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Let's Panic: The Book!

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How to Endure and Possibly Triumph Over the Adorable Tyrant
who Will Ruin Your Body, Destroy Your Life, Liquefy Your Brain,
and Finally Turn You
into a Worthwhile
Human Being.

Written by Alice Bradley and Eden Kennedy

Some Books
I'm In...

Sleep Is
For The Weak

Chicago Review Press

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Let's Panic

The site that inspired the book!

At LET'S PANIC ABOUT BABIES, Eden Kennedy and I share our hard-won wisdom and tell you exactly what to think and feel and do, whether you're about to have a baby or already did and don't know what to do with it.

Lets-Panic.com → 

« The book would be entitled, "I Wrote This Book to Make Alice Cry." | Main | It can now be revealed. »
Monday
Jul042005

Fireworks are pretty, but also loud.

I can’t take this long between posts. I’ve forgotten how to do this. It’s taken me at least an hour to figure out that punching the keyboard was wrong and only resulted in gbhj hgh fg som m m bnmbbv gh.

(Once, on a job interview, I took a typing test and I was so nervous that I didn’t look at the paper as I typed (this was back when we typed on “typewriters.” I’m old!), and when the interviewer took the paper out of the typewriter , he looked at it, then at me, then at the paper, and handed it to me and said, “I don’t know what to say about this.” Turned out I had placed my hands incorrectly on the keyboard and everything I had typed was gibberish. I responded, “What, that’s not right?” and laughed maniacally, which he apparently found more alarming than amusing. And that’s why I’m not working for the William Morris Agency today. True story!)

I’ve been at my parents’ house, eating their food and enjoying their clean and pretty home, with its lovely flowers and relative absence of mouse urine. On Friday night my mother went out dancing—did I not tell you that my mother is a ballroom dancer? And dances in competitions in which she wears spangly outfits down to there and up to here?—so it was just me and my dad. And Henry, duh. But then I put him down for the night, and my dad and I were hanging out, and we decided to watch a movie.

The movie, by the way, was “The Life of Brian,” rented by my mom, whose motives I can only guess at. I was uneasy at the prospect of watching this with my dad, as he is a holy man, the Catholic-est of Catholics, with his “Liturgy of the Hours” right there on the coffee table and his rosary beads invariably at the ready, and there we were, about to watch a movie that makes light of crucifixion. And I was pretty sure there was a blow job, somewhere in there.

The sacri-larity of it turned out to be less of a problem than the DVD’s audibility; we had to turn it waaay up in order to make sense of the dialogue, and then when the music surged we were deafened. Anyway, I was having a hard time paying attention because I kept hearing… something. A faint something or other. A high-pitched squeak somewhere off in the distance. There had been some fireworks earlier, so I figured the sounds were bottle rockets. But I couldn’t relax. Well, I thought, I’ll just check the child. I’m sure it’s nothing, but, you know, can’t hurt to check.

So I walked over to the stairs and OH MY GOD THE SCREAMING. THERE WAS SO MUCH SCREAMING. I tore ass up the stairs and there was my child, still lying down (it never occurs to him to stand up, he is so good and I am so bad), his face red and mottled, his head and the surrounding environs utterly soaked in tears. He must have been crying for a half an hour, at least. I never did figure out why he was so upset, because when I threw myself at him and scooped him up, all he could tell me was, and I quote, “I was crying so much and you didn’t come.” Wow. For the next half hour or so he snuffled into my neck while I read him stories and considered ritual disembowelment as a way to alleviate my guilt. Surely a little seppuku would convince Henry that I didn’t mean to ignore him! Surely!

The end! How dramatic that story seemed, before I wrote it. “I didn’t hear my son and so he cried.” Thank you, World Wide Webs, for showing me how silly I am. How negligent, yes, but also how silly.

I have so much more to write about but I’m so tired. Next: my near-death (or near-ankle fracture) experience on the subway and my interview on Bravo. Anticipate!

 

Reader Comments (50)

Oh my god. I'm repeating myself. Repeating!
July 5, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteralice
Sad Monkey. Happy Bravo!
July 5, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterlis
If I had cried and cried as a child and my parents had not come, I would have been convinced the Rapture had happened and I had been LEFT BEHIND. The perils of being brought up fundamentalist Baptist. So at least Henry doesn't have that to contend with. Does that at least help a little with your guilt? : )



July 5, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterBabelBabe
Actually, that was one of my earliest memories...I was crying in my room and no one heard me and I wound up falling asleep. The thing is, I never had any trust issues with my parents because I knew they loved me and kept me safe, so I figured that they just hadn't heard me. I got over it quickly, but like above commenters said, Henry'll be fine. It's you that feels traumatized. :p I wonder now if my parents were letting me cry it out. I turned out fine though. :) Love your blog.
July 5, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterKarin
SO. WEIRD.

Same thing happened this weekend when I put my daughter to bed a friend's house on a kid-sized roll-away (on the ground). Not having ever slept in anything without sides, she awoke and was surprised to find herself able to walk around the room. She must have been crying 20 minutes when I finally heard a peep from outside. I ran upstairs and found her sad, sad wretching little body standing at the door. (Still flagellating self...gulp.)

Missed you this week!
July 5, 2005 | Unregistered Commentermadgelove
Maybe God really does take offense with Life of Brian. Although one of my most listened to songs on my iPod is "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" from the movie, so the guilt God smote on you shouldn't last too long.
My mom is also a ballroom dancer now, a relatively new thing for her that came with a new boyfriend about six months ago. The weirdest part is the super short, tight spangly outfits. Little Henry was probably dreaming about that spangly dress a'twirling. It's disorienting.
July 5, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterMelissa
I recently confessed in a post that I (gulp) forgot to turn the monitor on one night and when I finally woke up and looked at the clock, I freaked out. I leapt out of bed, whipped open the bedroom door and heard the screams then. It broke my heart. I cuddled, she snuffled, I snuffled. I don't know how long she had been crying for, but it must have been around twenty minutes or longer (oh god, I hope it wasn't longer) for her to be that worked up. It's the most awful horrible feeling and I hope to never experience it again. So you're definitely not alone.
July 5, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterLaura
Um, I left my cat out in the hallway all night once. And didn't hear him miowing until the next morning. It was quite traumatic. More for me, I think. I gave him tuna and he was okay.

I don't think you're a horrid mother. These things happen. Please don't disembowel yourself. You amuse me. And I would be sad if you weren't around.
July 5, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterDM
or don't you love it when you're letting him cry it out a bit and you finally go in and find the diaper poopy or, as happened recently, the leg trapped between crib and wall? Yes, darling, I heard you, but I decided to ignore you because I am wretched. Seppuku.

(and I missed you)
July 5, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterLiz
Ummm... I don't have children so far be it for me to question anyone's parenting tactics, EXCEPT when I hear mention of ritual disembowelment of a small child just because he cried. Seems a bit harsh. Of course, you make no mention of funeral arrangements or upcoping court dates... If this means you have found some other way to live with the guilt, I'm oh so very glad.
July 6, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterMiss Julie
Hm, I use Safari (on a mac) and your template looks perfectly beautiful to me. So no worries, at least not for the mac users of your readership... Just to put that straight.
July 6, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteranja
Ummm, miss Julie? Alice was going to disembowel HERSELF, not Henry. Sheesh!
July 6, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterkaryn
Well, you know, grammatically it was pretty ambiguous.
July 6, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteralice
Alice! Welcome back! I was so sad every time I checked to see if there was a new post and there was never a new post, and then, today, there WAS! And I was happy again! Someone said that they missed you this week. Has it only been a week? I could have sworn that it was, like, a month. That's what it felt like, at least!

Although I have no children, my active imagination feels for your traumatic episode with Henry. However, as those above me have said, life goes on and someday, the memory will not be quite as horrific and guilt-wrenching as it is now. =)

Keep them posts coming, woman! I'm all a-flutter to hear about Bravo and near-death experiences.
July 6, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterBetsy
Sorry, didn't mean to present myself as the grammar police or step on anyone's toes. The seppuku reference made it all pretty clear. The problem was that my mind was already off and running in a different direction and refused to be shackled by the contraints of logic. Again, apologies all around. No offense meant to Alice or any of her clearly devoted other readers.
July 6, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterMiss Julie
What did your dad think of the movie? As a recovering Catholic, I find it hysterical, but alas...my 'rents do not.
July 7, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterBad Hippie
I've done that to my kid, too, accidentally. Makes me feel wretched remembering. The other bad one was when she woke up from a nap and came out of her room and couldn't find me (I was doing some work in a closet with the door partly shut). And then I went to look for her and she wasn't in her room. I don't which of us was more scared. Horrible. But we have gone on with our normal lives since then, there is hope....
July 7, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterAndrea
Interesting. The Google ad I'm getting with this blog is, appropriately, for a dance partner. If you hadn't mentioned your mom being into ballroom dancing, I wonder if I would've gotten an ad for online movie rental or a site selling the accoutrement for ritual disembowelment?

Oh, and I forgot to mention before, we seem to have that same audio problem with DVDs. The dialog is frequently inaudible, so we turn it WAY up and then we all jump out of skins (and subsequently feel really silly) when the music comes up. It's annoying when a movie requires constant volume adjustment.

Just FYI, I put a home theater sound system on my TV (which I got at WalMart for $50) and it has a center channel. The center channel volume can be separately increased to make dialog perfectly audible while leaving the background sound effects and music at a normal level.
July 7, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterTitanKT
Well, if your dad *didn't* have a hard time with LoB, try showing him the "Every Sperm is Sacred" bit from MoL. If that doesn't work, I recommend moving on to some of John Waters' early work. C'mon, I'm sure you can rile him. You just have to try harder.

I put my 18-mo. daughter to sleep while staying at my folks a few months back... even set up a blasted monitor, which for some reason didn't communicate any noise until outright, horrible screaming.

I ran upstairs to find daughter disoriented, sobbing, and covered in vomit. I assumed she'd been crying for some awful amount of time, and had puked because of it. O, the soul-crushing guilt.

So it was some relief when it turned out to be the stomach flu. I'm not exactly sure *why* three straight days of puking and watching thomas the tank engine was preferable, but it was.

And I still felt guilty.
July 7, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterJenny
been there, done that, wrote the book, did the shrink thing, got the t-shirt!love your site!
July 8, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterangel
great post! I did that too, I can still feel the guilt and he is 22 now! btw, he doesn't remember.
July 8, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterweetzie
Years ago I decided that my 18 month old was just "pushing buttons" and decided to ignore her while she whined/cried a bit upstairs at my sister's house. My neice decided she would go get her because she felt badly for her. Turns out, she was covered in vomit.I felt terribly that I had ignored her and it turned out she had a legitimate complaint. But, I was very glad that I wasn't the one to find her...it was a stinking mess!

She recovered, and is a psychologically healthy pre-pubescent now!
July 8, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteresther
would love to say "how could you? I would never neglect my child like that" but I have - I was cleaning the kitchen and had the radio right up and my head in an oven full of toxic fumes and didn't here a thing...
July 11, 2005 | Unregistered Commentersong
Oh my god, I totally took that typing test for William Morris. Unlike you, I passed with flying colors -- but I also got to take it on a computer where words appear on a screen for easy rereading.

Considering the way my experience turned out, I feel qualified to solemnly inform you that your subconscious placed your hands on the wrong keys and it did so for a very, very good reason.
July 14, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterester

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