Oh. . .

. . . fuck (I do try to keep the profanity out of the title, at least).

So I haven’t slept (again), and my plans of going to meet my sis, Em – who’s in town with my brother-in-law and niece – and another good friend were derailed due to the pseudoseizures.  I screwed around reading news articles, played on a certain social site (thank you, Brian – I know Andrea will pass this on* – for posting hilarious albums, and lots of them, so now when I’m low I still have plenty of things to guarantee a good laugh, not sure whom to thank for you having a sense of humor so deeply akin to my own), was all set to conk out, then realized that I hadn’t blogged.  And that if I take a sleeper – yes, another one - no one will hear anything from me for like two days.  Which wouldn’t concern anyone if I hadn’t been posting daily.

So Brian, you now get another nod for focusing this post.  My readers will also be grateful, I’m sure.

Let’s talk shock value.  Many years ago (starting at oh, say, 13) I dyed my hair for the first time.  From dishwater blonde to fire engine red.  I did it just ’cause I wanted to, but of course – being a free-spirited, rebellious type teen – I got a kick from the “shock value.”  My mother and father were horrified (even though red is really good on me), complete strangers crossed the cafeteria at school to make comments.  Mostly they were snarky bitches, but I loved telling them what was what, and how their opinion didn’t even register with me – which of course shocked them even more, because I clearly meant it.  No one is that secure at 13.  No one.  But I can honestly look back and say that I was.

Even my friends were shocked, in a much nicer way.  In retrospect, that was probably when the bipolar really started kicking in, and I was borderline to full-on. . .  You know what, as I think about things, I was full-on hypomanic, borderline manic (and yes, I will get some basic definitions up soon, until then, Dictionary and Thesaurus – Merriam-Webster Online - they have a “Medical” tab, fourth from left, try that).

At any rate, it’s hard to tease out the whys now.  When I did something, “unusual,” was it me, was it mania, was it the high I got from still, years and years later, still being able to shock people?  Probably all three.  Although I can look back and happily declare that I never did anything I regret for shock value.

WARNING: Detour – Just had this moment, where I’m sitting and thinking about how many times I have used the word “shock” in this post without it bringing to mind electroconvulsive therapy (six, if you count the past tense).  That either means I’m recovering a bit more from the PTSD, or I’m really tired and my brain is in slow-mo.  Time and tide, my lovelies.

At any rate, I did many things over the years that shocked people, in fact I still managed to do it to my mom, twice in two months, actually (easy mark, though).  See:  Whoring Myself For Charity, which is the second example but contains a link to the first.

Moreover, if people I know knew the half of what they don’t know. . .  ”Won’t confess all my sins. . .” (I’ve tapped this song so many times without actually linking to it. . .


(This song and video are solely the property of their respective owners and artists. Absolutely no copyright infringement is intended.)

I was going to say just close your eyes and listen, because I feel like this song is a good depiction of me, however I look nothing like Shakira, but then I thought, Hell, if my readers want to associate me with an image, I could do much, much worse. . . and there were the belly dancing lessons. . . so watch or just listen, your choice).

Moving on.

So I thought I was past the deliberate shock value phase in my life – but I did some things last night and today that might make a liar out of me if I made that statement definitively.  Also, now that I think about it, this one was pretty much deliberate (last link, I’m almost positive):  Femme Fatale.

Oh, and I actually even managed to shock myself today (which is really not deliberate) – I walked past a full-length mirror, sans. . . well, everything, and finally caught a glimpse of why others see me as so thin.  I stand by my statements as to my health, but I actually kind of get it now.

Christ, this post is going to be a bitch to edit – which we’ve established I hate – and a mess to tag.

Moral of the story:  ’Never make agreements. . .’

*I am obviously now passing this on myself (but I like to put Andrea in here whenever possible), the last link in question regarding being self-critical versus hypercritical (this is going to be way too much of me all at once, most likely, so take it in little doses):  Do You Believe In Magic? 

© Ruby Tuesday and I Was Just Thinking. . . 2011. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Ruby Tuesday and I Was Just Thinking. . . with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. This work is protected under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

“Today I Am A Ma’am”

This is the title of the second episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show (and yes, I checked, I’m not that much of a fanatic – okay, I kind of already knew, but that’s only because it was the second episode).  I have always loved this episode, for two sort of counterpoint reasons.  The first reason is that in this episode, Mary Richards (the title character) gets called “ma’am” – as opposed to “miss” – for the first time in her life and it totally freaks her out that someone thinks she’s old enough to be addressed this way.  When I was much younger, I found this hilarious.

The second reason is that, when I was younger, of course it never bothered me when people thought I was older than I was, and I waited for the day when it would, just kind of curiously.  People called me “ma’am” all of the time, even in my early 20s (granted these were usually 15-year-old boys, but still, it got me pretty used to the term).  Then I hit about Mary’s character’s age, and it still didn’t bug me.  I watched that episode not very long ago, and I kind of laughed.  I figured age really didn’t mean much to me, at least not yet, and I was pretty proud of myself.

But, dear readers, I must confess to you that ‘Today I Am A Ma’am.’  And the catalyst for this transformation was a new hair stylist.

I don’t think the age of my ex-hair stylist is really relevant, like it was a comparison thing, but just in case, she was probably in her 50s (or at least looked it).  When I came for my appointment today, I met this new person for the first time (I found her via recommendation from a stranger working in a store – ladies, men too, but especially ladies, if you’re ever looking for a new hair stylist and having no luck, find someone whose hair you love, even if it is a complete stranger, and ask them where they get it done – you will never offend or embarrass, pretty much the best compliment you can give someone is ‘I love your hair so much that I want mine done like it, too!’).  That being a really long parenthetical statement, I’m starting fresh.

So I met my new stylist for the first time, gave her a brief once-over (super-cute, Betty Page-esque), judged her to be my age or a little younger, sat down in the chair and promptly started looking only at myself and, more specifically, my hair.  I mean, that’s what you do when you’re getting your hair done, especially by someone new when (as well recommended as they are), well, they’re new and you’re nervous as crap that they’re going to somehow render your hair un-fixable (mine is damned long, and while I know it needs to be cut to stay healthy, I’m always worried that the stylist is going to cut off five inches that it took me forever to grow).  I was more and more nervous, and less and less focused on her, and more and more focused on my hair, because the way she was cutting it looked like she was taking a lot off.

But I trusted and didn’t say anything.

She was great, she told me about her husband, and how the gal in the place across the hall had done some chemical peels on her and she loved the results, things that led me to believe I was correct in – or at least not question – my assumption about her age.

She finished up my hair, and let me tell you, trust can be a good thing, because it looks amazing!  There are a few things I would like to be a little different and tweaked, but as we were talking afterward, she explained to me – without me having to ask, no less – why she cut it the way she did, and why she couldn’t do E-X-A-C-T-L-Y what I had requested, because of my hair’s length and texture (which my stylist of ten years never did, maybe if she had, I wouldn’t have left her – blessing in disguise).  Oh, and her pricing is so good.  Hair is one of those things where I usually feel you get what you pay for – if you’re only going to shell out 25 bucks, your hair will reflect that.  I honestly feel like I got way more than I paid for.  I made up for it by tipping well, and the more I look at my hair and love it, the more I wish that I had tipped her even better (which means a great deal when money is as scarce as it is to me), but I’ll make up for it next time.

Wow.  Huge digression,  even for me!  It’s ’cause I’m so excited about my hair!!!

So.  Her next client hadn’t arrived yet, and we get to talking, this time face-to-face.  And I’m thinking, Wow, she looks pretty young.  And the more we talk, the younger I think she looks.  But we’ve talked only about “grown-up” things, and she seems really, really mature – which is much harder to do when you spend a couple of hours talking to someone in person than when you communicate with them online or even via telephone.  Generally something gives you away.

What gave this girl away (and yes, I will henceforth refer to her as a “girl,” not demeaningly, but because by my metric she still is one, as far as years – certainly not in perspective or maturity) – was the fact that we were talking about our moms and their take on wanting grandchildren – oy, different post, one day, perhaps – and she told me she said to her mom, “Mom, we haven’t been married that long, I just turned 21.”

I think I literally had to hold my chin to keep it from dropping (hope she didn’t notice!).  And after that, taking a good look at her, I would absolutely say that she looks her age, or even younger.

But it made me think about a couple of things.  First, when it comes to something like a hair stylist, I completely have the potential to be an age bigot.  Doctors and such, I actually sometimes prefer that they’re younger, because they don’t have that think-they-know-everything, jaded, won’t listen to the patients attitude that some, okay, in my experience, many older (especially male – I know that this is stereotyping, but it also happens to be true, and besides, I totally make up for it in my – I think – third post ever, way back in March, because my 62-year-old male doctor is the best, smartest, most open-minded man ever, and even though we have our moments, I wrote a post entirely dedicated to him and how wonderful he is) doctors have acquired or been taught over time.  The one exception being me and psychiatrists, because I am one hell of a complicated case, and even my primary doc agrees that I need someone who has been in the shrink game for a long time and knows everything there is to know.

But, back to my potential age bigotry.  If I had known straight off that this girl was barely 21, honestly, I’m not sure what I would have done.  I might have gone to her anyway, or I might have said to myself, Not nearly enough experience in the field, not at that young, and I might have kept looking for someone else.  Which would have been a huge mistake, after looking at my hair more and more, and loving it more and more, and the interaction I had with her, and how much I adore her already!

The other thing I thought about are the places which I frequent, and the average estimated age of the people who work at these places.  With rare exceptions, I would guess that they’re younger than me by, let’s say a usual ballpark of three to nine years (big ballpark, I know).  This never bothered me, especially now that it’s summer and they’re taking on a lot of “summer help,” usually high school/college aged.  Plus it isn’t as though the product lines are too young for me, it’s just that retail doesn’t pay well, and that’s another place you get what you pay for – not that young can’t be good, but let’s just say that, on the balance, I know from what I speak.

And I thought about how I cannot remember the last time anyone called me “miss,” even people considerably older than I, how ma’am just insidiously took over from an occasional term used by kids as the default term used by everyone.

I don’t know, maybe it’s some kind of training, politeness, respect kind of thing that all “associates” are taught now.  I mean, I’m not old, and I know it (I know I’m slightly ambiguous about my age here, but according to modern estimates, I am not even a third of the way through life yet).  I don’t think I look even as old as I am (close to it, but not quite there), and I have had people tell me as much, even people who aren’t related to me or trying to sell me something.  In fact, now that I am no longer a nanny and don’t have two children in tow, I think I automatically look considerably younger.  ;)

But those two children, whom I met when they were just days old and took care of from babydom on, are now eight and eleven. . .  The latter will enter middle school next “Fall” (people still say Fall, but for goodness sake, they start in August anymore!).  Yes, I took them on young, but that alone will make you feel your age.

Okay, enough is enough!  What have we learned today?

Moral of the story:  I am far more “age-conscious,” though not necessarily concerned about aging (yet) than I ever before realized (at least I am today).  Also, I absolutely should not write when I’m hyped up and on a deadline, because it leads to major digressions and parentheticals, and minor editing time.  Oh well.  Lessons learned (maybe).  ;) 

© Ruby Tuesday and I Was Just Thinking. . . 2011. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Ruby Tuesday and I Was Just Thinking. . . with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. This work is protected under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.