Too Soon to Talk About Next Year?

English: Two New Year's Resolutions postcards
 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I’ve had a great year. That’s the truth, no matter how ways I count in 2013.

Whether in babies (our #2 arrived in April) or books (2 eBooks, 1 paperback), even countries visited (3).

I love the year end countdowns that recap the past 12 months. But over dinner this week we were looking ahead to next year.

New Year’s resolutions have a bad rap; from unused gym memberships to abandoned manuscripts, they are made in the passionate hope of a blank slate of 12 months ahead. They have such a bad reputation for being broken that the most cynical no longer set them. Columnists now advise New Years “themes” for your year so you don’t have to feel so bad when you abandon them as you put away your Christmas tree.

My resolution last year was to make 52 short films. I came very close.

For 2014, I have my eyes set on something even more challenging. I wanted a new goal that isn’t related to writing, teaching, or exercising.

I chose something I’ve wanted to try for a long time but haven’t had the courage, stamina or reason to really get behind.

After trying Meatless Mondays, and meat free weekends, I’m going whole hog – to use an inappropriate phrase – vegetarian. That’s right: for a whole year, I’m going to go without any meat. I’ve always admired vegetarians for living much simpler than than us meat eaters who tax the earth with our animal farms. Lately, when frying or pulling skin from chicken or cutting into slices of steak, my mind skids to the humans in cages in Planet of the Apes.

What habits are you thinking about working on for 2014? What are your victories for 2013?

 

 

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Givin' it to Yourself

photo(3)One of the (many) challenges about the holidays is they often mean you’re on your spouse’s turf. Whether staying in the house he grew up, visiting college friends, or smiling through the extended family dinner, you might feel the strain of not doing things your way. Even after 8 years of Christmas visits to the northern part of the US, I still long for the warmer temperatures of Florida, my own friends, and favorite haunts. These longings don’t need long to be fulfilled however, as my husband and I are part of the lucky few: every year we have enough vacation time to subject each other to this cycle. First we see his family, and then mine.

This year the cold, the second child, the jet lag were conspiring to make me particularly grumpy.

Needless to say I counted myself lucky when a friend let me crash her mommies night out. In place of the innocuous, “Oh, you live in the Middle East, that’s far,” comments and then blank stares I often get from people, this was a group of gorgeous, smart women. They all had two (several of them three children) were well within their target weight for their size, dressed fashionably, were wearing makeup, and didn’t interrupt if someone was speaking.

And they were all wondering if they were good mothers.

“I try to be a good mother,” one woman is completing a residency in psychiatry said. She described a seven day week where she cooks homemade meals for her children everyday, alternating her parenting challenges with stories of how people in her profession are routinely killed by their more disturbed patients.

Each of them had a version of this, wondering if they were doing their children justice, critiquing themselves on how they were doing in various areas: challenging the kids in extracurriculars, helping them with homework, doing the right thing in sleep training.

I had an Oprah moment.

“Tomorrow, I want us to wake up and the first thing we say when seeing ourselves in the mirror should be: I am a good mother.”

They looked at me blankly.

“Whatever they’re getting from you, they’re better off than if they didn’t have you in their lives,” I said.

I wanted them to give to themselves what they give to their children and husbands: acceptance. Love. Support.

There are so many cliches around the holidays which still fail to mitigate rampant commercialism.

The best things in life are free is perhaps the most flagrant one.

This Christmas I want to give to all mothers (and fathers, though I rarely hear men talk about their fears about parenting) a gift: the gift of confidence.

We are all doing the best we can. And relaxing into that truth make this your best Christmas ever.

I know it will for me.

What’s one gift you’d give someone this year that they really need?

 

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Wordless Wednesday: The World is a Pigmentocracy

Driving in gridlocked traffic earlier in the week, a BBC Worldservice piece on pigmentocracy in Martinique resonated with me. People prefer lighter skin not only in the Caribbean but in all the former colonies. This form of reverse racism is appalling.

A more traditional form of bigotry reared it’s head with the awarding of Miss America to Nina Davuluri, an American woman of Indian descent, with many feeling that she was not American enough.

As a woman with darker skinned female Indian relatives, I corroborate the pressure to be as fair as possible.

Bleach based face creams can be found on shelves all over Asia and the Middle East. Ironically a dominant Indian brand is called “Fair and Lovely“.

While we looked at photos last night of the gorgeous Nina, a friend of Caribbean background commented “she’s a dark Indian.” And she is darker than the Aishwarya types who have represented India at Miss Universe or Miss World.

 

 

 

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