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Thursday, July 26, 2012

Good girl gone…normal?



So I was sitting at our YMCA the other day, dutifully watching my beloved nine-year-old daughter, Alexa, during her fourth round of intensive swim lessons (I should probably note here that she has remained classified as a “Polliwog”—or, in kid-centered, “everyone-gets-a-trophy” Y-speak: the level directly above “Sinking Stone”…I’m not kidding.  My angel-faced, fifty-five pound wisp of a girl floats across the land with the grace of a dandelion puff, but somehow ejects an invisible eighty pound anchor from her arse when she hits the water), and, after eight weeks of daily lessons, I’ve yet to witness any significant improvements in her abilities (unless you count not drowning as a skill).  However, on this particular afternoon, I am utterly astonished by what I observe.

Alexa, standing at the edge of the oh-so-scary deep end—all pale skin, twitching elbows, and knocking knees—was vigorously shaking her head at her gracious and kind teacher (the fourth in a series of wonderful, supportive young women who had coddled, nurtured, and encouraged her to acclimate and accept the grace given to those with confidence in their aquatic endeavors) floating in the water before her, arms open in a welcoming embrace.  For five, full minutes, I watched the two of them in a bizarre dance of warring wills.  It went something like this—  

Teacher: patting the water, extending the day-glo colored foam noodle to bridge the space between them, gently coaxing my reticent little wogger (hipster-speak for “polliwog”) with a warm smile and a firm direction while hiding her growing exasperation; Alexa: skittering to the edge of the platform, toes curling over the brink of the board, tilting forward…then, arms flailing, leaping back to the safety of the pool deck.  Repeat.  Repeat.  Repeat.  [This is not the unusual part.  This was becoming a carefully calculated habit.  But wait…]

Deadlocked in this watery waltz of authority and acquiescence, one of the lifeguards eventually approached them at the edge of the pool.  He was all muscles and tattoos, a small-town Channing Tatum (at least from where I was sitting in the remote, “parents-we-don’t-want-you-interfering-thank-you” observation deck) and I watched as he spoke to Alexa and her teacher for a moment.  Though I couldn’t hear a word of their exchange, Alexa smiled broadly and nodded cheerfully.  He extended his hand to her and, clearly besotted, she readily placed her petite palm inside of his.  Gliding like a debutante, the shirtless Prince Charming escorted my daughter down the diving board where she, without hesitation, leapt right off the deep end and slipped directly into the water.

On the drive home, I tried a light-hearted approach to understanding what happened with my little swim-class Cinderella, teasing her mildly about the new “boyfriend”—but this only earned me an “Oh, moth-ER!” face and the silent treatment until I could buy back her affections with a Happy Meal. 

[Please tell me it will always be this easy to make amends with my child?]

Other than the fact that I thought that I had another five or so years to prepare for it, this scenario didn’t particularly surprise me.  I’ve puzzled and written a lot recently about the rules of attraction and the nature of relationships—in my reaction to the “Fifty Shades of Grey” phenomenon, I briefly mulled over the economy in affairs of the heart, analyzing what it is that we are willing to barter in exchange for what we most desire.  I couldn’t help but examine what this young lifeguard represented to a girl of such limited years that would entice her (so quickly!) to abandon her fears and embrace the opportunity that all of her previous instructors had offered to her?  What mojo did this young man possess?  An awful fear gripped me unexpectedly.  Heaven help her—had my poor child inherited her mother’s preternatural attraction to the…dramatic pause…“bad” boy?

[I will quickly concede my weakness, as a young girl, to being drawn—like a hungry kitten to a saucer of yummy, yummy milk—to any young man within a five mile radius in possession of a tattoo, piercing, mullet, cigarette-smoke infused leather jacket, or rusted-out rattletrap blaring heavy metal at a level that more than alarmed my mother, but actually sent her into a frantic search for the nearest curator of chastity belts.  In fact, at sixteen sweet years old, I actually fell for a guy who fit the aforementioned description down to the very last detail; he even had a license plate that read “LOSER6” (I kid you not.  If you lived in South-Central Illinois in the early 90’s, I can almost guarantee you saw it or knew him.  I’m just going to issue a blanket apology now.  You’re all covered.)

One day I got the nerve to stop making out with him for about five minutes to ask why he actually paid good money for personalized plates that were so self-deprecating.  His response, leaning into me with his ethereal blue eyes fastened to mine, my brain blurred by his heady mix of Marlboro, motor oil, and whatever cheap cologne he’d stolen from the local Wal Mart? 

“I’ve lost in love six times.  But something tells me that my luck has changed with you.  Don’t ever make me change it to ‘LOSER7’, okay?”  

(You do realize that I just died inside writing that, right?  I mean, I threw up in my own mouth enough for the both of us.)

The intelligent young woman in me was laughing her ass off—actually screaming at me for listening to this absurdity—but the hormonally driven teenager in me with the boyfriend who looked like an even hotter Judd Nelson from “The Breakfast Club”?  Well…she was too busy cooing “Oh, you poor baby.  Here, let me love you and fix your broken-hearted booboos…” to even hear my ego trying to kick her idiotic ass. 

(I know.  I KNOW.)  Don’t judge me.   

In my defense, just so you won’t lose all respect for me, you should know that just because I was drawn to them, doesn’t mean I ended up with them.  Sheesh.  Give me a little credit, won’t you?  My “real” relationships were with artists, software engineers, attorneys, and IT consultants.  I just had a tiny addiction for a little while—just an occasional taste kept the jitters at bay.  But I’ve totally kicked the habit now, I swear.  I’m clean and sober, man.]

So…back to my precious girl and the question that would not leave my head: did momma’s predilection for rebels without a clue jump into her gene pool?  I couldn’t get any answers from Alexa, after all, she’s just a little girl.  She doesn’t yet possess the ability to articulate what it is that drives her to do anything, whether it’s shaving her cat, locking her sister in the closet for an hour, or holding hands with a strange boy to dive into nine feet of water that had her quaking in her swim shoes only minutes earlier.    

I hate pondering something and coming up without a hypothesis of some kind, so I decided to take a break from the navel-gazing and bust out the kindle to read my latest purchase—the wildly popular new Gillian Flynn novel (Gone Girl) that belongs to a genre (crime-fiction) that I never [EVER] read—just to blow off my fears that the sins of the mother would be visited upon the genetic betrayal that was to be my child’s legacy: that she would be destined to meet and love the wrong guy, over and over again. 

Talk about irony—for the next twenty-four hours, I was courted by the strange, exotic, charming, and horrifying couple, Amy and Nick Dunne.  (Picture above-average American sweethearts—I’ve personally cast Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Gosling, but you’re graciously free to select your own images, with my permission.  You’re more than welcome.)  The thing is, Nick and Amy offer a behind-closed-suburban-doors-peep-show that makes Ana and Christian Grey look about as interesting as a pair of neutered housecats.  (And I’m not even referring to the sex, although there is some of that, too.  No offense to the Greys, but their fifty shades of kink pale in comparison to the mind-fucking drama of the Dunnes.) 

There is honestly so little that I can tell you about this book that wouldn’t be too revealing or provocative—but I will limit myself to a couple of simple statements: this is a brilliantly written he-said/ she-said transcription of the proclivities and perversities of a perfectly normal American couple.  Then again, I suppose this depends upon your definition of “normal”; the truth is, there is love and passion and anger and betrayal and murder—and there are often moments in this book that will astound you and knock you to your knees with the awareness that these two people are more like you than you may ever comfortably admit.  And that’s a pretty humbling—and frightening—thought when you lie down next to the one you love tonight.

While I am definitely recommending this wickedly clever, agitating novel to anyone and everyone, I’m more than aware that Gillian Flynn does not need my help selling her book: it does this, splendidly, on its own.  In fact, as I was writing this, I noted that it was the #4 book on the Amazon* and #5 on the Times* best seller lists. (*Note—Dear God, for the sake of all that is holy in prose, please let something that is actually well-written knock that bloated Grey trifecta off of the top of the best seller lists before I lose all faith in humanity’s ability to appreciate genuine literature.  Please?)  I cannot tell you any more—I cannot pigeonhole this book into any category: it is simply its own engaging, electrifying entity.  (Honestly, would you all just hurry up and read it so we can talk about it?  Thanks.)            

Unfortunately, in matters of human attraction, sometimes we don’t make the choices that are the best for us—sometimes, the heart simply wants what it wants.  The real hero may be standing in front of us with his bleeding heart in his hands, but we are too busy supplicating at the foot of the hunk adjusting his balls and stubbing out a cigarette to notice.  Love is rarely within our realm of control—even when we think we have it all figured out for ourselves, we’re just bullshitting and making this up as we go along.  What or who we fall in love with is not always a true reflection of who we are or what we value.  In fact, the surface of the person we fall in love with might be nothing like what lies beneath the façade at all—Poe warned us that everything we see or seem might just possibly be a dream within a dream.  Gone Girl is a fresh take on a very primitive fear—that despite our hubris and our assertions to the contrary, none of us truly knows what is lurking in the shadows of the human heart.  Perhaps we would all be wise to exercise a little more caution around those murky places—lest we be sucked into that darkness ourselves.  (I’m telling you, this book will mess with your mind.)

As for my baby girl and her poolside prince?  I’ll just chalk this one up to the classy-sweet kindness of a stranger. The hopeless romantic in me hopes that one day—many, many years from now—Alexa will find the kind of partner who would inspire her to exile her fears and hold her hand as they dive into the deep end of life’s adventures together. 

However, the neurotic mother in me is far more powerful and she is fully prepared to purchase iron window bars and stainless steel chastity belts.  Bad boys beware: I can also locate a great deal on medieval castration tools.  Nobody needs a Christian Grey or a Nick Dunne for a son-in-law; consider yourselves warned.  

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