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Party Hat

The Christmas Show

posted Wednesday December 10th, 2008

sophie-xmas-pageant

“Gosh, I didn’t expect to cry,” a mom said, wiping her eyes as we walked out out of the school cafeteria after the kindergarten holiday show.

“Yeah, I know,” I mumbled, grateful it was dark so she couldn’t see my own dry ones. I actually had expected to tear up, had packed extra Kleenex, but it never happened.

Maybe because I was too apprehensive. Sophie looked worried, too, as she waited on the risers before the concert started. (Once it did start I couldn’t get close enough to get a good picture.) Maybe because the place was so freaking packed you couldn’t move, maybe because I was distracted by the endlessly fascinating task of watching the odd music teacher, or maybe because I feel like an interloper.

That’s it. Interloper. I got the usual phony hello from the principal as I ran Sophie into her classroom, then watched as another teacher had to nudge her (in a not very friendly fashion, I thought) toward her group, when she strayed — just enough that I was likely the only one to notice, but still.

I don’t mean to whine. Sophie rocked it. She mouthed along to the songs, sat up and down when she was supposed to, and didn’t sneeze (a big worry — she’s got a runny  nose and I had visions of a “snot alert” from the stage.) Of course, for Sophie all rocking it really meant was that she didn’t bolt from the stage when she saw her family, looking for a hug. Luckily, Annabelle found a spot on the floor right in front of where Sophie was sitting, and (trained from her own kindergarten experience) did the hand movements for Sophie to copy.

But I just couldn’t get past the anxiety and the fluorescent lights and the Flip camera to get a good cry in, and I didn’t realize why til we were walking to the car, just after talking to the weepy mom.

Next year, Sophie might not be in school with that weepy mom’s little girl. She might not have the luxury Annabelle has — of hanging out in second grade with the BFFs she made in kindergarten. Sophie might be held back, or forced to go to another school (if the principal has her way) and flush! There goes the community we’ve been building for her. I’m hesitant to embrace it, for fear it’s an illusion, just as my mom (understandably) worries that Sophie’s not really making any friends.

That so much of this is for show.

Is this kindergarten experience for show, just something to make me feel good? I have evidence to the contrary, I do. I know it. Sophie’s where she should be.

For the moment….


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Party Hat

Tradition!

posted Tuesday December 9th, 2008

The other day at Brownies, we talked about traditions. The girls went around the room, naming their own, and I talked a little about  Hanukkah. (That wasn’t on the agenda, but I whined after I heard the troop leader say she was going to have each girl put an ornament on her tree. It’s hard being Jewish-ish, as well as the Jew Who Loves Christmas and the Mom Concerned Her Kids Will Be Heathens — all at once.)

Annabelle was so psyched to share her Hanukkah tradition, and even Sophie wandered in from the playroom to show the group how she holds her hands over her eyes the way our 10-year-old friend Anna does, for the candle lighting and prayer. Sophie looks like the youngest-ever cast member of Fiddler on the Roof when she does it, always cracks me up.

I’ll join the temple next year. Swear to god. Or, um, whomever.

Back to tradition. That little talk at Brownies got me thinking. We have a few traditions at home, sure. I hang the same stockings on the same hangers on the same fireplace every year. But not as many as what I’d refer to as “normal people”. For one thing, we can’t decide on a tree situation. The little silver one still hasn’t come out of the box. This morning I heard Ray tell Annabelle we’ll get a big green artificial one, and my heart sank a little. 

“You know, it’s like how you always say you’re going to live in Manhattan your whole life and then things get expensive and you have kids and you move to Brooklyn,” I explained. He looked at me blankly. Ray grew up in Queens and couldn’t wait to get out of New York entirely. He doesn’t watch “Sex and the City”. Anyhow, Brooklyn’s cool now, so the analogy doesn’t work anymore.

“Oh, whatever!” I said. “Can it at least be a small one so it doesn’t look like we’re pretending we have a big live tree?”

Yes, it can, he said.

I have always wanted my life to be like the movies — the “When Harry Met Sally” holiday scenes, the dance parties that are part of every chick flick, and that inspired our chocolate dance parties at home. But it’s hard at the holidays in a place like Phoenix. Still, some days, it happens. Like yesterday.

Yesterday Annabelle honored a tradition, by attending a gingerbread house party. We met these friends in kindergarten, and this is the third house party. The mom who throws it is amazing, puts Martha to shame (let alone me) and this year mixed it up by designing a new house template.

gingerbread3

“You noticed!” she said when I commented. Of course. I notice every bit of it, all the attention to detail that goes into creating her own tradition. Here in the desert, we have to do that. There are no snowy scenes of cute blonde Meg Ryans dragging trees, nothing you know from the movies.

But sometimes it’s better. We rushed off from the houses to the botanical garden, to meet up with more dear friends and see the annual luminaria display. It’s one of the things that made me fall in love with Phoenix, albeit in my relative old age, my mid-20s, when I moved home.

It’s different now. The luminaria are in plastic (safer that way), the musical groups fewer (cheaper that way) and now you can get just about anything you want to eat at the multiple cafes (more commercial and okay, more convenient that way). But the hand bell ringers still bring tears to my eyes.

“Wasn’t Zach in a stroller the first time we came?” I asked Trish. Yes, he was. And next year he’ll be driving. Annabelle, Sophie and Abbie zoomed across the dance floor and Trish pointed to a couple in the corner — her body a little lump, hair mussed; his head a little too small for his body.

“Don’t they have –” she asked. Yes, they did. And they were fox trotting better than I ever did in Junior Assembly.

Someday maybe I’ll take Sophie and her boyfriend (or girlfriend) dancing at the luminaria. That’s a tradition I’d love to start.

For now, I’m going to figure out that tree situation. Oh, and temple.


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Party Hat

Annabelle's Wish — And Mine, Too

posted Sunday December 7th, 2008

The other night at the office holiday party, I gulped two glasses of sangria (seriously the best sangria I’ve ever had, and that includes La Grande Orange in Phoenix, which is saying something — I’ll post the recipe if I can wrest it out of the host) and for about 10 minutes, I was pleasantly tipsy.

Then immediately hungover.

That’s how the holidays feel — binge, buzz, crash. And it’s only December 6th. “You turn into a holiday elf,” my husband says, and he doesn’t mean it as a compliment.

But he went camping this weekend (at my urging — insert evil laughter here) and tonight the girls and I OD’d on holiday cheer. I opened all the Rubbermaids, took out the menorah, hung the stockings. Very Chrismukkah. Not that we’re either, really.

The holiday books came out, and the ornaments (I’ll try to hold the girls back til Ray gets home and can help decide — live tree or silver Urban Outfitters standby?) and the stuffed toys you press to make music. Sophie cuddled with the graying plush snowman, her face bathed in the glow from its ultra-tacky red and blue lights, playing “Let It Snow” over and over again.

Best of all, we busted out the holiday movies. Annabelle kindly let Sophie go first, so we watched “Elmo’s Happy Holidays” before “Pee Wee’s Christmas”. Then “Elf,” my favorite. Sophie konked out in the first few minutes; I let her snore on me for a while. It was time for bed, but I couldn’t help it. “Want to watch `Annabelle’s Wish?’” I asked. Annabelle practically swooned.

ab-wish

 I’d never heard of “Annabelle’s Wish” til my own AB came along. A dear friend who has since move out of town spent weeks searching for it when she heard what I was naming my first kid, assuring me it would be worth it — her now-teen kids always loved it. So did I, once Laura finally presented it. And so does Annabelle. You can’t swing a dead cat around here without hitting another Sophie, but Annabelle’s are hard to find, and don’t appear much in pop culture. 

Plus, this movie is terrific, as sappy as they get; I won’t ruin the plot for you, I’ll just say it’s worth seeking out. Watching it made me think of Laura, who has had a really rough year, health-wise. The last time I saw her was at our holiday cookie party last year, when she surprised me by showing up — moving slowly, but with a big smile. I’m hoping for another surprise this year.

And in Laura’s honor, I’m going to put the cranky bah humbugging aside and work on savoring the holidays. Maybe that means sticking to just one glass of sangria — and one holiday movie — an evening. I’ll try. Does “Love Actually” count? I was thinking of digging it out now…..


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Party Hat

Bratz: Bad Girls Finish Last!

posted Friday December 5th, 2008

Good news, and just in time for the holidays: Bratz dolls may soon be no longer. Not for the reasons I’d ban them — the lips that look like they were plumped with collagen, the hips barely covered with slutty skirts…. But for some detailed legal reasons you can delve into here: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081204/bs_nm/us_mattel_bratz

Hey, whatever it takes, I say. I’m off to the playroom to apologize to Barbie for ever calling her a whore.


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Party Hat

Radio Daze: A New Piece About Sophie on KJZZ/NPR

posted Wednesday December 3rd, 2008

I can’t believe it’s been four months. Four months of kindergarten, to the day — tomorrow.

And this is just the second piece I’ve done for the radio about Sophie’s kindergarten experience. If you read GIAPH you know the schtick already, but this will allow you to weigh in on whether you think I need my adenoids (sp?) removed — or at least if I need to get a netti (sp?) pot!

http://kjzz.org/news/arizona/archives/200812/Silverman


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Party Hat

The Santa Clause

posted Wednesday December 3rd, 2008

I had to get some advice from my mother in law.

“OK,” I said, “tell me what to do.”

“Well, you have the girls write the letters and then we’ll send them Santa’s letters in reply. We have the paper all ready.”

“But where do I have them send the letters?” I asked, confused.

“Anywhere. The North Pole. It doesn’t matter.”

I mean, it’s not like I believe in Santa Claus (or as Annabelle spelled it, Clause — I know it’s a bad movie, but I’m stealing the title, just for tonight), but I thought there was more to it than that. I’ve never done Santa letters before.

“So they won’t come back postmarked North Pole?”

She just looked at me, probably thinking (but too nice to say), “You, Jewish girl, should not even be attempting this.”

But I am the Jew Who Loves Christmas, something you’ll hear about for the next three weeks til you’re as sick of me as I am of the count ‘em TWO continual Christmas stations I’ve been listening to since Halloween. (I know, mistake, I won’t do that again. If I hear Paul McCartney’s “Simply Having A Wonderful Christmas Time” one more time — particularly when it’s over 85 degrees out — I’ll go home and OD on the first batch of limoncello I’ve already made.)

In any event, the show must go on. So tonight I got out paper and pens and the girls wrote their letters. Annabelle’s was done in a flash, she’s had her list ready for weeks (American Girl doll, Nintendo DS and some video game we haven’t heard of) and even illustrated her note.

ab-santa

Sophie’s letter took longer. For one thing, she kept changing her mind. For months, she’s said she’s asking Santa for “Noggin bath toys” (a la the kids cable network). Recently she added a camera. Tonight it was “a comb and a brush” as well.

I spelled it all out for her:

D E A R  S A N T A….and so on.

sophie-santa

If you know Sophie well and you look closely, you can make out the letters. Sort of. OK, not really at all. Annabelle was watching so I wrote a separate note reiterating Sophie’s desires, and the three sheets were folded and placed in an envelope. Each girl put a stamp on the envelope and Annabelle addressed it to the North Pole.

Tomorrow we’ll put the envelope in the mailbox, and I guess I’ll run home and get it back after the girls are at school. Or maybe not. Who knows — maybe it’ll make it to the North Pole.


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Party Hat

libby

The other day, I wrote about an event (the light parade down Mill Avenue) that exceeded expectations.

So it’s only fair to share the dark side of the weekend. Well, not so dark. But definitely on the darker side of pink.

It seemed like a great idea to take Annabelle, Sophie and their 5 year old cousin Kate to LIbby Lu. If you’ve never heard of Libby Lu (I’ve written about it before — note to self, learn that damn link thing on wordpress) it can best be described as Sparkle Heaven. Or Hell, depending on your perspective.

It’s a hair salon without the cut and wash, a place with a lot of bath products you’d never let your daughter’s you-know-what near. Harmless, I suppose, as long as you stick to the pink glittered high tops and avoid the sluttier options available for your toddler.

It’s one of those places I always swore I’d never take my kids. But after my first foray — on a quiet summer Saturday afternoon with Annabelle and a fellow second grader — I felt confident all the girls could handle it.

Poor Sophie. Poor Amy. From the moment we walked in, Sophie wanted to be in charge — and she couldn’t be. You just can’t let a kid wield the sparkle container, for obvious reasons. From the fight in the changing room to the fight over the wig (don’t ask) to the fight to pick out pink and purple plastic crap that comes along with the package I’d bought each kid, Sophie was loaded for bear. (Is that actually a usable phrase? I’ll have to ask Sarah Palin.) I’m shocked I got a smiling picture.

In the end, only Kate got her nails painted and no one got an updo. They all left in wigs (well, Sophie ditched hers long before we actually walked out, it looked great after being shoved in my purse) and the worst part was when Sophie absolutely refused to remove the tee shirt they gave her to wear for the visit.

I wanted to blame Sophie for her bad behavior, but I had to blame myself. I do think that generally speaking, the best policy is to treat her like any other kid, but watching her at Libby Lu on the day after Thanksgiving, I had to admit that some things are just not Sophie-appropriate. I think even she’d admit it. I hate to use the trendy vernacular, but this was sensory overload, sparkle style.

I’ve given it such a ringing endorsement you’re probably rushing out the door to the mall (really, I do sort of love it — the girls who work there are super nice to the little ones, and really, all that pink is a victimless fashion crime) but if you want to bring your kid to Libby Lu, you better do it soon. Big signs pronounced the entire national chain is going under, closing shop(s) in January.

Big sales on all that pink crap right now, though. And kiddie wigs, complete with hair nets.


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Party Hat

The Littlest Angel in the Fantasy of Lights Parade

posted Monday December 1st, 2008

angels

I looked around Saturday evening and noticed that just about every Brownie troop in town had chosen to dress as angels for the parade down Mill Avenue in Tempe that kicks off our holiday season. I felt badly for the woman who cut out 30 sets of cardboard wings for our troop.

The girls did look cute in their teeny white sheet togas and glittered wings draped with lights. The Daisies (Junior Brownies, which are Junior GIrl Scouts) were marching with the Brownies so Annabelle and Sophie were together, which seemed like a Kodak moment come to life — in theory.

“Oh look, a TRUE angel,” someone said, looking at Sophie. I shot them a decidedly non-angelic look, wishing I’d dared to put on the devil horns hanging around the house from a couple Halloweens back. I’d wimped out and put on wings and a halo, like the other moms. At that point, I wasn’t sure Sophie would even make it to the start of the parade.

She had already ripped off her belt, refused to wear the halo (it WAS itchy, I have to admit) and someone had tied her wings on upside down. I was afraid to take them off to fix them, fearing she’d never let me put them back on.

That parade is a pain in the ass.  You stand around for 2 hours (if you’re dumb enough to get there on time, and don’t get me started on the braindead move of volunteering to haul the juice boxes down there.) The first thing one friend said to me — from beneath arched eyebrows and between clenched lips — was, “I don’t think we’ll be doing this next year!”

I don’t know about her, but by the time we’d tossed out the last of our candy and Sophie had settled into the back of a little red wagon to be pulled back to the staging area, I was ready to sign up again.

Annabelle loved dressing up and marching and waving and handing out candy. I knew she would; she did last year. Sophie I wasn’t so sure about. As we finally approached the beginning of the parade, I reached into my bag and pulled out a miniature Hershey bar and handed it to my motley angel.

“Here,” I said,  giving her a little push, unsure of what would happen. “Go give this to that little boy on the sidewalk and say, `Happy holidays!’”

And from that moment, Sophie was on a mission. The kid had the time of her life. “More candy! More candy!” she demanded, slowing the parade to practically a halt as she spread her holiday cheer methodically. Several people called out her name — including a few I don’t know, I have no idea where Sophie knows them from — and she smiled and waved.

The highlight was reaching Daddy, who caught the moment on videotape. Sophie took her job seriously, as you can see in the little movie he’s already made. She held my hand when I told her to, never strayed or talked back, didn’t rip off the rest of her costume, as she’d threatened before the parade started. She was performing.

No shrinking violet, my younger daughter.

Yeah, I’m in for next year. As long as we can come up with more original costumes. What’s wrong with Christmas devils?


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Party Hat

Happy Thanksgiving, Robert Polk

posted Wednesday November 26th, 2008

This Thanksgiving, I am thankful for many things, including a man named Robert Polk.

I didn’t know what to expect, when I decided to start this blog on Sophie’s fifth birthday. Ray (who rarely, if ever, reads the blog — who can blame him, he lives it) announced immediately that it would go viral. I knew it wouldn’t. Really, it’s more of an exercise. Not completely in futility, I hope. 

I’m a person who makes a living as a writer, and yet I’ve never been able to journal. This is the closest I’ve come, and if anything, I’m putting down the bones, as Natalie Goldberg would say. (Corny but true.) On May 21, 2009, I’ll have a pretty good record (minus some stuff I can’t say publicly in real time) of Sophie’s sixth year on earth.

And I’ll have something else, too. I didn’t realize, when I started GIAPH, that this would be the perfect way for me to learn about older people with Down syndrome. At arm’s length. Or farther. I’m not proud of that, but increasingly, I hear it echoed from other parents of young kids with DS.

Last night, a very dear person — a mom at Sophie and Annabelle’s school, part of the Momfia (in a good way!) — gently took me along to the Thanksgiving dinner at our neighborhood ARC center. I’ve driven by the sweet little house dozens of time, but never stopped. The closest I’ve come is Poco, who works at our Safeway, and one time I was in Walgreen’s when a large group emerged from an ARC van, ready to shop.

I fled. My daughter’s 5, I should be well-adjusted by now, but I still can’t look a group of people with Sophie’s features in the collective eye.

When I wrote recently that I haven’t kept my promise to myself to sign up to volunteer at ARC, this friend offered to go over with me. It would better than her first experience, she promised, which involved a craft project and scissors and no small amount of fear on her part. (She wound up working there as an accountant; she doesn’t have special needs kids, she’s just a special person.)

I knew what she meant as we wandered through last night’s pot luck party, offered our baked goods to the organizers and mingled with the guests. I spent part of the short time watching my friend’s boys play near an irrigation ditch, and had to remark to myself that actually, young boys are more foreign to me than a group of developmentally disabled adults, as I cringed and shouted warnings, worried this woman’s sons would break their necks on my watch.

But I had some fear of the ARC folks, I admit, particularly after one of them (he didn’t have DS, but clearly something else) came up behind me twice and screamed a short, impossibly high-pitched scream that told me he could sense my unease. My game face isn’t working, I thought.

About half the ARC participants had Down syndrome. From across the yard, I spotted a woman — an adult, maybe my age, maybe younger, I couldn’t tell — who looked a lot like Sophie. She had blonde hair in a feathery page boy and glasses, and she was sitting quietly at a table, coloring the word “cornucopia” in as carefully as could be, with different colors for each letter. I sat down next to her. She didn’t acknowledge me, just kept coloring.

I watched, feeling ridiculous.

Finally, she spoke, still looking at her paper. “Can you get me a roll?” she asked.

“Of course!” I announced. I jumped up, returning with a roll and some crackers on a plate. I put them next to her.

“Thank you,” she said, and began to color the fruit on her drawing. I watched.

Nearby, some volunteers arrived, and one woman hugged another, welcoming her back.

“See?” she said. “This place is addictive!” Everyone laughed and nodded.

The Sophie look-a-like kept coloring. I kept watching. My friend approached; it was time to leave.

“Bye,” I said. “Bye,” she said.

I might go back to ARC, on a day when it’s not so popular to visit, and try to get to know some of the people. Or I might not. Not for a while, anyway.

For right now, I have my friend Robert Polk, and his son Ryan, who live in Texas. Robert and I “met” in June, after I did a radio piece about Sophie. He heard it, and emailed me, and he’s become one of my favorite GIAPH commenters (I have several!) even though he does not care for my pink oilcloth tablecloth. I think he just needs to see it in context, but then again, I’m not sure what Robert would think of my carnival chalk collection.

I digress. I love Robert’s comments and you might have read them already, but here is a recent one I love that explains how I’m getting to know adults with Down syndrome in the way I think is best for me, for right now, chickenshit that I am:

Ryan has all the necessary savvy to call me on his cell phone, invite himself to supper, supposedly, but really to rip additional CDs to his iPod. He logs on to his own computer account, rips the CDs, asking for help only to scan arcane album covers not listed on the ‘net.

Maybe someday I can send you a copy of his writing. Horrible handwriting (hey, what’s wrong with THAT) but generally impeccable grammar and spelling.

I don’t think he reads much. He CAN read music. All my sons took piano lessons, later to be in secondary school band. Even Ryan marched in the band.

Ryan is a savant about NFL quarterbacks. He used to carry a huge three-ring binder with their cards, memorizing and sorting them in a Rain Man kind of manner. He can tell you everything about any NFL quarterback, even last string players.

He used to work on all those fancy skateboard maneuvers that all the boys would work on, even one of those spin-twist moves.

Sophie will do all these kinds of thing and more!

Now, this sounds like something you with which you ended your This American Life article: Alas, one of Ryan’s more recent writings, at age 32, was an email to Santa. Sigh.

Happy Thanksgiving, Robert Polk. And Ryan. And to all the folks at ARC, including the guy who screamed at me twice, and to my dear friend and her beautiful family. 

And to Sophie.


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Party Hat

Mamas, Don't Let Your Babies Watch "Charlie Bit Me"

posted Tuesday November 25th, 2008

Ms. X did not sound pleased.

“Sophie had a really bad day today,” she said. We were on the phone, but I could see her shaking her head. Sophie was out of sorts all day, in ball buster mode, totally stubborn. Refused to come in from the playground, wouldn’t listen to directions.

“Oh, and she bit someone,” Ms. X said in a rush, like it was an afterthought. I know she knew I’d freak.

“SHE WHAT?!”

“She bit someone. But, but — it wasn’t bad. She just took a kid’s fingertip in her mouth. I don’t think she meant to really bite. It didn’t break the skin.”

Apparently another kid actually left a bruise on a classmate last month, so this really wasn’t much by comparison. Still, Ms. X and I both know it’s got to be nipped in the bud. (So to speak.) Sophie was sent to another classroom for 15 minutes, and it was during Reading Buddies, when Annabelle’s class was there to read with the kindergarteners. Big punishment.

As always, I could tell Ms. X felt badly about being stern with Sophie. And she was quick to tell me that the last 20 minutes of school, Sophie was absolutely perfect.

Super.

“And as she was leaving, she gave me a hug and said, ‘You come my house Thanksgiving!’” Ms. X reported happily.

I was not happy. I called Ray to report on the day’s events and warn that he not mention the bite. We don’t want to make a big deal, I cautioned.

“OK, no problem,” he replied, not seeming concerned. “I know where she got it.”

“Where?!”

“From watching `Charlie Bit Me.’”

Grr. Not on my watch. I’m the queen of inappropriate, but even I have my limits.

Am I the only one who doesn’t find that You Tube video funny? Check it out for yourself if you’re among the handful of Americans who hasn’t seen it:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HE4FJL2IDEs


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My-Heart-Cant-Even-Believe-It-Cover
My Heart Can't Even Believe It: A Story of Science, Love, and Down Syndrome is available from Amazon and 
Changing Hands Bookstore
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