By MBPDLPayday Loans

Tagged: friends

Aug 17

The Phenomenon of Family

Until very recently, I took for granted what Family meant. Or, perhaps more accurately, I overlooked the deeper roots. I felt them, I just never considered them.

My mother always told me that family are the people who have to put up with your crap even when no one else will because if they don’t, it will be awkward at Christmas, and no one wants to have that unholy burden on them. No one wants to be the one who ruined Christmas. So you live and let live and forgive and love unconditionally even though none of your shirts fit anymore because your little sister and her enormous boobs have warped them all, and why can’t Mom just make her wear her own clothes? Sometimes, Family took more effort than other times.

In my mind, my parents went from being A Couple to being A Family on the very moment I showed up, their oldest daughter. (I find that often my misguided, misinformed assumptions about my parents revolve around myself, my presence and it’s subsequent glorious effects on their combined lives.) Rarely does it occur to children– innately selfish and simple-minded creatures, simply for not realizing there is a bigger scope-of-things to consider– that their parents had lives before them. Or that each parent had an entire life before they met one another and chose to team up.

It wasn’t until I was almost 20 that I realized two things about my father simultaneously. 1. He was a very cool guy, and if I was not his daughter, I would still very much like to be his friend. (Happily, I now get to do both.) And 2. That man can really tell a story. (And does he ever have cool stories to tell.) At 18, my mother had become my best friend, and I started to open my eyes to how much they’d given up for me, given to me… none of it begrudgingly. When children have this moment, it is the profound beginning of a new appreciation for the people who birthed them. I’m sure it seems to take forever, but eventually we get there, to the place where we realize they are so much more than the hander-out-ers of groundings and allowance. And there are perks in it for them, too. Below, you’ll see my parents on the day their oldest graduated college with a BA in Film and Screen Studies and then went out with her parents and got completely shitfaced.

My Parents... Featuring: My Father's Drunk Face.

My Parents... Featuring: My Father's Drunk Face.

Happiness looks good on them, together, 25 years after they stood up and promised to love each other forever. They’ve spent every day since making good on that promise and showing my sister and I firsthand what it means to be part of a Family That Loves Each Other NO MATTER WHAT (capital letters courtesy of my mother, who can push words through her teeth with a fervor that I can only hope instills subtle terror in the hearts of my children with the acute accuracy the way she once did to the hearts of my sister and I).

The Kiss.

Kristin and Ryan were just a couple in my mind, too, until the morning they had Jonas. Then they started being a family. Like, a real family, with a baby. (… … … KRISTIN HAS A BABY! … I am not freaking out… … … As long as I take time to pause on this matter… … … I am not freaking out.) When I got to talk to her the morning after her C-section, she told me, in these words, “He looks just like his father.” She meant Ryan, of course, who I knew as the-guy-she-was-sorta-dating before I knew him as her-boyfriend before he became her-fiancee and then the-man-she-married-in-the-park-by-the-lake. He’s now the-father-of-her-child… And, wow. They’re a family. The boy who didn’t kiss her under the fireworks all those years ago finally redeemed himself for letting the moment slip by.

He helped Kristin become a Mommy. They’re a family. One plus one plus very-tiny-one equals a family. Jonas has Ryan’s face, and that proves that my math is wholly correct. They went from couple, to family, literally, overnight.

James and I were laying in bed the night after Kristin had given birth, just talking. We talked about work, and about school, and about money, and about life, and about our futures, and about the cats, and about our vacation, and about our mutual friends, and about our non-mutual friends, and about the fact that Kristin and Ryan had a baby. We talked about where we wanted to be as people, and as a couple, in five years. We talked about our dreams, and about how we’d raise kids.

We didn’t talk about getting engaged, or  getting married. We don’t talk about those things. I don’t need to with him.

And somewhere in the middle of the conversation, it hit me: He’s my family now. Somewhere along the way, and I hate to admit that I think the cats had a very big part in this, James has gone from My Boyfriend to My Person to My Family. And together, we’re putting together the beginning of what it is that our parents gave each of us: a strong familial foundation on which our children will build their lives.

It never occurred to me that it’s a process, that two people have steps to take before they suddenly produce a child that make them a family. There are a lot of parents out there who are not families, and there are a lot of families out there in which the parental-units are not biologically linked to their children. They’re still families.

And to bring it full circle like this, it’s pretty amazing. To consciously be at the beginning of something so profound and awesome is humbling, and exciting, and empowering, and amazingly comforting. I know that James and I have what it takes to build a foundation so strong that nothing– not even Evil Kittens– can shake it. I know this because we have two sets of amazing parents who have taught us these skills every day, our entire lives. I know this because we have between us one of the strongest bonds of trust and respect and love that I’ve ever seen among two people.

And I know this because we both place equal value in the phenomenon that I’m witnessing, first hand, reveal itself to me in my every waking day: the Phenomenon of Families coming to be.

In the Making.

We have a ways to go… We’re looking forward to enjoying the ride. I’ve heard good things about the destination and better things about the getting-there. In the meantime, we have a very long road trip with two very-small kittens coming up in the next 72 hours.

Amazing what you’ll do to get back to your roots, your mother’s hugs and to hold the next generation of your very best friend in your arms. I’ll even travel with Evil Kittens.

-M.

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Jul 02

Friends.

This is what it looks like when your soul gets a facelift.

This is what it looks like when your soul gets a facelift.

If you ask me the last time I laughed so hard it made my stomach hurt, I will tell you about the Great Umbrella Debacle.

It was a blustery day, and rain was imminent, and we knew this, but the three of us were determined to get together anyway. Because we rarely had the chance to get together any more, and what’s a little rain?

Hilarity and madness ensue. All the umbrellas flip inside out. As I announce I’ve never had an umbrella break, half my umbrella goes limp, dumping a pool of water down the front of me as my two best friends laugh uncontrollably at the irony. Maxine’s umbrella flips inside out, succumbing to the gale-force winds. Christine’s umbrella tries to drag her down Fifth Ave. We are laughing too hard to put up a fair fight. Those umbrellas, they had an agenda.

Then we look around, and everyone else on the street is TOTALLY UNAFFECTED by the weather. No one else’s umbrella has gone rogue. The wind, still spinning us in circles, doesn’t even seem to flutter the canopies of the other umbrellas.

That’s when we stopped, and we all laughed so hard our stomachs hurt. We laughed so hard it warmed our hearts and filled up our souls. Soaked, discombobulated, late for dinner, the three of us shared one of my favorite memories.

When we all graduated in December, I cried a lot because Maxine was going to Spain and Christine was going to Arizona and I was still stuck in Jersey, slated to move in with my boyfriend. None of it was the plan– I was the LAST one of us that was supposed to fall in love. These girls has saved me in college from years of feeling alone, misunderstood and apologizing for my quirky ways. They were my people. People aren’t just allowed to leave.

Except, but, they do. So I said goodbye, and cried a lot, and went to Boston on business, and moved in with my boyfriend, and walked at Radio City while Maxine traveled to Paris and slept on the beaches of Spain and Christine coached track at the local high school in Arizona while filling out law school applications. Life goes on, but I knew New York would never be quite the same for me. Like a gem necklace that’s now antique, appreciating in value for its endurance but not necessarily its luster.

When we found out we’d all be back in New York for the summer, I almost fell off my chair. It was too good to be true. We never thought that would happen for us again.

Of course our schedules would never match up, but we managed to have breakfast the week Maxine came back from Spain, and it felt better– more like home– knowing that they were within freakout distance if I needed them. (I never used the convenience; I’ve stopped having meltdown-freakouts.) We talked for hours, about everything we’ve missed. Life… I can’t get over it. Life just moves so damn fast!

I got a call from Christine just over 24 hours ago, telling me she’s moving to Texas pretty immediately for work. It would have been easy to go back to the Sad Place, where I cry unexpectedly on the subway, and watch Grey’s Anatomy reruns all by myself, missing the Cristina and Izzy to my Meredith. I didn’t cry. I didn’t get sad. I just got off my couch and went to Hoboken to help her pack. Then we rallied with Maxine and had one last girls’ dinner– because, let’s be honest. When are we all going to be together again?

We don’t know. They’re my best friends, have been for the past two years, and we don’t know. A year ago, that would have broken  me. But there’s something unique about the way I’ve bonded with Maxine and Christine, something special in the way we’ve kept in touch, how the world alone will never be big enough to truly keep us apart. They’ve helped me become the woman I am, held my hand through the hard times and watched me date the losers and rolled their eyes when I was all “I don’t know if I’m dating James or not…”

They’re my people. I’ve shared pieces of myself with these girls that you can’t give to anyone else. None of us necessarily lead the way as we forged our futures, but we were doing it together. We were a team. We still are… Always will be.

And I believe wholeheartedly that we’re ok as who we are as individuals now because of the time we spent together. It’s ok that I live with a boy, and I’ve hung up my tequila shot glass, that Tine coaches track and Maxine will hopefully spend part of the summer in Greece with the man we all hope she marries. (Sorry, Justin Timberlake. Max is the only one still pulling for you to be in the running.)

We’re all stepping up to start the next phases of Our Big Adventures. I’m looking at Graduate Schools. Maxine is heading to the Canary Islands. Christine will end up back in Phoenix. I can’t wait to hear about track practice, and life on the beach. They’re stuck listening to puppy talk, and about how my perfect boyfriend cooks and does the dishes.

And I know, eventually, it’ll all come together again. And we’ll find ourselves gathered together somewhere on Fifth Ave., doubled over in laughter… Laughing so hard our stomachs hurt. That’s what we do.

They’re my amazing friends, two of the strongest and most beautiful women I’ve ever met. We’re growing up, and stepping out. We’re each other’s people.

Always will be.

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Jun 24

Finding Touch.

Hello, old friends. It is Mallory. I am out from under my rock, and I’d like to chat it up with you.

Oh, I jest. I wasn’t under a rock, I was under a thesis. And then Boston. And moving. At any rate, today was a day to connect with old friends, old soulmates and The Reasons I’m Glad I Never Have to Date Again.

New Old Favorites include Tiffany, who’s still in Boston, but we forgive her. Allison, who has reminded me I need to finish reading Skinny Bitch and kick my blog into higher gear. (Allison’s blog can be found here, and you’d be well-advised to prepare for a good, hard laugh. Her take on life is priceless.) Sarah, who’s an adult now, and moving to Atlanta for business, and Aaron, who can still play a guitar better than any other boy I know.

And, because this won’t make for an awkward conversation when James reads this in an hour– I’ve picked out my wedding dress!

No, I’m not even close to being engaged. No, we haven’t even talked about anything even loosely pertaining to marriage. Yes, he has spent the past two hours playing video games. But, look! J. Crew has BEAUTIFUL GOWNS for NOT A LOT OF MONEY!

This is exciting for me, because I am not two things. 1. I am not one to plan her wedding out ahead of time, and also not one to take risks. Knowing that a brand I know and love will ship me a dress pretty much guaranteed to fit my body without much fuss = confirmation that weddings don’t actually need planning, and that other women fuss unnecessarily, and 2. I am not a girl who expects her father to pay for anything anymore, not even her wedding. I’ve been financially independent too long to foist that off on my father, who still has my mother and sister to worry about.

I’m not getting married. And for this occasion, I’ve selected for you, my Not Getting Married Wedding Outfit! J.Crew is Flash so I can’t swipe the images, but, for your viewing pleasure nonetheless:

The Gown.      The Shoes.    The Bling.

Go ahead. Picture me in the getup. You’re welcome.

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