

On Sunday, HuYi took me to indulge in a favorite Chinese pastime; a day at the spa. There are beauty and massage parlors everywhere here. Women pass entire days at least once a month being sauna-ed, steamed, showered, massaged, facial-ed, manicured, pedicured and of course, drinking copious amounts of tea. Men do the same thing, though I’m sure the environment is quite different. I’m told they hang out and eat, watch TV, steam in the sauna, drink beer and are propositioned by massage parlor girls (depending on how reputable the parlor is). Anyway, suffice it to say, the spa experience is part of the fabric of Chinese culture, so I was quite looking forward to it.
Anyway, I’m lying there blissfully, all sorts of creams and masks have been applied and I’m in a little pleasure haze, when I hear an ominous metal tinkling behind my head. These sound suspiciously like surgical tools. I try to keep calm, and I keep my eyes shut. They know what they are doing, I think to myself, and besides, HuYi told me this would fix my American skin.
Whatever the tool was, it was excruciating, like a series of bee stings in ever pore on the surface of my face. There was a little prick like a needle closely followed by suction that seemed to pull out little pieces of flesh. It was torture, but I didn’t dare to stop her. First of all, I don’t speak Chinese very well yet, and secondly, perhaps this would be the stern punishment that would finally convince my troubled skin to turn its life around. After a half an hour, she was finished with the tools, I sighed with relief when I heard them go back into their little tin. I had to consciously unclench my neck and jaw muscles. The benefits of the massage were surely undone. But at least it was over.
Or so I thought. I heard her plug something into the wall and a new and even more frightening hum began. I heard the clicks and sparks of static electricity. I was starting to feel like I was in a bad Sci-Fi movie. Before I could turn around to see what it was, I felt a hot glass tube touch my face, emitting little waves of static shock. After the extractions, this didn’t really hurt so badly, it was just unsettling and had an odd metallic smell. At last, she finished and unplugged the contraption, but rolled it out of the room before I could get a look at it. A few moments later she reappeared and applied more creams and potions and a mask and left my lying there in the dark for ten minutes or so. And then it was over. She had me sit up and look in the mirror.
I looked terrifying. The extractions had left little red dots all over my forehead and chin and I looked shiny and puffy. The facialist offered an explanation in Chinese, and HuYi came in and explained that it would look much better tomorrow, and of course, I knew she was right. That’s the strangest thing about a facial. Immediately afterwards, you actually look worse than when you came in, but the next day, you look all glowy and fresh. So I got dressed and made my way to the waiting room where I occupied myself with more Chinese fashion magazines until HuYi was finished.
I was hungry and had a little bit of a headache and was eager to get home and tell Eric about my half heaven half hell salon day. Finally HuYi emerged and we hurried out to the street. She said, “I get you Chinese medicine, it will help this” gesturing to my face. “Great,” I said. I was imagining HuYi bringing over a little brown bag of herbs later in the week as I looked for a taxi. “Here, very good.” she said. I looked up and saw a woman sitting at a little card table with an umbrella over her head. She had a series of eight white jars in front of her, a stack of plastic cups at her side and a row of thermoses behind her. It looked just exactly like a child’s lemonade stand.
HuYi began talking animatedly to the herbalist and ever so often they both stole glances at me. I felt more like Frankenstein than ever. The herbalist took a little muslin pouch from behind her counter and began filling it with powders and seeds from the pots. She had little plastic gloves on, and was well practiced in the art of mixing things. Eventually the little pouch was full. She placed it in a plastic cup and reached for one of the giant thermoses. She poured a dark brown steaming hot liquid over the pouch and swirled it around.
The steam was encouraging, it made me feel less like I was about to ingest thousands of parasites with my “medicine”. A thick yellow foam appeared on the top of the brew and she expertly scooped it off with a spoon in one quick motion and plopped the glass in front of me. “Don’t think about, just drink!” Said HuYi . “All at once?” She nodded. “Gung bai!” I said (Bottoms up!) As I gulped it down, I reminded myself about all the mysterious properties of Chinese medicine. Sometimes it cures people and Western doctors can offer no explanation. Perhaps I could join the ranks of those patients whose mysterious ailments could only be cured with thousand year old Eastern knowledge.
When I reached the bottom of my glass, HuYi held out something that looked like a dehydrated mushroom “Eat this” she said. It tasted like candied ginger or orange peel and it certainly did help banish the taste from my mouth. “No drink for one hour. And no eat hot food.” Then she drank down a brew of her own (“Help me sleep.” she said) and ate one of the mushroom things. Then she turned and hailed a cab and off we went into the night. I suppose the moral of the story is that beauty takes sacrifice. And, for the record, my skin is looking better.
Certainly being a chain is not inherently bad, in fact Anthropologie makes many of these lovely little wholesale companies infinitely more accessible to people who aren’t lucky enough to live in a city. Their scale enables them to be competitive in a way that a little shop just can’t be. But those little shops are the ones that made it a fun shopping area to begin with. Anthropologie wouldn’t be there if it weren’t for places like Splendor and Sensational Bites, but once they are there, they drive off the businesses that brought them there. I guess what small businesses have to do is find their niche and thrive there. What is it that small businesses can do better than anybody else? They have to be online and tailor services to the individual desires of your customers. What can you do as the little guy that the big guy can’t? Personal attention and a customized experience are important to people these days, and in some ways, this empowers small business.
1) We are not home yet. We are in Madison. Eric is asleep in my brother's bed.
2) My cat had an anxiety attack on the way here (read: feverish, panting, dilated eyes, hyperactive purring)
3) We didn't actually leave Chicago till 9:30 last night, and we took a bizarre route on Devon Street which led us through an Indian Neighborhood I never even knew existed. It was an odd way to leave my beloved city, like going through a rabbit's hole filled with sparkling saris and snarly traffic.
4) My last day with the babies was lovely, but they have no idea that we won't be seeing each other anymore. I felt upset about that, because to spend so much time together and then just leave them without a clear understanding was really awful. Sort of like trying to explain to them that Elvis had died. They just didn't get it.
5) My body is incredibly sore and dehydrated and just grubby in general. I feel disgusting.
6) This move has been a disaster. I have stuff in three states and the thing I wanted to avoid most (unpacking and re-packing everything in MN) is looking inevitable.
7) THERE IS A WEDDING COMING! IN LESS THAN THIRTY DAYS!
8) We left all manner of things in that coach house, which made me sad, because I want to see it get used instead of abandoned in the alley. Perhaps the new tenants will enjoy it. Here is a partial list of things that just wouldn't fit: a drill, pillows, stock pot, my little 9th grade jelly cabinet, that cool decoupaged dresser I did (I did hijack the knobs though). The car was ridiculous. We didn't put anything on the roof, but probably should have. It was brimming. The passenger seat is basically uninhabitable. Now, with the cat in his new home, it should be a bit better. Redonculous I tell you.
9) We had an incredibly meal on Thursday...our last night in Chi-town. Judy and Rob gave us a gift certificate to North Pond, a very swanky restaurant in Lincoln Park in a little secluded spot right by the Nature Museum. It was gorgeous. We had a tasting menu that took almost three hours to finish and I had a beautiful glass of pink champagne, followed by one from New Mexico, which was equally wonderful. Perhaps I will detail this meal in full later...I wish it hadn't all been so hectic. We enjoyed it so much, but I feel it was a golden moment that is getting eroded away by all of this insanity and just general chaos and disorder. I hate when life is like that. Fast, I don't mind, but chaotic makes me crazy. CRAZY!
10) I feel sad, except that isn't the right word. Its way more complicated than "sad" allows for. I feel a sort of nostalgia for our time in Chicago, and I feel rushed through my goodbye. But I know we've outgrown it and that it is time for a change. I feel excitement for all the good things that are beginning, but I also feel a bit of hesitation. I feel nervous about all this change...its the first time we could really really fall on our faces, you know? And have to come crawling home. I really don't think that will happen, I feel like things have unfolded really beautifully and my life will continue to reveal a path that makes sense. But I look back on our time in Chicago, and the way it began, and I am amazed at how beautiful it turned out to be. I never would have guessed that things would blossom between Eric and I and grow so much deeper. I never would have thought that I could attend such an amazing University, right in the middle of the city and work at a little florist shop that taught me the dos (and a lotta donts) of running a small business. I learned so much here and took advantage of so much and this city is really dear to me.
11) Eric feels none of this...He says all he feels is excitement for the future. And he rightfully pointed out that if we want this life back, we can get it back in a second. It will be waiting right here for us a year from now. But the other possibilities may not be, and so we'll seize those.
The kids I nanny for are half Jewish and half Catholic, so they celebrate both Passover and Easter. Talk about confusing. This morning when I arrived, they were busily playing with their Easter booty, which consisted of bunny stickers, sidewalk chalk shaped like eggs, hard boiled eggs, which were then confused with above mentioned chalk resulting in yellow and white goo scraped all over the steps to their house. Now, they are three, and their parents aren't very religious, so it isn't as though they understand the reason for either of these traditions.
At a passover seder, the traditions are spelled out symbolically through the foods that are served (parsley dipped in salt water to recall the tears of Jewish slaves, bitter herbs to recall the bitterness of slavery and unleavened bread to symbolize their quick exit from egypt. That shit didn't have time to rise!)The point is that the story of the Jews leaving Egypt is made clear through the course of the Seder.
Easter seems more than a little confusing. Here is a basket kids, go hunt for eggs! Then you can stuff yourselves with jelly beans and chocolate bunny ears. This should make clear to you that Jesus rose from the dead on the third day after his crucification to save all of mankind from their original stain of sin. So, we are celebrating his resurrection and our salvation by going to church, buying lilies and eating a big huge ham (now we don't have to worry about keeping Kosher, because our Saviour has arrived!Screw the Old Testament!)
Some of the confusion has to do with early Christians attempting to disguise their religion with pre-existing Roman Holidays. Yesterday's Writer's Almanac shed a bit of light on this perplexing subject.
"The word "Easter" comes from an ancient pagan goddess worshiped by Anglo Saxons named Eostre. According to legend, Eostre once saved a bird whose wings had frozen during the winter by turning the bird into a rabbit. Because the rabbit had once been a bird, it could still lay eggs, and that rabbit became our Easter Bunny."
Ah Ha! Now it is all as clear as mud. I think I will close with a delightful segment of "Me talk Pretty One Day" in which Mr. Sedaris and his colleagues attempt to explain Easter in broken French to their Muslim counterpart.
"And what does one do on Easter? Would anyone like to tell us?" The Italian nanny was attempting to answer the teacher's latest question when the Moroccan student interrupted, shouting, "Excuse me, but what's an Easter?"
It would seem that despite having grown up in a Muslim country, she would have heard it mentioned once or twice, but no. "I mean it," she said. "I have no idea what you people are talking about."
The teacher called on the rest of us to explain.
The Poles led the charge to the best of their ability. "It is," said one, "a party for the little boy of God who call his self Jesus...oh shit." She faltered and her fellow country-man came to her aid.
"He call his self Jesus and then he be die one day on two...morsels of...lumber."
The rest of the class jumped in, offering bits of information that would have given the pope an aneurysm.
"He die one day and then he go above of my head to live with your father."
"He weared of himself the long hair and after he die, the first day he come back here for to say hello to the peoples."
"He nice, the Jesus."
"He make the good things, and on the Easter we be sad because somebody makes him dead today."
Part of the problem had to do with vocabulary. Simple nouns such as cross and resurrection were beyond our grasp, let alone such a complicated refexive phrases as "to give of yourself your only begotten son." Faced with the challenge of explaining the cornerstone of Christianity, we did what any self-respecting group of people might do. We talked about food instead.
"Easter is a party for to eat of the lamb," the Italian nanny explained. "One too may eat of the chocolate."
"And who brings the chocolate?" the teacher asked.
I knew the word, so I raised my hand, saying, "The rabbit of Easter. He bring of the chocolate."
"A rabbit?" The teacher, assuming I'd used the wrong word, positioned her index fingers on top of her head, wriggling them as though they were ears. "You mean one of these? A rabbit rabbit?"
"Well, sure," I said. "He come in the night when one sleep on bed. Which a hand he have a basket and foods."
The teacher sighed and shook her head. As far as she was concerned, I had just explained everything wrong with my country. "No, no," she said. "Here in France the chocolate is brought by a a big bell that flies in from Rome."
I called for a time-out. "But how do the bell know where you live?"
"Well," she said, "how does a rabbit?"
It was a decent point, but at least a rabbit has eyes. That's a start. Rabbits move from place to place, while most bells can only go back and forth -- and they can't even do that on their own power. On top of that, the Easter Bunny has character. He's someone you'd like to meet and shake hands with. A bell has all the personality of a cast-iron skillet. It's like saying that come Christmas, a magic dustpan flies in from the North Pole, led by eight flying cinder blocks. Who wants to stay up all night so they can see a bell? And why fly one in from Rome when they've got more bells than they know what do to with here in Paris? That's the most implausible aspect of the whole story, as there's no way the bells of France would allow a foreign worker to fly in and take their jobs. That Roman bell would be lucky to get work cleaning up after a French bell's dog -- and even then he'd need papers. It just didn't add up.