The Straw Hat: Happy Father's Day, Dad

It’s a positively gorgeous day and I just had breakfast with a friend. We sat on her patio observing and discussing her garden – a mix of budding annuals, spent peonies and developing tomato plants. As gardens always do, it made me think of my dad.

Norman Slott had been widely known and respected as a builder, engineer, golfer, bridge player, gifted Ivy League grad, and, of course, loving husband, father, grandfather and friend. But mostly when I think of my dad, I draw upon one familiar image; that of a youthful, middle-aged man clad in old clothes, well-worn shoes, and protected from the sun’s rays by an enormous straw cowboy hat. He’s bent at the waist, his hands encased in garden gloves and he’s toiling in his vegetable garden. And what a garden it was – teeming with plants bursting with tomatoes, cucumbers, green and red peppers, squash and whatever else hit his fancy that particular spring. Anything that wasn’t eaten or given away by fall found its way into brine and mason jars and enjoyed throughout the winter months.

I like to think I may have inherited a lot of my father’s impressive qualities, but I only know for certain of one: his love of gardening.

As my father knew, away from the stresses of his job and the traumas of the world, he found peace in his garden. When I’m digging and pruning and propping up branches laden with fruit, my mind stays focused on the task, and its rewards – some almost immediate like when I plant a handful of impatiens or petunias and stand back to soak in the instant beauty and color. Gardening empties my mind of all those negative thoughts and worries and issues that never serve me well.

I have always found that of everything I do, it is when I am nurturing my garden (probably a fourth of the size of my father’s) or filling vases with flowers that I have selectively snapped off from my outside plants, that I am truly blissful. Maybe it’s the beauty, maybe the reward of seeing profits for my labor, or maybe it’s just thinking I’m like my dad.

My dad died much too young and much too fast in 1984 after a brief fight with pancreatic cancer. He has left behind many legacies for he was truly a remarkable man. But for me, it’s first and foremost his -and my – love of the outdoors and the soil – worms and all – and all that it can produce.

So, if you’ll excuse me, I need to go water my plants, and deadhead my roses so my garden looks trimmed and tidy for Sunday – Father’s Day. I may not be able to see him, but I will be thinking of him and picturing him in his garden.

In my garage, his old straw cowboy hat hangs above a shelf crammed with my garden tools, pots and planters. It’s as though it oversees all that’s happening below.

Happy Father’s Day.

18
Jun
2010

Hot for Hot in Cleveland

I’m psyched. Tomorrow night four great comedic actors will grace us with a NEW (not a rehash, not a rerun and not a remake) sitcom about four women whose ages average out to a stunning, youthful 62. And these are unequivocally, respectfully and famously hot actors.

Hot in Cleveland which appears on TV Land as a fresh, summer offering, features three aging LA friends:Valerie Bertinelli, 50, of One Day at a Time and weight loss fame; Jane Leeves, 49, of Frasier, and Wendie Malick of Just Shoot Me who turns 60 in December. The women’s plane is forced to land in Cleveland on their way to Paris.

In LA they are over the hill. In Cleveland they are HOT.

So they stay.

But what increases their average age is the addition of the fourth actor, 88-year-old Betty White. I’ve always liked Betty White, but after seeing her host Saturday Night Live and appear on Boston Legal (I miss that show), I am a Betty White devotee.

She’s funny, smart, adorable and OLD.

And while – age wise – I fit more in line with the other actors on the show, Betty White gives me encouragement. There IS so much more to strive for as we age.

How many 20 somethings do we all know – maybe we are one of them ourselves – who feel stressed over not knowing what to do with their lives? How many middle-aged women (and men for that matter) think once their kids are grown, they may be lucky to get a job, but a new career?!?!? And how many seniors think it’s time to retire, make sure their long-term insurance is paid, and finish every sentence with: “If I live and be well.”?

For what it’s worth, in my 20s I was a journalist in a job I hated more than I liked. In my 30s, I became a landscape designer so I could spend more time with my young kids (I’ve always loved the mom part). In my 40s I returned to graduate school. In my 50s I published my first book.

Who knows what’s in store for me in the next phase.

But I can look at Betty White and dream that one day in the future even someone like me might be considered HOT.

15
Jun
2010

The Right to Know

You’re not going to believe the story I’m about to tell you.

The other night I attended a barbeque and ran into a woman I hadn’t seen in quite some time.

“My son just got engaged,” she told me.

“Congratulations,” I said. “That’s terrific!”

“I guess,” she said. “I didn’t even know he had a girlfriend.”

If you’re the mother of a teenaged or adult son you know that while this may sound unlikely it can’t be dismissed as impossible.

Her son had spent his junior year of college studying abroad. During a vacation from his classes, he traveled throughout Europe and in Italy he met a young woman. He never mentioned her to his parents. When he returned home and resumed school in the States, he continued a relationship with the woman over Skype. Still no mention of her existence.

A year later he told his parents he was going to spend his spring break visiting friends in Europe. Friends plural – with no further identifying features.

Apparently, he saw the young woman and on the final day of his ten day trip, he proposed. Meanwhile, his parents still think he’s hanging out with a bunch of kids. He returns home, goes back to school, neglecting to mention he has a fiancée.

Weeks go by. His parents visit him at school. They spend the day walking around campus and then go out to dinner. Finally, he says, “By the way, I got engaged when I was in Europe and she’s at my apartment right now.” As the news settles in and their shock begins to lessen, they meet her. She’s lovely. They’re fine.

Should he have told them before? Yes. But more importantly, why didn’t his parents ask?

I’m not suggesting we ask for intimate details about a relationship, but we should ask our sons IF they are in a relationship or dating. And if they answer “Yes,” they should fill in some blanks: her name, age, hometown, occupation, appearance. If they want to withhold additional information until, and if, the relationship becomes serious, that is their prerogative.

But to be reluctant to ask our sons for fear of looking like we’re prying, is ridiculous.

When I asked the mom of this boy whether she had ever asked him if he was involved with someone, she felt he was entitled to his privacy.

All I could think of was when I began dating as a single mom. My children had no interest in details about the man, but they did want the basics, especially whether he had children. If I had chosen to keep my dating a secret from my kids – for whatever reason – and then one day announce: “By the way, I met someone and I’m getting married.” – my children would have been devastated.

No way is that fair to my kids.

And no way is that fair to a parent.

05
Jun
2010

Al and Tipper Gore – I Don't Get It

I’m a romantic. A hopeless romantic. So the news about Al and Tipper Gore separating after 40 years of marriage has left me feeling disenchanted, saddened and empty. Maybe I’m in denial or just blindly optimistic, but even with the dissolution of their marriage and the crushing divorces of so many others who cheated, or were cheated on, I still believe in the permanence of a relationship. Like I said, I’m a romantic. Hopelessly so.

I never had the experience of loving someone for decades. When my husband died I was only 38 and he was 42. I can tell you now that from the time I married him at the age of 23, I envisioned our being together forever. I couldn’t imagine I would ever love someone more than him.

I never had the good fortune of having my husband help me raise our children through all their traumas. I never got to see firsthand that adult relationships shift and turn, effected by circumstances and wisdom, and changes in taste. (I used to only drink coffee sweetened. Now, for some inexplicable reason, I like it with only a bit of cream.) I never considered that I could one day divorce a man that I had one day loved unequivocally.

But what do I know?

I ask that rhetorically.

I don’t know why the Gores’ seemingly picture-perfect marriage is dissolving. Like talk show hosts who have weighed in on the Gores’ private life, I can’t imagine that something or someone didn’t enter their marriage and cause it to implode. But then again, I need to think that. Otherwise I don’t understand.

It’s not that I don’t believe a marriage can simply crumble as it ages, like a wedge of long preserved cheese. It’s just that I haven’t had the privilege of experiencing that. My first marriage abruptly ended after 15 years. Would it have lasted another 50 or 60 years?

I’d like to think so.

But then I’m hopelessly romantic.

02
Jun
2010

Malcolm in the Middle

I know I always harp on how uncommunicative boys are as they get older, but this personality defect ends up effecting both the wife and the mother.

The other night as I flipped through the channels, I was drawn into a new sitcom, “The Middle.” The mother, played by Patricia Heaton, is running the snack bar at her high school-aged son’s basketball game. A pretty cheerleader named Morgan stops at her table and moons about her boyfriend who’s on the team. With that news, she points to none other than Axel, Heaton’s son. How long have they been going out? Six weeks. “He leaves me love notes daily,” the girl tells a shocked Heaton, who had no idea her son even had a girlfriend.

If you think such a premise is preposterous, then I’m pretty sure you aren’t the mother of a son. Yet.

Heaton goes home and tells her husband about the girl, and says she doesn’t trust her. (Girlfriends can relate to how they have to prove themselves over and over again before being accepted by his mom.) The doorbell rings. It’s Morgan who, being the perfect companion for their son, is carrying a basket of homemade muffins and says something like, “I know you have a ton of questions and I’m here to answer them. But for starters, we don’t have sex.”

Instantly, Heaton’s distrust turns to LOVE.

So what happens next? Most moms could have written the script. The girl breaks up with the son, who is left brokenhearted and, for a brief moment, seeks out his mom for comfort. This hasn’t happened since the days he thought girls were yucky.

The time is fleeting though and Heaton knows it. She also realizes that the next time her son has a girlfriend, she’ll still be the last to know.

Meanwhile Morgan, as the girlfriend, knows that she has to show his mother that she can be as nurturing and loving as she is. Hence, the muffins. But she also knows that the second she breaks off the relationship with the son, even if he’s the reason for the it, Mom will find fault with her.

Imagine what would happen if the boys actually opened up to both women?

14
May
2010


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