Friday, August 08, 2008

Housewives Must Shoulder Blame For Global Credit Crunch

While we were on holiday, the annual fortnight in Devon -
(Actually, 'holiday' is NOT a word that I would use myself, more like 'same shit, different place', because contrary to popular belief there isn't an industrious horde of keen little fairies who skip blithely at the chance to load the washing machine, empty the washing machine, hang up the laundry, fold the laundry, put the laundry away, sweep the floors, mop the floors, make the beds, make the breakfast, lunch, tea and supper, and provide non-judgemental, unconditional, instantaneous affection and approval at the drop of a mob-cap... no fairies, just ME. You will notice that the list of chores is dramatically reduced because I was 'on holiday'...
Now before I get emails telling me to pull myself together and stop whinging, the lack of house fairies is not the bit I mind. Really. It is the next bit that makes me want to skewer someone's eyeball through with a blunt knitting needle.
'Whose eyeball would that be?' I hear you ask. Take a wild guess...)
- we were having dinner with a friend when the conversation turned to the credit crunch.
"Women just have to accept..." said The Husband, "that they will have to go out to work now."

Because obviously the whole damn lot of us girls have been malingering at home for the last sixty thousand years, lolling about on chaises longues while scoffing chocolate and gin by the bucketload and having a kip.
And now the world has been forced to its knees in an economic recession because of our lazy, slothful, idle ways...




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Thursday, August 07, 2008

How Not to Throw a Dinner Party

The most useful piece of catering advice I have been given over the years is "Never Apologise". The idea is that if you don’t draw people’s attention to your ‘mistakes’ they will probably never notice.
The second most useful piece of catering advice, that I worked out for myself, is don’t swig too many glasses of white wine to steady your nerves before serving dinner to guests you really want to impress…
We had invited some of the other parents from school for dinner - the ones we have heard swearing at the school gate, whose children are often late and have forgotten their homework, who arrive in odd shoes (the children) or in pajamas (the parents), the ones we thought we would like because they seem just like us… Mrs Fussy Knickers was obviously not on the guest list.
Have I mentioned that our kitchen is the Smallest Kitchen in the World? Everyone arrived, and expressed the appropriate surprise that I owned a pair of high heels and that my Ugg boots are not permanently welded to my feet, and then proceeded to mill around my kitchen aimlessly. Under normal circumstances this would have been fine, however, I had not thought through the logistical nightmare of operating in a kitchen the size of a matchbox packed with sixteen ‘polite-and-middle-class-but-determined-to-get-sloshed-because-we’ve-paid-for-a-babysitter’ primary school parents. In an effort to look vaguely yummy mummy - that is slim AND gorgeous AND good at cooking, all at the same time - I had put on my favourite green leather peep-toes. I only ever wear heels at weddings and parties, and sadly there aren’t enough of either in a year to afford me much practice at actually walking in them without undue wobble. Throw in a couple of glasses of chilled vino blanco and you get the picture.

I was trying to throw together a salad of baby spinach, figs and feta in a suitably informal but inspired kind of way, when it all started to go haywire.

"Hope you like spinach!" I joked to a woman who had been watching my attempt at Nigella-like insouciance.
"Actually, I prefer it cooked," she replied. I pretended not to hear. "Are you going to make a dressing?" she asked.

I realised that I was not going to get to the fridge unobserved for the bottle of time-saving shop-bought vinaigrette. And that I had lobbed the last lemon half in the bin that afternoon because it was hard as a rock and someone was bound to inspect my fruit bowl. And everyone was watching, so I couldn’t fish it out and rinse it off. I reached for the Balsamic, only to find too late that the inner plastic cap that regulates the flow had miraculously disappeared and a huge torrent of vinegar poured into the bowl, immediately turning the sheep’s cheese an unappetising shade of sludge-brown. Trying to look as if everything was going swimmingly well, I picked up the extra-virgin olive oil and up-ended it over the salad. Nothing came out. It was completely empty.
"There!" I said definitively, plunging my hands into the careful arrangement of fruit and leaves and tossing it all about in a hopeless effort to distribute the ‘dressing’, "Balsamic-soused baby spinach!" and I swept the bowl onto the middle of the dining table with a flourish.
"Well, the beef looks lovely," said one of the Dads.
"A bit on the underdone side, perhaps?" said the woman who doesn’t eat raw spinach or anything else that hasn’t been thoroughly cremated, obviously.
"It is carpaccio of venison, actually…" I said -
"You do know that we are vegetarian?" said one of the other Mums
-"… in a pomegranate marinade."
"Oh my God, venison! That’s like deer, isn’t it?" said a woman, who was clearly on the ball.
"Yes. We have a friend who has an estate in Scotland."
"You mean he shot one of his deer?" said Mrs. On-the-Ball, horrified. "With a gun? So you could eat it?"
"Well, yes. I expect so. I don’t think he has a Light Saber," I said.
"You have a friend with an estate in Scotland?" said Mrs. Overcooked.
"Did someone say something about Star Wars?" said The Husband.
"There’s plenty of Wild Rice with toasted Pine Nuts, Almonds and Pistachios," I said to Mrs. Secret Vegetarian.
"Oh, my God, Michael has a Nut Allergy! Thank God you actually warned us in time," said Mrs. Overcooked, "or my husband might have ended up in anaphylactic shock on your kitchen floor!!"
"That would have been quite ghastly…" said Mrs. Secret Vegetarian looking straight at the collection of toast crumbs, wood lice, dried pasta and children’s crayons that I keep in case of emergencies just visible around the bottom of the fridge.
Under this kind of pressure, coupled with the effort of having to breathe in for six hours (in case I bulged in a very non-yummy mummy way over the top of my magic knickers) and the strain on my poor bunions, I think it is perfectly reasonable to have ended the evening dancing barefoot on the table with my elephant pants on my head pretending to be Obi-Wan Kenobi. Perfectly reasonable.

Anyway, now we have moved into a bigger house and I no longer have the Smallest Kitchen in the World, it seems sensible to have another party - although this time, Mrs Fussy Knickers is welcome…

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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Wit and Wisdom

Did you know that toothpaste works wonders on wasp stings? No, nor did I until last week. Cabbage juice sorts out bronchitis and anaemia, while a tincture made from horse radish, goose fat and turpentine is great for rheumatism. Apparently.


No, I haven't morphed into a Wise Old Crone over the last two months - Old Crone, possibly, but definitely not 'Wise'. I have been commissioned to write a book which required some research into home remedies, most of which did no more than positively encourage me to remain hale and hearty. Actually, the toothpaste proved to be a winner when Number Three stood on a sleepy, but understandably aggressive, wasp and got stung on the foot. I have not had occasion to try the cabbage juice remedy and not being decrepit enough yet, there has been no mixing up of ointments for rheumatism in my cauldron either.

The book is optimistically entitled "How To Be The Ultimate Housewife", not my choice of words I hasten to add and it caused much hilarity among various relatives of mine. I pointed out that knowing what to do and actually having the time to do it are two completely separate things. The publisher, in her wisdom, obviously felt my writing skills were convincing enough and therefore would not be requiring a visit of inspection to my house to check the practical application of my housewifely credentials. What Cheek! I am not a huge fan of dusting, I avoid ironing whenever possible and I rejoice in my speckledy brown carpets that disguise a liberal scattering of toast crumbs and require only an infrequent whizz over with the vacuum cleaner. Which is consequently, like my windowsills, a little dusty. I persuade myself that my mind is occupied with higher things (art and culture obviously, rather than cloud formation or astronomy) but the truth is, like most women, I find the whole 'housewife' thing paralysingly coma-inducing. Which is why the emphasis of the book is on saving time and sanity, about which I am eminently qualified to proselytise.

I was tickled to catch up with MotherPie and find her post Everything a Mom says. I went over to Merry Mama to read her account of a baby's asthma attack in Death, do not steal (love's life). Her emotional honesty is compelling as always. Kristin has posted a really heart-felt and thought-provoking piece in On the Dangers of Overthinking about what it means to share physical characteristics with one's children and whether the world's perception of our familial relationships changes if one is an adoptive mother and so does not share that physical tie. Slouching Mom has an amusing post about the complexities of children's social relationships which made me chuckle called The Alphas and The Betas. Veronica over at Toddled Dredge has a very useful product review about potties. Mayberry Mom tackles the perennial problem of balancing our principles with our standards when it comes to educating our children in About 978.58 miles, give or take. Happy Birthday to Jenny who has just turned 35 and made me giggle out loud in complete sympathy with her comments about Peak Performance. I'd much rather take a nap too, sadly. Mindy is talking about the gorgeous but embarrassing things your kid says in public in Now I know how I got my job and Jenn has written a great piece about Motherhood, Mentors and Mistakes which sums up exactly why I keep coming back here. It is so comforting to find you all still doing your stuff - your wit and wisdom keeps me sane.

Now, if you'll excuse me, my dodgy Housewife's Knee is playing up and I must go and prepare a draft of Juniper Berries and Quinine - otherwise known as a Gin and Tonic.







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Monday, August 13, 2007

Piles of Cash


Mrs. FussyKnickers called this morning, irritatingly perky. She wanted to arrange play-dates and I happened to mention that fitting everything in around my work was becoming more and more of A Juggling Act.

"Oh, you poor thing," she sighs. "Of course, we are lucky in that my husband earns so much money that I don't have to go out to work!"

There, bold as brass, she just came out and said it. WE HAVE PILES OF CASH...

I bit my lip and the play-date was arranged. She then mentioned that Super Brilliant Rich Husband was going into hospital for a day next week for a minor operation.

"How dreadful! Let me know if I can help you at all with the kids," I heard myself saying.

"That would be marvellous!" says Old FussyKnickers, "Because I have no idea how I will cope on my own." (Helpful Background Context: She has TWO children. I have FOUR.)

"Nothing serious, I hope?" I was dying to know what the problem was with Super Brilliant Rich Husband.

"Haemorrhoids," she whispered.


So there is a God after all.


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Sunday, August 12, 2007

The Trouble With Fish

We had gorgeous, creamy, succulent Lemon Sole for dinner last night with new potatoes and a crisp salad. Now I know this might seem extravagant, bearing in mind our Reduced Circumstances but I bought them quite some time ago when they were on special offer and put them in the freezer. The trouble with fish though, is that unless you wash the dishes Straight Away, the house smells like Billingsgate on a hot day for months afterwards... and I can be The Slatternly Housewife if I am tired or there is something good on telly or if it is a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday etc... The Husband redeemed himself somewhat by scrubbing the kitchen 'till it was spotless so not a whiff of fish remained.

The freezer is now pretty much empty. There is a large chicken defrosting on the side which I will roast today and attempt to stretch out to feed the tribe until Tuesday, but other than that there are two loaves of bread, an apple strudel, some sardines, a pepperoni pizza and three placentas.

Being a Heathen, none of my children have been christened and instead I intended to plant a tree to mark their entry into the world as I did with Number 1. I have therefore frozen their after-birth which provides marvellous compost if you pop it into the hole around the roots. Unfortunately, I still haven't got around to it, as I wanted their trees to be planted in the garden of their childhood home and we are still waiting for one of those. It doesn't seem a permanent enough tribute to plant trees while we live in rented accommodation and so we have carted around these three placentas every time we move house. At one point, they resided in the catering freezer of our old pub and on several occasions we had to divert the chef from cooking up what he thought was some very tasty-looking liver to the unwitting customers. Although, now that I can't afford to do any grocery shopping this week, perhaps he had the right idea?



Top Tips For Girls is a great website with lots of really useful advice like How To Support a Tall Bushy Plant (they don't mention the use of after-birth) and How To Get Rid of Kitchen Smells (they don't mention getting one's husband to clean up occasionally).

I wonder if they have any tips on how to feed the Hungry Hordes with just two loaves of bread and some fishes?

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Saturday, August 11, 2007

Having It All

We watched 'The Stepford Wives' last night - the 2004 movie version. It got me thinking about what it means to be a 'perfect wife' in the modern world.

The novel on which the film is based was written in 1972 by Ira Levin, and along with the original 1975 film version, falls into the horror/sci-fi genre. The modern movie though is quite definitely a comedy, although a weak one at best, and is given the predictable Hollywood 'love conquers all happy-ever-after' ending.

Culturally, I think that is quite significant. The idea that women might be turned into submissive pliant robots, programmed to pander to men's every need, by husbands threatened by high-achieving high-earning wives and that it would make them happy, may well have seemed horrific at the height of Feminism's Second Wave. Now, of course, the concept is just farcical.

But is it? Even though he doesn't place his wife in the Female Improvement System the heroine's husband admits that ever since they met she has beaten him at everything - she is better educated, better salaried, quicker, cleverer, more successful, even more sexually adept.
"Well, don't I get anything?" he says.
"You got me,"she replies.
"No, I got to hold your purse."

The other husbands agree. They married "wonder women", "supergirls", "Amazon queens" and so what does that make them?
"We're the girl."
"And we don't like it."

There is a conflict between a woman's quest to fulfil her potential and the possibility of insulting her husband's sense of masculine identity. It does not work the other way around. Do women feel threatened by high-achieving high-earning partners?

The politics of gender, particularly in terms of role assumption, play out in this house on a daily basis. I earn in a day what The Husband earns in a week, but having put my career on hold for the past five years while bringing up the children, I have been immersed in the mundane minutae of domestic life. It is difficult to leave it all behind. Our circumstances have meant I have felt obliged to go back to work part-time, but the guilt of 'leaving' the children and the home means the financial rewards come at a price. I still cook every meal, still get up in the night for the kids, still take on the household management... My female identity has been shaped by this. It is all part of what makes me feel like a woman, sadly. It is still the defining experience of the majority of women, the world over. The money doesn't make me feel feminine, but it does make me feel empowered, valuable, confident in a way all that domesticity didn't. Couldn't.

Can we have it all? Do men ever ask that question?

Excuse me, I must ask The Husband to put the bins out...




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Friday, August 10, 2007

A Room Of My Own

I have mentioned before Virginia Woolf's most sensible advice that "a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is going to write." I share My Office with the second fridge, two large recycling containers, the gas boiler, ironing board, mop and assorted buckets. This is because My Office is actually a tiny - (I hesitate to use the word "room") - a tiny area just off the kitchen. Really no more than a Large Cupboard. As such, I am constantly interrupted by Number 1 wanting to know where his clean jeans are; by Number 2 asking if we can go to the park; by Number 3 demanding something to eat; by Number 4 who wants to press all the buttons on my computer; by The Husband wondering if I know where his keys/wallet/the children's shoes/new lavatory paper/the telephone/cigarettes/letters that arrived two weeks ago and he left on the kitchen table are. It is certainly not conducive to writing the great masterpiece that lurks just Out Of Reach beneath the surface and requires extensive periods of Soul-Searching and Quiet Contemplation for it to incubate and begin to take form. Actually, My Office is not conducive to getting any serious work done of any kind, even the run of the mill copywriting that is our bread-and-butter.

However, all is not lost. I have found that My Office has an extension, an annexe, a spare room. It looks like a shower cubicle to the untrained eye, but it is in fact A Room Of My Own - My Study - where I can indulge in some serious concentration and meditation ALONE. Unfortunately it is only available for a limited time per day. If I wait until The Husband has left for work, Number 1 doesn't surface until lunchtime anyway, put Breakfast TV on for the middle kids (I know , I know...) and put Number 4 down for his nap, I might just get a whole six minutes of Peace and Quiet in the shower. I've figured out, that if I can get six minutes uninterrupted thinking time every day, it will only take me... Oh.... SEVENTY-THREE YEARS to write The Best-selling Novel. I shall invest in a waterproof pen immediately.


Have had a Cunning Plan to solve the minor problem of having no money to pay the rent. I have changed the date of the Standing Order which transfers the money directly from my bank to the landlord's account. No, all right, perhaps it doesn't exactly solve the problem and will require the whole family to skulk around in large hats whenever we go out as the landlord lives opposite our front door, but it buys me another week in which to think about how I am going to solve the problem.

If you want me, I'll be in My Study.


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