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Mother’s Day 2017

I’m spending three days this week in San Francisco with the team at Every Mother Counts who see Mother’s Day as one of the best vehicles to try and raise money for the incredible work that they do around the globe. One of their current grants supports Jennie Joseph who runs the Easy Access Women’s Health Clinic in Orlando, and as a board member I joined the team last December when we traveled to Florida to hear about Jennie’s ongoing needs.

Two women die every day giving birth in the United States, and the obstacles many low-income and at-risk women face to basic pre and postnatal care should make us ashamed and screaming angry at the state of healthcare in this country.

Jennie serves this at risk population in central Florida despite every obstacle our society and government has thrown in her way. She is the greatest of human beings, and I have never met anyone more dedicated to the cause of maternal health. She is a woman who serves other women when they are in need of it most.

You can buy an assortment of Mother’s Day gifts while also supporting this life-saving work.

If you need more ideas, here are a few of my own wishlist items that my children will not get me. And that’s okay. I get to spend every morning, every day, and every night with my girls. This is a treasure, a privilege, and a recipe for a nuclear war if Marlo starts her period before Leta leaves for college.

PSST, LETA: I WANT THIS GODDAMN TOASTER, KID.

Carpe The Fucking Diem print, coffee mug
KitchenAid 1.25-Liter Electric Kettle
Happy Legs Club

Eparé Dairy Frother (works with soy, almond and other nut milks)
Love Goodly bi-monthly subscription box (featuring vegan, toxin-free beauty & wellness products)
EMC Orange Rose Tank

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life
BELLA LINEA 2 Slice Toaster with Extra Wide Slot
CamKix Camera Lens Kit for iPhone 6 / 6S (includes 8x Telephoto Lens / Fisheye Lens / 2 in 1 Macro Lens and Wide Angle Lens / Tripod / Phone Holder / Hard Case / Velvet Bag / Cleaning Cloth)

Their age difference is beneficial to at least one of them →← Life is good because she isn't yet blogging about my parenting

You can never have enough imagery of the wackos you live with

I have to apologize for not remembering exactly when Jennifer Maher sent me this portrait of Coco  along with one she painted of Marlo buried underneath a mountain of stuffed animals, only that it happened right as the Downward Brain Spiral of Marathon Training and Veganism 2016 had reached a deafening pitch. Even if it was after that spiral, I still couldn’t hear it.

She once sent me a portrait of Marlo’s security blanket, and I was right! That blanket did not survive Marlo’s toddlerhood—very few people did—but we have that painting to remind us of the years our brains bled out of our ears good times.

Jennifer sent a lovely note with both portraits, and that note is now packed in a box that is buried underneath a giant mountain of chairs in my garage. Marlo collects stuffed animals, I collect chairs. I will admit that her habit is far less expensive, easier to store, and more acceptable to dry hump. This hasn’t stopped me, though.

If the threat of losing my planet isn’t going to stop me from being an absolute embarrassment, I wonder what would? I am 41 years old and have yet to run into a religion that can guilt me into acting my age. Oh! But you know what can, for like, five whole minutes? You printing out pages of my website and threatening to use them against me in court. That was a fun five minutes.

I have been decorating rooms little by little in the new house, and there was a blank corner in the living room staring at me like the back side of the bald heads of a string of men I went on first dates with last fall. All of those men, completely bald. Like, five in a row. It’s not a bad thing at all, but it made me wonder if this is peculiar to Utah? Is it an age thing? What about my energy is attracting bald men into my life? Do not even think about answering that question with an educated or insightful answer.

What that DOES answer, however, is whether or not I’m going to write about you on my website. I love it when people ask me this question, as if there is nothing else going on in my life other than scheming to divulge private details of a conversation or interaction. I’m sorry, you’re important to me—you really are—but I have no desire to write a blog post about how dirty your house was when I stopped by to drop off the coat your kid left at my house. I mean, my god. How can you live in such squalor? The stench, even! It’s been three days and my nose hairs still haven’t grown back! Also, here’s your name, phone number, and street address so that all of us can drive by really slowly, lean our heads out of the window of the car and shake them at you in judgment.

I live with two packrats, a herding dog who regularly rolls in her own shit, and I am smelling my shirt right now to see if I can detect the aroma of last night’s dinner on it. I am not judging you. I am instead using that brain power to survive daily life.

I do, however, have to warn you when I put your face in an Instagram photo that there is a high likelihood that a certain sleazy group of people will spend hours if not days of their lives looking up everything they possibly can about you to find the names and addresses of ex-husbands, previous employers, and ages and names of your kids. And they will inevitably say something really mean about your hair. Or your thighs.

No, really. Someone once said that my friend looked like she could crush someone’s skull with her thighs, and my friend was like DAMN STRAIGHT I CAN.

If called as a witness, I’d have to tell the jury what I saw, that, yes, her thighs are that spectacular.

I guess I did reveal the baldness of specific men just now, yes, but I could have spilled so much more. And like I said, being bald isn’t a bad thing. You will note that it did not prevent me from continuing to say yes to going on subsequent first dates with bald men. It’s not a deal breaker. Not like, oh, you know… being unemployed.

But we shall not go there. Not today, Jesus.

Today I’m showing you a tiny glimpse of how I decorated a wall in my room that reminded me of what a horrible nightmare it’s been to try and date in Utah, for all sorts of reasons, baldness not among them. You should commission a portrait for Mother’s Day if there’s still time. Or maybe one as a present for a summer birthday. I GOT TO THE POINT EVENTUALLY.

Life is good because she isn't yet blogging about my parenting →← Returning a favor and a tiny peek behind the scenes