Wednesday, January 06, 2010

The Day I Didn't Meet Florence Henderson

So I was on television today, and I have to say it was a lot of fun, though it all got off to kind of an inauspicious start. I arrived at the studio promptly at 2:20, as requested, accompanied by my supportive friend, only to find I wasn't on the security guard's List. I wasn't listed under my name, or my website, or my segment name. The security guard at the desk called the producer while my friend and I watched the 4 televisions in the lobby, hoping we wouldn't be there long enough to watch the show on which I was scheduled to appear. Time passed. I began cracking jokes about my life on the D-list. Guests arrived and were ushered in through the locked door by a production assistant with a walkie-talkie and an ear piece, and I began to wonder if I should sneak in with another group of guests.

2:30 came and went. I checked in again with the security guard, who had forgotten my name. I called and left a message for the segment producer, knowing he was likely in the studio, far from his office. I overheard the security guard say to someone, "Oh, that person must have slipped in while I was distracted." Um, security guard? I think it's your job not to be distracted! But that's okay, there's no reason anybody would ever want to slip unnoticed in to a television studio. I mean, I did, but I wasn't planning to hijack the news like the other guy probably was.

Eventually I got in. The producer was "looking all over" for me – except, you know, in the locked lobby. I was given a quick tour of the stage, shown where I would sit (grateful that I wouldn't be sitting between the two hosts, like a friend was during her TV gig, who then felt like she was watching a tennis match, unsure where to look). They took my pile of books, concerned that they might put them in the wrong order. "It's ok if they get mixed up, " I said, "I can talk about them in any order." The producer and stage manager looked at me, amazed. I can walk and chew gum, too, but I didn't offer to do that on the show.

The green room wasn't green, but mostly my friend and I hung out in the make-up room (thank you, kind make-up person, who did such a nice job of making me look like a better version of me!), chatting with Amy Tiemann and Jamie Woolf (who were on the show talking about their new project) and watching Florence Henderson talk about her new stage show and the tell-all books the Brady kids have written (and no, she never had an affair with Greg). At this point, understand, I wasn't yet sure I would actually appear on the show, because although I was listed on the show's website yesterday, I wasn't on the security guard's list, nor the producer's list, and while it was all kind of pleasant to hang out, I was going to be a little sad if I'd prepped and rescheduled the day and bought a new dress only to be asked to go home (well, I wouldn't really mind too much about the dress).

At 3:20, the production assistant came and said, "OK, you're on the schedule for 3:30!" So I had a moment to consider getting nervous but seemed to be done with that, and then spent some time cooling my heels (literally! it was freezing) in the back stage area while the stage manager tried to figure out how to clip the microphone onto me (my TV-veteran friends, having given me so much great advice about how to dress and sit, didn't mention microphone-friendly clothes, but there's only so much you can do, right?). It involved quantities of tape and me holding the device and trying not to turn it off until I got settled on my stool. I remembered not to cross my legs (thank you, Vicki), to look at the hosts, not the camera (thank you, Ericka, Sophia and Sybil), and I remembered what I wanted to say. That seemed the least of my worries, really, especially once I met the hosts, who could probably get rocks to say interesting things. They are very, very good at their jobs.

And then, four and a half minutes after it started, the segment was all over, and while I could have said lots (and lots!) more about each of these terrific picture books, at least I got to say one good thing about each of them. And then, at the production assistant's urging, I rummaged through the basket of green room snacks (Goldfish! Lorna Doones! Chocolates!) to bring treats home to my boys. I didn't meet Florence Henderson, but still: a pretty good afternoon.

Oh, and don't forget to check out the picture books, because they are lovely, and visit Literary Mama for new reading lists every month!

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Monday, April 06, 2009

Pigeon Postscript

A number of readers have asked for an update on the pigeon egg, while a number of others have simply marveled at my luck in seeing a pigeon egg, all of us city dwellers having lived a long time with the belief that pigeons spontaneously generate.

So in the beginning were two birds and an egg, and then we observed one bird and an egg, and then -- after the UPS man noisily delivered a package -- just an egg. It wasn't getting any less attention after the bird left, honestly, as she had only sat on it for a couple minutes, but it looked pretty forlorn just lying there and the boys worried about it. So we scooped it up and gave it a cozier little home in the backyard, and I told them maybe the pigeon would find it, or maybe another bird would adopt it (or maybe -- I didn't remind them of this possibility -- a rat like Templeton would come along and eat it.) It's been a while now, and there's no sign of the egg anymore, and the boys have forgotten it for now, but I expect the next time they see a bird's nest one of them will "Remember the time?"

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Monday, March 16, 2009

Birdwatching

As the boys and I were driving home from their swim class today, Tony called me. "You'd better come in through the garage," he said, "A pigeon laid an egg by the front door."

The boys, listening over the car's speaker phone, were rapt as the story unfolded. Tony had been heading out to the grocery store when he noticed a pigeon sitting by the door. Looking closer, he saw a second bird. And a small white egg lay between them.

He went to the store. When he came back, one pigeon was huddled behind the planter:



The second pigeon was gone, but a sad little gesture toward a nest was laid next to the egg:


By dinner time, the pigeon had moved next to -- but not yet on -- the egg:



The boys want to build a nest, or a bird house. They debated the best possible building materials -- wood? straw? fabric? -- and location -- backyard? the sidewalk tree in front of the house? -- even though we said we can't move the egg or the pigeon will abandon it, and she probably wouldn't welcome our offerings of nesting materials either. I don't like pigeons, generally; I have called them rats with wings often enough; but this pigeon, sitting here on our front stoop guarding her mislaid egg, foolish though she may be, has inspired all our sympathies. She's Mama Bird and we're all kind of rooting for her and her egg.

This story doesn't seem to be developing like one of my boys' favorite picture books, , in which a pair of San Francisco pigeons nest in a hotel sign's letter B. When the hotel is torn down, construction workers notice the birds frantically circling the B and deposit the letter, nest and all, at a bakery, where the baby pigeons safely hatch and grow up eating cake crumbs. On the contrary, it looks like we are in for a Life Lesson here. Stay tuned...

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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

A Sign of Change!

I had to tear myself away from Inauguration coverage today to work lunch duty at my son's school, but seeing this sign in person made it all worth it:

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Tuesday, December 02, 2008

What We Found in the Garage

Everybody's garage holds some mix of trash and treasure; ours is slightly more interesting -- to me, at any rate -- because it also holds boxes and bags of things saved by Tony's parents. They didn't move often, but when they did, apparently, not a lot of weeding or sorting happened first. So cookbooks and ticket stubs and artwork and bills and jewelry and newspaper clippings and silverware all wound up in boxes together, and here we are, years later, still finding surprises.

A large plastic tub of crumpled newspaper. On closer inspection, the crumpled newspaper was protecting small clay objects: Pre-Colombian pottery from Tony's parents' art collection. Glad I didn't toss it into the recycling.

A bag of cat litter. We don't have a cat. Tony's parents never had a cat.

2 small Calphalon saucepans (one with a lid!)

The 2 backseat headrests for our Hyundai.

Tony's 1st and 2nd grade report cards. He did very well.

One large, square copper plate for etching. Unetched.

Tony's grandfather's real estate license.

3 silver trays.

A checkbook-sized magnetic Scrabble game (excellent!)

Copies of the New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Examiner and L'Italia, dated November 23, 1963, reporting on JFK's assassination.

A wine notebook, with tasting notes from the 1950s and 60s.

Boxes of slides from European travels, circa 1950.

A small cardboard box containing Remington cartridges, apparently from the previous owner of this house. Need to call SFPD for information on disposing of these.

A binder with notes, sketches, and a full proposal for a sculpture titled "Flying Flag" that Tony's dad submitted to San Francisco's Hyatt Regency hotel (a hotel that had previously commissioned a sculpture from him).

Tony's grandmother's journal for 1938, kept in a leather-bound "Business Yearbook" embossed with her husband's name. This treasure deserves fuller examination; in the meantime, a brief excerpt:
Thursday, April 21, 1938

[Tony's mother Nancy was 11; her brother Geoffrey a year younger]

Usual school day. Nancy had a French lesson at 3:10 P.M. Went to Dr. Dillon's office at 4:30 PM. Geoffrey played at home after school. Nancy has 4 new petticoates -- length 38 in., size 14.
Breakfast: orange juice, oatmeal, bacon, toast, milk
Lunch: steak, c. potatoes [creamed?], beans, spinach, rhubarb, milk, cake
Supper: tomato soup, cottage cheese, scrambled eggs, jello, cake, milk




We have a long way to go, but we might some day be able to park both cars in the garage. In the meantime, I'm going to be reading Tony's grandmother's journal and unearthing more about family life in the 1930s. Stay tuned...

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Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Vote.

I woke at 3 AM and lay there a moment wondering why before realizing, Ah. All those calls I made to Virginia voters yesterday rubbed off: polls were opening in their state.

I managed to roll back over and sleep for an hour but then woke again, too anxious and excited to sleep any more -- I feel like a kid waiting for her parents to wake on Christmas morning.

A friend in Pennsylvania reports that at 6:50 AM he was the 90th person on line to vote. To all my friends in swing states, I wish you patience and hope you have something good to read while you wait on line!

It's 5:54 AM in California as I write this, and I'm just waiting for my turn to vote for change.

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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Write to Marry Day (No on 8)





I tried to start a conversation about same-sex marriage with Ben and Eli, but Ben was so surprised to hear that some people don't believe it should be legal that we got derailed. Eli only wanted to know if he could marry Ben some day. So no great wisdom from the kids on the topic, but here's what I think in a nutshell: marriage has been around a long time, and it's a better institution now than it was several hundred years ago (when it was basically a real estate deal) and it's a better institution now than it was even several generations ago (when it was less a real estate deal but women still had few rights). The more people who can participate in the institution, the stronger it's going to be. Vote No on Prop 8.

And because cute kids always help the cause, I'm including a picture of Ben at his first wedding, of our friends Brianna and Angie, back in the days when for same-sex couples it was a ceremonial ritual with no legal rights. Some day, I hope he looks back at this picture and smiles at how far our country has come.

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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Write to Marry Day Tomorrow!


Spread the word! On October 29th, Mombian is hosting a blog carnival to help defeat California's Proposition 8.

Here's the info from Mombian:

Please join bloggers around the country and around the world on Wednesday, October 29 to blog in support of marriage equality for same-sex couples and against California’s Proposition 8.

The event will give bloggers a chance to voice their opposition to Prop 8 and highlight what they may have already done, online or off, to stop the measure. The campaign will also educate California voters of the need to “go all the way” down the ballot to vote on the proposition.

Mike Rogers of PageOneQ approached me last week to ask if I’d organize a blog carnival like Blogging for LGBT Families Day, but this time to help generate awareness and action against Prop 8. I readily agreed, and here it is.

To participate, post on your own blog against Prop 8 on or before October 29, 2008, then submit the link to your post by completing the form below. Links to your own videos on YouTube or other video sites are also accepted.

Many of you have already done much to try and stop Prop 8 in California, donating and raising money, blogging, and talking with friends and family. Please share your efforts and post about them for Write to Marry Day, or submit a link to a previous post. This will help us create a comprehensive view of bloggers’ efforts to stop Prop 8.

I urge you to spread the word about this event as widely as possible, on both LGBT and mainstream sites. All bloggers who are against Prop 8 are welcome to contribute posts, regardless of where they live or whether they are LGBT or not.

I will showcase the full list of participants here on October 29.

Not only that, but all participants who leave a valid e-mail address will be entered into a drawing for a $50 gift certificate to Amazon.com.


I'll be posting a little story here later.

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Friday, October 10, 2008

How To Make a Museum Docent Happy

Ben's 1st grade curriculum includes a terrific focus on the visual arts. It starts in the classroom, where the students' tables are named for artists (Picasso, Monet, Seurat, etc), and carries on in the weekly 90-minute art studio sessions, where the boys started with full-size self-portraits and have now moved on to still lifes in the style of Matisse. Ben's always loved to draw, and he's got art in his genes, so we figured he would eat this all up, but he's even more excited about art right now than Tony or I could have imagined. He's bringing home artists' biographies (there's a great series published by the if you're looking to encourage your budding artist), he's drawing elaborate pictures of his future studio, and he's asked that we put the Metropolitan Museum of Art on our site-seeing list so that when we go to New York City next week, he can visit the Monets.

So when he had a day off from school yesterday, I decided to take him on a scavenger hunt, looking for paintings by Monet, Picasso and Matisse in museums around the city. Since we'd be spending a fair amount of time on the street car, too, I tossed in a couple extra-museum items, like election signs, Halloween decorations and the like. But it was the paintings that really got him going.

First stop, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art:

Enter museum pulled by eager 6 year old tugging on your arm. Get out museum floor plan and hand it to him. Watch as he scans map and then announces, "Matisse. . . 2nd floor! Let's go!" Watch docent beam.

At the Palace of the Legion of Honor:

Enter museum pulled by eager 6 year old tugging on your arm. Get out museum floor plan and hand it to him. Watch as he scans map and then announces, "Monet... Gallery 19! C'mon!" Docent beams, asks "How old is he?" and nods at the answer; "That's how old I was," she says.

And there at the Legion of Honor, inspired by the sight of students with their paints and brushes, copying some of the pieces on display, Ben got out his paper and pencils and got to work:


Turns out, what makes a museum docent happy makes a mama pretty happy, too.

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Milestones

This was a big week for the Grant family, as both boys began new summer programs.

Ben's attending a language immersion program at the local French-American school in preparation for our trip next month, the first time he's gone to any kind of class without a parent, or any other kid he knew, or without even visiting the building ahead of time. Typically, he was more concerned about his lunch options than about the whole communication in a foreign language aspect (hmm, I wonder where he gets this from?!) But Tony took him the first day, and Ben quickly found the Lego, so the communication issue was rendered moot: the language of Lego is universal.

Meanwhile, Eli began preschool! After a year away, we're back at our beloved, rough and tumble co-op, a school recently described in a local paper as the "best educational experience in the Bay Area" (hear that, Stanford?) I took him in and stayed for my work day; later he reported to Tony that he was "half wif Mama, half no Mama." Today, he did the morning all by himself, and reported to me afterwards, to explain his lack of socks, "Mama, some kids throwed water... and... never mind." Good boy: handled the water play and isn't a tattle-tale.

Tony and I are giddy: for the first time in 6 years, 3 months, and 12 days of parenting, we have twelve hours a week of scheduled, reliable childcare.

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Saturday, May 31, 2008

Two on the Town


Ben and Tony are off on the annual kindergarten camping trip, so this weekend it's just Eli and me, on our own, playing tourist in the city. This morning we made a long-promised trip to the Cable Car Museum. It's open 8 hours a day, 7 days a week, and yet somehow the 6 1/2 mile drive across town seems like too much to traverse most days, in our short window between school drop off, nap, and school pick up.

But today we made the trip, driving across town to a part of San Francisco that feels like we've driven back in time: this is the San Francisco of picture books, of and . It's narrow one-way streets, steep hills, and small apartment buildings. You can hear the cable cars' cables ringing underneath the sidewalk, even when there's no car in view, and you can hear the bell clanging from several blocks away.

We explored the museum, where you can go below street level and watch the huge gears turning the cables, and then we took three (because Eli's three) short rides on three different cable cars, sitting inside, outside, and then finally standing outside, hanging on to the pole. None of the conductors would take a fare from me, all of them complimented Eli on his stripey engineer's hat. The last ride brought us right back to our car, and we got home in time for lunch and nap.

Image source.

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Friday, May 16, 2008

Friday Night Updates

1. It's still hot. That's all I can say about that. My brain is melting.

2. Check out the little blogroll addition: my friend and former Literary Mama columnist Gail Konop Baker is blogging now at Cancer Is a Bitch (also the title of her beautiful soon-to-be-published memoir, which I was lucky enough to read in manuscript). If you feel like venting or talking about food, Gail's your girl!

3. I'm so connected. If you scroll waaaaaaay down to the bottom of the page, you'll see that I'm now. I'm not entirely sure what this means, really, but all the cool chicks are doing it (well, really not remotely all of them--Gail's not (yet!) but many of them.) So follow me, and let me know if you're over there, too.

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

A Summer Evening, in two takes

As you may know, San Francisco is sweating through an unusual heat wave this week. Even here in the fog belt, the temperatures are in the 90s. I love it -- I get to wear the sun dresses I buy (against my better judgment) each year and which then hang in my closet, mocking me. Don't I know by now that I only get to wear sun dresses once or twice a year? But when the weather's like this, I revel in it: we ride bikes after dinner; we barbecue on the deck; we go out without jackets and scarves.

But much as I love the heat, I know it throws us all off. Tony doesn't really like it, the boys aren't used to it. And when it's this hot, even I can get a little crabby.

And so tonight was glorious and hot and we went out to dinner -- but, you know, family life... it's not always such smooth sailing. It was a good night with some bumps along the way, and on nights like this I wonder how we'll all remember it down the line. Here are two possibilities:


One:

I pick Ben up from t-ball, where he and his buddies sweat good-naturedly through their one hour practice, and tell him Tony and I think we'll all go out to dinner in the neighborhood tonight.

We park the car at home and get Ben's bike and Eli's trike out of the garage; the boys bike happily the several blocks to the restaurant, ringing their bells and waving to passersby.

We sit at an outside table, and the boys' food (plain pasta and roasted artichokes) comes promptly. Tony and I enjoy salads--butter lettuce with asparagus and green goddess dressing-- and pizzas (mine's topped with arugula, goat cheese, sweet peas and mint; yum!) and big glasses of cold wine.

We walk and bike home. Tony bathes the boys while I sit on the couch watching a Tivo'd episode of Nigella Lawson's cooking show.

Two:
I pick Ben up from t-ball and say we're planning to eat out. He asks first to eat at the local tacqueria (ok for take out, but I didn't want to eat there), then suggests Chinese. The Chinese place is fine, but we've gotten take out from there too often lately, and I'm not in the mood. I tell him where we're planning to go--the casual Cal-Italian bistro--and he grumbles and sulks all the way home.

As we pull into the driveway, I try to cheer him by suggesting maybe he and Eli could ride their bikes to the restaurant. He loves the idea. We go inside to get Eli and Tony, who mishears my plan and somehow within a minute I'm sniping at him about I don't know what.

We get the bikes out and head to the restaurant, a 10-minute trip that restores everyone's good mood.

At the restaurant, the waiter is harried and inattentive. He brings the boys' food promptly (big points for that), but the rest comes in slow waves, and my salad comes sprinkled with the speck (smoked ham) that I'd asked him to leave off. By the time my speck-free salad comes back, the boys are done with their pastas, and the wine still hasn't come. The pizzas arrive; Eli says "I'm done here!" and I take him out for a walk while the pizza cools a bit.

On the walk home, Ben's so busy waving and ringing his bell that he runs right into me. I yell in surprised pain, Ben starts to cry. I storm off--pushing Eli's trike harder than necessary--my foot throbbing, leaving Tony to talk to Ben. There's still a 4" tread mark on my calf.

When we arrive home, Ben apologizes and asks softly if he can ride up to the end of the block and back, "super-fast." I finally soften and say sure; he and Eli race down the sidewalk.

We all go inside, Tony takes the boys up for a cool bath. I sit on the couch and watch Nigella make a fondue.

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Friday, May 02, 2008

Speaking of Music...

If you happen to be in San Francisco Saturday night, check out this rare local appearance by Sharmila Roy Pommot, a well-known singer of Bengali music who has sung on the soundtrack of Satyajit Ray films, worked with Peter Gabriel, been sampled by underground house musicians, and happens to be the aunt of a friend of mine.

The concert is at the Cultural Integration Fellowship, 2650 Fulton Street at 3rd Avenue. Contact for more info.

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Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Train Heaven


Amtrak + California State Railroad Museum = two happy boys.

Ben: "I almost forgot that after the train ride, there's still the whole train museum!"

Eli: "I love this train. I want to stay on this train forever."

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Monday, April 07, 2008

Spring Break: Plan C


Plan A: 5-day road trip to visit cousins in Santa Barbara and Long Beach. The kids play, the adults talk and art, we all curtsy to the Queen Mary and enjoy the warm weather. Canceled due to illness.

Plan B: Ride Amtrak for a day trip to the California State Railroad Museum in Sacramento. The kids play, the adults enjoy the scenic train ride, we all enjoy the warm weather. But, we get to the train station bright and early, our bags packed with camera, picnic and coloring books, only to discover that the trains aren't running due to an accident on the line.

Plan C: It's 9 AM Monday morning, a day when most of the Bay Area kids' museums are closed (why, why all on the same day?), all our Berkeley friends had spring break last week so they're in school, and it's a little too early and too chilly to go to a playground.

But we're near Berkeley, and I spent long enough there to know a couple things to do. So, we visit the T-Rex in the Berkeley Paleontology Museum; we go to the Campanile, hoping to ride to the top (but it's closed on Mondays, natch) and then we go to the Lawrence Hall of Science, where there's an exhibit involving build-your-own Lego race cars (did they know we were coming?)

After a picnic lunch, we call an old friend from the city who's moved to Berkeley. School's out for the day and the family is free! The big kids make scenery and rehearse scenes from The Magic Flute (somehow, both of their kindergarten classes have recently learned the story) and the littler kids play trains. The moms catch up and drink tea. After a couple hours, we're treated to a short and well-rehearsed performance of excerpts from The Magic Flute. We head out for Chinese food, follow it up with some gelato, and finally head home after the evening rush hour's over.

Thank goodness for Plan C.

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Sunday, February 03, 2008

If you happen to be in Santa Clara...

Go check out the exhibit at the de Saisset Museum, Eye on the Sixties. Tony and I went to the opening Friday night, and rather than having to hunt for his dad's sculpture, as we thought we might, were happy to meet up with it right in the front lobby, glowing in the light.

We'd never seen this one in person, and it was fun to see it in context with some other beautiful and unfamiliar acrylic and resin pieces, as well as some more famous pieces, like Claes Oldenburg's creepy moving Ice Bag, and some great paintings and drawings as well. We introduced ourselves to a couple of Tony's dad's old friends, including Bruce Beasley (who pointed out how ill-suited most museums are to exhibiting sculpture: not much natural light, no cranes to lift heavy pieces...) and we chatted with the Andersons, who are quite charming and unassuming guardians of a multi-million dollar collection. But my favorite quote of the night was from Ronald Davis (that's his piece, Spoke, at the top of the de Saisset Web site) who chimes in on the whole tangled question of abstract art vs. realism quite simply:

"The painting's just gotta look better than the wallpaper."

Indeed.

image copyright The Estate of James Grant.

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

A Good Day in San Francisco

This has not been a good winter for San Francisco. We have not, for example, been to the zoo to ride Eli's beloved Puffer train since the Christmas Day tiger escape, and I'm not sure I'll ever feel safe enough there to return. I have mixed feelings about zoos, but there's something about the SF zoo, the sight of the giraffes' heads bobbing along above the eucalyptus trees, the waves from Ocean Beach crashing in the background, that always appealed to me.

Meanwhile, in other local news, the governor has slashed the public school budget (how are our teachers, already stretched to the limit, going to continue under these conditions?), and our street car line recently struck another pedestrian.

My kids don't know about any of this, of course, but it's all been wearing on me and I badly needed a good city day. And we had one last Friday. We started at Ben's school, where his kindergarten class, their fourth grade buddies, and assorted teachers, staff, and families gathered for a peace march in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday. The kids paraded across the park to a shopping district, chanting slogans ("2! 4! 6! 8! We think Dr. King is great!") and singing Happy Birthday to the bemused smiles of shoppers and shopkeepers. We walked along beside them, Eli asking the whole way, "This the ha-pade? Where the ha-pade?"

After some time in the playground's train structure and lunch, I collected Ben from school (Tony and Eli having driven home for a nap), and we rode the bus downtown. A few stops along our journey, an older man boarded the bus and sat down next to Ben and me. He listened to us chatting about the parade and MLK for awhile, then pulled a piece of paper out of his bag and started to fold. Ben watched intently as the bird (pictured above) took shape. When he was done, the man handed it to Ben, who was delighted with his gift. "For me? Really?" and then checking with me, "Caroline, can I keep this?" The man and I both smiled our yeses to Ben, and the man then got out two more pieces of origami paper; handing one to me, he indicated (I only realized later that he never spoke to us) that I should fold along with him and learn. Two more birds emerged from the papers, just as we got to our stop. Ben bounced off the bus, holding his bird, delighted with this interaction with a stranger.

Next stop, the Museum of Modern Art for the Olafur Eliasson show. If this comes anywhere near you, go see it! Take the kids! It's a gorgeous, light-filled, fascinating exhibit, with many of the installations exposed so that you can see how they were created. Ben and I had a ball poking in and around the various pieces, and I think a Friday afternoon bus ride to MoMA might become a regular part of our monthly routine.

Ben then remembered the MLK memorial across the street, so off we went. It's a Maya Lin-inspired fountain/waterfall, with lines from King's speeches engraved on the walls next to huge photographs from various moments in the Civil Rights movement. Streams of water pour down ("let justice roll down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream"), and the whole thing always makes me cry. Luckily Ben was there, threatening to topple headlong into the water, hollering at the pigeons, lightening up the mood.

And then last stop, reunited with Tony and Eli, who took the street car (without incident) downtown to meet us for dinner at our favorite Vietnamese restaurant, Out the Door. We filled up on lemongrass tofu and chard with carmelized shallots, picked up some chocolate gelato for dessert, and then loaded two tired boys back on to the street car for the ride home. It was a fine day in San Francisco.

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Saturday, December 22, 2007

Oh, Christmas Tree


This tree, a scrawny little primrose, is making me very happy. We're fostering it for Friends of the Urban Forest, which will reclaim it after the holidays and plant it on a street somewhere in San Francisco (I'm hoping we can get the address, so that we'll be able to visit it). Tony and the boys deemed it too small and skinny to bring inside and decorate, so we have a more traditional Christmas tree in the living room, and this one is hanging out by the front door, adorned with a flock of origami cranes.

Meanwhile, in other Christmas preparations, I've made (with Ben's participation) candied orange peel, Elevator Lady Spice Cookies, pumpkin rocks, cranberry bars, and cranberry-pistachio ice box cookies. We still need to make hickory puffs and bourbon balls, some biscotti, and probably some wasps' nests (a recipe I'll post so that I can help Fertile Ground use up her egg whites!). Plus, there's nothing chocolate yet, and that's just wrong. Finally, I'm considering -- for the first time -- buche de noel for Christmas dessert, which is perhaps a little nutty. Tune in Wednesday to find out!

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Monday, November 05, 2007

City Toughs


They say city squirrels and city raccoons are tougher and more feisty than ones in the country (though this is hard to imagine); I guess Eli thinks city butterflies are tougher than their country cousins, too. We were at the playground the other day, and he was making me delicious imaginary lattes in the playhouse structure. Lately when we play, he sets up imaginary doors and windows, and spends a lot of time showing me where they are, updating me on their status ("This one open, this one shut"), and pulling them open and closed.

So there we were, me sipping on my imaginary latte, wishing for a real one, murmuring interest in the ever-changing status of the cafe door, when Eli did a double-take: "Hey, no doorstop!"

Well, no, indeed, the imaginary door had no doorstop.

"Maybe," he continued thoughtfully, "A butterfly came, ate the doorstop!"

And for the rest of the morning, whenever he spotted a butterfly, he pointed accusingly, "Maybe that one ate cafe doorstop."

I hope this notion doesn't color his idea of butterflies for too long. The city's butterflies are pretty scrappy, but I don't think they've been reduced to doorstop-eating yet.

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Saturday, July 21, 2007

25 Feet of Concrete Fun


The Children's Playground in Golden Gate Park has finally reopened after a 2-year renovation, and today we walked over to check it out. Before it closed, it was really too big for Ben, besides being a nightmare of splintery climbing structures and broken swings. Now it's got all the latest and greatest playground equipment, some of it shaded with huge canvas sails, all beautifully landscaped with flowering plants and grasses.

But the best part is the part that they didn't change one bit, the 2-story concrete slide that Tony used to slide down when he was a kid, the slide that always has plenty of cardboard at the top for the kids to sit on as they slide down.

There's a small concrete slide at Ben's preschool, and another one at Mountain Lake Park, but this is the granddaddy of concrete slides, and today there were more than 2 dozen kids waiting their turn at the top. Even the littlest ones were patient enough to wait till the slider in front flew all the way down and then climbed clear of the bottom. And Ben was in the mix for an hour, sliding down, climbing back up, tugging his big scrap of cardboard up behind him, a huge smile on his face. Occasionally he'd turn and wave and shout "Keep your eyes on me, Mama! I'm gonna go super-fast this time!" and I'd wave back and call "I see you!" and watch with a grin plastered on my face, too, watching my cautious boy sail down that slide, over and over again.

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Tuesday, June 19, 2007

I Am Irritated

A new restaurant has opened in our neighborhood, and I want to like it, I really do. The menu is vegetarian, the food organically grown, sustainably harvested, locally sourced (wherever possible, of course). The restaurant uses environmentally friendly products. It's a kid friendly-space with toys and large tables. They are trying to do the right thing, and it's clearly hit a chord around here (of course it has) because the place is usually busy.

But.

I cannot read the menu without wincing. Every item on the menu is an emotion, every dish a proclamation:

"I Am Sacred." "I Am Joyful." "I Am Triumphant." "I Am Festive." "I Am Bright-Eyed." "I Am Sensational." "I Am Prosperous." "I Am Elated." "I Am Plenty." "I Am Charasmatic." "I Am Precious." "I Am Succulent."

I Have To Stop!!!

I try to get past the names of the dishes and focus on the descriptions: the tabouli with hummus and spicy olive tapenade on pita sounds fine ("I Am Flourishing"), but it's right there next to the "live sun burger" ("I Am Cheerful") with macadamia cheddar cheese and I want my (veggie) burger cooked, thank you, and made with dairy cheese please, and then I see the basil hemp seed pesto ("I Am Sensational") and although I know hemp is good for you, I'm not putting it in my pesto. The thought makes me cranky.

I will just never be the flax seed-eating, hemp-wearing person my zip code might suggest; in fact, I guess you can take the girl out of New York but you can't take the New York out of the girl.

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Monday, May 28, 2007

Small Town Livin'


No, we haven't moved out of San Francisco, we just know where to get a dose of small town (and summer weather!) when we (read I) need it: over the bridge and in Marin, where today we joined friends for their hometown pancake breakfast/Memorial Day Parade.

And when a couple enterprising kids rolled by us with their lemonade stand on a cart, you know we made a purchase!

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Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Last Week, This Week

Last week: sandals, capris, tank top.

This week: boots, socks, jeans, long-sleeved shirt, wool sweater, down jacket, scarf.

San Francisco weather used to make me crazy. Now I'm just kind of amused.

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Monday, May 07, 2007

Summer in the City


We never know when we're going to enjoy a hit of real, fogless summer, but we're in the midst of it now: all the doors and windows open, me in a sundress, the boys in shorts, and grilled pizza for dinner. Yum!

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Tuesday, March 20, 2007

The Wading Pool


School assignment letters went out from the SFUSD last week, as did letters to private school applicants. We'd listed our seven public schools, applied to five privates (fewer than the seven recommended by some preschool directors), and were curious (ok, ok, anxious) to see what the mail would bring.

The SFUSD assigned us our third choice school (not, I should correct, the plastic-fish-beating school, which on review was actually our 5th choice). We should feel lucky; the SFUSD proudly claims that 90% of families are assigned to a school on their list, but in my informal survey of preschool families, it's more like 45% get their first choice, 45% are assigned a school that's not on their list (let alone in their neighborhood) and the rest of us wind up in the murky middle, assigned to a school we're not thrilled about, that's far from home, but which we put on the list to fill out our required seven.

As for the private schools, we received one acceptance, at our last choice, Tony's alma mater, an all-boys school about which we have mixed feelings, and four offers to be placed in the "waiting pool," the deliberately phrased non-waiting list from which random children are happily plucked to take the spots of families who have rejected acceptance offers. So if the straight white parents of a boy from an average middle class family turn down admission to our first choice school, maybe Ben will get that spot. Or maybe some other white boy will. We have no idea.

In the meantime, here we are in the waiting pool. I am absolutely not complaining, because we have options that some families would be thrilled about, but we are not at thrilled quite yet. We're still at uncertain and pensive. The water isn't too clear here in the wading pool, it's crowded, and there's an unpleasant vinegar scent in the air. We need to climb out and dive in to another pool -- but where?

Tune in next week!

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Thursday, March 15, 2007

Let's Call It My 4th Choice, Now

So, the San Francisco Unified School District mails out its school assignments today, and everyone I know is on pins and needles about this.

I am interested to hear, of course, but I've also been quite usefully distracted by my other projects. Still, that's not to say it's not on my mind, and so when I went out for a run today, I made a point of circling past school choice #3, just to see what might be happening out on the playground at 10 am on a sunny day.

I saw the usual assortment of ball playing and structure climbing and running around, and then, off in the corner, I saw a group of four or five girls, gathered in a circle. One of them was holding a plastic baseball bat, and she was smacking something in the center of the circle, over and over. The other girls, they looked to be in 1st or 2nd grade, were cheering her on.

I ran around the corner to get a closer look, and there, in the center of the circle, being beaten silly by the girl with the plastic bat, was a large plastic fish.

OK.

It could have been so much worse.

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Saturday, February 10, 2007

A Trip to the Ballet

The last time I went to the ballet, I was probably about ten. My mom took me to a New York City Ballet production of Petrouchka, and I don't remember much about the event except wondering what made the ballerina's cheeks so red!

We're really kind of film/music people around here... I think dance is beautiful, and I'm always knocked out by the graceful strength of the dancers, but I've never seen many performances, or learned very much about it. Meanwhile, Ben's interest in music started young and shows no sign of abating. He's got a bin full of instruments, as well as two guitars, a ukulele, and a mandolin. He studies the fabulous San Francisco symphony kid's website. And of course, we read books about music all the time, from , to , to to . He even has a 4,000 entry illustrated encyclopedia of music that Tony found at the used book store (Ben reads it in bed).

And yet, we still haven't been to the symphony! But we recently tagged along with a friend who'd bought a block of tickets to the San Francisco Ballet's special kid-focussed production of Stravinsky's The Firebird. We got to watch students from the Ballet School warm up on stage while a retired dancer narrated their every movement; we got to watch an excerpt from the vivacious dance, Blue Rose; and finally, a full production of their world premiere Firebird.

Of course, Ben and I had done our homework. I'd found a picture book version of , and we'd been reading it nightly for a week. I'd worried that maybe the story, with its demons and deathless king, would trouble Ben's dreams, but he seemed unfazed.

We arrived early, in time to really study the beautiful performance space. We walked down to look at the orchestra pit, to note which instruments were already in place (piano, harp, drums), and we got to say hello to the trumpeter when he walked in to put his score on his music stand.
Then the lights flickered, we took our seats, and Ben and his friends watched rapt as the dancers moved through their warm-ups, then Ben leaned back and let Blue Rose wash over him.

When The Firebird began at last, I suddenly realized that Ben has never seen a live-action performance of any kind. The few movies he has seen are animated; he has never seen real people pretending to be characters. And he didn't know quite what to make of it. He moved on to my lap, a little worried about Prince Ivan when Kashchei captured him. "Is that man real? Is he going to be ok?" And he still hasn't stopped talking about the scene of Kashchei's death, which I found beautifully, subtly staged (a flashing light and a brief black-out), but frightened poor Ben speechless. "He's ok," I kept whispering into his ear, "It's just a story. It's all pretend."

He's still at the stage where the line between real life and pretend is a little fuzzy, and it's an interesting stage to witness. I want him to know and appreciate the difference between real life and stories, of course, but I also -- almost even more -- want him to be so moved by stories that they feel real. I think I'll be a little sad when pretend doesn't have the power it does now.

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