Crazy old lady babynaps Maia!

I’m bothered by something.

This afternoon, we went out to a charity fundraiser at a bar that my brother-in-law and his girlfriend, my bff (Sommer) work at.  I used to work there as well.  One of the daytime regulars, a woman named Kay that I was never particularly close to as she’s rather stand-offish and kind of bitchy, came over to say hello and meet Maia.

Maia was holding a spear of broccoli she’d been nibbling, which Kay took away from her for no good reason other than that she wanted to know what the baby had in her hand — despite Sommer and I both protesting.  This should have set off alarm bells in my head, but we were sitting in a kind of loud spot and I didn’t think much of it.

Then Kay took Maia out of my arms.  I’m not one of those parents who freaks out about other people holding my baby, so despite the fact that I wasn’t really happy about it, I didn’t say anything.  Kay was so happy: “Oh, I’ve watched you grow up on Facebook! You’re my first Facebook baby!” (My profile is private, my picture albums are friends only, and we’re not friends, so … clearly I’m missing something here) and I took the opportunity gobble down some nachos while my hands were free.

I turned around and KAY WAS GONE.  WITH MY BABY.  Wandering around the bar, introducing Maia to her friends.  I knew the people she spoke with, so again, despite my unease, I didn’t go after her.  Then Kay went onto the patio with Maia — it had been raining off and on all day, the air was cool, and Maia wasn’t wearing socks, a hat, or a jacket.  But I could see them, and I really did not want to come across as overbearing, so I just watched them, feeling anxious.  I got up once and made my way halfway across the bar to them, but went back to our table.

Five minutes later, Kay came back and Maia dove into my arms.

I am so bothered by this.  Even though I didn’t want her to, and wasn’t comfortable with it at all, I let that woman hold and wander off with my baby.  Why would I do that?  It doesn’t make any damned sense.  The nearest reason I can come up with is that I couldn’t figure out a real reason why Kay shouldn’t hold Maia, or wander around with her — other than it seems socially inappropriate.  I mean, doesn’t it?  I wouldn’t take the baby of someone I hadn’t spoken with in over two years and prance around a bar chatting with friends, showing off my casual acquaintance’s kid.  I genuinely feel like she committed a total faux pas and I allowed it.  But then I think the fault also lies with me; I should have said something.  I should have gone after them.  It would have been completely reasonable to say “I’d like to hold her” or “Please stay here with her” or a hundred other things.

I need to figure out what to say, and never let that happen again.

My upcoming transition from SAHM to WOHM

Sleep.  It’s been something I’ve thought about constantly since Maia arrived, and while I try not to stress over it, sometimes I do.  When she was on her nursing strike — which seems to have had no good cause other than sheer stubbornness on her part — she slept through the first three nights and woke up once during the last  two, but since then, she’s been waking up multiple times per night.  And by “multiple” I mean last night she was up five times.  Brutal.  I don’t really understand why, since she was still drinking almost exclusively breast milk during the strike, but I wonder if we’ve come into another sleep regression.  Regardless, all I can do at this point is laugh, shake my head, and ask myself why I ever think I’m going to be able to predict her sleep patterns.

Thankfully, Chris and I are alternating who wakes up with her every morning, and while it seems that she’s happier for longer with me (so he gets to sleep in for two hours, and I’m lucky if I get forty-five minutes), I’m grateful for it.

I handed in numerous applications up at the local mall recently, and had two interviews on Wednesday.  I’m a little bummed out that I haven’t heard anything back from either of them yet, as they both went really well, both ended with me and the manager shaking hands with her saying “I’m so glad we spoke, and I’ll be in touch soon,”, and one interview even finished with the manager saying “You’re going to be a great addition to our team”.  I’ll call and follow up if I don’t hear from them by the end of the business day.

As excited as I am by the thought of returning to the workforce and earning some money, which will relieve so much marriage-related guilt, all I’m doing is replacing it with mommy guilt.  Maia’s still cruising along holding on to furniture, standing on her own for ten or fifteen seconds at a time, and she keeps trying to take steps on her own but falling forward.  I don’t want to miss the first time she doesn’t fall, but I know there’s a chance I will.  I know that I might be forfeiting “Mama” becoming her official first word by leaving her with Daddy while I’m at work.    I try not to let it bother me too much — after all, it’s not as if she’ll forget how to walk, or never call me Mama — but still, there’s a little bit of sadness and jealousy in my heart.

Still, I know I’ll be coming home to her and Chris, and I know they’ll be bonding more with one another.  That’s a good thing.  And in all reality, I need to get out of the house and feel like a more productive member of society.

Plus, by getting a job, I’m earning hours to make me eligible for maternity leave, which I plan on taking IN SEVERAL YEARS FROM NOW, MOM.

(Side note: you have no idea how many people suggested I was pregnant when Maia went on strike.  You also have no idea how impossible that is.)

Several years.  Because right now?  I’m too busy taking care of this little pigtail monster.

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OM NOM NOM TOES!

This is Maia. She’s eating Chris’ foot.

DSCN2458aWhy is she eating his foot?  I have no idea.  But it’s something she loves to do.

DSCN2459aHowever… she’s not really sure it’s all that tasty.

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I know I sure as hell wouldn’t want to eat someone’s foot.  Unless, of course, it’s hers… yum!

(To read about what we’re really feeding Maia, check out my newest review: Gerber 8 Grain Cereal & Yogurt!)

What did I do to deserve a nursing strike?

This afternoon, around 1pm, Maia started getting a little fussy.  The first thing I did was try to get her to nurse, but no luck.  Awhile later, we figured that maybe her teeth were aching (we think she may be getting one of her top teeth in, as well as both of her bottom one) so I tried applying some Orajel, which resulted in me tweeting the following (at 1:43): “bad news: it’s hard to apply orajel to a squirmy, angry baby. good news: if Maia’s lips were hurting? THEY AREN’T ANY MORE!

Yeah.  No one told me how hard it is to apply Orajel.  Holy shit.

So anyhow, after I numb her entire face, she ends up falling asleep against me, having not eaten in several hours.  Whatever.  She’ll nurse when she wakes up from her nap, right? She only naps 30-45 minutes at a time these days, I can deal with that.  Turns out, she sleeps until 4pm.  AND DOESN’T WANT TO NURSE.

But oh. my. God. She is  throwing a MASSIVE fit every time I try to feed her. I’m starting to get engorged.  Then I get angry, pass her off to Chris, and we decide to all go for a walk.

The walk is great, she’s lovely and happy the whole way, and when we get home, I try to feed her again.

CATS. SLEEPING. WITH. DOGS.

She freaks out.

I pass her off to Chris and open my copy of “The Mother of all Baby Books”, read the section on Nursing Strikes, don’t like what it says, and call my mom, babbling and most likely nearly incoherent.  She tells me that maybe Maia wants some real food and isn’t really all that interested in nursing.  Of course, my response is “But what’s wrong with my boobs?!”

Anyhow, Chris gives Maia some food and she starts to dig in, happier than a pig in shit.  Which when you think about it, is not the most apt metaphor when referring to someone eating, but the point is… I felt horrible.  I felt rejected.  She greeted my boob with screams, but Real People Food with adulation?

When she lost interest in her food, I tried nursing her again.  Still no luck.  Again, she started throwing a fit.

By 8pm she still hadn’t nursed and still had no interest.  We’d started her bedtime routine at 7, like usual, but she wasn’t falling asleep.  By 8:30pm I’d managed to hand-express 1.5oz of milk into a bottle.

There are no words for how absolutely rejected and worthless I felt as I held her, watching her hold onto the bottle and drink from it, feeding herself.  She didn’t need me.  It could have been anything in that bottle.  It could have been Chris holding her, or she could just have been laying on the bed, and nothing would have been different.

Since she enjoyed that milk so much, I went into the washroom and studiously expressed another 1.5oz, which she gobbled down just as gleefully.

Honestly, though, what really matters here, why I really need to write this post, is this:

I am so angry. At her.

It’s like a switch flipped and my mommy empathy turned off.  When I tried to nurse her and she rejected me, screaming with a pitch and fervor that showed her absolute displeasure, I set her down on the bed and laid down alongside her… I watched her cry.  I could NOT bring myself to hold her against my aching, engorged breasts.  I felt no sympathy for her.  Nothing was wrong with her.  If she wanted to eat, I waited; if she wanted to sleep, she could curl up against me.  There was no reason for this screaming. No reason to reject me.

I think that’s the crux of it: I feel like she rejected me.

And it hurts.

I don’t want her to suffer, but I don’t understand why she’s suffering.  Yet… she’s only “suffering” when I try to feed her.  Other than that, once I set her down and she realized I was no longer trying to shove my boob in her mouth, she returned to being happy.  I don’t know if I kept trying to feed her because I hurt (physically and emotionally), because I thought she needed it (clearly she didn’t), or because that’s just what I do, I feed her, that’s a big part of my job.  I guess she wasn’t hungry.  Tonight, it seems like I needed the connection more than she did.

Chris stepped up to the plate BIG TIME.  He told me he’d watch Maia while I went and tried to hand express.  He tried to comfort me as I sat there aching, fighting tears, feeling my heart crumbling in my chest.  He reminded me “it’s not about you, it’s not personal” as I stared at Maia holding the bottle in her mouth.  He held her close and sang to her when she got sleepy but wouldn’t sleep for me.  She fell asleep in his arms.  When she woke up a few minutes later, he told me to stay put, and went to her, rocking her to sleep again.

That’s the one good thing that came from tonight: she wanted him, and he wanted her.

But I feel lost.

You can actually hear him whimper SOMEONE HELP ME PLEASE!

Maia’s all over the place, crawling, standing, cruising around holding onto furniture, and experimenting with standing on her own.  She’s trying all sorts of new foods — oranges are a recent favourite — and being generally charming.

One thing she’s begun doing is chasing the dogs around the house.

WORD OF WARNING: This video opens  up with a really loud, shrieky Maia.

She cracks me up!  If you’re not going to watch the whole 78 seconds, at least fast forward to the 40 second mark and watch what she does there.  CRAZY.

Recently, Maia had her first playdate, with @cindyambrose‘s daughter Lily.  I didn’t get any good pictures, but Cindy did & they’re posted on her blog.  Check them out!  Our little girls are so different from one another physically, but they played together really well.  And they kissed each other, which was probably THE CUTEST THING THAT HAS EVER HAPPENED.

We’ve looked up the schedules for some local drop-in play centres and will be taking her to one tomorrow.  I can’t wait to see her interact with more of her peers!

Girl Talk Thursday

Girl Talk Thursday is a weekly event run by Maria of Mommy Melee. This week, we’re discussing dreams.

I’ve written about dreams twice before.  Interestingly, those recurring dreams don’t happen as much anymore.  Now that Maia’s here, there’s a whole new set of strange going on in my head.

I had a really fucked up dream the other night.  I dreamt that my parents, who have been split up for something like fifteen years, got back together.  Now, to be clear, I don’t remember ever wishing my parents would get back together (I think I understood that a divorce isn’t a lightly undertaken process) but if I have, it sure as hell hasn’t been within the last, ohhh, fourteen point nineninenine years.  In this dream, though, my mom kept saying to me, “It’s okay Tatiana, just give him another chance.”  My dad kept pleading, “Please let me hold my granddaughter,” and I was FREAKING OUT, screaming at him: “You’ll never hold her!  Never!” Fucked up.

And although sexy dreams have been absent for several months, I’ve had a few of them lately.  I’m kind of ashamed to admit that only one of them has featured Chris; the others have featured celebrities.  I’m totally not a celeb fangirl type, but I guess I am in my sleep (hellooooo Colin Farrell, and no I don’t care if anyone thinks you’re dirty, like the Paris Hilton of the male celebrities, I’m totally okay with that).

Now, speaking in a loftier way of dreams — what are my dreams?

Obviously, I dream of health, happiness, long life, and prosperity for my family and everyone else I love.

I dream of having a career that leaves me feeling fulfilled.  I dream of going back to school.  I love learning.  What is that career, though?  Sometimes I think I’m meant to be a chef, but other times I’m certain I’m meant to write, and yet others I know I was born to be a teacher.

I dream of growing old with Chris (also of him cancelling his WoW account).  I want us to be that little old couple walking, bent over, slowwwwwww as molasses, along a sidewalk under falling leaves in the autumn, holding hands.

I dream of our little Maia growing up strong and beautiful, of holding her baby in my arms.

I want to say that I dream of a world free of discrimination based on gender, race, and sexual preference.  It needs to be clear, though, that I speak of mutual, informed, consensual sexual preferences.  I’m not cool with the stuff that’s illegal for a reason.

I don’t dream of world peace.  I genuinely don’t believe it’s attainable.  I WISH it were, but so long as people use religion as a justification for unjustifiable behaviour, man needs natural resources, and psychopathic mental illnesses exist, world peace cannot happen.  Sad, but true.

Ironically, my working title is “Sorrow”

I’ve been writing again.

Obviously, not blogging.  Not even article writing (although I should).  Not freelance writing (again with the “should”).

No, I’ve been creative writing.  I’ve brainstormed a world and characters and a history, and I’ve been scribbling it down — pen to paper, ink staining my fingertips — for the past several days.  Each morning and night, when Maia sleeps, I take my notebook and pen onto the balcony and just write, until I have nothing more to say or she wakes up.

I love every moment of it, even the ones where I am staring blankly up at the sky, wondering if I’ll ever be able to put the scenarios in my head down onto paper.  I used to write stories constantly, although I never finished one (story of my life!), I had stopped for many, many years.  One of my goals to achieve while pregnant was finishing the first draft of a novel, just so I would have something to refine and show her in many years.

I’m counting my blog as that novel.

Now, I’m writing for myself.  And it’s something that Chris and I are bonding over.  I can ask him geeky questions that no one but the most hardcore lover of the fantasy genre would understand, and he helps me brainstorm.  When I’m in the middle of this world in my mind, sometimes I need an outsider’s perspective, and that’s where he comes to the rescue.  I explain a few key facts to him, and then I ask why are these things true, or how do these things relate to one another, or what’s a possible side effect of these? Sometimes he comes up with great stuff, sometimes not so great, but he always makes me think.

And I’m writing.  WRITING.

I could cry.

Being a twenty-something

I introduced myself as a “writer” at our CPR course this afternoon, because I felt ashamed to call myself (just) a “blogger”.

I’d rather be a writer who blogs than a blogger who writes.

The other woman who was part of the class — and 36 weeks pregnant! — told me that blogging is the wave of the future, and while I agree in theory, I still feel… funny… introducing myself that way.  “Hi, I’m Tatiana, and I’m a blogger.”  As I explained, 13 year olds on MySpace are also “bloggers”.

But then, there are numerous professional bloggers, people who get paid to write editorial-style pieces.  Perhaps there’s not so much of a stigma attached to it in the public eye as I feel like there is.  Maybe my hesitance is born from the fact that I’m a “mommy blogger”, a title that has been growing increasingly derogatory as the dramas of this summer continue, even among those I’d consider my peers.

Sometimes, though, I have to laugh at myself.  I suppose what I’m going through recently is the existential crisis that plagues twenty-somethings.  I always assumed I’d skip it and that I knew myself, but I look back at who I was when I turned 20 as compared to who I am now and I’m hardly the same.

Then again, I’m not even the same person I was six months and one week ago.

I think I’m better now, in some ways.  I love my family, appreciate life, and trust myself more.  Yet at the same time I’ve found such anger smouldering inside and have rediscovered the genuinely hurtful side of my personality that dominated my teenage years, and Chris is the person who bears the brunt of that.  Sometimes I feel like I use all my love on Maia, so when I turn to him or the dogs, I have nothing left but frustration and fury.  They deserve better.

Most days, being a wife is harder than being a mother.

Motherhood comes instinctively and innately.  There is not a cell in my body that is satisfied when she is hurt.  I’ve never snarled something intentionally cruel at her and stalked away.  I’ve never sat in self-righteous indignity with my back turned to her.  Yet I’ve felt and done all those things to Chris since we brought her into this world.

The truly sad part is that I try to be a better wife, a better woman, and I fail.  Miserably.

You know that “50% of all marriages end in divorce” wisdom that is so prevalent? I wonder how many of those marriages involve children.

Balancing these dual identities — wife, mother; husband, father — is the real challenge of parenting thus far.  I wonder how long it will take for me to figure it out.

Because this is difficult.  Sometimes it’s downright impossible.

Month Six

Dear Maia,

This will go down in history as the month you grew too quickly.  Oh yes.  You see, Mommy just went back to read her Month Five letter to you, where she says such quaint things as “you’ve finally learned how to roll from belly to back” and “you are learning to crawl“.  Haha.  I know, right?  You’re totally thinking GOSH MOM, THAT’S OLD NEWS, GET WITH THE PROGRAM.

You crawl like a speed demon all over the house, and we’ve had to put up gates or build mini-walls of laundry baskets to keep you in a safe, baby-proofed space.  For a few days we didn’t even have to do that, but then you discovered you could go around the corner of the couch and that was it, your life changed forever.  When Daddy and I blocked that area with a table and a rolling laundry cart, well, you just tugged on that cart and made it roll out of your way.  While we appreciate (and are somewhat awed by) your intelligence and determination, it’s actually quite frightening.

A day before you really got the hang of the crawling thing, you mastered sitting.  Literally, Maia, you had no interest in sitting, and then one day you were playing on the floor near the kitchen while I got a drink, then I looked over and there you were, SITTING STRAIGHT UP, all like “What up, homegirl?”

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(you’re surprised to see me here, like “oh shit, she caught me!”)

Of course, all this movement comes with a price (besides my sanity): you fell down this month.  You fell down A LOT this month.  You’d sit up, beam at me, and in your excitement… THUNK!  You’d topple right over, bonking your head on the carpet with this horrible, hollow, melon-esque sound.  You tried to climb everything in the house and often ended up whacking your head against them.  Your grandmas have a picture of you with all of your war wounds labelled that I will not share with the world, but it’s an accurate representation of how often, and how fast, you hurt yourself as you learned to move.  Sometimes you’d wait a second before crying, as if in total shock, but most of the time you’d just start wailing.  Mommy wailed with you a few times.

Yet you recovered more quickly than I did, and you have kept your sunny disposition this month.

Uh.

Actually, funny story, Maia: you’ve developed quite a personality, AND IT IS EXACTLY LIKE YOUR FATHER’S.  So help me God, I don’t know how I’m going to survive the next eighteen years, but I think it might involve a lot of booze, hoarded chocolate, and expensive day-long trips to the spa, because your father used to be the most stubborn person I knew, but now you’ve taken that crown.  You are also … mercurial.  You will snuggle into me like I am the most precious person in the world, but then when I lean over to set you down you start to grunt, and the second your butt touches the ground you start the wailing and the teeth gnashing and the OHMIGOD MOMMY CATS SLEEPING WITH DOGS.  This is when your father looks at me and says, “You know, maybe you shouldn’t kick her in the ribs, it seems to upset her,” but I’m pretty sure that even if I did, even if I were somehow an evil enough person to kick you in the ribs, it still would not make you cry as much as me setting you down when you want to snuggle does.

(And for the record, I tend to pick you back up, cause I like to snuggle you too.  Don’t tell your grandpa.)

Very often this month, I’ve sat on the couch with a notebook or novel in hand as you roamed around on the floor.  You really love your rattles and will often sit smashing them on the ground, then throw them a few feet away before chasing them down just to do it again.  One time, I had a water bottle set next to the couch, and you smacked that bitch over before proceeding to chase it around the living room for literally fifteen minutes, squealing with glee every time it rolled away from under your hands.  Do you know what I could have done with that fifteen minutes?  I could have written a blog post, talked to your daddy, painted my finger nails, applied for a job, read a chapter of my book, played with the chihuahuas, made a sandwich… but no, I watched you.  Because you were so vibrant in that time, so unbelievably charming and intrepid, and I both treasured and coveted your sense of wonder.

However, now when I sit on the couch, you do this:

DSCN2100aYou stand.  Against the couch.  You stare at me, and talk to me, and try to grab my book or eat my knee.  Sometimes you even let go with one hand and flail your arm around as if you’re intentionally trying to give me a heart attack, and no word of a lie, you even let go with BOTH HANDS once.  Then you laid your hands back on the couch and scooted over a few steps to slobber on my leg.

Last night, you were trying to stand while holding your stuffed turtle toy. You were having some difficulty grabbing on to the couch, so you stuck one of his fins in your mouth long enough to stand.  And let me tell you, Maia, I was proud of you, but you were even prouder of yourself, because you looked up at me and your face just LIT UP as you smiled so big that you released the turtle, who promptly fell to the floor.

You watched him fall as if it were happening in slow motion, then bent down to pick him up.  You wobbled back and forth, one hand gripping the couch, the other extended, inching towards the turtle…

… and then the Earth imploded.

Or at least, that’s how you acted.  OH, THE HUMANITY!  OH, THE HORROR!  What an utter indignity against your person, that Mommy witnessed your ass plopping to the floor when you were trying to pick something up!  This wasn’t your hurt cry or your “give me attention” cry, this was a pure, gut-deep wail of embarrassment the likes of which I had never heard before but imagine your father must have also given when he was your age.  Because, again, you are his clone (with a vagina) (also no ding-a-ling).

As if sitting and standing weren’t enough, you’ve also taken to reaching for the food on our plates (and getting very pissed when we won’t let you have it, as you evidenced last night when I wouldn’t share my fried okra with you — I love you Maia, but NO ONE gets my fried okra), so we’ve begun exploring solids with you.  You’ve had mixed reactions to these:

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Maia, if next month goes at the same pace last month did, I fully expect you to be trying out for the next season of “So You Think You Can Dance” (which is our favourite show to watch together now that “Canada’s Next Top Model” is finished and we were both pissed over who lost).  I suggest that you specialize in Broadway because, judging by the hysterics you’re so keen to share with us, you’re just MADE for drama.

The good thing about drama, though, is that it can be deeply loving and kind, just like you.  You raise your arms for us to pick you up and hug us when we do, one arm around our shoulder and the other resting on our chest.  You laugh and laugh when we kiss you or try to teach you how to kiss us.  At bedtime, we all snuggle into bed, lie on our backs, and read nursery rhymes, and you stare up at the book as we point out the words to you or glance back and forth between us as we sing Row, Row, Row Your Boat.  When the book is done, you invariably roll over towards your Daddy and stroke his face as if amazed at the stubble on his cheeks and the roughness of his goatee.  And you smile, smile, smile.

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Thanks for letting us be supporting actors in your drama, Maia.  We couldn’t be happier to watch you on centre stage.

Love,
Mommy & Daddy

Girl Talk Thursday

Girl Talk Thursday is a weekly event run by Maria of Mommy Melee. This week, we’re discussing our favourite songs.  It’s been interesting to watch the Twitter conversation around this topic, because several women seem to be saying that that our favourite songs, or the ones that are most meaningful to us, bring tears to our eyes and strike at our hearts.

I’ve definitely felt that while putting together this list, but I didn’t really get into a lot of the stories behind these songs, if only because some of them are so intensely personal that they’re too personal to type here. Yes.  I, who have written about A LOT here, won’t write about certain stories. But there are some of you girls I’d love to share personal stories with over a bottle of wine.

I settled on ten songs — four in video form, six with links to their vid on YouTube.

“Every Now and Then” by Tony Henry. My favourite slow jam song – if you listen to NOTHING else on this list, nothing else today, if you hate music, it doesn’t matter, you must, must, must listen to this song.  I am not joking.  It is AMAZING.  That this man is not an international star is beyond me.  This vid is nothing but the name of the song and the artist, so you can even work in another window while listening and not miss anything visually.  There is another Tony Henry that’s a recording artist, but he’s like an opera dude or something? Not the same.  (Thank you, Mark, for introducing me to this song — one of the MANY MANY MANY amazing artists you’ve brought to my attention.)

“Fast as You” by Dwight Yoakam is my favourite country song. I’m pretty sure this is the favourite country song of everyone in my family with the possible exception of my very Polish grandfather, who loves “The Devil Went Down to Georgia”. Also: LOOK AT THAT LEG ACTION! Smooth.

“Reckless Girl” by The Beginerz used to remind me of myself.  Still kinda does, a little bit.  But it’s just got a great groove to it.  “I ain’t much at cookin’ & sewin’, but my man is crazy for me.  I spend his money like there’s no tomorrow, I’m a reckless girl, I agree.”

“Angel” by Massive Attack is “our” song. This played at our wedding, but Chris was too cool to dance with his new wife. Ironically, I was introduced to this band — hell, this entire genre of music — by the Professor.  This song really gets to me.  It’s so powerful, the beat throbs, the singer’s voice is ethereal… shivers.  Serious shivers.

“Dirrty” by Cristina Aguilera is my favourite sexy song – . Chris and I first bonded and flirted over how fking hot this video is, all those years ago. I don’t know why, but I love the part around 4:03 where she kicks the water up.  It always sticks in my mind.

“Just to Get By” by Talib Kweli is the song I have an unexpected but deep love affair with. Love the chorus on this one — hell, I love all the lyrics.  It’s just inspiring.  Also, Talib Kweli tweets!

“Breathe Me” by Sia is THE song that makes me cry. Mom, I know you have heard this one before and it made you cry, too (I think at the end of “Six Feet Under”?).  Not only is it lyrically and musically beautiful, but it unlocks certain painful memories.  For that reason, I rarely listen to it… but when I do, I am always moved.

“Love Shack” by the B-52s is my favourite 80s groove.. Is there anyone that doesn’t love this song?  Also, if your answer is yes, please just close my blog now.  Don’t bother telling me in the comments.  I’ll just pretend you didn’t write it anyway.

“As The Rush Comes (Gabriel & Dresden Remix)” by Motorcycle takes the title of best song you’ve never heard but you should. Vid is just that one image, but this is the kind of song you just listen to and feel.

Last, but certainly not least, the song I consider to be my “theme song”: “Penny On the Train Track” by Ben Kweller.

I’m just a penny on the train track
Waitin’ for my judgement day
Come on baby girl let me see those legs
Before I get flattened away

I wait
Yeah, I wait
For something good, for something great

Stoppin’ in somebody’s old home town
Gotta get that midnight meal
If you can’t get behind your own life
Get behind the driving wheel

And go, just go
Find a place that you don’t know

Ran into a friend just the other night
Got a badge, he’s a local cop
Haven’t seen that boy in over seven years
Since out of high school I dropped

I see, I see
All the things that I should be

Oh baby dance with me!

Even lucky man has a bad day
And pretty girl has a scar
After that train comes and takes me away
Pick up that guitar

And play, just play
Play that rock and roll for me

He’s in the yard just washin’ his car
Thinkin’ ’bout his pretty wife
Makin’ lemonade with the kitchen aid
Makin’ him a perfect life

And it’s grim, so dim
When you wish that you were just like him

I’m just a penny on the train track
Waitin’ for my judgement day
Come on baby girl let me see those legs
Before I get flattened away

I wait, I wait
For something good, for something great

And I try, oh I try
I can’t stop, I don’t know why

Copyright © A Very Good Year 2012. All Rights Reserved.