Toddler Ten Commandments

These Toddler Ten Commandments were handed down generations ago, written, scribbled actually, on the underside of cereal boxes with crayons. Anthropologists recently unearthed, from landfills miles deep in petroleum fortified disposable diapers, these Toddler Commandments and are currently verifying their providence.  True story.

Toddler Girl Crying

1.  Thou shalt not do anything asked of you only once.  Repeating things is good for our parents as it will prepare them for a lifetime of needing to do this with us.

2.  Thou shalt prefer sugar, in any form, above all other flavors.

3.  Thou shalt approach grandparents or other such malleable adults who appear especially impressed with our cuteness for those big ticket items our parents deny us.

4.  Thou shalt never go to the bathroom on demand without first exercising the power of, “NO!”

5.  Thou shalt covet our neighbors’ toys, proving the theory that OKT (“other kids’ toys”) are invariably better than our own.

6.  Thou shalt request macaroni-and-cheese at every single meal.

7.  Thou shalt not submit easily at the end of the day.  “Do not go gently into the night,” is not a metaphor about death, people, it is the banner call of toddlers everywhere.

8.  Thou shalt lose crucial single pieces of puzzles, toys, and Legos, making the toy’s proper usage impossible, though still within the possibility of findability, making disposal prohibited.

9.  Thou shalt sense when our parents are coming to the end of their proverbial ropes, in danger of denying us necessary privileges, and smile and look all innocent adorableness until the threat of denial has passed.

10.  Thou shalt incite the fear of adults in airplanes by our mere presence.  If we meltdown, we are only living up to our reputation.  If we do not meltdown, we are impressing those around us, thereby increasing our access to sugar, macaroni-and-cheese, and toys.

Toddler Boy Crying

Happy Donna Day! It’s a Good Thing!

This is one of dozens of blog posts that will be published today, Valentine’s Day, to raise awareness for St. Baldrick’s, the largest private funder of research for pediatric cancer.  All of these posts honor Donna, Good Things inspired by her, and were written by some of the most amazing people I have the privilege to circle the sun with — Thank you, blogging community!

Donna on scooter 

Valentine’s Day sucks for a lot of people.  It makes us cranky.  When they’re good, they’re really, really good, but when they’re bad, oh man, they’re awful. Case in point:

Best Valentine’s Day Ever:  1994.  I was a young, single, dating gal on the make.  I had moved into my own apartment a year or two prior.  One of those awful four plus ones you find in Lakeview, an architectural blemish to the better buildings that surround them.  It was a studio with gray carpeting, a green refrigerator, and one window that looked into a light well.  But I loved it.  It was my small, stifling home and it had its charms.

I was newly dating a couple of young men and there was much promise in the air.  One was a handsome sound engineer/musician from Spain.  Barcelona. Barth-e-lona.  Need I say more?  The other was a tall Irish lad, broodish and angsty, with a day job and music aspirations as well.  I met the tall Irish boy (Irish American, Northwest side, yo) for lunch at a small Italian restaurant in Streeterville.  I took a cab and he was waiting for me at the table with a dozen red roses.  Swoon.  It was impossibly Breakfast at Tiffany’s.  He always made me feel like Audrey Hepburn.

After lunch I returned to the office and contemplated my evening date with the Spaniard.  He was much less Tiffany’s and much more Salvation Army, but no less appealing to me.  He met me at my apartment with, what else, but a dozen red roses.  He spied the other dozen on my table and hesistated but a moment before handing them to me.

Girl, you know I was feeling powerful that day.  Cupid had nothing on me.

Worst Valentine’s Day Ever:  1995.  Still young, still single, not dating much at all.  I had it bad for another musician.  Really bad.  Like puppy love on steroids bad.  He was involved in a serious relationship, but that didn’t stop him from making out with me in the file storage room of the law firm we worked at every chance we got.  Another musician with a day job.  Yes, I had a type.  Sigh.

We went to lunch at the Carousel Cafe, an old hole-in-the-wall diner on State Street.  As usual, our banter was lovely and flirtatious.  Not so usual was my admission that I loved him.  “I think you should know that I love you,” I offered timidly, sheepishly.  Yeah.  I think  he said something like, “Thank you,” in reply.  Kiss of death, of course.  I rode the bus home that night, sitting in the corner of the 36 Broadway not so silently weeping.  I get really, really ugly when I cry.  My nose and eyes pink up like an albino reindeer. Splotchy does nothing for me.

Worse yet was that when I finally made it home, to the comfort of that same stifling studio, there was a knock at the door.  I knew instinctively it was the guy from downstairs that was crushing on me and must have watched me walk in. I simply could not deal and that poor guy on the other side of the door knowing I was inside only made me feel worse than I already did.  I sucked in that moment.

Cupid had me by the throat that day.

So what’s my point?  And what does any of this have to do with Donna, or her Good Things?

Swinging on Swing 

My point is, that life goes on.  It gets better, and then it gets worse again. And then it gets better, only to nosedive into sorrow.  Valentine’s Day is the perfect day to reflect on the highs and lows of our lives.

I grew up.  I met the man of my dreams — better yet, I married him. Seriously.  I am married to the best human being I know.  That’s pretty cool.  But still, things happen.  You fall in love, you marry, you make babies, and those babies are diagnosed with cancer.  And die.

This is life, people.  In a nutshell.  It is hard and cruel and beautiful and wondrous.  Sometimes, all at the same time.

When Donna died Mary Tyler Dad and I resolved to start a charity in her name. Slowly, that charity took shape and form and is now an honest to goodness 501(c)(3).  Donna’s Good Things was created to provide joyful opportunities for kids in tough situations — moments of joy that would connect that child to the idea of possibility — that life sucks some of the time — a lot of the time for many, but that life is also a beautiful privilege.  We work hard to create Good Things for kids that lack them.  We work hard to encourage other folks to do Good Things.  For us, it is how we parent Donna now, and it is a means to fulfill her potential that cancer snuffed out too damn soon.

I wrote about Donna every day of September for Childhood Cancer Awareness Month.  In the midst of that month, one woman found Donna’s story and was so moved that she wanted to do a Good Thing to honor her. She had an idea to raise $ for St. Baldrick’s, the largest private funder of pediatric cancer research, $120 million and counting.  This woman wrote to me and asked for my support.  She wanted to shave her head and thought she could raise $5,000 to do it — would I help her?

Um, yes, why yes I would.

On Saturday, March 24, 2012, Donna’s Good Things is sponsoring a shaving event at Candlelite Chicago, where we will raise not $5,000,  but $20,000.  $20K-in-a-day is what I am calling it now.  One woman with a wish to honor a girl she has never met has inspired 32 others to shave alongside her that day. And that lofty $20K?  I think we’re gonna smash through that goal. I do.  But we need your help.

An anonymous donor, a great supporter of Donna’s Good Things, is offering a matching campaign from today until Saturday, February 18.  All donations to our St. Baldrick’s event will be matched up to $2,000.  Your $5 becomes $10 and that $10 becomes $20.  Or, you know, your $100 becomes $200. See how that works?

Doing Good Things does not bring Donna back to us.  We will never tickle her ear again or make her pancakes or walk her down the aisle or hold her babies.  None of that.  But we do wake up every day.  And we do care for Mary Tyler Son.  And we do need to figure out a way to live our lives with joy amidst the sorrow.  Supporting kids who need our help is one way. Nurturing the efforts of someone touched by Donna’s story is another way. It gives us purpose and hope and reminds us that once we cared for a beautiful little girl who had enormous ability to teach us about life and joy and wonder and beauty.

There are more kids like Donna right now, slogging through outdated cancer treatments.  There are others, most not even born, who will someday get a pediatric cancer diagnosis.  They will suffer and persevere and live and die. They need better treatments than Donna had.  You can help with a donation to the Donna’s Good Things event, or by creating your own shaving event, or introducing your hair to a razor while you raise $ for these kids through St. Baldrick’s.

This event is the latest of our Good Things and we are most grateful to the reader, one woman, who asked for help.  She has reminded me again, like Donna, that ordinary people are capable of extraordinary things.

Make a donation.  It’s a Good Thing.  Think about Donna and all she has to teach us, still.  Tell the people you love how you feel about them, because even if it results in you crying inthe corner of a bus on the way home to your empty apartment, there are better days ahead.  For you, for me, for kids with cancer and those who love them.

Happy Valentine’s Day, Happy Donna Day!  Now make that donation before you turn off your computer.  Now.  Not later.  Please and thank you.

Wonder Donna 

 

Clueless on Curves: Fashion Should Dress the Woman, Not Denigrate Her

Welcome to Mary Tyler Mom’s first guest blog post!  My pal Andy has something important to say.  Really important.  If you love it as much as I do, share the love.  Enjoy! 

 

“Adele ‘too fat’ says Wrinkly Old Queen with Ponytail.”

That’s how the headline should have read. But instead, news being news, the headline stated the obvious. “Karl Lagerfeld calls Adele ‘too fat’” read the piece from Entertainment Weekly.

It detailed yet another episode of a fashion designer –one rich, removed, and questionably dressed— trying to tell the world what the deal is. But I doubt Adele will be losing any gigs at Wembley or the Staples Center over some mean words from the fashion world’s own Herman Munster.

The strange thing is that, as a guy, this news made my radar at all. I don’t own a note of Adele’s music and would probably switch off a radio playing her songs. Plus I don’t read EW and wouldn’t reach for it unless, of course, I’m bored, waiting at the dentist’s office.

Still the thought of this old white-haired dude, a snooty fashion designer who can’t even show his own eyes without sunglasses, criticizing a very talented and beautiful woman about her body…Well, that got my pants in a bunch yesterday. And I’m sure that anyone else reading the headline would take issue with Lagerfeld, and maybe even yank that gnarly thing right off the back of his head.

The issue is always the same. We’ve heard it for years. From “skinny jeans” to “skinny lattes” the constant conversation out there is that skinny is the only beautiful. Or that skinny is the real beautiful, the one you should strive for.

Too often, this mindset is taken as the consensus. And sometimes I fear that women are led to believe that skinny is indeed where it’s at and what your potential soulmate really desires most.

Being resident in my usual “guy” mentality, one question came billowing out of my mind. That question is this:

Since when do fashion designers –many of whom are men not even attracted to women, by inclination—get to call the shots on what’s hot, what’s alluring, what is sexy and beautiful?

It could be that Lagerfeld was just being flippant and bitchy as famous people tend to be. But considering how designers get mega-rich catering to women’s appetite for high fashion, I think designers should celebrate the woman they dress, not denigrate her.

Even the sexless septuagenarians at the top of Vogue and other fashion magazines may have it right on today’s mix of clothes and accessories, but miss the mark on the body. Certainly it is easier to showcase new threads on the slender frame of a mannequin or similarly shaped high fashion model. You’ll note that the women strolling down the cat walk in haute couture are a size 0 and in the 6 foot range.

But these models are hardly in the ballpark of how most normal, healthy, attractive women are. As far as I’m concerned, most of Fashion has no idea what a beautiful woman looks like.


Lagerfeld in biker gloves posing with acceptably slender guests. Harley-Davidson, chaps, whip not pictured. (pic: Get Noticed Communications)

Perhaps I’m unusual. I’ll admit that as a lad I always found older women to be attractive, even before the term cougar got any legs. A woman’s natural curves are large part of the appeal.

But I think my view is similar to that of most sensible men out there. Ask men to name a celebrity they find “hot” and they come up with a ton of answers. However, names like Calista Flockhart and even Kristen Bell aren’t typically among them.

Sure, we men deserve the flack we get about our fixations. Some of us in our younger years placed a woman’s pretty face (or the size of her rack) above more important features like a brain, a sense of humor, personality and verve. But most of us grow out of that. Believe it or not, token blonde hair and skinny legs is not the only thing we’re attracted to, and it’s usually not the first choice.

If you don’t believe me take a superficial look at the women who take up the most space on our TVs.

I won’t say their names, but there’s a reason many a man is sitting at home next to a girlfriend, watching that show on E! about the dark-haired sisters whose names all start with K. It’s not because of Keeping Up’s brilliant content nor that these women have anything interesting to say. Frankly, most of us curve-loving men would rather watch this show with the sound turned down.

I’m not saying skinny is bad. If skinny is naturally you then go with it.  Let’s just stop making women feel bad or even less-than-gorgeous simply because they are not skinny.

But maybe the joke is on me. After all, just a half hour after the last set of bench presses at my manly-man gym, I was square on my couch with my wife, with “What Not to Wear” blazing on the boob tube. As usual, Clinton & Stacy were instructing a pretty woman to ditch the khakis, banish bad golf shirts, and embrace her curves. And rightfully so.

The good news is this. As the crusty old fashion conservatives like Karl Lagerfeld move off the scene, their conventional yet blind ideals will fade away. Besides, the rest of us average joes on the street get it on what’s beautiful.


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Andy Frye writes about local football for ESPNChicago.com and other sports/recreation for the Chicago Sun-Times. Follow his mania about sports and curves on his blog or on Twitter at @MySportsComplex.