Saturday, December 26, 2020

Boxing Alone, Together.

It’s been a year. And I’m writing this from a closet.

...Which I’ve dubbed “Mama’s writing nook” and supplied with essential writing accouterment including, but not limited to, expensive noise-canceling headphones, a Pendleton blanket, and a bottle of moderately priced champagne. And it’s quiet. Which is a word so seldom used to describe my life that stumbling upon it felt like finding a $100 bill in an empty parking lot – confusion, guilt, thrill, all wrapped into one intoxicating deliverance. 

If you’re confused about why you’ve been figuratively thrown into my cozy champagne chalet, may I remind you that it’s Boxing Day, an annual tradition where I forgo sending gifts and instead send you all of my opinions? Welcome! Like everything else in 2020, rest assured that this will be especially light and whimsical... 

In this year of 396 years, we’ve had a front-row seat in watching the unprecedented become precedented. In These Uncertain Times, what we all know for certain is that if we hear that phrase from a corporate brand trying to sell us an emotionally manipulated silver bullet just one more time... or zoom-fatigue, or “you’re on mute,” or any other insta-cliched neologisms, we will all (in this together) completely snap. And I’ll admit, in Times Like These, I’m tempted to whip something up for you that’s equal parts pithy and trite, proclaim something like “Sweatpants Forever!” and re-emerge upbeat and seemingly unscathed from the feces-lined waterslide 2020 sent us down blindfolded. It feels both logical and humane to wish for a momentary pause from the ceaseless conflict because between a particularly talented showman (whose latest act is feigning fury over a “stolen election” to subsidize his personal debt) and an entire subculture who has made denying science a culture war, an incredible amount of energy has been invested in division this year. A pause does sound nice. And yet, if anything has been brightly illuminated, it is my own unmistakable privilege to be able to stop paying attention when things get uncomfortable. (Nothing says you aren’t being impacted by something more than your ability to ignore it.) Putting a positive spin on things, while earnest, also serves to gaslight the raw pain and suffering this year has surfaced. So here we are. Many of us have spent the past nine months hoping, wishing, lusting for “normal.” Many of us have spent the past four years longing for a “normal” president. In 2021, we may get both of those wishes. But what will normal look like? And more importantly, what should it look like?

As for my current normal, Owen, our 1st grader, hasn’t been in a classroom since early March. He’s coping as well as imagined, Minecraft has unironically played a large role in teaching him how to read, and his ability to navigate any form of digital tech is uncanny. He’s isolated for most of the day, sitting at a desk in our basement from 9am-3pm, while I, behind a nearby door, virtually bounce from meeting to meeting, muting myself when his teacher attempts to facilitate virtual PE to what sounds like a JockJams megamix. I try to remember that he’s six and that focusing in front of a screen is challenging at any age. But most days my patience is paper-thin when I find that he’s sharpened all of his pencils to nubs, drawn on his desk, or made an executive decision to put himself on mute, turn off his video, and play with his legos. The current normal for 48% of all US students is full-time virtual instruction (another 18% are hybrid), and these rates are higher among poor students and students of color. Our school district distributed personal iPads and hotspots for every student. Private schools are holding classes under heated tents on sprawling campuses. Low-income students are sitting outside McDonald’s to get internet access. Normal sure can hit differently. Paraphrasing from Dr. Jal Mehta’s NYT opinion piece Make Schools More Human, we are realizing what we should have known all along: relationships are critical for learning. Pandemic or not, students’ interests need to be stimulated and their selves need to be recognized. The same is true for teachers. Teachers need to feel physically safe, they need support, they need their work to be recognized and honored, and they need working conditions that make it possible for them to succeed. All of this is doubly true in high-poverty communities, where, in the name of urgency, we’ve moved the furthest from taking a human approach to both students and teachers. This is not the normal we should return to. 

Over 330,000 Americans have died from a disease that has spread through the fissures in our communities, revealing the inequalities that were already rampant and built (intentionally) into the structure of our society. The US economy has 10 million fewer jobs than it did in February – almost all low-income service jobs – leaving the most vulnerable unemployed as the richest among us continue to watch their profits soar. This is not the normal we should return to.

And remember the collective cringe we all shared for BBC dad in 2017? This is also not the normal we should return to. For good and bad, 2020 has humanized us all. It has stomped its feet and demanded empathy and realness, even amidst the void of anything remotely resembling it from our president. We’ve collectively revealed our truest joys, our deepest pain, our darkest fears, our weakest points. We’ve seen the best and the worst of humanity and exposed that the privilege of apathy is the loudest silence. We’ve lifted the veil on cold, calculated, professionalism by divulging our cluttered basements, questionable art choices, toy-infested living rooms, unmade beds, dirty kitchens, curious pets, and exuberant children, fleshing out the fullness of our lives to those who previously only saw one dimension. And it makes you wonder: why were we trying so hard to hide all of this humanness before? What good did that do anyone? It’s impossible to miss the rambunctious interruptions we’ve come to know and love, but look carefully on your next virtual meeting and you’ll likely spot a silent mouthed “thank you” to an off-screen someone who is dropping off a coffee, snack, or lunch plate. These quieter moments of real-life and gratitude are reminders that, though this is impossibly difficult, it is still full of small gestures of love and light.

On the topic of light, December 21st marked the winter solstice when days get longer in the northern hemisphere – the oldest celebration in human history, because at the moment we’re farthest from the sun, it draws us closer once again. On our daily walks, Noa squeals with glee at the Christmas lights and points at every un-lit strand, indignantly demanding “ON! ON!,” almost as if she understands that as dim as it’s been, we have to celebrate whatever light we can find and share it with others.

So while it would be cathartic to close out this terrible year by hitting send on a scathing hot take on precisely how and where 2020 can go f*** itself, I’m instead here to confront the underlying tension many of us are experiencing this holiday season. The exhausted desire for rest and normalcy, but the visceral reminder that when we stress-tested our societal foundation, large sections had gaping holes. What was normal for many is not safe to return to. (In many cases, it wasn’t safe to begin with.) So my message to you is this – let’s resist the rallying cries to forget all things 2020. Let’s instead recognize it as a year so uncomfortable, so painful, so scary, so raw, that it forced us to grow. Let’s peel off the sticky film that coated every experience, good and bad, and use it as our lens through which we change our collective normal. Because the truth is, what happens next is up to all of us. How willing we are to fight, how well we learned from what’s happened, and how much we are able to care about one another. We have a lot to grieve from 2020 and much to repair, but the glimmers of goodness remain in their places. John Lewis and Ruth Bader Ginsberg feel near because we hold the light of those we lost inside us. Let’s chase after it with Noa’s fierce urgency. ON! ON! Let’s illuminate the paths forward as we stumble along in this, our collective endeavor toward our new normal.

Sweatpants Forever!

Thursday, December 26, 2019

Treat yourself to Boxing Day 2019

Ah, Boxing Day. The day I remind you (at length) that I forgo sending presents and instead send you all of my opinions. Get excited. But while past epistels have gone the full 12 rounds, I’m hoping for an early knockout this year because while I was born to be wild, the cliché clocks out at about 9pm in my world. And in said world, it’s 8:51pm the night of my self-imposed due date. So get your fill of my final nine minutes of wild before I call it an evening and relax to a show about nuclear reactor meltdowns (or royal family meltdowns or media conglomerate meltdowns) and leave you to whatever TikTok monstrosities happen after 9pm these days. Your move.  

Speaking of self-imposed due dates, miss Noa Eleanor was born on May 27th, 2019. Which would have been spectacular if that was when we were expecting her to arrive. Instead, we expected “the second week of June,” which we said so many times we apparently convinced ourselves that it would be completely appropriate to A. Plan a summit in Seattle for a handful of my internationally-based colleagues on May 28th, and B. Fix an old sprinkler system over Memorial Day weekend, because surely she wouldn’t arrive in May... we said. Even as the pipes burst, and we had to wrench off our main water supply at street level, and our yard transformed into a mud pit that would make a pig’s wildest HGTV-inspired vision board look tame, we still joked – like the blasé, fate-tempting, 3rd-child-parents-to-be we were – “lucky it was the yard’s water that broke and not mine!” Har Har HAR. Fifteen minutes later we got in the car, went to the hospital, and had a baby. 

The grand positive is that she is spectacular. Noa is the baby you don’t want people without children to meet because she lures them into believing that babies are easy and engaging and infinitely patient. They are not. We earned this baby. Quick backstory on her name: the female name Noa means “movement/motion” in Hebrew, “from love” in Japanese, and “to free/release” in Hawaiian. And while that’s all objectively adorable, we have this thing with initials – Theodore Asher (TAS) is the sidekick to big brother Owen Zachary (OZ) (which will track for my antipodean readers), and we couldn’t leave our girl without a special nod of her own. Our names list was long and highly contentious (see last year’s missive), but NES felt right the moment we landed on it. Outside of her early arrival, the only milestones she’s been eager to hit are height and weight; she is way too content taking it all in and being doted on by every human who enters her orbit to worry about silly things like sitting unassisted (and I am way too deep in 3rd-child parenting to be concerned in the slightest). Our lives are hectic and loud, fueled by caffeine and mac’n’cheese, filled with wonder and laughter and shouting and tears, dreams and dramas, sticky fingers and stuffy noses, pitchy songs and rainbow drawings, topped with dancing and building and running and crashing and so, so overwhelmingly full of love. It’s a beautiful chaos and I am embracing it. This wine has helped.

My 2020 mindset is to let go of what’s gone, be grateful for what remains, and look forward to what’s coming. To “go get there” as Beyoncé says. But have you ever felt nostalgia for a moment you’re currently in? Have you been immersed in your routine and suddenly realized that all of these people, this place, this particular blend of normalcy, will all disappear? And that you’ll miss it? I do this. I imagine my future-self looking back on my present-self and missing the moment I am actually still in. This, of course, is not a unique phenomenon nor original observation – it’s why we post photos from our vacations and enjoy scrolling through our own insta as much as anyone else’s. But I do find it compelling that it’s not the flagship moments of my life that I yearn to drop in on. It’s not even moments I found worthy of a photo or journal entry. It’s not the peaks, the pits, the transitions – it’s the unimportant, the unremarkable, the boring. 

The word nostalgia is a Greek compound of nóstos, or “the act of returning” and álgos, meaning “pain or ache” and I think that is perfect. It truly is an ache. I feel it for van rides to soccer matches in 2004. For inane conversations over highly questionable drinks at the Gypsy on NW 21st. For nights between ports on Semester at Sea. For Saturday strolls to Broadway Market and cutting through the North Bondi grassy knoll. These were not the insta-moments that made my social feeds, they were the in-betweens. The daily minutiae that bridged the gaps between the “big stuff” worthy of celebrating, mourning, and sharing. The middle moments where the work happened and the relationships solidified and the life lived. So how do I capture this? How can I put a bell jar over it so that when I do hit major milestones, when I do get there, I can pull up these formative moments as vividly as if they were preserved in resin? Today I watched my boys “negotiate” who got to send a marble down a track they spent the day building while Noa cooed contentedly from her mat on the floor. (She puked a little. I didn’t get up. 3rd child vibes.) I could hear my dad doing dishes in the kitchen and my mom transferring clothes from the washer to the dryer. Minutiae. And I want to bottle it. 

So here I am with future-me feeling all nostalgic, but the truth is that current-me’s life would cause the word chaos to curl up in a weighted blanket to de-stress. To add to my aforementioned list-o-chaos, on December 3rd, after weeks of extreme pain, fatigue, and weight loss, Jonny went to a doctor, which turned into a trip to the ER, which resulted in a 16-day hospital stay capped by emergency surgery to remove 47cm of abscessed small intestine. (Yeah, so I buried the lede this year. But I promised you a wild nine minutes and I dare not underdeliver!) He came home December 19th, but has continued to sleep most waking hours and receive antibiotics and nutrition through a PICC line in his arm. He can’t lift more than 15lbs (aka: not our 99th percentile baby), which means I’m a month deep as the solo-parent with the fulltime+ job ultimately responsible for the health, happiness, and deliverables of direct reports on both sides of my commute. Things have been really, really, real over here. 

And yet, this holiday season has been one of the most vivid and abundant and joy-filled that I can remember. Why? My theory is that, by becoming laser focused and cutting out unnecessary distractions, by dropping societal pressures and honing in on meeting the true needs of myself and my family, by spending my limited energy-budget on positive, edifying tasks rather than on anything low priority or emotionally unproductive, I’ve traded in breadth for depth. (When my screentime dropped below 30 minutes a day, I thought Siri might pop up to see if I was okay.) And this just might be the key to bottling the mundane moments – you have to be there for them. Look up. Reign in distractions. Focus.

Guys, we’ve rallied behind the wrong idea of self-care. True self-care isn’t the “treat yourself” solution that the booming anxiety consumerism market would lead us to believe. Look, I’m not coming for your aromatherapy oils and weighted blankets (and I’ll spare you my thoughts on the ethics of treating anxiety with stuff in the first place), but self-care is not about taking mandated breaks from living in order to do basic things like bathing and reading a book. It is about building a sustainable life that you don’t need to escape from in the first place. Bubble baths and chocolate cake should be used (and used often) to enjoy life, not to escape from it. 

And often it’s the opposite of indulging – it’s doing The Thing I want to do the least. It is enforcing a morning routine, cooking healthy meals, and easing up on my own relentless internal pressure to be everything to everyone. It has meant disappointing some (sorry, Siri) and letting non-essential things slip (like being okay with a dirty kitchen or a Boxing Day email that goes out a day late). It has meant putting my oxygen mask on first, parenting myself, and making proactive choices for my own long-term wellness. It has been dropping toxic relationships and surrounding myself with friends and colleagues who force me to level up. Like, seriously level up. My success has been in direct proportion to the quality of relationships in my life. It is committing to ruthlessly prioritizing the mantra “What do I have? What do I want? What am I willing to give up?” It is realizing and appreciating how wildly capable I am and continue becoming.

I truly believe that happiness is not a goal, it is a byproduct of a life well lived. And this year I was gently reminded that “well lived,” while marked by the milestones we strive to achieve and celebrate, is earned in the daily minutiae and realized through true self-care. It is up to you not to miss the happiness it produces, to appreciate the beauty in chaos, to sacrifice breadth for depth, and, in doing so, trade escapism for enjoyment. Noa has had it right all along. 

Happy 2020, everyone. Go get there.
Laura 

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Boxing-Binge 2018 (Season 14 Now Available)

It starts around the second week of December. Friends I’m texting will casually add something like: “Your boxing thing is still coming, right?” And I get it, people. Is there even anything else to do on December 26th? (No.) How would you know if I’m okay if I didn’t send you on a sardonic word rollercoaster speeding around curves from the benefits of a carbon tax to the hypocrisy of turning away persecuted refugee families while singing “Away In A Manger?” (I’m fine.) And most importantly, where else are you going to find shouty opinions that conveniently affirm most of your own socio-political leanings? (Times are so hard for shouty opinions.) To not disappoint, this year I boxing-binged early in hopes that I don’t have to undergo your shouty opinions when the 26th comes and goes without this mutually masochistic missive gracing your inbox. Are we having fun yet? Fasten your seatbelts.

But I know why you’re really here. This letter generally serves as my announcement channel for big life changes – most notably new babies and new addresses. Well. I’m pleased to announce that, for the first time since 2006, I do not have a new address to share this year. She’s arriving in June.

To the confusion of many, Owen has been brazenly telling people he’s “getting a baby sister” for the last 18-months. So when we told him that he’s actually getting a baby sister, his response was an exasperated “I already no’dat, guys.” Since then, not much has changed in his forthright demeanor other than the fact that now, it’s true. And Theo, the perpetually loyal companion, has started leaving tithes and offerings by saving coveted bites of his favorite snacks and setting them on top of my I-ate-a-burrito-shaped belly. (I wait until he’s not looking and eat them without complaint, obviously. After all, the burrito bulge is simply an illusion.)

People have been asking how I’m feeling, but it’s the first pregnancy+childbirth+new parenthood combo that hits you like a Mack truck. After surviving that forceful impact, I've found that you just reach a highly functioning state of constant exhaustion and what used to put you on the couch for a week (or 12) now seems like just another Tuesday. You know when you’ve plugged your phone in only to discover that the charger wasn’t in the outlet and your phone hasn’t recharged at all? That's what going to sleep as a parent is like. Sure, I’ve had to limit my lifeblood (aka my daily coffee and wine), but other than that, I’m operating at status quo.

One thing has been different. Now that we’re adding a girl to the mix, we’re having all sorts of feelings. Sure we were overjoyed when we learned we were having boys, but these feelings are different. For example, we’ve already received some gifts (pink taxed accordingly), and yep – they’re all pink. My son Theo loves the color pink. Is it strange that I don’t want my daughter to? And somehow everything from her name to the toys we’ll put in front of her seems to carry so much more weight. Or assumption. Or expectation. Or all of the above. And it all irks me. Do I normalize and signal-boost by encouraging my daughter to own her (theoretical) love for pink for all it's worth? Do I give her an overtly feminine name so that she can defy the self-fulfilling stereotypes? Or do I equip her with the Dealing With Patriarchy Protips™ that every woman keeps in her pocket corset? Should I set her up for success in the reality that is today’s world with a gender-neutral name so that she doesn’t have to constantly convince people to respect her? It would be irresponsible not to do all of these things, right?

It won’t surprise anyone to learn that I was raised by strong, loving, force-of-nature-type women. This is reflected in the company I keep today. And one of these women perfectly summed up my dilemma with this catchy proverb: “With two boys, you worry about two penises. With a girl? All of the penises. You worry about all of them.” The reason this is such sage counsel isn’t just because being rapey is – and forever has been – prevalent. Or that so often rape culture is casually dismissed as locker room talk (or the 2018 version: “hangin’ with PJ and Squee”). It is sage counsel because it’s not just the rapey part of the patriarchy that gives rise to worry, it’s the dissonance between believing in equality and being willing to live it. While only a very small percent of Americans think women should not be equal, according to Pew, plenty still ascribe to retrograde ideas about innate ability and biological differences between the sexes. While women tend to think that differences between men and women are based on societal expectations, men are more likely to believe in a “natural” difference. Put into a specific context, a study spanning decades shows that 25% of people believe that, while women and men should be equal in the public sphere, women should do the majority of domestic work and childcare. Of course! True to form, women should work like they don’t have children and raise children as if they don’t work, right? Look – the women and men who stay home as the family CEO are badasses and should be celebrated as such. It’s the hardest, most selfless, least championed important job on the planet. But arguing that women are naturally better at caretaking or cleaning or sending birthday presents or packing lunches has become a clever way to shirk living up to progressive values while claiming you’re simply complimenting women on their stellar ironing skills.

So back to my aforementioned feelings. I’m actively working on raising two boys to become productive, self-aware, compassionate members of society who will not abuse others with their power, privilege, or penises. The script flips knowing that I’ll soon be raising a girl to become a productive, self-aware, compassionate member of society who will not be abused by power, privilege, or penises. Note that subtle shift from active to passive voice? Nothing better sums up my feelings than the disparity in this reality.

So while I can’t possibly have all the answers as to how best to navigate the world she’s six months away from entering, here is what I vow to her today and forever:
  • I vow to show her the strength of womanhood and the power she innately possesses. Strong women are not intimidating – others are intimidated. Note the difference.
  • I vow that, despite what any ancient dogma or new age guru says, she’ll know that she is not somehow naturally subordinate to a man, no matter how well he is commanded to treat her. She will understand that women have more than male benevolence as the basis for our wellbeing.
  • I vow to always remind her to put on her own oxygen mask first – to love, to truly love herself, so she can lead by example and continue to serve others. Breathing is critical to any success. 
  • I vow to always be honest about the lessons I’ve learned, but also allow her to make her own mistakes.
  • I vow to lead by example and ensure she’s surrounded by strong, loving, force-of-nature-type women. Children don’t hear us, they imitate us. (...I type as my 2-year-old effortlessly navigates an iPhone.) 
  • I vow to encourage her to seek knowledge, empower her mind, and always ask why. 
  • I vow that she will never hear me casually dismiss behavior by saying “boys will be boys.” Instead, she will see boys being held accountable for their actions.
  • I vow to constantly remind her that we are not our possessions, but we are the accumulation of everything we've seen, the things we've done, and the places we've been. Time is the most precious resource we have. Take the trip. Drink the wine. Order the dessert. 
  • I vow to be the place she can come to feel uplifted and protected. To be there for her always, through it all, regardless of circumstance.
  • I vow to raise her not to wait for a knight, but to wait for a sword – she’ll learn to slay her own dragons, not to wait for someone to do it for her. 
  • I vow that there will never be conditions put on my love for her. 
  • I vow that her older brothers will know, live, and learn these truths as she does. 
There’s truth in the “Children Learn What They Live” poem I had hanging in my mudroom growing up. Kids don’t come into this world jaded and cynical and misogynistic, they arrive as open and curious mimics. So while I want my children to observe me holding power to account, I also want them to see me willing to open my eyes and heart to problems I ignore because I’m not affected by them. While being an adult is mostly being exhausted, wishing you hadn’t made plans, and pondering how you hurt your back, being privileged is when you think something is not a problem because you aren’t personally affected by it. Hardship and pain and hope and joy are not unique to a partisan experience. The problem is we don’t know each other. We intentionally don’t let one another in. In a world that is more connected than ever, it’s easier than ever to do just the opposite. We quietly ignore problems we aren’t affected by, only to turn around and loudly pontificate about how the other side could be so stupid. It is easy to hate through a filter. It is hard to hate up close.

So if you’ve only been scrolling your curated news and personalized feeds, you might have the impression that our country is coming apart at the seams. But please pause and take a breath. The government, especially the presidency, is in chaos and dysfunction, but the country is not. That is not to minimize the grave danger of the moment, but we must also realize that we are an expansive, diverse, and resilient nation of impassioned citizens and deep resources. If living abroad for nearly a decade gave me any perspective, it’s not only that Americans are an egregiously earnest bunch who unironically say “awesome” with painful enthusiasm, but that we innately contain inexplicable hope and resolve that grants us the ability to adjust and survive. We’ve proven it time and again.

So… steady. Please, steady. There is plenty to worry about, plenty to resolve to not normalize, plenty of fight for rights and justice, plenty to vow and instill in our children. And as we’ve seen, it is extremely easy, lazy, and lucrative to lead by fear. Yet I still choose hope. Because what’s the alternative? What do we want to model for our kids? I want them to believe in possibility. I want my daughter to know that, while there will be plenty of dragons to slay along her path, she doesn’t need to wait for a knight who is “naturally” better at that sort of thing, she needs to pick up a sword. Because in the end, she is who we are all counting on.

The arc of history is longer than this email and similarly challenging to follow, but I’m confident that we’ll make our way through the current crisis. Because if life and Instagram have taught me anything, it’s that things are seldom as good or as bad as they appear in any given snapshot of time. So have courage – the world needs you to show up today. You are valuable. Be messy and complicated and afraid and show up anyway. I’ll be there, too.

Wishing you and yours a hope-filled 2019.

Laura


------------
My 18 of 2018 – media I consumed that changed, challenged, or informed my opinions this year, all of which I highly recommend.
  1. Racism’s Punishing Reach (Believe, as many do, that racial inequality is linked to class inequality? It’s not. It’s just harder to be black in America no matter what.)
  2. UnErased: Mama Bears (The entire series is heart-wrenching and wonderful.)
  3. Michelle Obama’s full interview on Colbert (A masterclass in tenacity, class, and realness.) 
  4. Creating God (The social construct of religion and why it doesn’t matter. Spoiler: because religion works regardless of whether it’s true or not.)
  5. X&Y (The entire Gonads series is brilliant.)
  6. Life or Death Crisis for Black Mothers (The disparity is tied intrinsically to the lived experience of being a black woman in America.)
  7. Slanguage: Why it’s literally not wrong to say literally (I still can’t quite get behind this one, but I’m literally giving it a solid try.) 
  8. Weaponizing Victimhood (Unpacking the warped idea of male victimhood in the #MeToo era.)
  9. Republicans & The Deficit (Fascinating insight into why George HW Bush wasn’t re-elected, but arguably should have been.)
  10. World’s Apart (Yes, it’s a commercial. Yes, it’s worth watching.) 
  11. The Politics of Purity (Meet the hero you didn’t know you had: Claire McCaskill.)
  12. White, Evangelical, And Worried about Trump (More inspiring heroes.) 
  13. A New Climate Tipping Point (Carbon Tax 101 and why I’m in favor of paying my dues.)
  14. Facts don’t change people’s minds. Here’s what does. (Hint: it’s not going for the gut punch, it’s giving the previous decision an excuse.) 
  15. The Gender Wars of Household Chores (Effectively my boxing day email in comic form.) 
  16. Addressing Beliefs That Aren’t Rooted In Reality (Why fear is a dangerous and often inaccurate motivator.)
  17. Chimamanda Adichie on NPR talking about how to raise a feminist daughter
  18. Anything on Dan Rather’s Twitter feed (Case in point, here’s his most recent 🔥) 


Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Boxing Season 2017: Alive & Well!

Well, there you have it, another year done. Last year I started by saying that 2016 punched us in the collective face. But then, overheard in the final hours of 2016...
2016: *dusts off hands* My work here is done.
2017: Hold my beer.
It’s Boxing Day once again – lucky #13 – and I should probably start with something jovial and self-deprecating to lure you in and not come off as too angry or soapbox-y or worse yet, shrill. I’m sure some people think I should keep these shorter, lighter, and filled with more congenial, relatable stuff like a delightful Instagram flat lay. But these (and by these, I mean flat lays) take a lot more curation than you think. And while they look great, they don’t mean anything. Because they aren’t real. Who has all those monstera leaves just casually laying around on marble tables? Why would you spill coffee beans/thumbtacks/millennial pink macaron crumbs on your tufted white duvet? Put your watch/glasses/shoes back on for goodness’ sake, you’re working! THERE’S AN OPEN LIPSTICK ON YOUR STATUARIO MARBLE TABLE YOU MONSTER! ...are all things I shout at Instagram regularly. But really – if my Boxing Day letter was an Instagram account, would it be FlatLayStyle or would it be CelesteBarber? 

It's indisputably easier to confine real talk to sheet cakes and Ubers, and flat lay the shiplap out of an annual update to family and friends, right?   
Me among people I know and love: Why is everyone asking me personal questions?  
Me in an Uber: And that, Tom, might be where my commitment issues come from. So anyway, do you believe in God? 
But surprise to no one, I’ve landed here because things are not fine. Yes – curation, kindness, and sensitivity are noble and beautiful acts of love, but not when manifested to distract and ignore the daily bombardment of cruelty and incompetence. EnoughIn the several decades since November 8, 2016, it’s become clear to me that avoiding political conversation isn't being polite or loving, it's being complicit. It’s cashing in on the luxury of not being directly affected, marginalized, or oppressed. So spoiler alert: in the following, I will use words like (trigger warning) systematic, pervasive, and privilege, and I will clear up – once and for all – the resounding confusion over when and where men should expose their genitalia. If being political isn’t your thing, you’re going to absolutely love this and you should definitely read to the very end. Uber driver Tom did. 

But if you’re just staying for the soundbites: 
  • Despite not getting a full night of sleep since humans outnumbered bots on the internet, 2017 was a resoundingly wonderful year for me and the people I do life with. (Hashtag luxury of not being directly affected, marginalized, or oppressed)
  • Owen and Theo continue to exhibit amusingly accurate cat and dog-like tendencies, which I should definitely stop talking so openly about before I give them both a complex. Ozzie’s observant, particular, independent existence is continually punctuated by Theo’s earnest, joy-filled, cacophonous chaos. Yesterday I came into our bathroom to find Oz meticulously stacking dental floss into a tower 6-packs high, and Theo laughing maniacally as he licked his way – paint brush-style – across the full-length mirror. Dream big, future parents.
  • We bought a house! In Seattle! And it has room for you and your extended family to visit. It doesn’t currently have floors in the basement, but it also doesn’t haaaaaave aaaaaaasbestos! So weigh the pros and cons alongside the timeline of when you think two people who love their insanely involved jobs and their anthropomorphic cat and dog will realistically complete this project, then consider this your invitation. 
  • If you’re really leaving us here, you should watch this and consider scrolling to the bottom for my annual recommended reads.
Okay party people, here we go. 

Is it too cliché to say that 2017 was a barrage of bad news and alternative facts and generally just a swift kick to the covfefes? The assault was so incessant that we became numb to the minor headlines like casual and petty personal attacks, reckless provocations, flagrant disregard for the truth (or, you know, open threats against founding principles and civil rights) in an attempt to focus on the most destructive fires and hurricanes. And that’s not including the devastating natural disasters beyond DC. It was a year that (for better or worse) was rife for poignant, thought-provoking, and conversation-starting commentary. So while these topics couldn’t possibly all make this year’s letter, I want everyone to take a cold-sweat-inducing moment to imagine you’re at a party, and the ice breaker is a round of team Jeopardy with these family-friendly and not-at-all-polarizing categories:  

Jeopardy
Climate Accords
Musl Travel Bans
CHIPs
Capitals of Israel
Elephant Participation Trophies  
Little Rocket Men

Double Jeopardy
Tax Reform 
Sports & Constitutional Amendments
1984
Standing Rock
Border Walls We’ve Loved
Net Neut... [sorry, category buffering]

Triple Jeopardy
Things that are #NotAThing 
Shores of Floribama 
Places We Should Drill
Deadliest Mass Shootings
Deadliest Holiday Extinctions 
a/s/l

Final Jeopardy
Bing bing bong bong bing bing bing

As for my 2017 Boxing Day theme, I’ll take THERAPISTS for $200, Alex. 

Wisdom is like scar tissue and frequent flier miles: it incidentally accumulates while you’re trying to accomplish something else. Right now, I’m actively working on raising two boys to become productive, self-aware, compassionate members of society who don’t abuse others with their power, privilege, or penises. Here are common conversations we have to that end: 
Yes, that is your penis! I know you think your penis is wonderful – you’ve made that abundantly clear. It is also private. You can do whatever you want with your penis alone in your bedroom, but here in [the parking lot, Target, our neighbor’s kitchen], you need to put it away.
No, it is my turn to talk now. I listened to your very interesting facts about trucks and magma. Now it’s your turn to listen because what I have to say is interesting and important also.
Mmmm... no, thank you. I don't like body part nicknames. 
Please do not slam your hands down on the table to communicate your feelings. I want you to be able to express your hurt, frustration, and anger about not getting to eat cookies for dinner, but I need you not to physically explode like that. That was violent and it scared me. 
You know what? That's too close. I need you off of my body. I need space.
When you hit and yell, I can tell that you're sad. It's okay to be sad, but it's not okay to hit and yell because that hurts me. I'm not going to be around you while you are hurting me. You should probably go be alone for a little while. 
Whoops! Yep, those are my private body parts. They are not for grabbing.
Hey hey hey whoa, did you see there is a lady in line here? Okay, well, you need to wait. I know you're excited! I can see that! You still need to wait. Just like everybody.
As I say these things to my boys, I recognize how naturally they come. I know these retorts all too well. See, while I’ve only accumulated a small amount of frequent flier mile wisdom through parenthood, I have an abundance of scar tissue wisdom from being a woman – I was saying all of these things to males long before I had two of my own. Despite our collective efforts to educate early and often, it’s clear that many men are still profoundly confused when it comes to respecting women, and more specifically, where, when, and with whom they should expose their genitals. 
Sidenote: “Where does your penis belong? A children’s book for grown-ass men” is a helpful resource, though if you’re really struggling with penis etiquette, there’s an online quiz that asks men where their penis belongs on a train (in your pants), waiting in line at the grocery store (in your pants), and at the office (not on the water cooler; in your pants). 
The reckoning of sexual harassment and assault dominated 2017 with a constant cascade of high-profile men (save the one waving a gun on 5th ave) being fired or forced to resign. And as we experience this fascinating moment of truth – our societal retinas painfully adjusting when suddenly exposed to the bright light of #metoo’s sheer volume and ubiquity – we are faced with two choices. We can close our eyes or dim the lights to reduce our discomfort, or we can force our eyes to adjust to the exposed reality, refocusing sexual harassment graphically, and disruptively, from a “women’s issue” to what it really is: the problem of men.  

No, #NotAllMen are violent against women, but #YesAllWomen have to navigate a world where men who are violent look the same as men who aren't. When a woman is in an office or an elevator alone with a man, she doesn't know which group he's in. And when we apply the Graham/Pence rule and limit solo interactions, guess who loses out? Hint: it's not Doug from accounting who gets even more 1:1 time with the boss. (Is this Doug's fault? No. But is Doug benefiting? Mmmhmm.) The answer is not to tell women to avoid offices or elevators, it’s to hold the men in the offices and elevators accountable. There's only one rule that needs to be followed, and that is the “don’t sexually assault people” rule. No man should require a wife present in order to follow this. 

This is a men’s issue because it isn't about individual perpetrators. It's a men’s issue because they hear gender violence described in ways that magically erases male responsibility (funny how many women "getting raped" just happens to)This is a men's issue because men benefit simply from the power of being a man, whether they abuse that power or not, right Doug? The thing about privilege is that it’s often invisible from the inside. It’s hard to see the scale and scope of a system designed to benefit you when it’s as all-encompassing as patriarchy. The best professor I ever had constantly reminded us to ask: Who wrote the stories? Who benefits from the stories? Who is missing from the stories? 

So the question is this: what can we all do to actively work against it? What are the roles of various institutions? How can we change the socialization of boys and the definitions of manhood that produce these current outcomes? Once we start making those kinds of connections and asking the real questions, then we can talk about transformation. Talking to our sons about how they treat women and showing them how to grow up to be feminists like Dad is a great start, but if we're endlessly derailed by what women are wearing or not wearing or arguing about what kind of open-secret harassment is gross but okay, we’ll never get there.  


I’ve been talking to men a lot in this missive. So before I sign off, I want the women to step outside with me for a sec. Our house of outrage is a harmonious house, thrumming with the sound of people agreeing vigorously, yelling into sheet cakes, and wondering if our president is, in fact, communicating with us from his toilet. (He is.) But I want to take a moment to breathe in the crisp, fresh, night air. I want to clear our heads as this intense year comes to an end. I want to exhale. I want to remind you (if you need reminding as I sometimes do), that you deserve to be represented in the stories, you deserve to benefit from the stories, and you deserve to get million-dollar signing bonuses for writing stories of your own. You also deserve to like things the way you like them. You deserve to buy yourself beautiful jewelry and burn your expensive candles. You deserve to stop comparing your desk to an Instagram flat lay and to eat that $18 artisanal granola rather than artistically spill it across your laptop for others to double tap. And you deserve to get the flavor of LaCroix you like the best, because you are the only one who can quench your thirst, and because it tastes so damn good. You are just as important as anyone else in your life. 

Our rise in action, our “getting too political” – it can’t just be a thing we did that one time we all got so angry that our voices got shrill. Plan to get hurt, plan to break. Plan to put yourself back together again. Plan to disconnect for a minute or a month. Plan to recharge. Plan to not stay silent. But do take care of yourself; you're the only person who truly can.

Okay, done! Perhaps next year I’ll keep it light and transcribe my one-woman show in which I share anecdotes about all of the times I’ve been burned by Secret Santas over the years. But probably not. I’ll likely talk about something cliché like how life is a giant swinging pendulum, or circularly ponder why we spend so much time and money trying to achieve balance, but then spend every free moment in our houses of extremism shouting into our echo chambers and expecting things to change. But regardless of topic, I promise to keep it suuuper long so that (unlike the other important communications you receive) you will know without a doubt that it wasn’t written from a toilet. 

Until next Boxing Season, know that I am beyond thankful for you, my inspiring, system-challenging, shrill friends and family. And thanks to you, 2017. For better or worse, it’s been absolutely covfefe. 

----------------

Here’s my personal “Best Of 2017” list of thought-provoking, hilarious, and beautifully written reads. Many of these inspired, shaped, and even landed directly above.

Anything from Katie Anthony’s blog, and especially Dinosaur Defense
Katie is both an insanely poignant and intimidatingly hilarious writer. I drew so much inspiration from her blog, and in some cases, ripped off entire lines. (The listing things you say to toddlers? Hers.) Everyone should subscribe to her blog immediately, or better yet, support her here.

The First White President
“The scope of Trump’s commitment to whiteness is matched only by the depth of popular disbelief in the power of whiteness.”

Why Facts Don’t Change Our Minds
“Humans aren’t randomly credulous. Presented with someone else’s argument, we’re quite adept at spotting the weaknesses. Almost invariably, the positions we’re blind about are our own.”

My Family’s Slave
“She listened intently, eyes lowered, and afterward she looked at me with sadness and said simply, ‘Yes. It was like that.’”

Talking to boys the way we talk to girls
“We tell ourselves we are preparing our sons to fight (literally and figuratively), to compete in a world and economy that’s brutish and callous. The sooner we can groom them for this dystopian future, the better off they’ll be.”

The World’s Last Great Undiscovered Cuisine
“Grabbing oven mitts, she screams an incantation in Azeri and drops the red-hot horseshoe—splosh! clunk!—into the pot, leaving the whole fairy-tale brew to simmer just short of forever, until it's time to strain out the metal.”

The Nationalists Delusion
“Supporters and opponents alike understand that the president’s policies and rhetoric target religious and ethnic minorities, and behave accordingly. But both supporters and opponents usually stop short of calling these policies racist. It is as if there were a pothole in the middle of the street that every driver studiously avoided, but that most insisted did not exist even as they swerved around it.”

Poor Millennials
“This is what it feels like to be young now. Not only are we screwed, but we have to listen to lectures about our laziness and our participation trophies from the people who screwed us.”

The Looming Decline Of The Public Research University
“The system of public research universities—the one that became the envy of the rest of the world and a central component of America’s dominance of science, technology, and the global economy—has become an afterthought and even a target of state and national political leaders.”

A Most American Terrorist: The Making Of Dylan Roof
“Roof was safeguarded by his knowledge that white American terrorism is never waterboarded for answers, it is never twisted out for meaning, we never identify its “handlers,” and we could not force him to do a thing. He remained inscrutable. He remained in control, just the way he wanted to be.”

Why America’s Airports Suck
“As the manager of one midsize, overcapacity U.S. airport puts it, ‘Airport financing is a hot mess right now.’”

The Charcuterie Board That Revolutionized Basketball
"Don't pass for the sake of it… If you're open, shoot it. If not, pass it. But don't be stationary. Move!"

Elizabeth Warren Is Getting Hillary’ed
“The mainstreaming of this caricature of a woman… manages to gently but efficiently discredit Warren both with a right wing that regards ambitious women as threatening and ugly, and a left who might view her reported approach as fake, compromised and emblematic of reviled Establishment mores. It’s a limber exertion. But it’s worked before.”

Why do women get all attractive if they don’t want to be harassed? Glad you asked.
“It’s not a contradiction to want all those things and not want a superior to masturbate in front of you. That seems pretty simple. But I wonder if it’s a little too simple. I don’t think we can have an honest conversation about sexual harassment and sexual assault right now without talking about all the ways we have taken women’s bodies and turned them into vessels.”

Videos/Podcasts:

The Language of Gender Violence



Monday, December 26, 2016

Boxing Day 2016 – The Great Delay

Sorry for my delay. This annual missive has morphed from an update I luxuriated over – complete with a decadent creative process summoned only by inexpensive alone time and multiple nights of uninterrupted sleep – to an update I whip together whenever a window of opportunity opens. (Current status = blurred haze powered by Christmas cookies, coffee, and the urgency of impending chaos.) But tradition is tradition. And this year is year 12, so you better believe that even though my coffee is cold, my husband is not even feigning subtlety with his I-could-reeeeeeeally-use-your-help-over-here side-eyes, and my strong sense is that the leftover ham will be picked over before I can indulge in the year’s second-best sandwich, I will get this email out today. Or maybe tomorrow. Definitely Probably before 2017. I’m perfecting the art of picking my battles. 

If Boxing Day evokes a visceral response this year, it’s probably because 2016 punched us in the collective face. Don’t get me wrong, on a personal level, 2016 has been up there with the best of 'em. Theodore Asher joined the party in June (the day Muhammad Ali died #thanks2016) and while we loved the prospect of having an Oz and a Taz, this chilled-out, joy-filed, love-lump is most definitely a Theo. If Owen is a cat – particular, ritualistic, opinionated, observant, not above peeing on pillows to prove a point – Theo is a dog: happy, easy, happy, easy, hungry, happy. Luckily, Ozzie’s fierce loyalty manifests itself as a protective and nurturing big brother and, while I stand by my claim that parenthood feels like treading water and being thrown a baby, Theo’s addition has only added sunshine and margaritas to that analogy. 

I left my long-term relationship with an incredible company (the love's still there, but the passion had faded), and after a sexy consulting rebound, I settled down with startup Duolingo. Haven't heard of it yet? You will. Passion doesn’t begin to describe my day-to-day – providing opportunity in the form of free education to the world – and I can’t help but think that the personal boundary shift that comes from learning a foreign language, the empathy developed by botching conjugations and brandishing ridiculous accents, is more important than ever. What if in this moment of rising intolerance, nationalism, and xenophobia we could all put ourselves in another person’s tongue? Could we then see that the world looks completely different depending on where you stand and what you speak? Also, Duolingo HQ offers massages and infused water, sooooo… 

We capped off 2016 with a move to Seattle, a city I haven’t lived in since the year 2000, but a place we all feel home. We’re renting a beautiful house in the ‘burbs, and while we’re short on the exotic carrots we used to dangle like stunning beaches and 12th-century castles, we do have more space than our last five apartments combined and we love visitors. Plus, we have an anthropomorphic cat and dog whom you really should meet.

Okay, let’s do this. 

As I sat down on Boxing Day, conditions perfect for penning a fiery takedown, or a rousing rallying cry, or a comforting hope piece, I gathered my thoughts, took a deep breath, put my hands over my keyboard, and started crying. So I topped up on the aforementioned Christmas cookies and coffee, tried again, cried again, and so on and so forth until other humans in my house began crying and I had a valid excuse to stop and pretend I couldn't smell the dumpster fire’s smoke. Through some creative trial and error, I’ve learned in times like this that David Attenborough’s Planet Earth voiceover is a foolproof remedy. Thus, over the last few days, I've been reminded (in transcendently buttery British narration) that in the Namib desert, the darkling beetle ascents a massive sand dune, inverts into a headstand, and remains still until a thin fog condenses on its body. Then slowly, using grooves in its casing, the water rolls into its thirsty mouth. I meditatively repeated “this is how life is sustained on earth” until I was forced to acknowledge Netflix’s passive-aggressive banter (yes, I’m still watching, stop judging me Netflix) and by then, my personal equivalent to blowing into the Nintendo cartridge was complete. Needless to say, I’m back now and I’m ready to go. 

I felt Hillary’s loss like a death in the family. And as I look back, I realize that her ultimate defeat should not have come as a surprise. The sickness that caused it has been slowly, yet plainly, metastasizing for years. I had simply learned to readjust to the warning signs, just like I readjust as a lefty in a world of right-handed can openers and serrated knives, or I readjust as a woman attending an executive meeting or walking alone at night. These conditioned adjustments are so subtle that I don’t even notice making them, but every lefty knows precisely what I’m talking about. As does every woman. And we’ve done this as a collective whole; we’ve ignored warning signs, subtly readjusted, humored untruths, normalized chaos, all while the world watched horrified at the bizarre pageant of our nation pretending these two contenders were equivalent.

Barbara Kingsolver was right when she said “Pain reaches the heart with electrical speed, but truth moves to the heart as slowly as a glacier.” and only now am I unpacking how we arrived in this post-accountable world. As much as I want to shame Trump supporters for providing, if not explicit, at minimum, tacit support to his ceaseless vulgarities, the truth is that I too am complicit in supporting exploitative and damaging systems when they don’t directly affect me. (How many of you are reading this on an iPhone?) Ultimately, all of our shit stinks, and getting beyond that is going to take incredible work. What this does not mean is that it is okay, or that we should accept this as the new normal and readjust. Yes, I acknowledge that Donald Trump will be the President. I understand, intellectually, that he won the election. But I reject the notion that we must ingest this victory for smallness, for xenophobia, for misogyny, for racism, for wall-building and humanity-banning, for this particular brew of American ugliness that tops off the hatred-swirled slop pile he serves up on 140-character platters.

I am raising two sons in a country where I do not want them emulating our President-Elect. Let the gravity of that sit for a moment. And when the opportunity comes for me to talk with them about this, I will not shy away. I will not excuse how or why those who voted for him ignored his vileness, because while I am self-aware enough to understand that I too am guilty of complicity, this does not make it okay. 

Instead, I will tell my boys that our President-Elect is everything they should abhor, and fear, in a role model. I will explain how humans are inherently tribal and why actively fighting that tendency is so important. I will teach them to be kind to those they disagree with and to show dignity in the face of undignified behavior. I will show them my victory pantsuit and not trivialize the fact that inexperienced men get promoted ahead of qualified women every day. I will explain that patriotism is not the only way to love a nation. I will teach them to care for the full breadth of America’s diversity, not just the smallest sliver of it. I will reinforce that America is great and that openness, diversity, humility, progress, grace, and science make it better – not worse.

Most importantly, I will demonstrate accountability. I will admit that Mom and Dad and our entire generation royally screwed this up. But reinforce that after a devastating loss, the solution isn’t to quit and move away, or to hole up waiting for things to change, or worse still, to subtly readjust and go on like nothing happened. The solution is to acknowledge this reality, then reject it. To find a way to fight it, to overcome it, to defeat it. Yes, sometimes I will need a break to have a buttery Attenborough detox, but then I will come back refreshed and will do literally anything but accept this as our fate.

If 2016 was a punch to the face, my initial numbness came in waves of overwhelming powerless and insignificance. How can an ordinary person stop intolerance, ISIS, lunatics driving trucks into crowds, fake news, Tucker Carlson... But as the numb wears off, I realize that I can be extremely powerful in living accountably, by offering the small generosities of listening, by standing up against the casual utterance of prejudice, by letting daughters know they are no less than sons. And also by exiting the insulation of my bubble and experiencing a wider world. 

When Planet Earth ends after an hour (or 10), I think the strangest thing: This world is so much bigger and more powerful than any small moment in time (or small hands it may temporarily find itself in). We will be okay. Well, maybe not the darkling beetle. When it descends the sand dune, plump and hydrated, sometimes there is a Namaqua chameleon waiting, who casually flicks its tongue and eats the beetle for breakfast. No matter, the beetle has to reach the top of the dune, it has to drink water, it has to take its chances, it has to make that journey to survival. Like us, you see, it is a hopeful beast.

Thanks 2016, it’s been weird. And thank you to all of you, who continue to hold me accountable and make me hopeful each and every day. Bring it on, 2017. 


-------------------------------------------
Incredible writing came out of 2016, and I would be remiss not to mention the inspiration I took from so much of it. These are my most impactful and influential sources:

End This Misogynistic Horror Show. Put Hillary Clinton In The White House
(Barbara Kingsolver, The Guardian)

Revenge Of The Forgotten Class
(Alec MacGillis, ProPublica)

Sweet '16, Notes On The US Election
(Benjamin Kunkel, Salvage)

My President Was Black
(Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic)

Hillary Clinton vs. Herself
(Rebecca Traister, New York Magazine)

A Letter To America From Leslie Knope, Regarding Donald Trump
(Leslie Knope [aka Parks and Recreation Staff Writer], Vox)

The Trouble With The Liberal Arguments Against Third-Party Voters And What To Do About It
(Josie Duffy Rice, Daily Kos)

Choosing A School For My Daughter In A Segregated City
(Nikole Hannah-Jones, The New York Times Magazine)

Jon Stewart Finally Went Long About The Election And Donald Trump
(Todd Van Luling, Huffington Post)

Trump Changed Everything, Now Everything Counts
(Barbara Kingsolver, The Guardian)