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Let's Panic: The Book!

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How to Endure and Possibly Triumph Over the Adorable Tyrant
who Will Ruin Your Body, Destroy Your Life, Liquefy Your Brain,
and Finally Turn You
into a Worthwhile
Human Being.

Written by Alice Bradley and Eden Kennedy

Some Books
I'm In...

Sleep Is
For The Weak

Chicago Review Press

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Let's Panic

The site that inspired the book!

At LET'S PANIC ABOUT BABIES, Eden Kennedy and I share our hard-won wisdom and tell you exactly what to think and feel and do, whether you're about to have a baby or already did and don't know what to do with it.

Lets-Panic.com → 

« Because kids love furniture, and parents love putting them on it. | Main | I am too old to drink that much tequila. »
Wednesday
Aug032005

BlogHer, BlogMe

Last Friday, I was on a JetBlue flight, surrounded by the Greenwich, Connecticut Boys’ Water Polo team who are headed to the Junior Olympics in San Jose. This was announced by the pilot, whose voice I was too busy scrutinizing for slurring or tipsy joie de vivre to appreciate what I was in for: five hours of good-natured, sun-bleached young boys wearing flip-flops and torn jean shorts and stepping over my lap every two minutes. It was physically impossible for these kids to sit still. I could hear them straining against their seat belts during takeoff. They were sweet, but I quickly had had enough of being knocked to one side while I attempted to sleep. And sometime during the flight, my lower back began to protest sitting for so long. I was in agony. I was sweating and trying to knead my lower back with my knuckles, while I considered asking one of these boys for a massage. Could you imagine? “Excuse me, young man—perhaps you wouldn’t mind palpating my lumbar region?” As I begin to unbutton my shirt. And one of their many guardians pushes me down to the aisle and locks me in a half-nelson.

 


Finally we arrived and somehow, although I was now officially all nervous and sweating, I made it to baggage claim and there was Melissa, frowning at Baggage Carousel #1. “This guy was throwing himself on the carousel trying to get at his luggage,” she said, “doesn’t he know it comes back around?”

“Shut up and come over here,” I said, and then I forced her to hug me. And I have to say, it was not an awkward hug at all. She explained that her friends have been helping her learn how to hug. Which was a good thing, because she was so adorable that if I hadn’t been able to hug her it might have killed me.

For a while everything was a blur, to be honest, because all I can think was, “Oh my god! I’m here with Melissa and she’s so cool! And I’m making her laugh!” Mrs. Kennedy observed at one point, “Alice was funny, but Melissa, you make her seem even funnier,” which was absolutely true. Melissa has the most infectious, addictive laugh that it made everyone else laugh even more. I was pretty much unbearable all weekend because nothing was as fun as making Melissa laugh. Not that she wasn’t funny in her own right, because oh God she was. If she wasn’t laughing at something I said, she was making me laugh, and we were pretty much hysterical from the moment we got in the taxi until… well, until she left.

While Melissa and I were settling in at the hotel and braying like donkeys at everything we did or said, Mrs. Kennedy called me to update us on her arrival, giving me a sneak preview of her husky incredibleness. Finally she arrived. As she attempted to check in we lurched toward her giggling and snorting. She raised one eyebrow at us and we gawked up at her and then we climbed step ladders to give her a hug. “There’s a Trader Joe’s near here,” say Mme. Kennedy. “I thought we could go buy drinks and snacks.” I like drinks and snacks, too! I thought. It’s all going to be all right!

I definitely felt like I had to grow up a little to become worthy of Mrs. Kennedy’s company. She’s hilarious but entirely sane and sure of himself, where I’m jumpy and dorky and sticking straws up my nose to get a laugh. Dooce called her “grounded,” and I think that about sums it up, and so I shall steal it. Grounded! It’s definitely from all the yoga.

I can’t fully explain how incredible it was to meet Melissa and Mrs. Kennedy. I’m struggling to make a joke here, but I can’t, for once. I had felt for a long time like they are two of my best friends, which felt awfully strange, as I had never met them. And then I met them, and they were even better than I had imagined, truly. Nicer, funnier, and hotter. I was free to make the most tasteless jokes I could think up around them and they still liked me. Or sometimes they made the joke before I did. The minute we were all together, all I could think was, Why in hell are we going to this BlogHer thing when we could hang out in the room for three straight days and have as much fun as three people are allowed to have?

However, we had already paid the money, and there were other people we wanted to see, actually. So we were off to find the BlogHer dinner.

A fellow blogger was nice enough to give us a ride to the restaurant, where the three of us proceeded to offend her sensibilities (and Ken Kato’s, who was sitting in the front seat). This was when I knew I was in the right company:



Melissa: I will now make a saucy comment about penises!

Woman: Ha, ha! I will quickly change the subject to let you know how inappropriate you are! Let’s talk about the restaurant!

Mrs. Kennedy: I will talk of penises, as well!

Me: Yes, yes! Penises, penises!

Melissa: I will top you all, with my penis talk!

Woman: Ha, ha! Cut that shit out, I am implying, as I talk once again about the goddamn restaurant!



By the end of the ride we were snorting and holding our mouths closed with our hands to keep from giggling out loud. I’m sure she hated us.

 

Then, to the dinner. Mexitalian! Italexican! It was fine, but beside the point; we were there to see our friends. When we arrived at the restaurant, there was JenB and Amanda.

Amanda was completely adorable and sweet and I want to remove her hair and paste it to my skull. And JenB! For no intelligent reason, I had always been intimidated by her, probably because she’s Canadian and she might bomb my house. And while she did threaten to do so a few times that night, she was also sweet and gracious and oh my god, so funny. In a dry, astonishingly smart way. She’s the person you want to sit next to at an event so you can catch every bit of her commentary. And then you can feel cool and glad that you’re on her side. And the “aboots” just aboot slayed me. Canadians! I also wanted some of her hair for my skull.

Suddenly, there was a blonde presence at the door, and a murmuring could be heard amongst the peoples. Could that be Heather? And was that tall redhead behind her, was that Maggie? It was. And we stood, for we were in the presence of royalty. Heather did a sly little strut over to us and I immediately removed my panties and tossed them in her direction. A friend of mine who reads Dooce just sent me an email calling Heather “The Simon LeBon of the '00s,” and I think that pretty much sums it up.


Heather’s first words to me, after we hugged, were “You are so cute.” Dooce called me cute. And, oh, god, in that Southern accent of hers. I removed my second pair of panties and handed them over.

Here’s the thing about Heather: as smart and funny as I already knew her to be, she was also incredibly gracious and warm and empathetic. When she’s listening to you, you kind of feel like you’re being heard for the first time. Then you want to sit in her lap. (And hand over your panties.) All the people who enjoy hurling abuse at her via the Internets would immediately be stricken with shame and deep regret if they ever had the pleasure of meeting her, she’s that gentle and sweet and lovely. Then again, all those people would probably also instantly fall in love with her and want her to live in their vans with them, forever and ever, and I’m pretty sure she doesn’t want to live in your van so you back the fuck off, you hear?

And Maggie! Another one who scared me, for no good reason except I didn’t know her beforehand so immediately assumed she was too cool for me. Which, pretty much, she was, but she still deigned to talk to me and make me eat JenB’s exotic foreign candies while we drank in our room. She’s incredibly funny and has impeccable comic timing; in addition, she was glamorous and eminently lickable. Although I held off, for both our sakes.



I wish I could tell you what Heather, Melissa, Mrs. Kennedy, JenB, Maggie, and Amanda and I talked about in our room that night. But there was a lot of drinking. At one point Heather became sincere and made Melissa cry. I remember thinking, “Hey, I’m not feeling as drunk as I thought I would feel!” and then a few minutes later I tried to string together some words and they were coming out all wrong and I put my head in my hands and said “Oh my god I was so drunk.”

After everyone leaves our room, Mrs. Kennedy and Melissa and I actually attempted to push the beds together. For a family bed! In our drunken minds, This made more sense than for us to decide who would get to sleep alone. Sadly, the beds were nailed to the wall, to stop the kinky sex perverts like us. So Melissa and I got to share a bed. Many jokes were made about spooning each other. In bed, Melissa will not stop talking and also begging us to make her stop talking. I considered making her stop by kissing her full on the mouth, but instead we listened to this: “Oh my god you guys I’m so drunk. Oh my god you guys I love you. I love you guys! I do! Oh my god you guys make me shut up. Don’t let me keep talking. Oh my god. You guys! Do any of you snore I hope you don’t snore! You guys!” Approximately 30 seconds after this monologue faded away, Melissa began to snore, loudly. And Mrs. Kennedy and I laughed at her. “You guys, stop it!” Melissa whimpered. Finally she went to sleep. And whapped me in the face several times throughout the night as she flung her limbs hither and yon.

We made it to the BlogHer conference the next day… eventually. Everyone was already there, all perky and ready for action, and we came stumbling in like a bunch of hungover adolescents, missing the opening meeting and sitting around a table, drinking coffee and wincing. People kept coming over and asking, “What group are you?” and we all responded, “Waa? Wuzza?” Then one of us realizes this was the allotted time for some kind of Birds of a Feather Meet-Ups or something. And we kept telling people that we were all just people sitting around. And then that person would get a glimpse of Heather and, temporarily blinded, stumble away.

Then Tracey entered our group. Tracey! What a surprise she was! I remembered that she had commented on my site a couple of times, and I had looked at her blog and thought, “She’s cool, I should really link to her,” and then I returned to picking my nose. My first thought about Tracey was that she was all punk rock, with her “Defend Baltimore” shirt and her white-blond hair, and then I wondered if she was going to beat me up. Thankfully she did not, even after I asked her some inane question like, “Didn’t you comment on my site? What did you say again?” Because I expect everyone to memorize their comments to me, apparently. Tracey sat with us and was incredibly funny and wondrous and quickly she was declared One Of Us. She fit seamlessly into our routine of Mocking Everything Around Us For No Good Reason.

Then there was our Flame, Blame and Shame lunch, in which I attempted to do all three to Melissa. Before the actual talk began somehow the discussion at the table turned to—of all things—vacuums. Heather intoned, “Dyson totally changed my life, y’all,” and we were hanging on her every word. We laughed self-consciously at our talk of vacuums and then we were all, “But seriously, you think the Dyson was worth the money?” and then Heather was like, “Hell, yeah.”

After lunch, Heather and Maggie left. We wept. Well, Melissa did. I’ve never met someone who cries more than I do! I like it!

Although I was enjoying the hell out of being with my friends and meeting all kinds of new people, I was also becoming increasingly annoyed by an undercurrent of derision aimed at the “Mommy Bloggers” (no matter how I try, I still hate that term). At the Mommy Blogging panel, an editor admonished us for always being the ones who attack each other and also for being upset with the NYT article. Which, um, isn’t true (for the first part) and misses the point (for the second). But whatever. If we’re not valued enough, it’s our own fault, and look, even when we get attention we whine about it. We are such whiny bitches.

Then at the closing seminar another comment was made in which mommy bloggers were dismissed, and my hand flew up. For about fifteen minutes I sat there with my hand straight up and I was going Oooh! Oooh! Ooh! Finally it was my turn, and I made up some shit about how mommy bloggers are important too, blah blah, and I wish I could remember what I said but I was too nervous. The important part was that I made Melissa cry. And that’s what I came for.

That night we got drunk again. At least, I tried. The previous night proved that I am not capable of the heavy drinking, and after a beer and single glass of wine, I knew I couldn’t handle a repeat performance. Melissa repeatedly told me how disappointed she was in me, and I attempted to Shame her by observing, “I guess it makes me uncool! That I can’t drink that much! I guess I’m not part of the cool crowd, is that what you’re saying!” and she shrugged and said, “Pretty much.”

We had worn out Eden, so we left her alone in the room and went to Tracey’s, where we laughed until we all felt sick and Melissa said, “You guys, I have to go to sleep” approximately 37 times. Melissa had to leave early the next day, so she said her final goodbyes to Tracey and Jen. And when Melissa and Tracey hugged, the Promise of the Awkward Hug was finally fulfilled. Oh, people, I wish I had had a video camera with me. I have never seen anything like it. I had no idea anything could be that awkward. There were elbows getting in the way and Melissa was grimacing like she might get slapped and Tracey was saying things like, “Wait, just put your arm over there. No, not there. Wait, ” and JenB and I were hysterical. I laughed so hard I fell down. I was lying in the hall of the Westin and I couldn’t breathe, I was laughing so hard.

Oh, there was so much more. I missed so much in this. I met many other incredible people and I didn’t even mention them here. But my poor hands need a rest, and Henry is getting up from his nap.

It was incredible. I cried all the way home because lord I love these whiny bitches.

Reader Comments (106)

Is it wrong that I want to START writing just so I can go to wonderful-sounding events like this? Shouldn't there be some more lofty inspiration? But I can't help it! The thought of people I've never met meeting people THEY'VE never met brings a little tear to my eye.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterLaziza
Are you wearing a Brooklyn Industries T-shirt? If not, we have eerily similar T-shirts. You look so happy in those photos.

Anyhow, the crazy woman you wrote about earlier Who exposed herself to you and Henry? I think my mother and daughter were accosted by the same woman. She thought my daughter looked sad and so pulled out her boob, saying that O needed some "Ninny!" Yeah, that didn't add fuel to my mother's "Move closer to us!" fire. At all.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterkb
Holy Fucking Shit. I have been writing all day trying to pay off my debt to the internet for getting me to Blogher and all 1000 words have just been deleted because this is so fucking perfect.

I just want to follow you around for the rest of my life giggling like a lunatic. Like I am right now, in the middle of a coffee shop. Where people are staring at me.

Also, I'm crying.

WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH ME?
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterMelissa Summers
Hi,I'm glad you at fun at BlogHer! I'm sorry folks were dissing "Mommy Bloggers." I quote your blog at footnote 122 in this law review article: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=755724By which I mean, I think "Monny Bloggers" are important and cool.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterAnn Bartow
Good grief, people who proof their comments before posting them are cool too, obviously more so then me. Oy. MOMMY bloggers. You rock.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterAnn Bartow
mommy bloggers rock and don't let 'em tell you differently.

August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commenternicole
That's all right, Ann. I wish I had proofed this post before I put it up but now it's up and ain't no way in hell i'm fixing it.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteralice
OMG that sounds like it was so much fun. What an oddly amazing experience.... to meet the people you read so much about. It's like going to a blind date with a cheat sheet.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterandrea
I don't have any kids and I LOVE mommy bloggers. I don't know how that happened, but I'm glad it did. My gf has a bit of trouble keeping all of the names straight - "Okay, so Mrs Kennedy lost the Angels tickets, Melissa is SuburbanBliss Mom, Finslippy is the one you called a whore, JenB (she had no trouble at all with her, must be the Canadian bondage thing), oh, I know who she is..." She still can't keep your kids straight, but that's for another time.

I've been online, on message boards for a loooooooong time and met lots of people (uh, my gf, for one), so it gives me warm fuzzies to see the connection between you guys, even though I'm insanely jealous of your trip.

Those foreign candies, did they include Coffee Crisp, the world's greatest candy bar?
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterFlippy
Wait a minute, Flippy, you're GAY?!

Ha, ha.

yes, coffee crisps!
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteralice
oh, you make me laugh! also, mommy bloggers are the best bloggers, though burdened with officially the worst nickname ever. mommy bloggers? wtf.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commenterkilowatthour
No, I'm not gay. I just play gay online.

Coffee Crisp - heaven in a yellow wrapper.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterFlippy
There was a time when I thought Finslippy and Flippy were the same person. (IMAGINE my confusion!)

Reading the blogher recaps has been a treat for us nonattendees. Thanks for sharing, ladies!
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterSusie Sunshine
Hi! I'm just getting into the Mommy Blogging - I'm a DotMoms contributor, but just got my own site up a few weeks ago. Have to say that I LOVE the idea of BlogHer and am already plotting how I can make it to the next one. Please tell me there's going to be another one, next year? So much better than the college reunion I was planning on going to.

You ladies rock! And I too, would be humbled to be in Heather's presence.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterPeyton
BEST. RECAP. EVER.

I so enjoyed this. Of all the people mentioned, I only read you, Melissa and Heather and I'm so excited to know that my impressions of them (and you via the others' recaps) were right on.

OK I will stop kissing up. Wait for it. Now.

:)
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterNinotchka
This post makes me love your hair even more than I did yesterday.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterSusan
I am glad, Susan, for I am hating my hair even more than I did yesterday, and I didn't think that was possible. After those pictures all I can think is GROWING IT OUT NOW.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteralice
For the love of god, DON'T GROW IT OUT. I'm begging you, please.

Jesus, why would you listen to me? Just don't do it. Don't. That's all.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterSusan
will you marry me?*

*not legally binding in any U.S. state or territory on the eastern seaboard.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commentersweetney
Love the re-cap. Love the hair. Love the shoes. Love everything.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterSusie
Ha! In that car ride, even if I had sensibilities, they would not have been offended. I spent the whole conference trying to hear what you were saying, because I wanted to know what everyone else was laughing about.

August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterKen
You were scandalized. Admit it!
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered Commenteralice
I'm with Melissa. I'm going to go delete my post now. Be right back.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterMrs. Kennedy
I hate the whole mommy blogger thing as well. A lot of the blogs I read are by mothers but that's not why I read them, other than to constantly be reminded either a) why I don't want children or b) oh, maybe a child wouldn't be so bad...who can I get to knock me up?

I read your blog and dooce and one good thing and suburban bliss not because you're mothers but because you're funny and real and I adore you all. In a totally non-stalker way. Well, at least until next year when I try to get to blogher. Maybe.
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterDM
I do have kids, but I read you all because you are so fricking funny. Obviously that's why you get all these non-mom readers. The hilarity!! I'm happy that you are so happy and I am thrilled to read all about it! You rule! Crabby publishers drool!
August 3, 2005 | Unregistered CommenterGG

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