Jen Lancaster hates to burst your happy little bubble, but life in the big city isn't all it's cracked up to be. Contrary to what you see on TV and in the movies, most urbanites aren't party-hopping in slinky dresses and strappy stilettos. But lucky for us, Lancaster knows how to make the life of the lower crust mercilessly funny and infinitely entertaining.
Whether she's reporting rude neighbors to Homeland Security, harboring a crush on her grocery store clerk, or fighting-and losing-the Battle of the Stairmaster- Lancaster explores how silly, strange, and not-so-fabulous real city living can be. And if anyone doesn't like it, they can kiss her big, fat, pink, puffy down parka.
In my former, auspicious career I addressed crowds of
thousands without breaking a sweat. I negotiated with
dour, gray-suited hospital administrators so hostile
they’d drag me into the desert and leave me for dead given the
opportunity, yet I stood my ground in demanding they accept
my company’s contract, “Or else.” And I’ve guided corporate
executives through the most dire of crises with a smile on my
face the entire time. So you’d think chatting with a kindly
medical professional in the privacy of her office wouldn’t be
but a blip on my radar.
And that would be true.
If I were wearing pants.
Today I’ve got an appointment with the girlie doctor and
I’m nothing less than terrified. I’ve put off my annual wellwoman
exam for four years because I’m so cowardly about
this sort of thing, no doubt stemming from my Quaker-like
sense of modesty. Sure, it’s all well and good to litter my
conversations with every variety of f-bomb, but when it
comes to showing my unmentionables to a complete stranger?
Regardless of her impeccable medical education, extensive
experience, and board certification? I think not.
However, I’m really trying to act more like an adult lately,
so I force myself to make the appointment. Of course, I have
to down a whole bottle3 of wine to do so. And then I cancel it
three times before Fletch, disgusted by my lack of courage,
threatens to (a) drag me to the appointment on a leash like we
have to when we take Loki to the vet to have his nails clipped,
and (b) check me into the Betty Ford Center if I don’t stop inhaling
boxed wine every time I look at the phone.
I have to honor the appointment this time and the only
way that’s going to happen is if there’s an elaborate system of
treats and rewards in place. I decide my beforehand treat will
be a trip to the bookstore, so I ask Fletch to drop me off at the
Michigan Ave Borders an hour before my appointment.
We’ve just gotten in the car when I start to hyperventilate.
“Funny, but Loki doesn’t start to panic until after we’ve
exited our parking lot,” Fletch observes. “You need to breathe
in a paper bag or something?”
“No.” Gasp. Gasp. Gasp. “I’ll (gasp) be (gasp) fine,” I
reply.
“I don’t understand your anxiety. Are they going to cut
you at all?”
“Oh, sweet Jesus, no!” I shriek.
“Then they’re just going to look at stuff?”
Gasp. “Right.”
“Alone, in an exam room—just you and the doctor, and no
one else, right?” We cross the bridge over the north branch of
the river at Division and begin to drive past the projects.
“Yes.” Gasp.
He glances at the boarded-up buildings with their broken
windows and concertina wire and poses a question. “Okay,
which would you rather—to be dropped off in the middle of
Cabrini Green at midnight with a handful of cash or to see
your gynecologist for a routine visit?”
I don’t even have to consider the choice. “The Green.
Definitely the Green.”
He turns to face me. “You’re kidding.”
“No, really—maybe Florida and J.J. still live there? And
Thelma and Ralph, too. But not James. Poor James. He was
killed in a car accident before the family could move to Mississippi
for his excellent new job. And that? Was not dy-nomite.”
“I wouldn’t know. My racist parents refused to let me
watch Good Times. However, they were able to decipher
fantasy from reality, which is more than I can say for you
right now.”
I begin to hyperventilate again as we turn down Michigan
Ave and idle in front of Borders. “Okay, you’re here,” Fletch
says. “Good luck today.”
“Do—do—you have any last-minute advice for me?” I
stammer.
He looks thoughtful for a moment. “Yes. Yes, I do.”
“Well?”
“You should try to be less of a pansy. See you later!”
I escape into the safe confines of the bookstore, secure in
the knowledge no one there is going to make me pull down my
pants. I linger over the new releases and peruse the sale table.
I go upstairs to the café and eschew coffee in favor of herbal
tea, figuring the caffeine would make me even jumpier. Beverage
in hand, I cruise the self-help section but don’t see any titles
that might make me “less of a pansy.”
I buy a few new reads before heading down the street. I
trudge past many happy places—Cartier, Coach, Tiffany,
and, of course, Garrett’s Popcorn, but window-shopping fails
to make me smile because I feel like Dead Man Walking.
I pray to get hit by a bus as I turn down St. Clair Street,
figuring the doctor could check out my girl parts while I was
under sedation to fix my broken leg, but no such luck. I arrive
at the office not only intact but early, damn it. As I climb the
wide marble steps to the front door, I’m overwhelmed by the
desire to run. However, my inner adult forces me to press on
and take the elevator to the eighth floor, likely because my inner
adult fears running slightly more than pants-dropping.
With a quavering voice, I check in at reception. The office
is gorgeous—clean, sleek furniture, lush plants, and an unobstructed
view of Lake Michigan through enormous picture
windows. The skies are steely gray and it’s windy today so the
lake is choppy with whitecaps and is kicking up six-foot
waves. Water crashes and foams over the concrete barriers
protecting Lake Shore Drive, launching huge plumes of icy
spray all over the abandoned running path. If I didn’t know I
was in Illinois, I’d swear I was looking at the Atlantic Ocean.
This magnificent body of water is precisely one of the reasons
I choose to live here. Were I not about to show a stranger my
yahoo, I’d be enthralled by the vista5 and likely to break into a
chorus of “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,” but today
it barely registers.
The receptionist gives me the insurance form clipboard
and a pen sporting an Ortho-Novum logo. I feel like I’m going
to throw up and my hands are shaking so badly I can barely
scrawl my name on the paperwork. I’m about to toss the clipboard,
dash out the door, and catch the first steamer to
Venezuela when some girl comes in with a “problem.” I can’t
hear everything but I do catch the bit where she tells the receptionist,
“I don’t know what it is, but I want it gone immediately.”
I snicker so loudly the entire desk staff shoots me
murderous looks, but I don’t care. Laughing at someone
else’s misfortune makes me momentarily forget my fright and
I remain in my seat, keeping a healthy distance between myself
and Miss Scratchy McUnderpants. (Because, really?
What’s funnier than venereal disease?)
I’m barely on the second page of the new Janet Evanovich
when my name is called, so I gather up my sack of books
and head down the Hallway of Doom. The nurse is wearing
Dansko professional clogs and my loafer heels are rubber, so
the only noise I hear as I’m walking down the hall is that of my
own pounding pulse.
The walls leading to the exam room are covered with
beastly graphic charts of internal workings. Squeamish as I
am, the idea of all those pipes and tubes and fluids makes me
weak in the knees. I prefer to think of myself as having a thick
peanut-butter center. Or possibly creamy caramel.
Once I get to my room, the first thing I have to do is step
on the scale. “Well,” I tell the nurse, “you certainly know how
to add insult to injury in this joint.” And it’s no surprise when
she points out I’ve gained fifty pounds since my last visit.
“Really,” I exclaim, “is that why I can no longer get my old
pants past my knees? Goodness, I’d simply assumed I’d had
twenty-seven separate dry-cleaning incidents!”
Note to self for future reference: Tubby girls with smart
mouths will be given paper robes, not cloth, by nurses who lack
senses of humor.
Nurse Ratched advises me to strip completely, and as I
undress I wonder if “completely” includes my socks. Erring
on the side of caution, I toss them aside first, pleased with
having the foresight to have given myself a fresh pedicure.
Earlier this morning, I also brushed my teeth a second time
and flossed. Fletch noted my excellent dental hygiene and
asked, “Is that the end they’re going to examine?”
With much trepidation, I take off my sweater and bra and
begin to struggle into the miniature paper gown. Because of
my rampant modesty, I’m trying in vain to keep everything
covered. While I wrestle with the tiny plastic belt-tie, I burst
out of the left side of the robe, thus exposing my long, flat,
completely non-gravity-resistant breast to the wall of Your
Cervix and You brochures. Gah!
So, I do what any good little prude would do in this situation
. . . I grab a stapler from the doctor’s desk and attempt to
put the side back together in a panicked frenzy. While I twist
around to work on fixing the left shoulder, I burst out of the
right side of the robe.
I begin to get very angry at the exploding clothing. Exactly
when did I turn into the Jen-credible Hulk?
In my haste to cover my naked parts, I then staple the right
side of the robe all crooked. I glance at myself in the mirror
and see that what I’m wearing no longer resembles anything
like a robe. Jagged bits of paper are sticking up everywhere,
with random clumps of staples littering the sides and shoulders.
I look like a mental patient who escaped to a paper factory
and crafted a paper suit before attempting to create a
paper getaway car to drive to paper Mexico. All I’m missing is
a touch of (paper) crazy about the eyes.
After inspecting my handiwork, I inadvertently bend over
laughing, thus causing the one untorn part of the robe to explode.
And in trying to fix it, I accidentally staple the back of
the robe to my khakis. I’m hunkered over in my paper straitjacket,
struggling to remove staples from my pants, when my
gynecologist enters.
The doctor then excuses herself while she tries to stop
crying.
Fortunately, when she returns she’s carrying a cloth gown,
which I manage to put on upside down and backward. However,
she’s got access to all the forbidden zones, so we leave it
as is. She apologizes for giggling and says this sort of thing
happens all the time. Yeah. Of course it does. Ten bucks says
six months from now an entire table of conference-going,
Chardonnay-swilling, lobster-tail-eating OB/GYNs will be
laughing at me when she recounts this scene.
To the good doctor’s credit, she senses how scared I am,
although perhaps my inability to clothe myself tipped her off.
Or possibly me shrieking, “I am fucking terrified!”
Which is why I’m not surprised her first question is, “Do
you use recreational drugs?”
I think for a moment before replying, “I don’t know. Do
you consider NyQuil recreational?”
“I guess that would depend on the frequency,” she
replies.
“Maybe every couple of months?”
“I’d say that’s okay. Any other drug usage? Marijuana?
Ecstasy? Cocaine?”
“Ha!” I reply. “Look at my butt; is this the ass of a coke
fiend? I think not. However, sometimes when I’m tense, I
have an OTC sleeping pill and follow it with a champagne
chaser. Actually, it’s my signature drink and I call the combination
‘The Judy Garland.’ ”
After the doctor explains why she can’t just “remove the
whole shootin’ match so I don’t ever have to suffer through
this again,” she puts on her rubber gloves, at which point I
may or may not pass out.
When I snap to, I inform her, “My middle name is Ann,
my favorite movie is Pulp Fiction, and I have a naughty pit
bull named Maisy. Seems like if you’re going to poke around
down there, you should know a bit more about me.”
She nods thoughtfully and tells me, “My middle name is
Elizabeth and I like Law and Order reruns. I backpacked in
Europe after I finished undergrad and I adore Indian food.
Now can you please uncross your legs so I can get a look?”
The whole exam takes less than five minutes and . . . yes,
I realize I probably overreacted. No matter how unpleasant
the circumstance, if I can hold my breath for the duration, it
can’t be so bad. After I dress,7 the doctor reenters the exam
room and wants to discuss breast health. The only thing
slightly less mortifying than being naked with a stranger is
talking about it.
Stab me in the eye with a fucking fork, why don’t you?
Anyway, the doctor tries to give me a little kit that includes a
journal to document my monthly cancer-screening self-exam.
A journal?
What the hell am I going to record in a boob journal?
January 1—Got to second base with myself. Heh.
February 1—Got to second base with myself. Heh.
March 4—Forgot about the screening and only remembered
four days later when I almost slammed
my boob in the car door. Got to second base with myself.
Heh.
Sorry, but I do not possess the kind of maturity required to write
about me ol’ knockers on a regular basis. I politely refuse the
offer, claiming I couldn’t see me using it, what with all the giggling.
Although I have to wait for the pap results to come back
from the lab, everything else looks fine and I’m free to go,
thank God.
Pants securely on, bags packed, and sock-free, I leave the
scary, scary office with a spring in my step and a bit of a
speculum-induced waddle. I did it! It’s over! I congratulate
myself for being brave, so very brave,8 and decide it is treat
time. Woo-hoo! But what to get? When I was a kid, my mom
would take me to Dairy Queen after a particularly traumatic
allergist appointment, but (a) she’s 150 miles away, and
(b) it’s fourteen degrees today. So a Peanut Buster Parfait is
probably out.
I practically dance the ten blocks from my doctor’s office
to One Magnificent Mile and spend the whole time vacillating
between the idea of high tea or a cocktail. Sure, orange pekoe
and finger sandwiches in the vast parlor at the Drake Hotel
sounds lovely, but that’s really more of a shared experience.
Also, my hands are still trembling and I’m not sure I could
keep my tea in its bone china cup. Instead, I choose the warm
embrace of my old friend alcohol.
I head to the gorgeously appointed mahogany-and-leather
bar at the Four Seasons on Delaware and I survey the array of
squashy couches and brocaded chairs. Oh, how I love the
Four Seasons! We used to come here all the time during the
dot-com era, but now that we’re barely middle class we save it
for very special occasions.
I’ve always adored the service here; I guess I appreciate
any place that lets me make an ass out of myself without raising
an eyebrow. One time a group of us came here after some
drinky-drinky event downtown. Right as we were about to
pour ourselves into a cab, I spotted a gigantic laminated
“George Bush Is Hitler” poster and I thought, “Oh, hell no.”
Sure, I get why people don’t like him and I’m fine with that. I
understand those who protest his decisions and can totally
see why folks might think he’s a dummy. However, I cannot
agree with comparing him to the fiend who almost singlehandedly
exterminated an entire race of people. So I tore the
poster off the telephone pole and was barely able to wedge it
in the taxi with us.
Anyway, we spilled out of the cab and washed onto the
sidewalk at the Four Seasons. Valets helped us up and out,
gingerly handling my mammoth placard. “Here you are,
miss,” they said without batting an eye. They acted as though
drunken girls carried giant posters of a swastika-covered president
into their facility ten times a day. We paraded past all the
staff—doormen, bellhops, concierges, etc., each of them
smiling graciously, while I struggled behind my colossal sandwich
board. We sloshed into the bar and the maître d’ met us
at the door to show us to our seats.
And this bit? Right here? Is why the Four Seasons rocks.
With nary a smirk, he asked, “Might I check that item for
you, miss?”
To which I replied, “Ssshhank you, but I shhhannn’t be
requiring your sssshhhhervichhes,” before hooting and snorting
at my own savoir faire. And then Fletch, our friends, an
unfortunately mustachioed photo of the commander in chief,
and I spent the rest of the evening sitting on barstools swilling
$14 cocktails.
As I settle into a plush couch in the corner next to a porcelain
reading lamp, a waiter approaches with a dish of mixed
nuts and wasabi peas. “Miss, what might I be gettin’ you?” he
asks in a melodious Irish accent.
“Hmm,” I say. “I’m not sure. I’ve had a really stressful
day. Doctor. Girl parts. Total nightmare. But I don’t want to
talk about it. So, what can you suggest that might be hot,
sweet, and full of liquor? And I don’t mean Tara Reid!”
With a heroic amount of patience, he waits until I finish
chortling myself stupid to detail the finer points of the winter
drinks menu. We settle on a cider-and-whiskey beverage,
which I belt down in about thirteen seconds. After the first
cocktail, I begin to pace myself, spacing out my drinks with
sips of water from my crystal goblet and nibbles from the
gratis nut tray. (Whatever profit margin the Four Seasons may
have realized from the overpriced ciders is neatly eclipsed by
my cashew consumption.)
Since I spend all my money on fancy drinks, I have to take
public transportation home. Mumbling to myself about girl
parts and shuffling, I make my way down to the Chicago Avenue
stop. The bus and I arrive at the same time (how did that
happen?), and wafting whiskey fumes, I manage to stagger
over discarded newspapers and empty Starbucks cups to the
back of the vehicle.
And you know what’s nice?
Today I finally smell like everyone else on the midday bus.
Hooray for Tuesday Afternoon Drinking Club!
Before leaving the Four Seasons, I apparently call Fletch at
work and leave the following message: “Hi, iissch me! My girly
partschss are fiiiine and I’m drinking whooshkey! Bring home
many beers.” Smirking, Fletch informs me he and his work
pals had a delightful time passing the phone around and
laughing at my expense.
Yes, har-de-har-har, fat boy. Laugh it up.
I hope you enjoy doing your own laundry when I check
myself into the Betty Ford Center.