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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
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Written by Alice Bradley and Eden Kennedy

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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.

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« Settling in but still unsettled. | Main | Guess what he got, shortly after this. »
Thursday
May042006

Hello. I live in Jersey.

We moved on Sunday, after an all-night frenzy of last-minute packing. Even though we had been packing for six weeks—and before the official packing had begun, had purged our belongings for our Open House, in order that we might fool would-be buyers into thinking that our home was clean and spacious and not inhabited by unhinged packrats—we were still up all night packing. There seems to be no way around this. Nature demands that the night before you uproot yourselves and leave your loved ones, you must also be deprived of sleep.

For the first day or two here I was positively blissful, but at some point on Tuesday I began my slow decline. It went a little like this:

Day 1: It’s so pretty here. And peaceful! This is going to be great!

Day 2: The quiet! I love it. I LOVE IT. I can’t believe I love living here! In the suburbs!

Day 3: Wow, the quiet, it sure doesn’t stop, does it? Isn’t there any noise?

Day 4: OH GOD, THE SILENCE. THE AWFUL SILENCE. MAKE IT STOP.

Day 5: Goddamn silence makes me want to punch someone. And what’s this “I have to drive everywhere” shit?

Speaking of driving, I’ve only driven the car twice and already I’ve made at least two wildly boneheaded driving maneuvers. I err on the side of caution, as I am a 90-year-old trapped in a 37-year-old’s body. In one instance, my bony hands clutched the wheel at 10 and 2 as I came to a dead stop at an intersection because I couldn’t find the damn light (why do they hide it on the side like that?) and then wondered why everyone around me was leaning on their horns. (Even the people without cars! Kids these days! Walking around with horns!) But I’ll get used to this, right? Someone? At some point, I hope to stop sweating so hard my hands are sliding off the steering wheel.

It doesn’t help that my son has developed a car aversion, due no doubt to his delightful new tendency to vomit after relatively short car rides. (Dear relatives who want us to come visit you: will you wait until my son’s eighteen? If he’s not over this by then I’m pretty sure he could at least hold the bag over his mouth.) Today we went for a five-minute ride so that I could go to a dermatologist (because my face reacts to stress by EXPLODING. And my hair falls out! I’m breathtaking), and I thought Scott and Henry might like to check out the neighborhood library and meet me afterward, and boy what a bad idea that was! Which I realized when we told Henry we were getting into the car! “NOOOOO!” he shrieked. “GAAAAAH! I’m going to THROW UP!” he informed us. He didn’t, thankfully, and when we got there he informed us that the ride “wasn’t so bad after all,” a fact that leapt gazelle-like from his mind when it was time to get back into the car to go home. He went all boneless and wept facedown on the sidewalk while Scott and I discussed if it was okay to leave him there for the afternoon.

But enough about him; let’s get back to me. On the positive side, I have discovered my Inner Extrovert. I had thought I was on the shy side, but now that there’s no one around, I’m jonesing for the sweet stink of humanity. It’s unspeakably weird to have, instead of hundreds of people on your block, maybe eight. (It’s a small block.) While I used to sit in my apartment gritting my teeth while gaggles of morons stood directly outside my window, leaning against the security grate and discussing That Slut Chrissy Who Totally Fooled Around with Rick (for example), I now find myself standing on my porch, shrieking salutations at the 3 or 4 people foolish enough to pass by. (If you happen to be in Jersey and you spot a hairless acne-ridden hysteric perched on her weed-choked lawn, flailing her limbs, do not be afraid. That’s how I say hello!) The few brave souls I've spoken to have been lovely, even when my son tried to kiss them full on the lips. (Apparently he feels as I do, with the whole love of humanity thing.)

Also! Weeds! We have this lawn, and we have absolutely not one single clue what to do with it. We also don’t know how to take care of, oh, anything else. Our ignorance in all home ownership matters is absolutely staggering. So far our strategy has been to stare at the weeds and say, “We really should, I don’t know, rip those out?” and then go back inside and stare at the boxes and say, “Oh, god, so much to unpack.” And then we join Henry in his Quest For Galactic Dominance, in the relatively clean corner of the dining room.

So yeah, so far this is all working out just fine.

Reader Comments (103)

If you have grass-envy of someone in your neighborhood, kill two birds and introduce yourself and find out if someone takes care of their lawn. Lawn services and godsends.

Then again, you might not want to kill those two birds as they may be the only things chasing the troublesome silence away.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterDD
you just got there and already you're worried about the lawn? i wouldn't even think about the lawn until you have slept in the house thirty seven times (once for each year of your life) and then when you DO worry about it do so only long enough to say to one another, gee, grass grows, don't it.

the lawn, ach. whatever. you have a house! your very own! in the silence! which yes, at first, creepy but then? you will adore it! and many more exclamation marks! i think i had too much chocolate!

also i am watching ER and it is a very stressful episode that has made me very hyper!
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterhonestyrain
If it makes you feel any better, when I moved to Jersey several years ago (I was young and foolish - I've matured lots now. I live in a desert), my very first night, I went outside in my boxers (it was night, who's gonna see?), and when I closed the sliding glass door, it locked. Now there's a great first impression. I broke a basement window so I could crawl back in.

Granted, this has nothing to do with anything, but reading your post reminded me of that and made me laugh.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterJeff
I was just remarking today that you know it's spring in my neighborhood when people realize that meh, maybe their grass didn't fare the harsh winter months as well as they had hoped. Solution? Rip it out and lay down a chem-tastic new lawn. I'm from the country, where we just mowed it and let the weeds be weeds.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterlindsey
God, that Chrissy. She totally IS a slut.
Do me a favor now that you have a house? Can you run from room to room screaming at the top of your lungs for me? Please? We live in an apartment and I am so sick of being worried about making noise and disturbing the neighbors. Not that we're loud people at all, but I'm all "Is the TV too loud? Turn it down" or "Don't rearrange the books and slam them on the floor! What about the neighbors??!" So, while you're having your homeowner freak-out (which is perfectly justified--it's a big deal!) PLEASE savor the solitude of not having ajoining walls with anyone else. Thanks!
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commentersamantha Jo Campen
When hubs and I moved from the city (Boston)to the suburbs, we laid in bed awake, night after night after night, waiting for someone - ANYONE - to make some fucking noise already. I was practically BEGGING my neighbors to have some kind of domestic dispute late at night so I could JUST GET SOME SLEEP ALREADY.

It'll be okay. I'm excited for you.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterjonniker
I totally hear you on the driving thing. I moved to Manhattan right after college, promptly sold my car, and never drove again. Seven years later, I moved to LA where driving is unavoidable, but instead of being able to relearn on some comfortable back roads like when I was 16, I was forced out onto the freeway my very first time. It gets better, and easier, trust me. Now I'm one of thoe crabby people honking. (Sorry!)
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterLori
How great! YOu can find all sort of info about gardens and lawns at www.gardenweb.com. And you'll figure out the driving thing easily enough. And you know--you're in New Jersey, not outer Mongolia.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterRachel Cohen
Can you put the car seat in the middle so that he can see out the front? It made a HUGE difference with my Goddaughter, on the car-sickness front.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterGnightGirl
You made it! As usual, your post is hilarious...you've been missed. At least one thing is the same. Your blogity goodness feels like home, doesn't it?You'll meet some nice people soon. Best of luck to you.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterKaren Rani
Congratulations on the big move.

I find the best way to deal with weeds is the lawnmower. I have become very adept at getting the lawnmower up into the little raised gardens that surround my house. Admittedly I no longer have any nice flowers, and the rosebushes are now little stumps, but at least when my mom comes to visit she can't complain about the weeds!
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commentersuburban_lush
I love you. I love your blog.



May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterBarbara
Ah yes, the silence of the suburbs.

Wait until next weekend when someone wakes at 8am and decides to mow the lawn. Then he wakes up some other guy who thinks, "Oh yeah, I should mow the lawn today." And just when the first guy is done, the second guy has his coffee and starts up his mower. Which wakes up two more neighbors who think, "I guess I should mow today, too." Etc. until 8pm that night.

And then there's leafblower season and snowblower season...it will be like you never left the subway. ;-)

The lawn? Weeds are in. Did you know that most lawn weeds are edible? Just think of it as your Armageddon stockpile.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterjozet
You funny girl!

Mary, mom to many, also battling the weeds in my own little corner of suburbia...actually my corner of the world is called the boondocks.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterOwlhaven
Welcome to Suburbia!Actually, I will be joining you there soon as my husband I will moving into Our Very Own House (we're first time homeowners *is excited!* *bites nails*) at the end of May. We hope. If the mortgage people get it done by then.Anyway.As it stands right now, we're living in a small house that we've been renting for the last 4 years, and we're Very Far Away from our neighbors. Huge Lot. HUGE. You could put two more of our house in the backyard, but I wouldn't if I were you. There's a lot of poison ivy back there around two of the trees. So, while yes, we're in a neighborhood, the only thing that's noisy is the dog two houses Way Down that barks at anything that moves and our elderly neighbors that like to mow every other day as soon as it's above sixty out. Of course I'm not counting the train three blocks away and the ambulances that drive past our house at least once a day (we live near a train track AND an EMS station, what luck!), because you know, after a while, you don't really hear them anymore.Agh, I ramble. Sorry, I'll stop.You'll get used to the silence like I'll get used to having much closer neighbors, right?Findahappyplace, FindAHappyPlace, FINDAHAPPYPLACE! Whew.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterAlexandria
Yes! Dandelion greens in salad are very sza sza.

It'll get better... is there a park nearby where you could, maybe, meet other moms?
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterjess
For the first three weeks after our latest move, we hid from our unpacked boxes (and our demolished kitchen) by living in the furnace room, sustaining ourselves on a cheese-based diet. Once we saw a mouse, and instead of being freaked out by germs we mainly worried that it might have brought along luggage, and think of the extra clutter. Also, some of us peed in a bucket. (Truth. Water was off.)

We only came out of there (each of us speaking in 2nd-person plural, our eyeballs possessed of a phosphorous glow) when they hooked up the cable.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterDave Thomas
Weeds? How can you worry about weeds? You have a lawn! Think of all the things you can put on it. A garden gnome? Flamingos? Statue of the Virgin Mary? (That's what I'm putting on our lawn when we move to the suburbs.) Flags of every nation?

I'm glad you survived your move intact with only a few problems (which I'm sure don't detract from your beauty. I hope you get used to the quiet soon. Let us know if you start experiencing bourgeois emptiness of stifling conformity and want to say things like "You're boring me. I already have a husband." And drink. That, or write upbeat humor books about married life. Then we'll start to worry.
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterozma
We moved from the inner city to the outer semi-rural suburbs just after Christmas so I'm making all sympathetic eyes over here. Sometimes this peaceful bucolic bliss is just so bloody SILENT I have to scream. But that frightens the kangaroos. So I don't.

(And that Rick, he's on with Chrissy's best friend now I hear.)
May 4, 2006 | Unregistered Commentersuse
Finslippy, you are my hero and my goddess. I just bought a house last June and, while I am okay with the lawn (this is because I used to be married to a butch dyke and we spent a lot of time shopping at Home Depot together), I am hopeless with all other things, such as trying to figure out how to get the air filter out of the furnace. Which I only learned about from a home-owning friend who remarked casually that it was about time to change the air filter in his furnace. Which panicked me, so I crawled under the house, but I wasn't even sure which of the giant metal structures *was* the furnace, so I started crying a little bit (I'm divorced and sometimes I miss my butch dyke wife, who used to do all these useful housey things) and crawled back out and emailed the previous owner, who is very kind and sent me a detailed email explaining how to recognize the furnace and how to get the air-filter cover off. (It involves a screwdriver.)

I have not actually gone back under the house yet, but I might soon.

Also, I have not yet unpacked all my boxes, and it has been 11 months. But I did recently paint one wall of my kitchen.
May 5, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterMargaret Price
Ah Jersey. Those were the days. (My homestate...).

It might not be a bad thing that he doesn't like car. Perhaps it will carry over until he's about 16 and then you won't have to worry about him driving.

And lawns? Do what the Jerseyites do. Hire a groundskeeper :)
Oh, the terrible silence. When I visit my in-laws in Iowa, I cannot get a lick of sleep (also, the DARKNESS! It is so dark outside of the city!) and they all mock me terribly.I am so pleased that at least you have gotten through the actual move part with your sanity (if not your skin) more or less intact. The car thing will get better, with practice and alternate (less frightening) routes, I think.
May 5, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterAlexa
You're where I was three years ago, when we moved to a suburb and a house and had no idea what to do with either. Among the offbeat but useful items the internets have got me are What's That Bug?, a compendium of the aliens living in your yard (and house); Weed ID, with which to do the same on your lawn aliens; and You Grow Girl, just the sort of thing to make you feel like you can not only accomplish something useful outside, but you can treat yourself to a t-shirt as congratulations.

As for the driving anxiety, I had that too when I moved. I find that now that there are Google Maps, it helps tremendously to plan each drive first, and to look at the hybrid map to imagine what the landmarks might look like when I get to turns and such. I found it helped me get the rhythms of the streets, so that I could drive a little more confidently. You can even, on close-ups, see if there's a left-turn lane at major intersections. Sounds crazy, but it can be a big relief to know what to expect.
May 5, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterEffective Nancy
Buy a goose. She'll keep your grass nice and tidy ;-)
May 5, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterSarah

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