Posted in friendship on 04/13/2009 09:13 pm by Jerseygirl89
I don’t know the Spohr family. But that doesn’t matter. What matters is that these parents have lost their beautiful little girl.
Please go here if you can help.
And give your kids an extra cuddle.
Posted in friendship on 04/17/2008 09:54 am by Jerseygirl89
Imagine that you see a tallish person wearing a teased wig. The person has orangey-red lipstick and eyeliner that looks like it was done with a Sharpie. The person is wearing black pants with gold pinstripes, a tight black t-shirt and a black jacket with rhinestone buttons and a fur collar. Clear plastic heels adorn the person’s feet.
Now imagine that you are seeing this person walk into the playground where your children are playing.
Do you think, OMG, there’s a drag queen at the park! Maybe she’ll want to be friends and I won’t have to hear the tenth birth story of the morning! Maybe we can go to a gay club over the weekend – I’ve so missed them. What will I wear?
Maybe that’s just me.
But wouldn’t you get a little bit of a thrill if a drag queen (and his/her grandchild) showed up at the playground when you were bored to tears?
Now imagine that as you get into a conversation with said drag queen, you realize that she has no Adam’s apple. And her voice sounds naturally high-pitched. And the child calls her, “Grandma”. And to your horror you realize that this “drag queen” you wanted to befriend is just a woman with really, really, bad style.
Do you still attempt to make friends with her, or do you casually wave as you go to your car?
At least I smiled as I waved.
Posted in friendship, life in Stuck-Up on 02/04/2008 10:35 am by Jerseygirl89
When I was growing up in New Jersey, I was a lackluster Giants fan. As a family we were way more into college football so I never paid much attention to the NFL. But if you’d asked me, I would have said I was a Giants fan (NEVER the Jets). I didn’t really become interested in professional football until I moved to Kansas City and went to my first Chiefs game. Actually, it was probably my first Red Friday that intrigued me. “Red Friday” is when pretty much everyone in Kansas City wears red and/or Chiefs gear to show team support for the home game the following Sunday. Growing up in a place that had at least two teams for every sport, the Kansas City’s devotion to the Chiefs really impressed me. EVERYONE was a fan. Stores suspended Muzak in favor of radio coverage of games. Homeless people asked for the latest scores. Naturally I too fell in love with the Chiefs.
I wore my Chiefs sweatshirt yesterday while watching the Super Bowl. I will always root for the Chiefs – no matter how many bad decisions their coaching staff makes. But last night I fell in love with the Giants too. That game was the most exciting game I’ve ever watched. Surely it’s okay to have more than one team? I mean, they’re not like husbands. More like children, really. And everyone knows it’s possible to love lots of children at once.
The only problem I foresee in Giants fandom is that I don’t know anyone here who watches football besides my Dad and sometimes Hubby. I’ve yet to hear a woman even mention football. When I lived in Kansas City, I always had girlfriends to watch and/or go to games with. I’m seriously considering starting a Meetup for female Giants fans. Surely there must be some around here?
(BTW, sorry I missed Soap Opera Sunday. I’ll do it again next week. )
Posted in Haiku Friday, friends, friendship on 01/04/2008 02:32 pm by Jerseygirl89
So on Sunday, I finally left the farm for my night with a few friends. Oy.

Mary rescued me
and brought me to Christen’s house
after some errands
like the liquor store
OK, two liquor store stops
and we got food too
There were many hugs
upon our arrival there
it was wonderful
my old KC friends
they like to drink and party
I used to keep up
I don’t party now
But I forgot on Sunday
you know how it is
So I did the shots
and had a vodka cocktail
maybe it was three
Rumpleminze is bad
more than one shot – really bad
I forgot – shots bad
I had so much fun
until I passed out cold
on the hardwood floor
I, apparently,
was very entertaining
I can’t remember
It is very good
that I was sleeping over
poor,poor Christen though
there are two bathrooms
I was most ill, not hungover
or so it seemed
Jason took me back
to the farm on that Monday
and got the Hubby
They went out that night
and I tried to recover
no more shots ever
Posted in friendship on 07/10/2007 02:31 pm by Jerseygirl89
The worst part of living in New Jersey has been my lack of friends. I miss my friends in Kansas City terribly. Most of the people I keep in touch with (or would like to keep in better touch with) from high school no longer live in Bergen County (take that as you will).
But on Sunday I went out to lunch with Michelle. As Michelle pointed out, we are probably each other’s oldest friends. I have known Michelle since tenth grade, which makes our friendship over twenty years old now (Michelle doesn’t look like she has been friends with anyone that long, though, she looks just like she did when we graduated). Michelle lives about forty-five minutes away, which makes it even more challenging to get together than it should.
Anyway, Michelle wanted to take me to lunch for my birthday. Michelle is sweet and thoughtful like that. Our budget has been stretched so thin since we had the kids I can’t remember the last time I bought a non-family member a gift. But Michelle wanted to take me out anyway. And she also bought me this lovely perfume just because she knew I’d never buy it for myself – when money’s not tight we buy toys, of course. How sweet is that?
But even more than the material kindness was the way Michelle and I could just talk and talk and talk about anything, even though it’s been months since we’ve seen each other. I had almost forgotten what it was like to hang out with a non-family member that I didn’t have to be my “social self” for – it was so wonderful. But even beyond that, since I do at least talk to my KC pretty regularly, it was great to be with someone who knows all of my stories, even the ones I’ve forgotten.
So thank you Michelle, for lunch and perfume and for being such a terrific, veteran (not old!) friend.
Posted in friendship, parenting on 06/10/2007 02:13 pm by Jerseygirl89
Let’s be clear about a few things before I tell my story. I am thirty pounds overweight. My clothes that fit are all from Target and Old Navy. I desperately need a good haircut and to do my roots. I could use a pedicure. I look like a stereotypical mom from the mid-west.
So anyway, here I am in the suburbs of NYC, where women carry Coach diaper bags. Where even the friendly ones are wearing yoga pants from Nordstrom. They never seem to be bothered by what their children do (or do not) do. They are always calm and well put together. I’m not surprised that I haven’t met any new BFFs. But I know there are other losers lurking around here somewhere. I just have to find them.
Anyway, yesterday I took the kids to the park in the next town. We met a mom and her two little girls. Zoe immediately became enchanted with the older girl and they ran off to play. The mom and I chatted while we pushed the younger ones in the swings. And even though she was skinny with a nice haircut and cute clothes, I liked her. Eventually Zoe wanted to go to the other side of the park. I waved good-bye to the nice woman as I followed Zoe and Zach to the other area. Once there, Zach kept trying to climb the too-high ladder. After distracting him successfully (I thought), he began a tantrum. He rolled in the dirt, cried, kicked when I picked him up and when I put him down. It sucked.
Zoe continued to play during her brother’s meltdown, but then she began asking about a snack. I explained (while wrestling with Zach) that we would be leaving in five minutes to go have lunch. Zoe continued to ask for snack and reject the idea of lunch, I continued to deny her. I decided it was time to leave. As we walked to the parking lot, I had Zach on my hip, facing out so he couldn’t kick me. We were both covered in dirt. Zoe was hanging off of my other arm, protesting loudly about her dislike of the concept of lunch. My ponytail had fallen out and my hair was frizzing everywhere.
That’s when the nice lady drove by and paused. She rolled down her window as if to say something, then paused in horror. Her own little girls were sitting quietly in her backseat. “Ummm, nice chatting with you!” she called as her tires squealed and she roared down the park road.
Another one bites the dust.
Posted in friendship on 03/30/2007 01:10 pm by Jerseygirl89
Everyone keeps asking me how great it is to have moved back home. After seventeen years (granted, four of them were college, but still) I have returned to New Jersey. And I’m not sure great is the word I would use.
I love my new house. I love being close to my parents (well, so far
). I love that I can walk everywhere now, or hop on a train into the city. I love that I can get good pizza, real bagels and deli food easily. But.
I don’t really know anyone here anymore. I don’t like that the Daily Show doesn’t come on until eleven. Other moms don’t seem very friendly (everyone I have talked to in the park or the neighborhood has been male or childless). I have to bring six different things to get my driver’s license.
I like it here, but it doesn’t feel like home. For years it’s been the place I grew up, the place I visited at Thanksgiving and Christmas. I know it probably won’t take all that long to feel at home here- certainly it will take less time for me than for my Kansas native husband. But’s it’s not great, and it’s not home. Not yet.
Posted in friends, friendship on 03/29/2007 01:35 pm by Jerseygirl89
I moved to Kansas City under duress. Most people, especially in the late ’90′s, did not move from Seattle to Kansas City. Prior to Seattle, I had lived in Portland, Boston and New Jersey. I was not a mid-western kind of gal. But my ex-husband’s graduate school options were limited, to say the least. At that point, I still had vague hopes of saving my marriage, so I went along. Then he declared he wanted to have a trial separation upon moving to KC. I agreed, knowing that it would be the end of our marriage (no way would I return to living with him after the freedom of living alone). I went along to feel like I had tried my best – and because I had a teaching job there.
When I moved to Kansas City, I didn’t know anyone. I had visited briefly for my job interview and that was it. I didn’t know about 3.2 beer, that some people still didn’t believe in evolution, that strangers apologized after bumping into you. I could only get from my job to my new apartment. By the following spring, I had friends who called me for directions. I had become a Chiefs fan and actually went to Royals games. I even started calling soda, “pop”.
Instead of staying for the year it took my marriage to officially fall apart, I stayed for nine years. At the start, I was somewhat satisfied with my inner-city teaching job. I liked the early spring and the late summer (not to mention the days of sun, something that the Pacific Northwest sorely lacks). I liked the affordable housing. I liked how nice people were at the grocery store. I liked Chiefs games and the manageable yet impressive Nelson Art Museum. I liked Jerry’s Bait Shop, Kennedy’s Bar and Grill, shopping in Lawrence and Parkville, the preponderance of Targets and the fact that I always ran into acquaintances while I was out.
But I stayed because I made wonderful friends – the kind of friends that I didn’t expect to make this late in life. Friends who put up with my moods, my wild bouts of drinking and my tendency to retreat. Friends who listened through my disasters of post-divorce dating, who braved my sad attempts at community theater and karaoke, who threw me baby showers.
I will miss you guys more than I can say.