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Battle with an Etrog, Wild Things, and a Biologicical Clock |
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| And People Say that Jewish Mothers Don’t Control the Media | ||
by Amelia Cohen-Levy, October 19, 2009 |
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Friday morning, October 16, 2009. Mighty Mouse's 67th birthday. The mail arrives with an unexpected package from mom--it's an etrog.
Flashback a few years--my mother and I went to the Jewish film festival in Houston, TX.
There's a film about Sukkot. What
matters is this: I learned that if a woman wants to have a baby in the next
year, she is to bite the tip off the etrog
(no circumcision jokes, please).
Back in 2009, I open the familiarly-shaped box, already suspecting that I was
about to find a fragrant citron, and my husband walks in, asking "What's
this?"
"Pretty sure mom sent me an etrog,"
I tell him, ready to chuck the thing out the window or feed it to the dog in
order to avoid further explanation.
"???"
I explain anyway. He begins to laugh. He starts pushing the etrog closer and closer. He asks if it
counts if he sneaks it to me, like at this point, I'd fall for the old,
"hey honey, I made some lemonade...want some?"
Flashback, Simchat Torah 2007--I have
gone to services with a lovely Jewish man, the first MOT I'd dated in over a
decade. By the time we got the Barchu,
we knew Gd was having a good laugh at our expense. We got buzzed on the etrog vodka our unicycle-riding rabbi
was handing out and danced with the Torah.
But, in 2009, there's one other hitch. Tonight is the opening night of my
husband's favorite childhood tale, "Where the Wild Things Are."
Normally, we'd just go the movies. Ever since he first saw the trailer, and
every time since, this cinematic event has become something more sinister. You
see, every time, his hand slipped down to my belly. I eventually pointed this
out, thinking we'd have a good laugh. Instead, he says," I'm ready when
you are."
So, my husband's clock is tick-tick-booming, my mother has sent me an etrog, and the Wild Things have decided
it is time to thrust us all back to childhood.
Dear Mr. Jonze, Mr. Eggers, Mr. Sendak, and Mr. Hanks (you're not getting out
of this, Tom, I stayed for the credits--I know you were a producer):
I don't care what my mother has on you. I don't care that you just wanted to
help us reclaim a touch of our exuberant innocence. If I end up pregnant in the
next few weeks, I am holding each of you personally responsible. I expect
monthly child-support payments equivalent to the amount I paid to see the
movie: two IMAX tickets, one large popcorn, one package Whoppers, one large
Coke. Oh, and you're calling my rabbi and explaining why I skipped shul.