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Tag Archives: thankfulness

week in the news … from minden st.

16 Friday Jan 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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Tags

boston, thankfulness

So this new relationship we’re in with 2015 has gotten off to a rocky start. First there was the Boxing Day visit to the emergency room — technically the final throes of our dysfunctional relationship with 2014, but resulting in a diagnosis for Hanna (gallstones) that will be following us into the honeymoon period with 2015. And then last Friday, January 9th, we came home at 7pm to this:

100_4417

Frozen pipes, caused by the improper winterization of the foreclosed unit below us, had thawed and burst during the workday. Water was pouring down the outside wall of the building, had saturated the unoccupied flat and the basement, and had finally started to bubble up through a crack in the kitchen cabinet of our apartment. Flooding the kitchen floor into the hallway.

100_4415

 

The blue bin above, at the source of the leak, was filling about every 20 seconds as we frantically hunted for the water main shutoff (protip: if you are a tenant and don’t know where the water main and electric main are in your building, find out!) and got on the phone to our landlord’s maintenance guy. He eventually had us call 911 for assistance from the fire department (wonderful, wonderful emergency workers who arrived when we needed them!) who shut off the water, electric, and heat pending a full inspection and restoration of utilities the following day.

Did I mention we’re in the middle of a below-freezing cold snap? Thank heaven our cats can self-warm with fur and we were able to decamp for a hotel that night.

100_4419

(When I returned Saturday morning to meet the plumber, this is what the outside wall looked like.)

We are back in our apartment now, with the utilities mostly functional, and face only the long tail of damage assessment and repair. Thankfully, our own belongings were minimally damaged — it could have been so much worse! As it is, we only lost one advance review book I’d left on the kitchen floor and a scratching post of the cats that was on its last legs anyway.

It’s been a rough week, but we’ve had lots to be thankful for:

  • Hanna’s parents, who were willing to wake up in the late evening to let us decompress.
  • My parents, who offered to help with some immediate out-of-pocket expenses.
  • The fire personnel who were there when we needed them, and did a professional job.
  • The kind hotel staff who warmly welcomed our rather careworn selves at 10:30pm.
  • The waitstaff at the Paris Creperie who made me crepes and hot chocolate to go fifteen minutes before closing.
  • The barista who, the following morning, made me a mocha free of charge (I tipped him generously) after hearing my response to “How are you this morning?”
  • Our landlord, who was on the phone with us almost daily this past week to ensure we were on the same page and that we were back home as soon as possible. We are so grateful to have a good working relationship with him and hope to continue that partnership for years to come.
  • Our landlord’s plumber and electrician who both put in long hours on the weekend to get us safely back into our apartment.
  • The city inspectors who have followed up to ensure the situation was being addressed properly and in a timely manner.
  • All of the colleagues and friends who’ve listened to the telling and retelling of the story with sympathy.
  • The colleagues who have accommodated scheduling hiccups as we need to rendezvous with various service providers.
  • The fact that our own living space was minimally damaged, and that we can continue to live in an apartment/neighborhood we are growing to love.
  • The fact that our cats were a bit freaked but safe and sound when we got home to the flooded kitchen.
  • The opportunity this experience is providing us for learning all about how condo associations, foreclosures, and homeowners insurance works!
  • Our childhoods, which provided us both with the rough-and-ready experience of managing when faced with sponge baths, jury-rigged plumbing, and the necessity to bundle up in the short-term as long-term repairs are being made.

I devoutly hope 2015 has thus far treated you and yours well! Enjoy your long weekend & look for more regularly scheduled programming soon (I’ll be back to reading books, fingers crossed, as our life settles back to a hum of routine).

on gaining weight

20 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

bigotry, feminism, food, thankfulness, the body

Photograph by Laura Wulf

I had my annual physical last week, and for the first time in a couple of years I actually looked at the reading on the scale when they did all the usual readings. Typically, I stand on the scale facing away from the screen and the nurses at our awesome community health center don’t offer the information unless I ask.

I’d gained about ten pounds since the last time I’d bothered to check.

I was (surprising even myself) pretty unconcerned about this state of affairs.

I’m not going to share the exact number or the number(s) I’m comparing it to. The minute I did so virtually every woman reading this post would do the calculation and contrast and compare. Either I’d be smaller, and some part of them would feel jealous, or I’d be larger, and some part of them would feel virtuous. They might judge themselves for feeling that way (I do when I catch myself doing it), but for most of us it’s an involuntary reflex.

There’s a reason I don’t own a scale, and weigh myself at the doctor’s office blind.

As photographs on this blog demonstrate, I’m a 5′ 10″ woman who falls within the median weight range for American women — which is to say that my clothing sizes are usually available in many styles in most stores. This is a form of privilege, one I’ve become even more acutely aware of married to a woman whose body is actively marginalized by our fatphobic, sizest culture.

But, like virtually every women and many a man will tell you, being a body of normative size in a culture “at war” against fat (and people we judge for their size) is no proof against a disordered relationship with one’s physical self. While never diagnosed with a formal eating disorder, I spent most of my teens obsessing over food and weight, counting calories, bingeing, eating until my stomach hurt and falling asleep each night (yes: every night for nearly a decade) wishing I could just purge and have done with it.

I ended every day — every day — from age sixteen to twenty-four feeling some measure of failure for what I had eaten, and what I had done, with my body.

My own struggle with disordered eating was complicated by the fact that my thyroid condition, managed with medication until age twenty-five, meant I was almost always hungry. My appetite was not a reliable measure of what my body actually needed as fuel — my hormones were telling me I was hungry. I could (and did) eat gallons of ice cream at a sitting and my body would still tell me I was hungry.

When I finally received medical treatment that treated my condition more effectively, I got my libido back and learned what it was like to have an appetite: to eat and feel full. And not think about food every waking moment of every day.

While I was never diagnosed with an eating disorder, I was at my thinnest — received the most praise from acquaintances for having “lost weight!” — when my hyperactive thyroid was raging out of control. Did I glow with “pride” at the praise? Some part of me did. The other part of me recognized how fucked up our culture is congratulating a young woman for thinness — as if body size is some sort of merit metric. When instead, in my case, it was actually a pathological symptom.

One I knew even at the time part of me would miss, because being “effortlessly” thin (while, as I said above, obsessing about my weight and food intake on an hourly basis) was something society rewarded me for.

I was scared, when I chose the treatment that would help me heal — that would give me my sex drive back (though no doctors thought to mention this as a perk) — that would allow me to experience appetites and satisfaction — when I chose the treatment that would give me these things, I was scared that I’d just become “fat.”

Because of course, that’s what we’re taught to fear most of all.

So it was remarkable to me, last week, when I walked into the doctor’s office and discovered that I now weigh about thirty pounds more than I weighed at the point when I was the sickest (and most obsessive — and most frequently praised). It was remarkable that I didn’t much care.

I’m growing into myself. That’s what I thought. I’m growing older. And my mind meant that in a positive way. I’m thirty-three now; nearly ten years older than I was then. Bodies change. As I grow into my middle age, I may continue to gain weight slowly, incrementally. If family size and shape is any guide, I’ve likely settled more or less at the point where I will probably stay as I grow older.

And even if I grow larger, become more, I resist the notion that this is something I should categorically fear, manically avoid, judge myself in relation to. I’ve got other things to focus on, thank you very much. I refuse to spend my energy struggling to control my body size when there’s overwhelming evidence to suggest that such efforts are both futile and unrelated to one’s overall health outcomes.

I refuse to fear in myself what I embrace in others: embodiment in the selves we have.

I’m grateful for how little the number mattered. It’s been a long journey to this point, but well worth the climb.

post eleventy-hundred: nerd blessings

01 Saturday Jun 2013

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

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Tags

being the change, blogging, fun, random kindness, thankfulness

Today, after making a trek to Harvard’s library privileges office in the middle of the first heat wave of the summer to apply for spousal library privileges (what could be nerdier than that?) I finally made the time to watch Wil Wheaton’s message to a baby nerd, which Hanna sent to me several weeks ago via the Mary Sue.

I thought it was appropriate to share as my 1100th post here at the feminist librarian.

Stay cool, everyone, and spend some time this weekend loving your favorite things as hard as you can.

in praise of pen-friends [a year-end post]

22 Saturday Dec 2012

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

blogging, friends, thankfulness, writing

As the year 2012 draws to a close, I’ve found myself thinking about the value of my long-distance friendships.

Such relationships have been a fixture of my life, beginning when I initiated my first “pen pal” correspondence at the age of three.* This was in 1984 and while computers were a thing in the world, Internet access for the commonfolk was not. (Actual paper and writing implements were used, and my personal papers will hopefully make some future historians weep with joy in that several major life relationships are documented almost entirely in analog.)

(via)

This year has seen the deepening of some long-distance relationships I’ve developed through blogging, and the initiation of a few more, and thus I’m prompted to once again give thanks for these friends with whom I experience mutual support and intellectual stimulation — despite the fact that we rarely (in some cases have never yet) meet face to face.

I’m a person with limited in-person social energy — at the end of the workday I generally want to come home to my wife and my two cats and curl up on the couch with a book, a cup of hot cocoa, my laptop, my handwork, whatever, and just be.

We get home around six and retire to bed around nine. Weekends are for chores, recuperation and for being together as a family. There’s not a lot of time for social activity in our lives right now — it was a major achievement this fall that we managed to see two of our friends on Thanksgiving, and finally have breakfast with a friend and mentor with which we’d been trying to schedule a date for three months.

But conversation doesn’t take it out of me the way getting together in person does. So email conversations are a brilliant way for me to bridge the gap between my limited energy for social interactions and my boundless energy for relational connection, for intellectual and emotional engagement and sustenance.

Sometimes, these relationships have been long-distance by necessity: I was politically and culturally isolated in my conservative hometown and finding kindred spirits genuinely took a lot of patience and a search without geographical boundaries. Yes, I had (still have) a handful of friends who happened to live in geographical proximity — but that was the exception rather than the rule.

And while we generally privilege those next-door-neighbor relationships in our culture over long-distance/virtual ones, I’ve often found those long-distance connections just as (and at times more) meaningful than the “people in my neighborhood” ones.

So thank you, Elise and Joseph and Molly and Anne and Stephanie and Fannie for your willingness to put energy into creating and sustaining a friendship with me across the miles and time zones. It takes mindfulness to be present with a person when they are not there before you in your day-to-day life of hectic, well, living, and I’m grateful that all of you have, over the years, been willing to commit to connecting with me.

I look forward to years of friendship to come.

*to be fair, at three years old my fellow correspondent and I mostly exchanged drawings and dictated random text to our parents to forward on. But that relationship developed into a sustaining friendship that lasted well into my teens, and we remain in occasional contact today.

"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

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