Witless Wednesday

by Mothership on August 5, 2009

I should be:

Tidying up my studio. There is actually a spider web on my mixing desk, it’s been that long since I actually wrote any music.

Doing the laundry mountain. Disgusting. Quite disgusting.

Finding a pill to take away my impending migraine.

Finishing a piece for this blog that I started yesterday that was looking like it might be quite interesting. But it turns out it isn’t actually.

Ringing back several people I promised to call.

Eating something more healthy than buttered toast with marmite.

Washing my hair.

Finding the cord for the portable DVD player so we can take it in the car on our road trip to Monterey on Sunday.

Writing my book.

Plotting the resurrection of my business so I can make some money this autumn while the children are in school.

Being dynamic.

Creating world peace.

Solving the energy crisis.

Feeding the hungry.

Comforting the sick.

Moving purposefully through my life with intent and good grace.

But I can’t quite be arsed so instead I’m going to loaf around in bed and play on Twitter for a bit and then feel guilty until I fetch Five from camp after lunch.

I’d quite like to pretend that it was only this Wednesday that has been like this over the summer, but actually I seem to have more than one Witless Wednesday per week. I could start my very own chapter of Underachievers Anonymous and it would be pretty busy with just me as a member, but in the spirit of inclusion and my typical lack of selfishness (me? self aggrandizing?) I am going to invite you to join me in a virtual meeting.

What did you manage not to do on your dynamic list of important Things To Do today and what did you do instead?

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The Writing Workshop Part II

by Mothership on August 1, 2009

Here we are, folks, same Bat-time, same Bat-channel, and I am certain you’ve all been holding your breath – all three and a half of you  – in glorious suspense.

Are you sitting comfortably? Then we’ll begin.

It is finally time to reveal (oh, I’m reveling in this! I’m sure you’re hanging on my every second-hand word!!) to hear what Dan, Dan the lavatory Editor Man had to say about

“The Secrets Behind Writing and Publishing Your First Book”

But in true informercial style, before I get to the good stuff I’m going to take the opportunity to sell something completely different to you, namely myself/my blog, and point out that I have just added a Facebook Fanpage link to the blog so please pop over and add yourself as a fan (obviously don’t do that if you think MTFF is a load of gobshite) and I also encourage you to subscribe to this blog. or sign up to have new posts sent to you by email.

The reason for this sudden self-aggrandizing scramble? All of these things make me look popular and add to my PLATFORM which I will be explaining shortly – it is related to today’s lesson.
You, too will be wanting a platform by the time you get to the end of this post and we’re not talking about the ones that Thomas, Percy and Gordon pull into. (If only we were,  because I’m really good at those!)

These are the basic lessons he taught us:

  • How the publishing industry works
  • How to find an agent
  • How to write a query letter
  • How to prepare a good proposal
  • What really stupid things not to do
  • How to be realistic in our expectations in terms of being an author
  • How to tackle the business of selling your book both before and after a publishing deal

As there was so much information to take in I have decided, after much deliberation, to just give you the best and most entertaining bits, and also to drag this all out over a few more posts. We’ll get to the query letter today and I’ll continue with the rest of it a bit later. The extremely factual and numbers-related bits you can find out on the internets anyway (see Taking Responsibility, one of DDTEM‘s favourite phrases) and I loathe being boring. Intentionally boring, anyway. I take it that you’ll be too kind to tell me if I’m sending you to sleep by accident, or else you’ll just drift off elsewhere?

So, here we go, point one.  A bit dry, but I did promise..

How the publishing industry works:

Here’s the scoop: There are about 200, 000 books published in the US every year.

“How are you going to make yours one of them?” DDTEM asked us meaningfully.

“I’ll get me coat” thinks MTFF.

It used to be that the big NY publishers were the be all and end all of all things book-related in the US (btw, this was all US slanted advice).
No more. Where there were around 15 major houses, now there are 5, and their power base is crumbling. The big booksellers (Barnes&Noble, Borders etc) are losing money hand over fist and the indies have long been a dying breed.

Coming right up:  the gem I paid my $125 to hear:

The most powerful booksellers in the United States right now are (wait for it) Target, Wal-Mart and Costco.

I sort of love that, don’t you?

It’s so hard to get through to the hallowed halls of Random House, but they have to kiss ass at the place where I buy nappies to get their books on the tables so Two can drop free sample cookie crumbs on them.

DDTEM predicts that in a few years Amazon will be book king of the world,  becoming direct publishers as everyone will get a Kindle, or printing on demand and they will cut out the middle men who are currently the big publishers.
Interesting. Very interesting.

He also informed us that whether you go with a big publisher, or look to a smaller house, the fact remains that they will probably do little more for you, as a first time author, than print your book and find you distribution and act, in a small way, as a bankroll for your project. The most important thing he stressed, over and over again, was that YOU HAVE TO TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR YOUR BOOK.
It is unlikely that you will be put on a book tour. Or if you do that many people will come unless you have been lucky enough to be picked up by a national TV show (again, he stressed that this was unlikely unless you have engineered it yourself). He said you were far more likely to have a 21 year old college intern lacklustrely making a couple of half-hearted calls on your behalf, if you were lucky. Best to organise it all yourself. Take responsibility.

I actually felt myself brightening at this point because I’m quite good at doing everything myself – I have a deep-seated and fundamental belief that I have to do everything that keeps the planet turning anyway, so why should this be any different?

He spoke a bit about self publishing and how it is losing its stigma. Technology has enabled this to become a very reasonable way of getting a book out. Again we looked to Amazon. They can print on demand, give you an author blog, rent you designers for the book covers etc. This can be a very viable way to get started. What you don’t get is distribution, PR, editors, etc. But you do get straight onto Kindle, and into the marketplace. And if you self-publish there is an entire industry of freelancers to assist you – you can hire PR people, hire editors (like DDTEM!), hire all kinds of other professionals  and this way control a huge amount of your work. It’s the ultimate way to take responsibility for your book. And many people have gone on to be picked up by publishers after this, so it’s worth considering. Of course it all costs money, so you’ll need some of that. You probably won’t make a lot of it.

Most publishers will not accept unsolicited material.

This means they don’t want you to send them anything. Don’t.

If it’s a really small publisher, they may have guidelines on their website for submission. If so, follow the guidelines precisely and don’t be tempted to do something different. You’ll just end up in the bin.

Publishers, on the whole, will prefer to have an agent offer them new material.

So. You need an agent.

How to get an agent:

First of all you need to identify the right agent for you. Don’t send an agent who represents fiction your ‘How to cook courgette hats’ manuscript, or your hooker memoir to an agent who represents children’s books. Do your research and find someone who represents books from the same genre. Then find out where they are and send them a query letter.

If you have the good luck to find an agent who is interested in you, remember that you are interviewing them just as they are you. It should be a good, trusting relationship and you will be stuck with that person throughout the life of the book and you have to believe that they believe in you and that you can work together well. They should take 15%, no more, and never ask for money up front. They will probably shop your book for you for a maximum of 6 months and if they haven’t found you a deal by then, they’ll probably let you go.

DO NOT SEND MATERIAL UNLESS IT IS REQUESTED OR THERE ARE SPECIFIC SUBMISSION GUIDELINES. It will be chucked out and you will annoy people. Don’t annoy anyone. Be professional. It is a business.

How to write a good query letter:

I suspect most of you reading this blog are actually rather good at writing letters, but just in case, I’m going to give you the outline. Keep it professional (Dear Mr. Blogs/Ms Smith) and make sure you spell their name correctly. Then you tell them that you are writing to them specifically because you like their work and you have a project you think will interest them (obviously put this in your own words).

You are not supposed to outright lie in your query letter. Dan, Dan, the editor man said this several times. But I’m sure you’re supposed to make yourself as attractive as possible. However, in the interests of entertainment and for bowing and scraping purposes I might have told an untruth or two in this example, see if you can spot them.

Dear Ms Smith

I am writing to say that I loved “Bad Mother” by Ayelet Waldman and to congratulate you on its success. It has been a big influence on my own project Motherhood:the Final Frontier

Then you give them a short (SHORT! 2 sentences) description of your own book)

which is a narrative/memoir/fuckknows* based on my blog of the same name that provides an insight into the world of a former British pop star-turned-reluctant-Stepford-wife/eleventh-hour-parent who suffered a midlife crisis due to the humbling role of parenting after the glamorous life of rock-n-roll but then found her true life’s purpose in amongst the dirty diapers and illuminating trips to Costco, Target and Wal-Mart. And Amazon.

*don’t say this

Then a short (SHORT!!) Author biog.  Anything that legitimizes you as a writer or your experience on this matter. This is your Platform. Do you have a blog? Are you already a magazine writer? Do you have Twitter followers? Do you have a ready made audience of any kind or any authority in this area? This is where you get a couple of sentences to brag about it. Not more.

In my career as a pop star I sold over 100,000 records worldwide including top 40 hits in the UK and USA. I have a regular parenting column at www.bambinogoodies.co.uk which reaches over a million readers every week.  My own blog has sixtygazillion subscribers, a hundred hits per nanosecond and has over 400000000 Twitter followers, all who swear they’d love to buy the bookMTFF is also listed as one of the UK’s top 100 parent bloggers.

Then you tell them what you can send them next (one of the following, and you’d better have it ready, guess which one is true, don’t do that one)

¨ I have a manuscript of 50,000 words upon request

¨ A comprensive proposal if available upon request

¨ An outline and sample chapter available upon request

¨ A few old posts and some sketchy ideas not really put in any kind of order available upon request

Thank you in advance for your consideration,

Mothership

A big hint from Dan, Dan. Type it on white paper. Do not use glitter pen. Do not send pictures of unicorns. Do not make it ‘personal’ or arty in any way. Just very businesslike. Everything else gets binned.
Honestly.

So here we are at the end of Part Deux. I rarely write anything of any practical use, it’s usually something faintly onanistic and self-serving, but hopefully some of you will have found this helpful.

I will continue in a day or two with the remaining points if anyone else is interested, but please don’t hesitate to tell me if you’re bored titless.

And if this WAS useful, please don’t forget to subscribe via RSS or email and  facebook fanpage because now that I am thinking of writing my book for real, I have become a revolting PLATFORM WHORE and will be getting out my proverbial hotpants and shaking my (thankfully) virtual booty at you for a bit. But then I’ll forget because I’ll have those urgent cups of tea to make and everyone will be safe again.

Mothership xoxo


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The Writing Workshop Part I

by Mothership on July 29, 2009

I have been muttering for some months about my book – the one that I am purportedly writing in my ‘free time’

HA HA HA HA HA HA AH AHA HA HA HA HAHAHAHA * wipes tears from eyes*

and although I had not entirely taken myself seriously in this venture – a sign that I really have been partially reprogrammed by the Stepford cyborg designers – it seems that other people, those I knew before my tenure as wife and mother, are not prepared to let me go to the dark side quite so easily.

The Hollywood Bunny in particular is most insistent on reminding me that I have a brain (it was here somewhere, I am sure I put it near the lunchboxes yesterday. Surely nobody ate it? It’s so..unappetising – full of sawdust, non-sequiturs, unkind thoughts about people who deserve more compassion, delusional self images, unfinished lists etc. Plus it’s well past its sell by date..)
She will insist on talking to me about my blog and ensuing book project with great seriousness and has a very particular way of shaming me into honesty about my secret aspirations for my writing. I’m usually reasonably good at concealing what I really think from people by dint of charming and light hearted self deprecation.  It’s particularly easy to do this here amongst the Americans.  Along with irony and Marmite, that very British characteristic of being humble and self effacing while secretly being extremely pleased with oneself  **false modesty that is socially acceptable**  is utterly alien to them.
Although HB is actually American, she spent enough time in the UK and was married to a Brit for several years to have learned the language, so she knows I have greater ambitions than making peanut butter sandwiches and grumbling about Husband’s failure to spot the dishwasher.  I cannot pretend to her that I regard my creative projects as an offhand little hobby that I don’t really care about, like a prized cashmere sweater I treat like a dirty cotton t-shirt

“Oh? This old thing? I just pulled it out of the laundry basket..”

She fixes me with an intense green stare and asks me, pointedly, how my book is going, how many readers I have on the blog, did I know that the future of publishing is self publishing, throws some terrifying statistics about new media at me and then discusses, as if it had already happened, what I will do when my book is published.

AGGGGHHHH!

This makes me want to put the kettle on, make a cup of tea, read someone else’s novel, find an urgent load of laundry to put on, obscure telephone call to make, non-essential surgery to book (must have that bunion seen to, surely?) write that thank you card to Auntie Enid, procrastinate, procrastinate.

But no. She is merciless.

She’s known me longer than Husband and has watched me move through several successful creative careers before my banishment to Stepford, and now she’s just waiting for me to come out of the domestic fog and be a proper person again.

Last week she sent me a link to a class that she thought I should take called
“The Secrets Behind Writing and Publishing Your First Book” taught by an editor who had worked at Random House in New York.

She said in her email that the company who ran the class was a very reputable one, and she had found all of their workshops useful and good for networking purposes.
But the title alone (so American! So commercial! So promising!) made me immediately distrustful. How could it possibly offer any secrets? How could it not be a giant scam? Who was this ‘freelance editor, formerly of major New York publisher’ anyway?  I hate classes! I always fail classes! I can avoid writing my book all by myself! FUCK YOU!!!!

No, I don’t have any issues at all. I don’t have any difficulty in accepting help. I just never need it. So there. Who asked you anyway?

Then I thought about how I had failed to book Five in for camp or any other activities that week and that I was going to be stuck with no time to myself save a dance class or two for nine solid days (yes, weekends are even harder than weekdays because then everyone is home and there is no escape or chance for solitude). If I went to this class in LA I would have a bona fide excuse for leaving town for at least half a day and I might even learn something and meet some interesting people. At the very least I could do a spot of shopping at Target along the way – we don’t have one in Stepford. That might actually have been the most attractive part, if I’m honest.

Husband was agreeable. He always is, the darling. It’s true that he didn’t laugh when I told him I’d bookmarked the dishwasher on his iPhone GPS, but when it comes to the important things in life like supporting my hopes and dreams, letting me sleep when I really need it, buying me beautiful underwear, and unstintingly believing in me, he is the very best of men.

So I fished out my credit card, booked the class online, arranged the requisite babysitting (it was all eerily easy) and last Thursday afternoon I  gaily abandoned the children and thundered down the highway toward the City of Angels.

Oh, before I forget, here is the tale of my side trip to Target. You will recognise this from your own adventures to that great shopping monolith:
I went in. I had fun. I spent $300 on crap. Can’t remember what I bought. The end.

Once arrived in LA I found a free parking space directly outside the venue where the class was to be held. This was a good sign. I am pretty good at finding good parking spots, actually. I find that if I just drive around optimistically saying “I believe in parking angels!” in a Fotherington Thomas stylie then one always appears right when I need it. It really works, even if you feel like a tit! You should try it some time. Anyway, I digress..
I made my way inside one of those designer-office-space-for-rent type places and was shown into a conference room by a friendly but businesslike man who was clearly the teacher. I sat down next to a slightly nervous, twitchy looking man who responded to my smile and greeting by picking up his cellphone and fiddling with it importantly.
Oh dear.
Then one by one the others drifted in. There were eleven of us, of all shapes, sizes and ages and we were all very eager to hear what the editor had to say.
He introduced himself to us, told us we’d be there for four (!) hours, that we had a lot to cover and we’d want to take lots of notes.

I had forgotten my pen.

SHIT!

But I had remembered my laptop so I got it out.

Redeemed.

He then went around the table, got us to introduce ourselves and tell each other what our book was going to be about and if it was fiction/nonfiction/memoir etc. This was very interesting. It was also terrifying because I was not quite sure whether what I’m writing is fiction or nonfiction or memoir. It changes on a daily basis depending on how many lies I’m telling and how serious my tone is or who I’m writing about. I let everyone else go first.

We had: A cooking memoir, a photography book, a self help book, a legal memoir, a business ‘Blink’ type book, a book of political poetry (!!), a book about an illness, one novel (sci fi) and then mine which I suddenly decided was nonfiction about Gen X misfits (like me) and how we parent as a result of our fragmented childhoods, and also how we are positioned to help a new generation of misfits like Max and Kevin.

Dan, our editing tutor, expressed surprise (and relief) that there was only one work of fiction in the class and then told us that it was easier to sell nonfiction in the USA (really? How long was the Bush administration in power here again?) and that this class was not going to be about helping us with the craft of writing. He was going to assume we knew how to do that already.
His class was going to teach us:

How the publishing industry worked

How to write a query letter

How to prepare a good proposal

How to find an agent

What really stupid things not to do

How to be realistic in our expectations in terms of being an author.

How to tackle the business of selling your book both before and after a publishing deal.

And then he spent the next four hours doing just that. It was most illuminating.

One thing I found very interesting was that the publishing industry appears to be almost exactly like the music industry in terms of how it runs as a business model, and also how much one has to take responsibility for as the artist/author oneself, ie the book doesn’t run off the shelf at Borders (or even ON to the shelf at Borders)  by itself, and it all costs money. Big money. And that is not something there is a lot of around at the moment.

It could have been hugely depressing news, and many of the attendants found the class a bit of a downer – the fantasy of being a bestselling author in a single bound volume seemed to be dashed, rather, by the practical advice meted out by Dan the Man, but I was oddly cheered by it. There seemed to be so much one could DO to make things work, rather than sitting around feeling saddened by disempowerment.

I wonder how many of you are thinking about writing a book, or have wondered how to approach publishers and agents?

I am not going to post Dan’s advice today because I have run out of time to blog (must dash and do some book writing – see how organised and efficient I am being? Hollywood Bunny, take note. I am taking myself seriously) but if you are interested in hearing more of what he taught, please leave a comment and I will write a Part II in the next few days with the key advice.

My own advice for the day? Stay away from Target

Mothership xo

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More things you Didn’t need to know about MEME

by Mothership on July 25, 2009

100bestbloglogoI usually shy away from MEMEs, partly because I have an absolute horror of questionnaires (they all look like TESTS of some kind. I usually fail tests.) and partly because I can’t imagine who wants to know the answers to the same questions that are being asked of literally hundreds of people. We can’t all be that imaginatively different when asked ‘what is your favourite drink?’ can we?

Also, as I am known to be curmudgeonly about this kind of thing I am often last on people’s list to be sent the damn things so by the time it gets to me everyone else has done it already and I haven’t got anybody else to palm it off on to.

Oh GOD! It’s like being stuck with a chain letter and then I get 10000000000 years bad luck or something for not doing it, or not doing it right, or saying the wrong thing or being boring or.. I don’t know.
ANYWAY.
I’m doing this one because the lovely Amy at and1moremeansfour tagged me, pointing out that we are both on the UK top 100 parent bloggers list (although she kindly didn’t point out that she was higher up than me because I am major slacker and didn’t post much last month whereas she posts nearly every day despite being 23 years old and having FOUR CHILDREN) and she doesn’t know yet that I am a churlish ingrate so I’m trying hard to disguise this from her.

Unfortunately, however, despite there only being ten questions I found myself unable to answer many of them so I had to change a few to suit myself which IS CHEATING.

But this is my blog, so I did it.

You may give me an F. I don’t mind. I am used to it.

I may even enjoy it in a perverse kind of way. It is rock and roll. kerrang!!!!

The original questions:
1. Who is the hottest movie star?
2. Apart from your house and your car what’s the most expensive thing you have ever bought?
3. What’s your most treasured memory?
4.What was the best gift you ever received as a child?
5. What is the biggest mistake you’ve made?
6. 4 words to describe myself
7. what was my highlight or lowlight of 2008?
8. Favourite film?
9. Tell me one thing I don’t know about you
10. If you were a comic book/strip or cartoon character, who would you be?

Here are my new questions and answers:

1. What do you think about movie stars?
I rarely give them much thought. I find people’s fascination with celebrity COMPLETELY BAFFLING. Really. Having said that, have met a few movie stars here and there and some were nice, some were not. All seemed to be very, very concerned about their place in the universe. This did not seem to be a comfortable feeling. I did not envy them.

2. If you had large swathes of disposable income, what would you spend it on?
I would take my husband and children traveling to see as much of the world as we could and try to accumulate as much pleasurable experience with as little material consumption as possible.

3. What is your most treasured memory?
How could I choose just one? Of course holding one’s children for the first time is quite sublime, but is it any more special than the last time you kissed their precious faces as they skipped out the door? Or reading the loving note left by my husband this morning telling me he’d taken the children out to breakfast. It was not the note, it was the knowledge of love and understanding of the 30 years of migraines that I have suffered and that only a long sleep followed by a quiet morning alone will cure them. A shaft of sunlight, a piece of paper in my hand and love suffusing my heart, remembering this kind man who would be home in less than an hour? I find it hard to place premiums in the moment..

4. What is the best gift you received as a child?
When I was nine years old, after years of begging and pleading and almost giving up on the idea, I was finally allowed a kitten of my own. Carbonel, a small black, half-siamese kitten aged 8 weeks was chosen and he came to live with us. My father says he can still remember coming home from work and seeing me through the window holding up the tiny cat in my hand with my whole face alight with joy. Carby slept on the pillow by my face all night that first night, and throughout his long life we never spent a day apart. He was the most personable of animals and he sat politely at the table on his own chair during mealtimes never begging , just wanting to be part of the family. When he died of FIV, aged 13 I thought my heart would break. But it didn’t. I just haven’t ever quite loved an animal the same since.

5. What is the biggest mistake you’ve ever made?
Giving up too soon on myself. I am still learning from this. I am not going to do it again.

6.Four words to describe yourself
Inventive, funny, loving, eccentric

7.Highlight or lowlight of 2008
Taking my two small children to the bush in Africa on my own. We were gloriously, crazily free on the wild continent and despite the obstacles we ran into, we had the most fantastic time and came back much the richer for it.

8. What are you reading right now?
I am simultaneously reading A Most Wanted Man by John Le Carre, The Plot to Save the Planet by Brian Dumaine – this is a business oriented book, Bad Mother by Ayelet Waldman which is entertaining but patchy and True Tales of American Life by Paul Auster. Also have great plans to reread Brave New World but it’s at the end of rather a long queue as you can see..

9. Tell me one thing I don’t know about you.
I am rather partial to iced gems

10. If you could be a fictional character who would you be?
Today I’d like to be one of the Famous Five from an Enid Blyton book. I would like to step back in time to a prewar Britain and eat delicious things (lashings of custard!) and ride about on my bike with uncomplicated chums in a world free of pedophiles, nuclear weapons, terrorism, global warming and long before the spectre of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring had foretold the beginning of the end of the lovely hedgerows of the country of my birth.

Now, I’m supposed to tag a number of bloggers so they, too will be forced to do this. I can’t remember how many so I’m going to arbitrarily pick five and give them permission to change the questions to suit themselves in the interests of entertainment.

Here you go:

It’s Not Just Me Is It?

Are You Receiving Me?

Stuff2Eat

Califlorna

Zooarchaeologist

Mothership xo

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Quick Max update

by Mothership on July 21, 2009

Due to a slight oversight on my part, I failed to book Five in for any activities at all this week and thus have had what she would call, delightedly, an entire ‘Mummy week’ where I get to entertain her at every waking moment. This was not quite how I saw motherhood during those misty-eyed moments when I was lovingly folding tiny white, fluffy babygros into the as-yet-unscratched chest of drawers in her room, but it turns out that her favourite refrain at five is

“I’m BORED! What shall we do?”

And I, in an eerie echo of my own mother, reply

“Well, why don’t you think of something interesting to do? Like look at a book? Play with your toys? Water the garden?”

“No that’s all BORING!”

Then I pull out the big guns.

“If you don’t think of something yourself by the time I count to three I will entertain you by having you help me empty the dishwasher. How is that?”

You’d think this would miraculously send her off to find something edifying, and 50% of the time it works, but the other half it sends her onto the floor in a dramatic slump, hand draped across her forehead with a huge groan, saying;

“I can’t believe you’re so MEAN! And I’m so BORED! I just want to go away forever and be somewhere and you’ll miss me and CRY!”

Wasn’t this supposed to happen a bit later on?

So there has been a fair bit of tongue biting going on around here and countings to ten (that’s me – she can already do that with great savvy, of course). But there have also been many delightful outings to the library, beach, coffee shop, museum etc. Today we took a train to a neighbouring town to have a picnic breakfast which was tremendous fun, particularly as we could see cars overtaking our carriage – can this be the only country I’ve lived in where the cars on the highway, traveling a modest 65mph can outstrip a diesel locomotive?  But in amongst all the holiday shenanigans there has not been much time for post writing or adult relaxing and certainly no time to add to my novel (past page 1 now, but perhaps not as far as I’d like to be).

I did, however,  manage to squeeze in an email to Max, and was very pleased to get one back the same day. I thought you might like to hear what he had to say, too, so here is the text of both.
Short and sweet, just like him.

On Mon, Jul 20, 2009 at 11:11 AM, mothership <> wrote:

Hi Max
Just wondering how you were getting on and if you had liked any of the other bands on the list we gave you on July 4th. Hope your summer is going well and you’re practicing that guitar!
Rock and roll!
Mothership xo

On Mon, Jul 20, 2009 at 17:14 PM, max  wrote:

Great! I especially love the Buzzcocks and the Rites of spring. But my overall favorite would probably be the Avengers. I also heard of some other hardcore bands such as The Freeze and Flipper. Speaking of witch, I just got a new electric guitar.

Bless his hardcore socks!

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Everywhere I go I meet myself.

by Mothership on July 15, 2009

Everywhere I go I meet myself.

This isn’t exactly a Zen motto (although perhaps it should be)

I mean that lately I keep on running into various earlier versions of myself. Mostly the sad, confused, vulnerable ones and although I often have a tremendous urge to help and treat them with compassion I do occasionally have the compulsion to give them a huge shove and run away screaming “NO! Not that again! I can’t bear it!”

That is not my highest inner voice, obviously.

And how very telling of my own lack of integration that I do not always immediately recognise these incarnations and their gifts.

These are usually, perhaps unsurprisingly, children.

This past July 4th I had taken Five on a little trip, just we two, to visit my father and his family in Washington DC. On the day itself there was a party at my his country house in Virginia. Sixty-three acres of rolling hills, trees and swimming pond, plus about 30 adults and assorted children all milling about at the obligatory patriotic barbeque. Five was the youngest for a change and was delightedly lapping up all the attention that being a visiting grandchild accords, and she bossily showed the others what poison ivy looked like and where the stores of insect eggs she had discovered were hidden. The children – aged between five and ten – roamed around in a cheerful gang.

All of them except Max.

He was very, extremely busy with important things, the vast majority of which involved being told off for antisocial behaviour by his exasperated father.

Max found it quite hard not to hit outdoor furniture with large sticks ripped off ancient, live oaks, or do suspicious things with lengths of rope that he found in hitherto locked sheds. He was also rather fond of kicking unspecified foreign objects around the lawn with that combination of aimless aggression and lurching menace that only young boys and bored, caged apes can muster. My father calls it ‘lurgging around’ (with a hard ‘G’). Max was had turned the lurgging dial up to eleven and was clearly driving his father bananas, thus the constant, badgering admonishments. He was also succeeding in alienating the other children who were mostly focussed on ice cream eating, Mother-May-I-playing, insect hunting and swimming.
Not tree-murder and smacking each other.

Poor Max.
To add to his woes there was only one other boy present.
Enter Joseph: An exceptionally beautiful and sweet-natured child a few years younger who had been rather fiercely claimed by Five, so whenever Max tried to play, in a cackhanded, puppyish male way, he would be trumped by the superior social manoeuvering of the girls and eventually give up and wander off feeling left out and resentful, as if he didn’t quite understand how to insert himself into the social structure. Heartbreaking. It transpired a little later, from tidbits I overheard, that Max suffered from a mild form of Asperger’s syndrome; interaction was a challenge for him under any circumstances and he was frequently frustrated and angered by emotions he could not name or easily express– thus the stick and rope show. In addition his parents had split up recently – painful for anyone – and to top it all off his little sister, who at that moment was having a grand old time as the eldest of the girl gang, was streaking ahead of him academically, socially and athletically.
It just wasn’t fair on the guy.
I began to feel quite sympathetic towards him for wanting to beat up the plant life – I would too.
But alas, as with all of us who are in the midst of a crisis, his awkward behaviour did not exactly endear him to people. What most of us saw was a badly behaved, angry boy, past the age of redeeming cuteness but nevertheless in the terrible realm of childhood powerlessness,  still crucial steps away from adolescence where at least he might find company in other kids who would wear black and write bad poetry.

Interestingly, Joseph was more willing than the other kids to tolerate Max and his idiosyncracies , but it was Joseph’s father who wanted to keep him away from the dischordant boy.
A bad influence, he muttered.  A destructive, angry child who would not be good for the sunny, happy-go-lucky sweetie-pie seven-year old.
I could appreciate that, although it might be fair to point out that the dad himself had what you might generously term a chequered past that was still not in its present incarnation, a gleaming path of white tiles.
I suppose, though, the more deprived of innocence one is oneself, the more viciously one guards it in one’s offspring.
I am also guilty of this. I should not judge.

The removal of Joseph left Max with literally nobody to play with. So after being told rather firmly by me that he should not jump up and down in my dad’s prized miniature japanese ornamental cherry tree and break off its branches, he wandered off sulkily and sought refuge, once again, in his friends the sticks.

By now I was past vexation and just felt desperately sorry for him, so I followed, wondering what I could say to make him feel a bit better.

For a few moments I was at a loss for words.

Middle aged, middle class mother looks at disconsolate, annoying boy and wonders what to say to younger generation.

Um. Uh.Let’s see now…

Was I just another irritating grownup who would say something eye-rollingly unhelpful?

I could feel an apron growing out of my suddenly spreading middle and a bun and spectacles sprouting out of my silly, fat, greying head like the terrifying special effects in the movie “She’s getting OLD and OUT OF TOUCH!”.

No, wait! STOP! That’s not me. That is not why I am here!! Erase!! Rewind!! (what is this ‘rewind’ says Gen Y?)

Here is a child, ten years old; angry, sad, lonely, feeling bad about himself, surrounded by kids he doesn’t fit in with and adults who don’t understand him.
I know EXACTLY how that feels. I may not want to remember, but I do.
It feels like shit and actually anyone who reaches out without patronising is going to help.

Max was beating up an imaginary foe.

“Are you practicing your Samurai” I asked.

“How did you know I liked Samurai?” suspicious an defiant, but also a bit pleased.

“A wild guess”

He suppresses a smile, thinks a bit, then throws me a challenge. His eyes are hard and arms are crossed.

“Did you know I really like punk rock music? And heavy metal? I like the Sex Pistols and the Clash. I listen to it a lot. My Dad hates it. It’s VERY LOUD!”

Little does he realise that this, for me, is the golden ticket.

I laugh.

“That is very cool, Max. Did you know that I like punk rock music too? I have actually seen the Clash in concert when I was about your age. And your dad is SUPPOSED to hate it! Good for you. Make it as loud as you can.”

“You’ve SEEN the Clash?” (so easy to impress a 10 year old) “Did you know that Sid Vicious was in the Sex Pistols??” (how cute is that?)

At this point Joseph’s mother, with whom I have been friends since we were young teenagers wanders over. She and I are veterans of the DC Hardcore scene (that’s punk, not porn for anyone who is wondering, and yes, we started going to shows when we were, um, about 3) .

I tell her that Max is into punk and metal and she is completely enchanted and demands to know who his favourite bands are. He lists a few obvious choices (Pistols, Clash, Ramones). Upon further quizzing we realise that he doesn’t really know any other bands which is really rather sweet. We tell him that we were into that kind of music when we were young and that J’s mother used to have purple hair and that I used to have pink hair and that neither of us wore any colour except black and he is totally enthralled. Then J’s mother tells him that I used to be a rock star and he practically faints with delight. He tells us he plays guitar, though not very well. We tell him that this is entirely appropriate for a punk rocker and that in the beginning none of them could play either. He is immensely cheered by this. He confides that none of the kids he knows like his music or understand it and that he wants to be in a band but nobody else does or wants to play with him. We ascertain that he’s in 5th grade and we advise him to spend the next two years playing very loud music, practicing his guitar, writing songs and by the time he hits junior high he will find others who are ready and able to be in a band with him and then he will be streets ahead. He then asks us, with great peer-to-peer seriousness what instruments we play and we chat, with surprising ease, about the pros and cons of bass versus guitar and how being a vocalist is good in some ways but limiting in others. He already sounds like a real musician. I feel great hope for him.

I tell him that Joseph’s mother and I met and became friends because we were part of a group of outcast kids who didn’t fit in with anyone else. We were all angry or sad or misfits and that was why we loved that music. That was why he loved that music. It sounded like he felt inside.  I told him that whenever he felt mad or sad to take that feeling, which was an energy, and pick up his guitar – just like his heroes – and put it into the music. It was going to be better, and feel better, than throwing a stick around. It didn’t matter if he sucked. It just mattered that he did it.

As I told him this he looked straight into my eyes and for a moment or two our souls locked. He knew I was telling him the something important.
He knew because he has a keen ear for music and he can recognise the ring of truth.

Then we asked him if he wanted some ideas for new bands to listen to.

He did.

We got a pen and paper and started writing them down.

It started out with J’s mother and me thinking up a few fairly accessible (read chart-friendly) punk bands for Max to get on with. We felt some sense of responsibility for his musical education so we gave him The Damned, Siouxsie and the Banshees and a couple of other obvious choices. Then my dad wandered up and suggested we also lead him forward in time – he might also like some early Ska music – I had loved it at his age. Ok, on the list. Then J’s mother insisted we compile a separate DC hardcore list- he is a DC kid, after all, and then we could impress him with all the people we personally know at a later date and feel less old and has-beenish (although surely that would make us feel more has-beenish?). Then J’s father reappeared, suddenly changing his tune (geddit?) declaring himself an authority on punk and started adding obscure-but-important bands so that I had to turn over the page and keep scribbling. An unlikely looking, slightly sweaty economist who had been eavesdropping piped up from the porch that he, himself, was a metalhead – he felt this category was underrepresented – and gave us a number of loud suggestions for eardrum explosion. It was getting hard to keep up with it all, and the crowd kept growing.

Meanwhile Max was in complete heaven. He had gone from ostracized outcast to the life and soul of the party in just a few minutes. This was very touching to see. And more than that, he had inspired a reunion of sorts – it turned out that all of us clustered around the ever-enlarging list had been Max in one guise or another. Here we all were, showing off to one another that we belonged, after all.
To the music, to each other, to ourselves, and ultimately to Max.

Max was overheard later telling my father that this was the “Best party EVER, THANKS!” and he hugged me tightly before he left.

But really, I think it’s me who owes something to him.

Thank you Max.

Thanks for the memories.

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Five vs. the iPhone

by Mothership on July 10, 2009

I’m booking Five in to zoo camp next week.

She will be a spectator and a student, although one could be forgiven for thinking she might be a resident given her recent behaviour.  I am willing to pay almost anything to get her out of the house for a few hours each day given the stroppy teenager she has taken to aping at intermittent, unpredictable intervals during each and every day.

Today she woke up at 5.30am, citing jet-lag although curiously this also kept her up until 11pm last night – don’t quite know how it works both ways but she milked it anyway – and demanded stories, forbidden DVD’s, food, drinks, etc. all of which were granted by her bleary-eyed father while I slept on, blissfully unaware. Her mood deteriorated as she got colder and therefore grumpier because she absolutely and categorically refused to put on a stitch of clothing except the revolting My Little Pony nightie she had conned her Grandad into buying for her in Washington DC. Of course it was unavailable today – in the wash, finally and deservedly – so she conducted her Machiavellian morning in the buff which was picturesque but chilly so by the time I got up (roughly shaken awake with the admonition to fetch Two as he was stuck between his cot and the wall) her teeth were chattering and she was furious with me.
Husband had gone back to bed by this point, exhausted by ill temper (hers) and obsequience (his).

I fed the children and drifted outside for my morning dose of sanity – writing in my diary – leaving Husband in charge, and came back to find Five lying on the floor howling about nothing in particular.  She had been set off by Two finding a ladybird and was enraged that she herself did not have one -it wasn’t fair.

I hear “It’s not fair” quite a lot from Five and I do sympathise. I well remember feeling completely powerless at that age and thinking that only the grownups had any fun or control. When I grew up I was going to eat sweets for every meal and live in a double decker bus and go to bed as late as I wanted and never have a bath, not ever, so there!

Now I’m a grownup and a mother I also think it’s not fair that I try my very best, give her all that I didn’t have, including my attention, affection and understanding and I still get flashing eyes, stomping feet and phenomenal cheekiness sometimes bordering on rudeness and she’s only FIVE. Admittedly I was like this sometimes but I saved it until I was a bit older and had been crapped on by the world. I was quite sweet up until then and not overly dramatic (nb. I checked with my parents, I am not making this up).


Today she said:

“Oh, you think your iPhone is SO smart.”

Me: ” Well, it is quite clever”

Five: ” I bet it can’t find London”

Me: ” Well, actually it can.”

Five: ” Oh. Well, I bet it can’t find Paris.”

Me:  ” It can find Paris, too – want to have a look together? It’s in Europe.”

Five: ” Well, it can’t find HEAVEN!”

Me (laughing): “That’s true, it can’t. Nobody really knows where that is, though, not even the iPhone.”

Five: “I do. It’s up there in the sky”

Me: “Really? We were just up there in a plane! I didn’t see it. Are you sure?”

Five: ” Oh yeah! I saw it, it was there. You just didn’t see it because you were too busy reading your book”

This was hilariously funny, but also a little sad. There were moments when she was shrieking with laughter at the tiny people and specks of cars on the ground, seeing the swimming pools from far away as little fairy ponds for flies to swim in.
Was this a kind of nirvana for her?
I was trying to block it all out, get some shuteye, trying not to remember a hundred flights like this I had taken in my own childhood, alone, between one grumpy parent and another, full of sadness and anxiety. I used to read a lot on those little eggbeaters.

Maybe I could take a leaf out of her book by taking my nose out of mine. I wouldn’t want to miss heaven if it’s really up there. And I suppose it’s possible that if I were just a little more present she might see that as a gift, too.

Sound fair?

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Slow Connection

by Mothership on July 5, 2009

I have not posted for a little while because I have been away somewhere where the internet connection is painfully slow when there is one at all and I can hardly stand to check my email let alone write a post.

In addition to that I am on holiday with Five visiting my father and his family, Husband and Two having stayed at home, and it is incredibly nice not to have to cook or be responsible for any household tasks, and my little girl is completely ecstatic to be the youngest, in fact the only, child in the house and is busy being doted upon and fussed over by her grandparents and aunt. This has left me with quite a bit of free time which I could spend writing, but in fact I have spent lazing around reading books and eating chocolate or drinking cups of tea which have thoughtfully been made for me by other people while they look after my child.

I have not helped with the washing up.

I have not cleared anything away.

I have not offered to do anything useful.

This is very out of character for me and I am quite thrilled by the success of my daring impersonation of a spoiled, entitled Gen Y brat, and what’s more I seem to be getting away with it.

I could start wondering why there has been a sudden shift in family dynamic around here and do my usual amateur psych analysis of it all, but upon further consideration perhaps I will not scratch too hard upon the surface.

It’s all good! Why not enjoy the status quo for the time being.

While I was here I spoke to a family friend, a mother of three grown children,  who has recently given up her job working with a nonprofit to help women in prisons (fun!Not!) and decided to open a knitting shop instead (random!). She looked absolutely gorgeous and young and had a lovely, peaceful air about her. I complimented her on her youthful demeanour and on the decision to change her career so dramatically in her 50’s and asked her how she kept so calm and peaceful.

She said:
“I don’t worry anymore about anything. I realise I have very little control over events, things just happen, usually okay, sometimes not, but either way I can’t really control them. I’m pretty happy. My husband worries all the time. He’s not very happy. Me, I just don’t worry anymore, and it usually turns out just fine.”

Then she laughed joyously and walked off leaving me with my mouth hanging open.

When we first got here I was a bit anxious about no internet connection. How would I post? How would I check my email? How would Husband contact me if Two got ill? What if I needed an urgent, I don’t know, something or other? What if? How would? Facebook?Twitter? Blog? Cellphone? Aggh!

Then I realised that I couldn’t do any of those things.

All I could do was talk to the people I was with or hang around and read a book which was what I came for. If Two got ill, Husband would look after him – that’s why he has two parents. So I stopped worrying, Five just wanted to go swimming and didn’t give a hoot whether her hair was clean or she slept in dirty pajamas. I had long, important chats with my baby sister and enjoyably harangued my father about his nonexistent recycling habits. Life slowed down. I haven’t thought about what we’ll do tomorrow, we’ll get around to it… tomorrow.

I’m using the holiday as a practice run – let’s see if I can get through this without worrying too much, and if that’s all good, then we’ll see if I can bring it home with me. I will measure it in terms of how compulsively I need to check my email, post my blog and look on Facebook when I get back.

I sort of like the slow connection. It gives my feelings a chance to catch up with my brain.
I have a very quick mind that darts ahead of my feelings, but my emotions are a bit stupid and they often only arrive at the destination a few days later. Then they get all huffy because the brain has made a social arrangement without asking if they are available and then the two won’t communicate anymore. Meanwhile I am left trying, anxiously, to appease both sides  – it’s very worry provoking.
If we just slow it all down then perhaps I won’t need to worry because stuff will just happen and feelings will get a chance to react first and the brain can come to the rescue on practical matters in the aftermath.

I may have gotten a bit carried away with that little flight of fancy. It’s a bit late now  and I’m knackered but I’m not GOING TO WORRY if this is a mad, random post. I’m just going to put it up because the internet is, miraculously, working and I want to say hello to everyone.

Slowly connect.

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The Last Diet You’ll Ever Need

by Mothership on June 27, 2009

As I sit here, stirring sugar into my tea (shh! My dirty secret) and wishing I had a custard cream left from the stash I brought back from England, I am thinking about a book I was reading to Five earlier this evening about astronauts and what they ate on board spaceships. It didn’t sound very appetising or glamorous and they also had to exercise in the most cramped and awkward conditions to prevent muscle wasting due to the lack of gravity. But I’m pretty sure they don’t complain or worry about their waistlines looking at issues of Vogue, Hello or the fashion pages of Astronaut’s Health and feel inadequate as a result.  My guess is they regard the food as mere fuel and just do their exercise so they don’t waste away, and besides, it’s probably quite difficult to weigh oneself where there isn’t any gravity.

There has been a lot of talk amongst my Twitter compadres recently about the trend for dangerously thin celebrities and models and how the entertainment and fashion industries are to blame for turning people into anxious, self-starving, body-obsessed miseries. If it wasn’t for them, the premise goes, we would all be happy with our body image and would not torture ourselves with dieting, failing to diet, bingeing, bulimia, anorexia, compulsive custard-cream eating and the rest.

It would seem only common sense that these entities would have a vested interest in making sure that we are not content exactly as we are, because who, then, would buy all the aspirational goods and services which create the profit to drive the machine?

We’d all sit at home being happy, having that second slice of cake whilst chatting companionably to our friends and families instead of poking anxiously at ourselves with dissatisfaction while the latest movie star flits across the screen insisting she is naturally a size negative 2 and she washes her face in gravel and cow dung. We might do something more interesting, fun and worthwhile with our time and money than perpetually trying – and failing – to turn ourselves into human toothpicks to the tune of $40 billion per year in the US alone while a few thousand miles away there are children literally dying because they don’t have enough to eat.

I recall a conversation over Thanksgiving dinner the first year we were in America after Five was born. One of the guests worked as a drug rep. in the pharmaceutical industry and she was very excited about a new wonder diet drug for which her company was trying to get FDA approval. She told us it was made from a plant that the Sani Bushmen of South Africa have chewed for centuries to suppress their appetite in the lean times of drought and famine. It is a fragile herb that only grows in a specific region, the homelands of these oft persecuted people. Now this large pharmacom had ‘discovered’ it, were trying to market it, and (she said indignantly) had unreasonably been slapped with a lawsuit by the Sani who were demanding restitution as they considered the plant theirs – it grew solely on their traditional land and had been appropriated without their permission. To be absolutely fair, as soon as I heard the words Big Pharma vs. Indigenous tribe, it was pretty clear whose side I would be on, no matter the details, but what really did my head in was what she said next:

“I mean, it’s not like those people EVER have to diet or lose weight! So what do they need it for anyway?!”

Husband could obviously feel the Vesuvius about to erupt next to him so, uncharacteristically, he stepped in quickly and quietly and pointed out to her, rather more kindly than I would have, that the Sani had a much more basic need for an appetite suppressant than we did – they got hungry and there simply wasn’t any food. This helped them with the pain of starvation.

“Oh!” She said, with a kind of dim, flickering light-bulb look.

“I never even thought of that”.

When you were small did your mother ever tell you to eat everything on your plate because there were starving children in Africa?
Mine too,  and like you I also used to tell her to pack it up and send it there, then.
I wonder what would happen if we could send our overconsumed dinners to the starving children in Africa plus the money we spend trying to uneat them again(all US$40 billion)
How many lives would we save?

And how many cute pairs of jeans would we subsequently fit into?

This specific set of data did not seem to be available readily on Google but I am planning to write to the World Bank and suggest they publish a white paper on this very subject.

I do not mean to belittle the agony of feeling unhappy with one’s size or weight. I have been personally tortured by that demon. I will go to considerable lengths to avoid face-time with a set of scales – why know the number? A whole day can be ruined by a set of random digits.

I do not think this befitting for a person of my intelligence.

I also find it inadvisable to look closely at one’s reflection when a little unhappy or hormonal. Mirrors tend to expand and retract in direct proportion with one’s emotional state – if you feel a little wobbly inside, you can be damn sure that’s what your eye will catch in the glass, regardless of what is actually padding your skeleton.

I got the best piece of advice regarding body image from a girl I once knew who was, oddly enough, a former anorexic. As soon as I began to feel anxious about my weight she rolled her eyes and told me to shut the fuck up, go to the gym, eat a little less, love myself a little more, and stop looking at the people who made me feel fat and ugly.
Genius

Because that is the problem. Not my weight or yours. That’s pretty easy to control, it’s just a math problem.  It’s the feeling, yes FEELING fat that is so awful and hard to battle. And therefore ugly. Why else would the two words go together as seamlessly as gin and tonic? Or thin and beautiful?

If we are constantly bombarded with images of perfect beauty, and these perfect beauties are having perfectly happy lives with all the perfect consumer goods that I do not have but a great deal of psychology and money is put into making me want then not only will I want to have those consumer goods but I will feel that I, too, need to look like those perfect beauties (being a type of consumer good myself, as a woman) and therefore need to purchase further goods/services in order to contort myself into the perfect female form in order to attract one of those white-toothed men in the ads (they do exist, don’t they?) who will provide the consumer goods I am coveting etc. etc.

I read the other day that 24% of women (and 17% of men) would trade three to five years of their lives to be thinner.

NEARLY A QUARTER OF US WOULD GIVE UP THREE YEARS! That is just crazy talk. They didn’t even say which ones, like, okay, I’ll give up three shitty ones in a nursing home where I can’t wipe my own ass and I don’t know if it’s Tuesday anymore. Just a random “three years”.

In the last three years I have borne and raised my beloved son, Two. Imagine missing that so I could squeeze into a smaller pair of trousers!  The mind boggles.

It was so awful that I felt inspired to write my own diet plan. I can’t promise you will be a size zero at the end of it, but you won’t care if you’re not by the time you’re done (kind of like they say about Dilaudid – not exactly a painkiller, but you don’t care that it hurts? Maybe that’s a bad analogy..)  Anyway, here is is:

The Last Diet You Will Ever Need:

Throw away your magazines

Switch off the TV

Do not watch Hollywood movies

Do not follow Entertainment figures

Do not compare yourself to other people. You can only look like you, just a few pounds either way. EOS.

Read good books

Eat good food when you are hungry. Don’t eat crappy food, it’s not worth it.

Laugh a lot

Spend time outdoors with people you love

Find an exercise you love and do it because you love it, not because you ought to.

Don’t look in the mirror when you are sad or feel unstable

Don’t weigh yourself

If you feel a bit fat, start moving your body and stop thinking about food.

Repeat, do not think about food. Think about life.

If you really need a biscuit, just bloody eat it. It’s not arsenic, you know!

Remember that life is brief and nobody will be engraving your dress size on your tombstone.

If, when you are done with the diet, you have any extra dinner money left over, do remember to send it to someone who is truly hungry. I have the feeling that once you have adopted The Last Diet You’ll Ever Need, you’ll never feel like you’re starving again.

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Running the Numbers

by Mothership on June 22, 2009

Image: Lightbulbs 2008 by Chris Jordan

I am well known in my circle for banging on about the environment and making uncomfortable and unwelcome comments about social responsibility. I am not without my own hypocrisies – for instance I did not even entertain the cloth diaper issue for one second (not for me, no thank you) and I am having constantly to battle with my inner impulse shopper and temper her with my more mature planet saver (planet saver does not always win). Husband is very eco-conscious and finds it disgustingly easy to live by his frugal principles which sometimes drives me into a frenzy of contrary consumerism just to be awkward and this is further exacerbated by having dry peer-reviewed white papers from the front-lines of industrial ecology or in-depth lifecycle analyses quoted at me. I know he is right. I feel it to be right in my soul yet it makes me feel like a recalcitrant six year old and I don’t want to listen.

It’s all too gloomy. It’s all too much. It’s all too big and I can’t cope. Let’s go shopping instead and drown our sorrows in the intoxicating liquor of overconsumption and get fatter and fatter on our own greed and blindness.

On this note, the other day the children and I were at Costco, warehouse shopping experience extraordinaire, where I go meaning just to buy nappies and wipes but somehow always come out with a swing set, a lawnmower and a 12 pack of medjool dates, when we stopped at one of the little tasting stands where they give out free samples of the food. The young man serving the mandarin oranges asked me where I was from. I told him (are you expecting the usual spiel? I was) and he did indeed tell me he loved my accent but then surprised me by saying that he would love to live anywhere other than America, his homeland, because people here were such blind, fat consumers and all they did was shop and eat and it was DISGUSTING (he got louder and louder) and no wonder the planet was dying and there were starving people in Africa when these people were buying (ahem) 12 packs of medjool dates and lawnmowers that they DIDN’T NEED?  I was almost dumbstruck. I actually agreed with him on a lot of points and it was sort of flattering that he’d decided to exclude me from the rest of the Costco shoppers due to my nationality, but on the other hand one couldn’t quite avoid the fact that there I was with my children and my giant trolley full of GOODS (medjool dates!). It was very surreal, especially as he had one of those mad hairnets and white jackets on but he talked a lot of sense in a raving loony sort of way.  I slunk off and quietly put back half of my unnecessary purchases (farewell medjool dates, this is the last we will hear from you) and walked out with milk, eggs, nappies and wetwipes feeling a lot better about myself. Plus it was really interesting which is more than can be said for most trips to that ghastly place.

I have often wondered why it is so hard to digest the information that each of our own small actions has a huge impact, collectively, on how we shape the future of our world. Husband knits his brow and shakes his head but has no answers – he is too busy working on the mechanics of it. I try, in my way, to do what I can, but it seems that we need some kind of translation from the unimaginable damage to the personal effect from the huge to the small.

Luckily for me, just as I was pondering this very mind-boggling subject, I happened across an amazing exhibition called Running the Numbers quite by chance by an artist, Chris Jordan, who has clearly thought this out and visualized it for us far better than I ever could have explained it.

Running the Numbers looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on. My hope is that images representing these quantities might have a different effect than the raw numbers alone, such as we find daily in articles and books. Statistics can feel abstract and anesthetizing, making it difficult to connect with and make meaning of 3.6 million SUV sales in one year, for example, or 2.3 million Americans in prison, or 32,000 breast augmentation surgeries in the U.S. every month.

This project visually examines these vast and bizarre measures of our society, in large intricately detailed prints assembled from thousands of smaller photographs. Employing themes such as the near versus the far, and the one versus the many, I hope to raise some questions about the roles and responsibilities we each play as individuals in a society that is increasingly enormous, incomprehensible, and overwhelming.

-Chris Jordan 2008

Chris has kindly given permission for me to use a couple of images in this post and I urge you to look at his website and read what he has to say as well as look at the pictures zoomed out and in for it is only there that you can understand what he is trying to do. And perhaps from there, you will also want to do something. For yourselves and for your children.

From: Mothership <info @ motherhoodthefinalfrontier.com>
Date: Sun, 14 Jun 2009 22:50:21 -0700
To: <studio @  chrisjordan.com>
Subject: Tumultous applause

Dear Chris Jordan,

This past weekend I visited your exhibition Running the Numbers at the Natural History Museum, which was a most pleasant surprise.

I am usually subjected to long and rather dull viewings of elderly and slightly fleabitten stuffed animals which nonetheless delight my two small children, or forced to explain (yet again) why I will not be buying cheap plastic items made in China from the gift shop which they will tire of before we reach the parking lot. However my eldest child, who is five, insisted we enter the room in which your photographs were housed, and without really knowing what was in store we went in and all three of us were immediately entranced.   The images are so fascinatingly beautiful, both at a distance and up close, and yet how uncomfortable it is to know, to be able to see – unavoidably – the precise figure of our gluttony.

That is not quite so pretty.

We went from print to print, with me explaining to the children what each picture was, and what the numbers represented (they are both too little to read). It was also very interesting to hear what they had to say about your pictures.

seurat1

Five recognized the Seurat image.

“I know this picture” she said to me. “It is of a lovely lake with beautiful ladies from the olden days when you were young.”

Upon closer inspection she exclaimed

seurat3

“Mummy, it’s made of tiny teeny soda cans! About a hundred of them!”

I told that there were 106,000 aluminum cans, the number used in the US every thirty seconds, in this picture and that was one of the many reasons that we did not buy soda.

The next picture she was keen to explain to me:

oilbarrell

” That is the drying planet earth who is now a black, dark sun.”

I told her the image was made up of oil barrels, that it depicted 28,000 42-gallon barrels, the amount of oil consumed in the United States every two minutes (equal to the flow of a medium-sized river)

She asked if we could just not use oil anymore because the earth was so sad.

barbieboobs

She was very interested in the Barbie/breast augmentation image (32,000 Barbies, equal to the number of elective breast augmentation surgeries performed monthly in the US in 2006) but I could not quite bring myself to explain it to her as she still has a few years left of innocence. We’re hoping to keep

barbieboobs3Barbie out of the house until she can define irony though I’m willing to admit this might just be my own foolish fantasy..

At any rate, the tumultuous applause part of this email is nearly over. I think you are marvelously clever and talented and love the fact that because of you I actually packed my groceries today directly into the car – I forgot my cloth bags at home (again, slacker) and couldn’t bear to take a paper one thinking of your work. My husband is a professor of Industrial Ecology so really the facts and figures should be what sway me – God knows we have enough of them around here – but really, I think that you made your point and I don’t have to quote it back at you.

I look forward to sharing your work and images with others,

Kind regards,
Mothership

Check it out : http://www.chrisjordan.com/

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