My Life as a Mercedes Lady

I’ve been driving a Mercedes for three years.  That is a sentence I never thought I would type, but it’s true.  And let me tell you, it’s been pretty cool, but now it’s time to say goodbye.

In 2010, Mary Tyler Dad was gifted a three year lease of a new Mercedes Benz C Class compact luxury sedan through his company after being awarded the distinction of “Inventor of the Year.”  Now beside the fact that I am married to an honest to goodness inventor, being gifted a brand spanking new car was pretty damn cool.  It happened only eleven months after losing our daughter to cancer, and I won’t lie, for the first time in a long, long time, it felt like the Universe was smiling down on us in that moment.

Me and another "Mercedes Lady" or "Benz Frenz."  Both of our husbands were awarded with the car lease that shiny night.  We both opted for black, too, as had the fun task of even getting to select interior and exterior colors.  Notice the pretty white bow, which just happened to match the white rose I wore on my waist that night.  Such a lovely evening it 'twas.
Me and another “Mercedes Lady” or “Benz Frenz.” Both of our husbands were awarded with the car lease that shiny night. We both opted for black, too, as had the fun task of even getting to select interior and exterior colors. Notice the pretty white bow, which just happened to match the white rose I wore on my waist that night. Such a lovely evening it ’twas.

Full disclosure, I was way more excited than my husband.  He has sort of gritted his teeth through these 36 months of Mercedes driving.  I married myself a solid New England practical man — not great when you long for a French door refrigerator, but super cool in the retirement years, I am told. There was always a sense, I think, that he found the Mercedes distasteful, excessive, a little bit ridiculous.

Not me.  I have loved every single second sitting behind the wheel of that gorgeous car.  It had things that our other cars lacked, like a door handle that allowed you to get out of the car without powering down the window to extricate yourself from the outside.  Or a moon roof instead of gaudy maroon velour fabric that needed to be held up by thumb tacks.  The Mercedes introduced me to my now favorite two word combo ever:  heated seats.

Yes, make no doubt about it, I will always and forever look back fondly on my three years as a Mercedes Lady.  Except for those early moments of intense guilt driving a German luxury car around my Orthodox Jewish neighborhood. Oy vey, even non-practicing Catholics can feel that guilt.

To understand why I have loved this car so much, it’s important to have a wee bit of back story.  I grew up in the south suburbs of Chicago, the granddaughter of immigrants.  Lots of the kids I grew up with had fathers who worked in factories, not offices.  My own Dad was a bus driver in my very early years, a job he was happy to have after several episodes of unemployment in my infancy and toddler years.  Growing up the youngest of four, money was tight, but we always had what we needed.

Things loosened up considerably when my two older sisters tested their wings outside the home.  We were the first generation in my family to go to college.  Both of my parents were smart, but grew up in a time when college education wasn’t considered mandatory — it was a privilege, a luxury.  When you are raised by immigrants, practicality is important.  Honestly, my family’s story is the story of the American Dream.  My parents did better than their parents financially and we (my husband and I) are doing better than my parents.  I am grateful for everything I have.

That said, cars were never a big deal for me.  I was not impressed by them, never coveted them, didn’t understand them as an expression of status.  Sure, my Dad drove used Cadillacs, but that was, again, more a reflection of practicality than excess or status.  He had the oddest knack for and pride in finding a garage kept Cadillac with low mileage previously owned by a church going widow.  He would find a new/old Cadillac when the last new/old Cadillac gave up the ghost.  Those cars were awesome and perhaps the imprint for my secret love of luxury.  I potently remember sitting in the back seat, cigarette smoke swirling around me from the closed windows and two smoking parents, and Montolvani playing on the 8 track.  Used Cadillacs were a sweet, sweet ride.

My husband, like my father, doesn’t see the sense in a new car.  The argument is that they drop in value the instant you drive them off the lot.  And my husband also doesn’t like to have a car payment.  Thrifty and practical.  The two cars we had in September 2010 were a 1999 Toyota Camry and a 1994 Chrysler LaBaron.  Now you can see why the shiny black Mercedes got my juices flowing.  Well, when we drove that Mercedes into our spot, we immediately gifted the 1994 LeBaron to two close friends who needed some new wheels.  Pay it forward, you know?

The "glamour shot" that our friend took of said LeBaron just a few weeks ago when it finally went out to pasture.  Notice the rich bordello-like interior.  Nothing says bordello like plush maroon upholstery, amIrite?
The “glamour shot” that our friend took of said LeBaron just a few weeks ago when it finally went out to pasture. Notice the rich bordelloish interior. Nothing says bordello like plush maroon upholstery, amirite?

A few words about the LeBaron.  I used to call it the Bordello Car.  It was my Mom’s old car.  Not bad, really.  She liked it because it was small and she could drive and park it easily.  She kept her Carmex in the arm rest.  My Mom was never far from a little jar of Carmex.  The ashes from her cigarettes were still in the ashtray.  After she was diagnosed with her brain tumor and her death within the year, well, you get sentimental about things like cigarette butts and ashes.

With my Mom no longer needing a car and my daughter recently diagnosed with cancer, my Dad gifted us the LeBaron so that my husband could get back and forth to work and hospital quickly.  It was a godsend, honestly.  I am very grateful to my Dad to this day for that kind gesture.  The 1999 Camry, our fancy car, even in 2010, was, in fine tradition, purchased from a little old church going lady.  She lived at the retirement community where I worked as a social worker.  She posted her car for sale and BAM, a couple of days later I was feeling pretty damn fancy myself.  This was back in 2006, so the car was only seven years old at the time.

Does this give you a sense of what an aberration the Mercedes was for us?

One thing I have learned in these three years of being a Mercedes Lady is that people look and treat you differently when you roll up in one.  Some people give you the silent nod of approval, an unspoken, “We are of like mind, like status, of similar ilk and quality, you are approved of . . .” For others, it is the exact opposite, a more hostile sense of rage, “You rich bitch.  Just who the fuck do you think you are, driving a Mercedes?”  You know what I mean.

The truth is, I am neither of those assumptions.  I am not a rich bitch.  Well, I might be a bitch, certainly sometimes, but I’m not rich.  Full disclosure, Mary Tyler Dad would argue with me on that one, maintaining that in the world economy, we are, indeed, rich when compared to the global population that exists on dollars a day and rice.  And even though I may pass as” similar ilk” to the other moms in the drop off lane at Mary Tyler Son’s private pre-school, I know otherwise.  I know that I am a 1999 Camry gal sitting behind a Mercedes steering wheel.

I had some great and good times as a Mercedes Lady, I did, indeed.  And while life was not better in a Mercedes, it was absolutely nicer.  Hell, the heated seats alone have changed my life.  Yessiree, I have loved my 36 months as a Mercedes Lady.  I will look upon them fondly for the rest of my days.

This toy Mercedes will now have to suffice.  And honestly?  It's not much smaller than the actual car.  As much as I loved my Mercedes, ain't no way a compact C Class was gonna cut it for a family of four.
This toy Mercedes will now have to suffice. And honestly? It’s not much smaller than the actual car. As much as I loved my Mercedes, ain’t no way a compact C Class was gonna cut it for a family of four.

Auf Wiedersehen, my lovely C Class Mercedes Benz.  I will miss you. You were dope and fly and made me feel pretty damn fancy at a pretty damn sad time in my life.  Ich danke ihnen.

Oh No, He Didn’t! Jon Stewart Talks Smack About Chicago

I love Jon Stewart, I do, I do, I do.  But making headlines today is the seven minute smack down he gave to Chicago last night on The Daily Show.  You can watch it here in its entirety.

The back story is simple.  Chicago’s beloved SEARS Tower (and yes, some may call it the Willis Tower, but they are not from Chicago and are wrong) was technically dethroned as tallest building in the good old U S of A yesterday by the shiny One World Trade Center in New York City.  Not because the building is taller, mind you, but because of the spire that sits up top.

Say it ain’t so, Joe.

Well, dear Mr. Stewart, all in good fun, raised a glass to the loser Chicago in the tallest building in America contest, magnanimously offering a toast of champagne.  Never mind that in Chicago we toast to Old Style or Schlitz, or more commonly, au jus in a shot glass.

Photo courtesy of MTM.  And Candlelite is one of the best neighborhood joints out there.
Photo courtesy of MTM. And Candlelite is one of the best neighborhood joints out there.

But then our illustrious Mayor Rahm Emanuel opened his skinny trap and the gloves came off.  In true ‘chip on the old shoulder’ Chicago style, Rahm complained at a press conference that if a spire looks and acts like an antenna, its a GD antenna.  You see, to qualify as tallest building, you need a structural element to elevate you, not an antenna.  An international board of objective architects deemed the metal thingey on top of One World Trade Center a spire, not an antenna, even though its function is antenna-ish.

Chicago is famous for its chip, or what I like to think of as its “middle child syndrome.”  Sandwiched between the warmer and more vapid LA, and the cooler (not referring to climate here, folks) and more cosmopolitan New York City, Chicago is that stocky cousin from the midwest.  Nice enough, sure, great to visit, but, yeah, never gonna make it at the cool kids table other than as a plus one.

Now, mind you, that doesn’t reflect my personal feelings about Chicago.  I love this place.  It is the only home I have ever known.  Every day I am lucky enough to roll down Lake Shore Drive, in rain or sun or snow, I can’t help but marvel that I get to live here.  Like live here in Chicago, not freaking Schaumburg, but Chicago.   (No offense, Schaumburg, but you know what I mean, and if you don’t, well then, by all means, take offense.)

Chicago sign at the Art Institute of Chicago, photo courtesy of MTM
Chicago sign at the Art Institute of Chicago, photo courtesy of MTM

Lots of folks who call New York home think Chicago provincial.  That’s cool.  We don’t mind that.  In a lot of ways, we are.  We’re thicker, too.  It could be all that deep dish pizza Jon Stewart was so hopped up about last night.  HA!  The funniest thing is that after a long week with a fever and infection, I ordered in some deep dish for my family last night.  Had it for lunch today, too!  Woo whee, deep dish pizza is the shizz.  True story.

So have your fun, Jon Stewart.  Make light of Chicago being the “murder capital” of the world.  Yessiree, gang violence is hilarious, right?!  Kids being shot on their front porches is totally game for late night yuks.  Have at it, Sir.  Truth is, I’m good with all of it, cause when I go to sleep at night, it’s in Chicago, greatest damn city in America.

See, I TOLD YOU we Chicago folks have a chip on our shoulders.  Shudder, I actually have something in common with Rahm Emanuel.  Imma go pour some celery salt in my wounds . . .

The jewel on the prairie.  Photo courtesy of MTM.
The jewel on the prairie. Photo courtesy of MTM.

Not a Box

One of my favorite books for the kiddos is called Not a Box by Antoinette Portis.

Not a Box

It is a great celebration and exploration of a child’s imagination, how a child can take a cardboard box and transform it into a race car or a rocket ship just by thinking it.  I love the pride of the featured bunny rabbit as he stands his ground with the naysayers who insist the bunny is merely sitting in a cardboard box.

Bunny knows better and I empathize with him.

I have a box, too, that a lot of people would look at and see just a box.  I know better, though.

NAB 1

In July I wrote about the need to clear out my daughter’s closet to make room for the new baby boy we were hoping to adopt.  Well, it turns out that writing about clearing out the closet was more of a psychological step than an actual declaration of my actions.  I actually didn’t get around to clearing out Donna’s closet until mid-October, after a month of pulling baby clothing out of a hamper left on the dining room floor, and four years exactly to the week of her death.

That was no way to welcome Mary Tyler Baby into our family.  It was time, and so I got about the hard work of going through every stitch of clothing Donna every wore, from birth to death.  Most of it I packed up and gave to three separate friends, each with a little girl of their own who could use Donna’s clothing.  I made very conscious choices and while I can’t say it felt right, per se, it did feel necessary.  And oddly hopeful.

What I couldn’t bear to part with remains in the box pictured above.  A very few treasured pieces that most recall Donna to me.  Her dance recital costume, her sailor suit, the pajamas she was wearing when she died in our bed.

Donna had tremendous style, which is a really odd thing to say about such a little girl, but it’s true.  When I think of her, my memories are often attached to certain things she was wearing.  A red beret on Thanksgiving day, pink sequin mary jane gym shoes for school, a black t-shirt with dandelion seeds blowing across it that were paired with leopard velour pants Donna wore the first time she sat upright and played on our bed, toppling over every few minutes with giggles loud and clear.

All of those treasured things now rest in this box.  All that is left of Donna’s time here on this earth of ours now rest in this box.  The last few scraps of fabric that I am able to justify keeping for those moments I really need to indulge my grief now rest in this box.  So, you can see, this is not a box.  It is more — much, much more.

This is not a box, but an avenue for me on the road to Donna.

This is not a box, but a time traveling system that transports me back to those very few moments I mothered a daughter.

This is not a box, but the warm embrace of a joyful, sweet little girl who loved so much about this world of ours.

This is not a box, but my ticket to a less complicated time where things made more sense and sadness wasn’t so heavy.

This is not a box, but a key to the best parts of myself that Donna helps me nurture every day.

This is not a box, but evidence that once upon a time there was a girl named Donna and she was amazing.

So you see, my friends, imagination is a wonderful, wonderful thing.  It can allow me to transform a box full of fabric into a rocket ship made out of hope that carries me back in time to be with the most extraordinary girl I ever met. And the naysayers amongst you can’t tell me anything different, because I know better.

This is not a box.  Clearly.

NAB 2

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