Southern Comfort

November 17, 2008

A Wedding for Everyone {Part One}

Seven year ago today, we were married. 

Although neither of us had ever called it home, New Orleans called to us, so it was there that we chose to plant the roots of a life which we would forever call home.

Laced with the strength of chicory, echoing with the sounds of friends and family, bruised by adversity, warmed by tradition, spiced with variety, worn threadbare by the lives that dug their heels in deep to the rich swamp soil...  New Orleans was the perfect place to swear our souls to one another. 

And no, we didn't keep it simple.  But we certainly kept it real.

Real joy  ...hope  ...celebration  ...tradition  ...flair  ...fun  ...love  ... Real us.

 

Surrounded by love.  Friends and family and well-wishes wrapped in smiles.

A bride wrapped in the wedding gown worn by her mother.  Made by her great-aunt.  Hand-painted and fussed over and preserved with hope and anticipation.

The end of something solitary and the beginning of everything whole.

Everyone should have a beginning such as this.

 

An early afternoon ceremony in St. Louis Cathedral in Jackson Square in the French Quarter.  We arrived in carriages and hushed tourists' whispers of "who are they again?"

Strangers taking our pictures and generously offering to send us copies of our own. 

Everyone should have paparazzi on their wedding day. 

 

We are you.  You can have this, too, you know!  Just ask.  You don't have to be fancy, you just need to want to have more fun than a couple of dreamers should be allowed to have...  and then have it.

St. Louis Cathedral would be the only serious moment in a party to stretch eight hours

long.  It would be the last hushed or still anything.  A beautiful foundation to a spectacular day...  to spectacular hopes for our whole lives long. 

I smiled so much as I walked down the aisle, I thought my face would ache for years.  The beginning of laugh lines that would be nurtured by baby's giggles and toddlers' antics.  Laugh lines deepened by new lives to enter our own, to erase the melancholy of the father walking his baby girl down the

aisle only to be rewarded by hilarious miniature versions of himself. 

But first...

Can you hear the beads rolling into the square, bunches and bunches headed to eager hands?  Can you hear the crowd gathering?  Can you hear the Second Line Band assembling?

I do.

Everyone should have a parade through the streets after they say "I do."

 

We left in our wake screams of celebration, cries of surprise, and not fewer than a few bums with pearl-like beads around their necks, dangling medallions announcing our union.  This was a wedding celebration for everyone

 

And everyone should have the blessings of the street people on their wedding day.

~~~

...this is only the beginning, so be sure to stick around for Part Two...

~~~

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November 16, 2008

Anticipation

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October 06, 2008

The Trouble with Pies

A pear pie made me stop blogging.

Rather, the promise of a pear pie.

No.  Precisely, the absence of a pear pie.pear-pie-powder-sugar

The day before we evacuated for Hurricane Gustav a handful of weeks ago, I dropped by our elderly neighbor's home to find out what their evacuation plans were and to share my family's.  They are a wonderful couple that have lived in this home for over thirty years, friendly and both interesting and interested.

Needless to say, I rarely visit them.  Yep, I'm that neighbor.  I'm the one that smiles and waves, greets you through the fence, buys lemonade at your child's lemonade stand, but generally doesn't step into your yard.

The day I stopped by to discuss evacuation plans was not the first time I had knocked on their door, but it was the first time I accepted an invitation to come inside.  I did not have our two toddler boys with me at the time, so was enjoying the rare moment in which I could make decisions independent of everyone else's immediate vicinity to impaling devices.  As such, I happily stepped into what I expected to be a very similar floor plan as our own home, our houses being two of the oldest on the street.

The home I found myself standing in was, instead, the home our house wishes it could be.  I did not hide my enthusiasm for their renovations, so the Mrs. welcomed me to tour the home with her so she could point out the changes.

After a walk-through that had my brain mapping out blueprints for the virtual mansion I wish our home could one day become (okay, more like bungalow with a larger family room), we returned to the kitchen to find the Mr. waiting for us with a plastic bag full of something heavy and plentiful.

Pears. 

Mr.:  Do you like pears?

Megan:  Sure, we love pears.

Mr.:  I thought you might,pears so I picked these while you were with the Mrs.  They are from our tree out front.

Megan:  Oh my, thank you!  I always wondered if those were edible.

Mr.:  They aren't good for eating, but they're fine for baking.  I thought you could bake a pie with them when you get back.

Megan(trying to comprehend a couple foreign words he used in those sentences)  Sure.  Absolutely...  I. will. bake. a. pie.

Mr.:  smiling proudly, having helped a young mother provide a special treat for her young family... 

Her young family who are actually completely oblivious as to what a pie is or how one would be made from scratch and then baked in that big white thing we make grilled cheese sandwiches on top of, if we're lucky.

I left with my bag of freshly picked pears, plopped them on my kitchen table, and then forgot about them.  What did stick with me, though, was how casually he had said I could "bake a pie with them."  As though of course I knew how to bake.  A pie.  With fresh ingredients.

I am a young mother, with a young family, on a tight budget, and I do not know how to bake a pie.  I sure do have a cute apron, though.  One I designed and had made from a vintage table cloth.  One I had made by a friend I met online, from a table cloth I bought online, and which I intended to sell online in order to help support my family.

That is the mother that I am.  pear-pie-texture-lattice I don't bake pies, creating them from scratch, slipping them into the oven to bake, then serving them to my expectant family at the dinner table.

Rather, I Google pie images, digitally insert them into graphics programs and then virtually publish them from my digital desktop for my statistically relevant online audience to consume. 

I suspect I'm missing something here.  For all that my .com resourcefulness gets me, I suspect that a certain amount of real "calm" could be gained from that real pie.

And that is what stuck with me.

In the days to follow, long after the pears had to be thrown out, I was still thinking about that pie.  That damn pie.

After a long day of wrangling editors and answering questions from PR emails, I turned off the computer, loaded the boys in the car, and headed over to my parents' house for a bit of a break.  After satisfactorily distracting the boys, I plopped down on the couch and found a movie to watch.  Waitress starring Keri Russell was on, a movie I had heard great independent-movie things about. 

And I'll be damned if it wasn't about pies.

What followed was roughly two hours of watching pies being made.  The filmmakers might suggest that there was a plot line and a romance and something about marriage and babies and career, but all I saw was pies.  Pies, and a simplicity that my life has been missing lately.

I've written only one blog post since then, because I more or less turned off the computer and started reassessing the clutter in my life, both literally and figuratively.  For those of you that have been reading me a long time, you know I do this every now and then.  I don't make a big fuss about it, I just don't show up for a few weeks.

But this isn't about blogging.  I'm not looking for comments that read "I'm glad you're back!" or "I missed reading you."  The web is stuffed full of enough to keep you occupied, and I think that is precisely my point. 

This reassessment of our priorities and taking inventory of our homes and goals is relevant to every single one of us.  Or at least it should be.

When I wrote Gravel Paves the Road to The White House, my point was not a small towns vs. cities one.  Rather, it was about taking the time to listen, to absorb, to process and integrate the mass amounts of stimuli we are faced with every single day.  It was about taking the time to settle the white noise in our heads. 

You didn't notice it happening, but then you step outside one evening, discover it quiet, and realize that you have cocooned yourself within a wall of static.

That pie.  That damn pie that I never made, sliced through my static.

This is about simplicity.  It is about appreciating what I already have at my fingertips.  pear-pie-bartlettWhat I've struggled to build but then sometimes take for granted.  It is about what I let slip by me every day and never notice.  It is about that woman that I'm going to get around to being.

So...  I've been cleaning.  Decluttering.  Stepping back and asking questions, making decisions, taking action.  Slicing through the static I've let accumulate, static that I've allowed to drown out something important that I can't quite put my finger on but that I can sense is still there.

Maybe it's the stress from all of this screeching panic on the news each day.  The economy.  The bailout.  The election.  The noise the noise the noise.

You don't notice it sneaking up on you.   You don't think you even care.  But then there it is.  Regardless of how much you think it affects you, you find yourself needing to make a decision, put your foot down, stake your claim.

Close your eyes, take a breath, exhale.  Open your eyes.  Step back.  Sit down.  Stand up.  Move forward.  Slow down.

Steady yourself.

I'm going to make that damn pie.

...........................

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August 29, 2008

You Loot, We Shoot

Three years ago today, Hurricane Katrina demolished the Gulf Coast.  We lost everything we owned, save for three days' worth of clothes, one guitar, a handful of photos, and our lives.

We evacuated ahead of the storm, as we always do and always will.

We had no idea what Katrina had wrought until a few days after she was gone.  The video below is of us at Maguire's parents' house, blissfully ignorant of how our lives were changing as we sat in the dark. 

While we played with a 13 month old Q, our home was going under water.  It was being battered and blown to bits.  His toys were being submerged and smashed and dragged out to the Gulf of Mexico.  His Christening gown, passed down from his great-grandfather, worn by his grandfather, by Maguire, and then by him, being swept away. 

Every photograph and journal I had saved so carefully since elementary school, warping and floating away.  The photos from college, where Maguire and I met.  Our wedding.  Our honeymoon.  The photos of me pregnant.  The photos and videos of Q's birth.  The videos of him learning to walk and talk...  all gone.  And we had no idea.

 


Night of Katrina from Megan Jordan on Vimeo.
 

 

What Katrina left us was the gift of charity.  The importance of family and friends.  The impermanence of the material and the futility of regret.

Katrina Aftermath Home

As I sit here, hurricanes are forming to the south of us.  And yet we remain.  We will evacuate, but not before protecting all that we have rebuilt.  All that we have fought for and struggled to call home again.

But we will evacuate.  And with us, we will take our most precious gift from Katrina, our son Goose.  Because one other possession Hurricane Katrina took away from me was the illusion of control.  Had it not been for her, I would not have released my need to plan every moment.  I would not have opened my carefully guarded life to the unexpected gift of the right baby at the wrong time.

Boys-inthe-Raw

Thank you, Katrina, you complete and utter wench.

But Gustav and Hanna? 

Stay off of my property because looters will be shot.

YouLootWeShoot-blog

And yeah, that's my dad.  And, yes, he will shoot you. 

~~~

Feed readers, if you don't see the video, be sure to click through.

~~~

Related Posts:

Victor Vito (our Katrina story)

Camille was a Lady, Katrina was a Bitch (on the 2nd anniversary)

Hierarchy of Suffering (why being a victim is a waste of energy)

Resilience or Defiance: on the Third Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina

...........................

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August 25, 2008

Tall Glass of Southern Sass? More like a Short Shot.

My first post for Deep South Moms Blog, the sassy sister site of Silicon Valley Moms Blog network, is finally up.

DeepSouthMomsBanner

Well, "finally" in that I finally wrote a post for them.  I signed on to the site well before they launched, but became thoroughly distracted with our BlogHer The People's Party and Blog Nosh Magazine.  When I showed up for the SVMB Group headshots shindig at Saks Fifth Avenue in San Francisco, some whispers hounded my tail along the lines of "Does she really write for us or is she crashing?"

I may steal movies, but I don't generally crash parties.

Hm, that would look good on my headstone.  But I digress...

The post I wrote for them is "Resilience or Defiance" and it is something that has been on my mind every day for years.  It would mean a lot to me if you would head over there, check it out, and if you feel compelled--  leave a comment.  In fact, I worked my sassy ass off this weekend and have some free time today (seriously finally!), so I promise to visit and comment on every single one of the blogs that leave a comment on my first post over there.  Something I should do more regularly over here, I am well aware.  But still...

For all of your hard mouse clicking and keyboard tapping, here is a glimpse of the behind-the-scenes of my Deep South Moms post:

Photosessiondsmb

Do you love all of the Sonic cups in there?  I was bribing my boys with Sprite and cups of cereal so that I could take the photos I needed to along the beach for the post.  You can see the live oaks along the waterline in the reflection in the window.

Now then...

Let's show those girls that I can pull my own weight on their fancy blog.

Sweet tea and pearls, my ass.

...........................

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  • Mommyblogger? Fine. Brevity blogger? Rarely.

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