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[info]rosefox posted about her mother today and I thought that was a super sweet thing to do. So I thought, since I was at my grandmother’s for the weekend, I would get a current picture of the three of us together. I don’t remember the last time I got one, and I think it’s important.

I am so incredibly grateful for the women who shaped my life. I had amazing people to look up to, and I still do.

When I was a very little girl, my mother was the center of my universe, the perfect domestic goddess mother of legend. I used to brag to complete strangers about how beautiful my mother was. She sewed my clothes, she gardened in our backyard, she cooked and canned and pickled and brewed. We had homemade yogurt and homemade beer, homemade candy and homemade fruit roll-ups, and a thousand cookies in two dozen varieties every Christmas.

The year I turned nine, my mother told me she was going back to college. I freaked out– bawled and sobbed and begged her not to go, because, in my world, college meant going away from your family and living in a dorm. It took a lot of coaxing and cajoling and explaining for me to finally understand that college didn’t have to be like that, that she would be going to classes while I was at school and sometimes in the evening, and that she would still be there. And so, I entered into the world of part-time latchkey kid, with a key to the back door of our house on a white plastic heart keychain, and my mother entered into the world of elementary education.

It was a long time before I realized that she did it for me. Not just in the sense that she wanted me and my brother to have a better life. She saw what happened to me as a child, the difference it made when I had a teacher who understood me versus a teacher who didn’t, the difference between the years when I faked stomachaches and the years when I got up eagerly every morning, and she wanted to be that teacher who understood for other kids.

My mother has taught kids, she’s taught teachers, and now she’s a principal. I know she misses being in the classroom sometimes, but she is amazing at what she does and I admire her in ways I can’t even describe. I wish I could be like her, but her talents and my talents are extremely different.

And she is amazing at home, too. My mother is one of my closest friends, which isn’t something a lot of people can say, and I know that. My mother is the person who cultivated my love of food and my love of books, she’s the one who introduced me to old movies and the one who played Simon & Garfunkel and Bob Dylan for me as a child (I still remember discovering what whores on 42nd street were, and when I realized that Rainy Day Women No. 12 & 35 wasn’t about executing someone by throwing stones at them). She’s the one who let me drink beer well before I was of legal age; she’s the one who taught me how to bake. She’s the one who keeps me stocked in liquor that would be the envy of a lot of bars. I owe a lot of facets of my personality and talents and my sense of humor to my father, but I owe most of my tastes and loves to my mother.

My grandmother was born two years before the Great Depression, and I grew up hearing her stories about eating pasta and beans for every meal, every day. She grew up in a time and a place and a culture where she couldn’t follow her aspirations to be a professional artist, and instead was a mother to four children.

She has impeccable taste and an impeccable eye, and even now, at 84 years old, she is one of those people who never leaves the house without looking like a fashion plate. She spent years as the official chaperone to Miss New York, and then finally spent a number of years as an interior decorator. Her house is still like a little decorative fairyland inside. Now, she is the manager of a high-end consignment shop, and she brings me clothing home from the store a lot of the time. It’s a little odd, having a grandmother who knows more about fashion and is more trendily dressed than you are all the time. I wouldn’t know the first thing about how to put clothes on without my grandmother.

Every time we pile into the car to go home to New York from my grandparents’ house in Delaware, my grandmother starts to cry. I wish we didn’t live so far away; I wish I didn’t have to see her cry every time I leave. I wish she didn’t have to cry.

My mother moved out and away from her mother when she graduated from college; she has never seen her parents more than a few times a year. I see my parents a few times a month, and I am so incredibly grateful for that.

I forgot today was Mother’s Day. Not in the usual sense of “crap! I completely forgot about Mother’s Day, I need to buy flowers right away!” but in the sense of the fact that I wished them both a Happy Mother’s Day so many times yesterday that I forgot it was today and not yesterday. Silly, silly.

Mirrored from Antagonia.net.

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I took a couple days off work during my mama’s Easter break and the two of us went down to New Orleans!

I feel kind of silly because the whole time I was there I was like, OOH I need to post about this! But I didn’t really have a lot of time on the interwebs so that didn’t so much happened. And now I’m like, oh, umm, I guess posting about my cab ride on the way to the airport isn’t that exciting anyway, is it?

So here are the highlights:

1) There was something I was going to put in #1 and then I got distracted!

2) PARADES. We went to three parades, and only one was on purpose!

I don’t think my mom has ever been in New Orleans for a parade-oriented holiday, unless it was when I was really little and we were visiting my dad (he worked in New Orleans for a while when I was, like, two. I remember almost nothing of visiting except for the time my mother accidentally left me on an elevator, except for the eerie flash when I’m looking at something that looks strangely familiar). Anyway, the upshot was that she was super excited and a little girl we know back here in NY is getting a LOT of shiny beads.

We also got these:

Yeah, my mom arranged them on the hotel bed when I wasn’t there.

Specifically, we got this:

Watch the video. No, seriously.

3) I finally got all the split ends cut off my hair! Doing so cost less than a third of the discount price at Bumble & Bumble where the split ends were NOT cut off.

4) Green Goddess is ALWAYS one of my favorite things, and we ended up there every night that they were open from the time we landed. We were planning on going over Saturday, but then our flight got in an hour early and my mom wanted a drink, so I was like HEY I KNOW HOW TO FIX THIS.

Scotty is not only the awesomest bartender but one of the awesomest people I have the pleasure of knowing and all of you should go and have him make you drinks. When we came back on Saturday, I sat at the bar so we could chat (which mostly involves geeking out about liquor), and I told him about the Easter Peep Cocktail Tradition (God, that last one is the first one I did, and it was really pretty but kind of awful. There’s no picture of the third and probably best of the drinks, which was a rum and chocolate liqueur concoction with a chocolate peep in it, but I think that is from the Era of No Camera). And he told me that if I brought over Peeps the next day, he would make me one! Like I said, AWESOME.

It has Miller’s Gin, Crism Hibiscus, and Mandarine Napoleon in it, and it was super delicious.

5) But now I got ahead of myself, because before we went over there, we went over to Cure, which came on Brendan’s recommendation. He had been coming over to my desk and saying “Pancetta-wrapped figs!” to me. The only sad thing about this place is that it was like three blocks from [info]liret‘s old apartment, and I had never been there when she was living there. Because this place was like my porn:

So I texted photos to Brendan solely for the purpose of making him jealous (it worked!)

6) Then, on Monday, my mother and I went to the Museum of the American Cocktail:

It’s this little tiny place with a giant bar in it and all kinds of awesome cocktail stuff ranging from historic to kitschy. They had an absinthe display, and I found all my bottles (that they had; they didn’t have Tenneyson in the display)

They also had a TEMPERANCE HATCHET.

I kind of took enough pictures of the displays in this place for a whole other post because I am that kind of nerd.

The only problem with last weekend is that it is over.

Mirrored from Antagonia.net.

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