deming, who said that “an essential part of maturing, is putting fear aside, because if there’s anything that cripples us it is fear.”

Anna says that many of us with lots of candles on our cake “may not like our age spots or crepey necks, but that we are happier now than we were when we were younger…that we settle into our own skin, even if that skin has sun damage.”According to the Gallup poll of 340,000 people that Anna mentions, people get more contented as they age. “After age fifty there was a change in the weather, and from then on happiness was on an upward trajectory into the eighties. As those in the survey grew older, they reported that stress, anger, sadness all declined.”

Ooh, ooh, ooh. There’s also the Pew study that Anna quotes as well. That study found that most adults over fifty feel at least ten years younger. (Is 50 the new 40? I thought it was the new 30? Some people say that 50 is the new 50. What do you think?)

I don’t want to give away all of Anna’s goodies, so I’ll stop here. I encourage you to download a copy or buy a hardcover book so you can highlight your favorite phrases and sentences as you read. There are essays about girlfriends, mothering adult children, being a parent to parents and a whole lot more.

Ooh, ooh, ooh, there’s one more quote I just have to share. I know you’re going to love it. It’s from Anna’s friend Lesley. Here’s what she said: “On the day my friend Lesley’s first grandchild was born, she sent out a message that ended, ‘You’re never too old to have the best day of your life.’”

Okay, so I haven’t had a grandchild yet. But whether or not I have one, two or none, I still love Lesley’s philosophy about aging. Don’t you?

Judi

Exercising My Menopausal Memory

When my friends at BoomBox Network invited me to test out a new online site called Cranium Crunches, filled with games that challenge my brain, I gladly obliged. I always liked games when I was a kid – Candyland was my favorite with all the colored squares. I was also very good at playing card games with Nana M – War, Gin Rummy, Solitaire – I enjoyed them all.

With my menopausal memory fading fast, I was quick to try a teaser or two to sharpen up my skills. Am I game?  You betcha! Here goes:

First up, was Memory Match, where I honed my attention, categorization and recall skills. I had to match as many photo pairs as I could before my time was up. What 44 clicks to get to 10 matches? I know I can do better than that. I did not back down. Again, 44 clicks. I tried one more time, with more determination. Sixty clicks. Ooh, ah. Ooh, ah. I was ready for a different game.

Next, I moved on to Find The Difference. I was very good at this game. This game required attention to detail, focus and searching strategies. I had to find as many differences as I could in each photo set. One, two three – I beat level I. One, two, three, four, five – I made it through level II. Uh oh! Uh oh! The puzzles in level III were not as easy. I needed help.

Next, I tried the Match game, which required me to act quickly, put things in categories, do problem solving and visual memory all at once. The images were fast moving and my fifty-something mind was a little dizzy by the last banana bunch.

One Of These Things Is Not Like The Other puzzles also kept my attention in check. I remember this type of game when I used to read Highlights magazine in the pediatrician’s office. I was much better at finding the differences in the pictures back when I was five versus now at almost 55. I was best with the pictures of babies versus more scenic shots.

Ruth Curran, founder of Cranium Crunches, has a background in psychology and says that her website offers good exercises for people with a broad range of abilities and levels of functioning.  In fact, next time I am visiting Flo-ree-da, I am going to bring along my iPad and have a Crunch match up with my 90 year old mama.  May the brainest girl win.


Judi

Disclaimer: I wrote this blog post while participating in a campaign by BooMboxNetwork.com on behalf of Cranium Crunches and received payment for my participation.  All opinions stated within are my own.