New York City FIRST LEGO League Championship, a very long day…

3:45 am.  The first time I woke up in the night afraid that we had overslept.

6:00 am the alarm went off.  It felt like 5:00 am because it would have been 5:00 am if this were not the designated “spring forward” Daylight Savings Time.

Shower.  Dress.  Consume instant coffee.  Make banana smoothie for breakfast and sack lunch for My Kid.

7:00 am (which really feels like because yesterday it would have been 6:00 am) our family of 3 leaves the apartment and walks to nearest subway station.

No one riding the train at this hour is wearing high heels or fashionable clothing.

One woman in a uniform of manual labor rants at the stop and starting of the train accusing the driver of “smoking crack”.

It’s really early in the morning.

Pennsylvania Station.

Jacob Javits Convention Center.

First Lego League.

City wide robotics tournament.

8:00 am teams go to their assigned “pit” location.

8:30 am my kid is ready to got with the others to give their presentation on subway track fire prevention to the judges.

Sitting,

Walking,

Talking to other parents,

Attempting to read the Sunday Times,

Gathering to watch the two and a half minute robot competitions,

Five times.

The cavernous grey concrete convention center has terrible acoustics and fewer food choices than a 7-11 convenience store.

At the end of the day, due to snafu, My Kid’s team leaves the convention center without participation medals

The low point of the day.

On the way to dinner, two fruitless quick searches through stores looking for a particular item for a clown character.

Korean dumplings on 32nd Street, Mandoo Bar.

The world is looking up.

Home for homework.

Hannah Montana

Please can we please go to bed?

Packing

07/30/09

I’m drinking my coffee and trying to pull my brain together to get My Kid and I packed and ready to go.  The Husband is packed and working.  My Kid is still sleeping.

I’m counting the hours and looking around the apartment listing what needs to be done.  It’s 9 am.  We need to be getting into a car service car at 5 pm.  Some friends of My Kid will be at a local pool at 11:00 am.  I’d like her to join them but I don’t know if I will be able to make that happen.

Woah! And I’m back!

My Kid is still asleep.  My plan for focusing by making a packing list in my blog has fallen apart.

Now My Kid is awake and hungry and watching Hannah Montana.  It’s an episode from the first season and it makes me want to cry the way Miley Cyrus and Emily Osmet don’t look that much older than my daughter and her friends do now.

Too many clothes in my carry-on already and I know I’m going to be cold in Montana.  It’s so hot and muggy here in Brooklyn it’s really hard to remember to pack long sleeves and long pants.   Maybe I’ll just plan to buy a new pair of jeans when I’m home.

Back home in the hood

Me and My Kid, we didn’t have any plans today. On our first day back from Toronto we were slow to get going day because the rain made for a dark and claustrophobic morning.  My Kid watched the recorded “So You Think You Can Dance Season Finale” while I stretched, read the New York Clown Theatre Festival brochure online, and e-mailed back and forth with Lorraine about our upcoming 15 minutes of fame. 

We had to play store and then restaurant before I could get My Kid out the door to run errands like going to a store.  Who is to say that Target is more real than the plastic cash register arranged at the foot of the bed.  The experience is essentially the same.

My Kid stands on the table in her underwear and sings into her white plastic Hannah Montana microphone with a purity that I can only wish for in my performance.

Stay At Home Mom –NOT!

When I was preparing to begin a blog of my own, in my random  cyber-wanderings I came across a blog that made me laugh. It wasn’t the wit of the writer, it was the subject matter.  A man, a professional athlete had just become a proud stay-at-home-dad.  His blog bragged about how smoothly his day went.  He got up early and got in a good workout before his wife went to her job. Then he managed the care and feeding of the baby all day, accomplishing other tasks and getting in more exercise while the baby slept.  He didn’t know why people complain about how hard it is to stay home with a child. There are no further posts. 

I don’t want to be one of those people who start a blog and don’t continue.  But, I also don’t want to chat and vent and whine.  I want to write about what I do or try to do making my way as a theatrical clown in New York City at the same time as I am a “stay-at-home-mom”  although apparently unable to stay home for more than a few hours at a time. Granted My Kid is in school now (except she’s not now–summer vacation has begun both “Finally!!!!!” and “Already???”) so it’s not like she’s a baby or a toddler.  But, it did seem that going on the science field trip, attending the Second Grade Field Day, the Brownie Girl Scout Badge Ceremony and taking cupcakes to her class in honor of her “summer birthday” not to mention, the cleaning, that I don’t do enough of, but spend a lot of time stressing about and the cooking, that I don’t do enough of but spend a lot of time stressing about, and the laundry, that I don’t do enough of but spend a lot of time stressing about, and the hanging out on the playground so that she can run and play (before the summer becomes too hot), during which time I think to myself:  “Surely there must be some high school or college student who could do this instead of me”.  Except that it was lucky for me to be there talking to the other moms on the playground when it was decided to organize a week of Mommy Camp for those of us who haven’t registered our kids daycamp starting-right-away-like-the-moms-with-real-jobs and so there is the problem of what will our kids do now that school is out and all their friends are in day camp.   I wouldn’t have been a part of this project if I hadn’t been standing around chatting with the mothers at the edge of the playground when the idea came up and Enthusiastic Mom ran with it and several multi-kid mom’s latched on because they hadn’t planned anything anyway because of upcoming travel or visitors or baseball or finances.

It’s a good thing I was there, because otherwise My Kid would spend all next week watching Hannah Montana and The Suite Life of Zach and Cody (I hate that show) and iCarly,  television shows wherein My Kid learns that  middle school is going to be great fun and grown-ups are sight gags. Meanwhile I would drink too much coffee and vibrate between the kitchen sink and my laptop trying to decide whether I should clean or cook or shop or do laundry or work on a clown piece or write or take My Kid to the park or the library or the beach or a museum and end up going to Target because it’s entertaining for her and has some errand accomplishing value for myself.

 Instead, for this coming week my friend, Enthusiastic Mom, has already  e-mailed me a spreadsheet schedule of when and where My Kid and I are supposed to be each day in order meet up with the other kids and mommies to do something stimulating and exciting with My Kid’s friends and assorted younger siblings. 

Meanwhile, there is some life in my life on the clown front.  The full-length show I proposed was not chosen for the New York Clown Theatre Festival this September, but they would like us to do a piece in one of their evenings of short works.  I forwarded that e-mail to my puppeteer partner but she didn’t respond.   Before I sent her another e-mail asking why she hadn’t  responded and would she be able to be in town to perform with me, and  what’s the matter didn’t she like the show we proposed or want to work with me anymore.  I googled the summer theatre where she is running the prop shop and noted in their calendar that they had 4 different shows open this week, so I let it slide for now.  I was on stage at the New York Downtown Clown Revue in a demonstration of Jef Johnson’s Clown Lab.  Kendall’s next project, “Clown Axiom”, went into rehearsal on Friday and I was there at Triskelion Studio on Williamsburg (after schlepping my kid to a begged-for babysit/playdate in Brooklyn Heights and the end of the day I took the girls swimming at the Y and then for pizza and then donughts with My Husband and then the next morning my kid’s friend’s mommy called and said her daughter was still asleep at nearly 11 am.  She reported that her child had gone from little girl to teenager in less than 24 hours.)  I attended some Clown Labs at Theatre Lab and The Producers Club and I got a 4th of July corporate gig through a Ringling contact.  So I’m not doing nothing.

But,

It feels like it sometimes.