It’s not often I’m asked how I met Mr. Magpie; we’ve been together for almost half my life and we are old news.  But I recently had occasion to walk down memory lane when a new friend asked after our story, which always begins with this: I met my would-be father-in-law the same day I met my would-be husband, at a high school graduation party for my best friend at the time, M.

It’s funny to think back on this — something Shakespearean about it, really — because in spite of the fact that I spent close to every weekend with M., I’d never met or even really heard anything about Mr. Magpie.  M. had grown up with him; their parents had been tight-knit when they were young, and they trick-or-treated together and attended parties together and dined out together and were offered pizza and a movie together in one or the other family’s basements while the parents shucked blue crabs or downed gin and tonics or talked into the the slurry-sticky-thick air of a Washington summer night.  In short, they spent a lot of their youths together.  Their families imagined that one day M. would marry Mr. Magpie — only, back then, of course, he wasn’t Mr. Magpie; he was Landon, the deeply tanned, athletic-looking tall-drink-of-water I couldn’t stop staring at.  And I was about to become the interloper in what might have been a romantic story of two childhood friends ending up together.

Landon was, by all accounts, A Babe with a capital B.  This is a fact.  (The picture at the top of this post was actually taken a few years after we graduated from college, and by the incredible photojournalist Andrew Harnik, whose courtly invitation to an awards ceremony in D.C. changed my life, but it captures my young Landon so well.)  I would later discover that he had a high school fan club — a group of sophomores who swooned over his every word and smile — and that even girls at the rival public high school in Arlington knew about him and his movie star good looks.  On that particular day, he wore an olive-green Ralph Lauren button-down with a navy polo player embroidered on the chest, the sleeves rolled up casually to reveal his tanned forearms, and I remember noticing — when M. scuttled me over to make introductions — that it brought out the hazel in his eyes.

I was ecstatic to learn that he was a rising junior at UVA; I was preparing for my first year there and my imagination immediately got to work envisioning what life might be like with an older, more mature (HAHA) fellow Wahoo to parade me around Grounds and take me out to dinner on The Corner and show me the ropes when it came to tailgating for football games.  I can’t for the life of me remember what we talked about, though I know we were engaged in conversation for at least 10 or 20 minutes — I principally recall the misty hazel of his eyes and the swatting away of mosquitoes while his father tapped on the glass from the inside of the kitchen and made a kissy face intended to embarrass him.

“Oh, that’s my Dad,” he said, turning red in spite of himself.  “We should probably get back inside.”  He gestured at the mosquitoes around us.

And that was that.  I didn’t see him the rest of the night and I tried — with difficulty — to play it cool when the girlfriends with whom I’d carpooled to the party peppered me with questions on the ride back home.

Landon, I thought that night as I put in my retainer and curled up under the floral comforter of my childhood bedroom.  I am in love.

We didn’t get together for two years.

We ran into one another once very early into my first year at a football game, and he was polite but short — “good to see you,” tossed over his shoulder as he trailed after his friends.  We would IM one another every now and then — he used a hideously thick blue italicized font and left bro-y away messages like “gym” or “class” or the oh-so-descriptive “away” — and one evening I worked up the courage to ask him to buy me a six-pack of hard lemonades for an upcoming football game tailgate.  (Sorry, Mom, if you’re reading this.)  He obliged, and I still remember him careening up the drive to my un-cool “new dorm” like it was yesterday (at UVA, the cool kids stay in “old dorms” closer to the center of Grounds and they know to request “old dorms” when they register because…well, how do cool kids know these things?  Older brothers?  Word of mouth?  I, of course, lived in the dorky “new dorms,” as I had been oblivious to the social implications for said decision — though, in my defense, I was forced to live there because I was an Echols Scholar, part of a special program that waived area requirements in order to enable high performing high school students to chart their own courses of study — which, incidentally, I rather regret because I wish I had been required to take college-level mathematics!).  At any rate, he was in his boxy black Jeep Cherokee, music blasting and UVA hat low over his eyes, and he came up to my dorm to deliver my bounty.  I couldn’t figure out how to get him to stick around; we chatted briefly and he mentioned how embarrassing it had been to buy hard lemonade, and that he’d needed to barricade it with a few cases of Bud Heavy to compensate.  We laughed.

We didn’t see one another for several more months — until I rushed sororities that spring.  Part of the pledging process involved filling out a form listing all of your favorite foods, drinks, colors, and any crushes you had.  Then, your “big sister” would use that information to arrange all kinds of elaborate shenanigans for you — special baskets full of your favorite foods and drinks, surprise lunches with said crushes, wine tastings, balloons, special t-shirts, etc, etc. On my form, next to the “crushes” line, I wrote: “I’m going to marry Landon Shoop, third year e-schooler.”  (Droopy hearts everywhere.)

I was floored when he showed up to take me out to a surprise lunch and was so nervous I didn’t eat more than a spoonful of the soup I’d ordered from Take It Away.  (Who orders soup from Take It Away anyway?)  I remember rushing back to my dorm room and pecking out an email to M.: “You won’t believe it, but LANDON just took me to lunch.  But he was kinda forced to because it’s all part of big sis week.  BUT STILL.”  A few days later, I opened a card from M.: she’d cut out a picture of Landon’s face and pasted it into a picture with me.  Underneath, she wrote: “MR. AND MRS. SHOOP.”

And then, on bid night, Landon showed up at the house party with a smile.  “Your big sis invited me,” he said, casually.  He was wearing a dark brown leather bomber jacket and a navy blue baseball hat and I could hardly believe that this third year god was spending a part of his evening with me.

Things quickly unraveled, though — he was uninterested in dancing (“you do your thing!” he said, shooing me away) and more engaged in chatting with the buddy he’d arrived with.  Within an hour, he let me know he was peeling off.

I remember sending M. an email that evening: “He’s just not into me.”

Now, Landon routinely tells the story as follows: “I wanted to let her do her thing.  I liked her a lot, but she was a first year — she needed to experience college before we could start dating.”

I do not believe this.  Because the minute I started dating a different boy a few weeks later — a fratty mcfratterson whom I won’t say much about except for that he was funny and awkward and wore outlandishly preppy outfits — Landon started coming around.  It began with casual lunches: “Hey, do you wanna try that new place on the Mall?”  And then we started to pal around in the evenings, too — meeting up at house parties and tailgates and the chaotically bad idea known as dollar pitcher nights.  (Mom, for the record, I did not drink beer.)  We carpooled to and from D.C. together.  We were both dating different people at that time and we pretended as though we were “just really good friends,” with no romantic feelings towards one another.

And then one night, we were walking home from a party together on 14th street.  We were with friends, but we hung back, and at some point, he reached out and started holding my hand.  I have, on several occasions in my life, felt something akin to a lightening bolt in my stomach.  I felt it in the days leading up to our wedding, and when I walked on stage to deliver a talk to 200 people, and many times in the weeks leading up to mini’s birth — part exhilaration, part nerves, part breathless, and open-hearted awe.  But the first time I ever felt it was when Mr. Magpie reached out for my hand that night:  a switch flipped.  We were electric.

“Friends don’t hold hands,” I tapped out giddily, nervously in an email to M. that night.  “…Right?”

With curiously auspicious timing given this recent hand-holding development, my relationship with fratty mcfratterson (FMF) fizzled, as did Landon’s with his then-girlfriend.  To be fair, the writing had been on the wall for some time with FMF; we were not in it for the long haul.  Looking back, the fact that I never once imagined marrying FMF or even spending the upcoming summer together — such long-term thoughts simply did not compute, did not occur to me — should have been a red flag.  Still, the break up was surprisingly dramatic, and FMF begged me to be a good sport and at least attend his fraternity’s spring date function with him, which was two nights later, even if we weren’t together.  With the immature, drama-loving illogic only a college student can pull off, I agreed.

The night was A Disaster.

By the end of the pre-game held in one of the beautiful gardens off of UVA’s historic lawns, we were a hot mess.  FMF was angry, suspicious of my relationship with Landon, and apparently unphased by the presence of dozens of other party-goers, as I’m certain that everyone knew that we were breaking up by the time we boarded the bus to head to the venue.  There were tears involved.  When I slipped away to the bathroom during the dinner portion of the evening, I found my way to my best girlfriend, who was attending with a friend of FMF’s as a courtesy to me.

“I need to get out of here,” I said.  She nodded in agreement.

I called Landon.  I knew he was playing softball with some buddies that evening, but he answered nonetheless, a little breathless.

“It’s a big mess.  I need to get out of here.  Can you pick me up?”

For some reason, when I remember this part of the story, I always imagine him transposed into that scene from The Godfather, when Sonny gets a call from his sister, who’s been beaten by her husband.  He squints into the phone and says, firmly, gesturing with his pointer finger to the ground: “You stay there.”  And then drives off in a daze to rescue her.

So Sonny came for me, his boxy Jeep barely rolling to a stop before he leapt out of it.  He was dirty, his gray sweats marked with mud from sliding across home base, his face flushed, his hat on backwards —

It was the first of a trillion and ten times in which Landon arrived and made everything right.  He scooped me up, drove me home, and we’ve been together ever since.

“That’s probably more than you wanted to hear,” I told my new friend, after getting to the very end of the story, suddenly a little too aware of how long I’d waxed poetic about my Landon.

“No, I liked it,” she said, waving her hand as if to dissolve my apology.  “It’s like it was meant to be.”

Meant to be.  I feel just that way about our story.  Though I’m a big believer that God’s hand is in all things, there is something particularly poetic and formal about our getting together — formal in the literal sense, in that there’s a legible shape to it.  The oddness of our not crossing paths until a high school graduation party for a gal whose parents had at one time seemed like probable parents-in-law; the foreshadowings of marriage so early into our relationship in the form of a sorority pledge card and a silly bit of snail mail between two friends; the electric hand-holding; the farce of other relationships, feints poorly disguising our truer feelings; the chivalrous rescue at the fraternity formal.  Sometimes these happenings feel foreign — as though they happened to someone else, a sentiment I often feel when reminiscing about the events of my youth.  “Did I live in Lyon for a semester?”  “Did I actually sing-rap 50Cent’s Candyshop as a part of an interview?” “Did I really steal that magnet from the National Zoo gift shop?”  (Yes to all of these things.)

But the other day — Valentine’s Day — I arranged to meet up with Mr. Magpie at a wine bar in midtown after he got off of work.  As I walked down sixth avenue, I walked by a hotel we’d stayed at a few years ago while in town to pitch the business we built together and that we’ve since dissolved.  A flood of mixed emotions washed over me — bitterness, nostalgia, sadness.  Lost in my own brooding, it barely registered that I’d entered the wine bar, and I suddenly looked up and caught sight of A Babe with a capital B sitting at the wine bar, waiting for me.

BAM — the same lightening bolt I felt that time he grabbed my hand on 14th street when we were young.  I was looking at this man sitting at the bar, waiting patiently for me, not having ordered a drink yet (“we need to confer on the wine situation,” he said, as I sat down — “bubbles, I assume?”), and the weight of all of the things we have been through together — births and deaths and businesses and moves and heartaches and heartbreaks and triumphs and failures — seemed at once suspended from and implicit in the meeting of our eyes.  And that’s how I often feel when I get a moment to step back and admire Mr. Magpie in all of his glory: half of me sees the smile wrinkles in the corners of his eyes, the graying hair, the distinguished look he’s cultivated with age — physical reminders of the very full, though not without struggle, life we’ve lived thus far together — and the other half sees the boy in the olive green shirt that brought out the hazel of his eyes when we were just kids.

Post-Scripts.

+How to dress like the protagonist of a Nancy Meyers movie.

+My favorite organization gear.

+A review of my favorite spring tote.

+The best book I’ve read in a long, long time.

+On failure.

+On the agony of watching your babies grow.

+Spring 2023 fashion finds.

The other day, I saw a chic mom walking her daughter to school wearing Golden Goose sneakers (<< on sale!!!), tapered joggers, a huge parka, and one of those Celine trio bags that was all the rage a few seasons back, shown above and below.  (You can snag one gently used and in a fantastic color here.)  It made me realize how timeless a bag it is — owing, largely, to the practical crossbody strap, simple shape, and sturdy leather.  I instantly wished I was wearing her entire outfit, but especially her unfussily chic handbag.

The Fashion Magpie Celine Trio Bag 2

The Fashion Magpie Celine Trio Bag 2

The Fashion Magpie Celine Trio Bag

Because I’m contemplating the pragmatic purchase of a backpack that can be used as a diaper bag, a new Celine is not in the cards; here are some other options I’m contemplating:

+This sleek pebbled leather beauty ($115!!), which you can have personalized with your initials.  I’m normally such a color girl, but I’m interested in basic black for this look.

+This chic two-tone style from new and very trendy label Danse Lente << I’m obsessed with this brand.

+This Clare Vivier, in the black nubuck (though navy intrigues me, too…), which you can also get embossed with your initials!

+This feminine See by Chloe.  Love the scalloped detailing.

+This boyish Madewell steal.

+This sleek wallet on a chain.  Love the simple design, and the price tag is fetching, too!  (<<Could I stuff my phone in this though…?)

+At the higher end of the spectrum, I’m dying over all of the sleek and polished bags from new-to-me line RSVP, but none more than this clutch, with an attachable crossbody strap.  I WANT.  The drama of the hardware against the simplicity of the shape!  I love it in the navy, black, or “gold” (tan leather).  AND you can get your initials on it.  UGH.

P.S.  More fashion picks inspired by the streets of New York.

P.P.S.  What I want to be wearing RN, and fashion micro-trends I’ve contemplated recently.

P.P.P.S.  I am currently in FL, wearing these $10 sunglasses and living my best life.

My Latest Score: The Rhode Resort Dress.

I dedicated an entire post to this dress, but I finally snagged it in pink as a possibility for mini’s first birthday celebration.  (You can get the look for less with this, which is currently marked down below $40!!!)  I’m a little concerned about the length and volume of the skirt, which seem like they might dwarf my frame, but will report back!  (Also, this breezy maxi dress of theirs is currently on sale…love that lipstick red color!  I’d pair with my Hermes Oran sandals.  You can get the look for less with this darling pair — under $80!)

The Fashion Magpie Rhode Resort Dress

You’re Sooooo Popular:

The most popular items on Le Blog this week:

+Apparently, the key to the modern kitchen.

+Move over, everything-bagel-seasoning-from-Trader-Joe’s — there’s a new cult following seasoning in town.

+Perfect with jeans on the weekend or a pencil skirt at work during the week.

+A smart solution for bathing a baby while traveling.

+Such a fun statement for travel!

+A fabulous cosmetics storage solution.

+Mini’s favorite toy.

+Athleisure Cali-cool footwear.

 

#Turbothot: Roseanne.

On a whim, Mr. Magpie and I started watching Roseanne from its very first pilot episode via our Amazon Prime subscription.  I knew who Roseanne was — and had a vague conception of her as a crass, rough-around-the-edges comedienne — but was never permitted to watch her show growing up and therefore didn’t really know anything about her.

This show is amazing.  I find it pushing boundaries today, so I can only imagine what viewers thought of it when it first debuted in 1989.  I’m sure that centering a sitcom on a blue collar family and their truthful struggles with finances and long hours of physical labor would have been shocking enough given that most TV series of that era were decidedly middle class, with conventional family values and schmaltzy plot lines.  In the first episode, for example, Roseanne is called into a parent-teacher conference, requiring her to lose an hour of pay as she leaves work early and hustles through traffic to attend.  When she arrives, the teacher breezily suggests that they reschedule, as Roseanne is a little bit late and the teacher is off to play squash with friends.  Roseanne puts her foot down and insists on keeping the meeting, but the lesson lingers, hauntingly: what other seemingly straight-forward errands and responsibilities are that much more difficult when you are a blue collar laborer, paid by the hour?  And what kinds of unfair assumptions do others make about you without understanding that your life is shaped in many ways by those economics?  Class clashes like these take place all the time, and not without snarky commentary by Roseanne, ensuring that we attend to them.

But setting class frictions aside, the thing that startled me the most was the portrait of Roseanne as a mother.  The show advances a dramatic departure from more conventional portrayals of motherhood: Roseanne is often foul-mouthed (in one of the first episodes, she refers to someone else’s mother as “a slut”), sarcastic to her children (often joking that she wishes they were dead), and physically different from the Betty Crocker paradigm of a healthful maternal figure, i.e., slim and aproned, with perfectly coiffed hair.  Instead, Roseanne is overweight; she works a physical job in a factory; she drinks beer.  But she is also one of the best mothers I’ve ever seen in a TV sitcom — maybe even in any film or TV venue.  She is nurturing, engaged, smart, thoughtful.  She ensures her children complete their homework, stand up for the right things, and feel loved — but without any of the cloying conventions to which we have likely become immune.

My favorite episode so far is the one in which her tomboy daughter gets her period and, distraught over it, insists on throwing all of her sports gear away and worries that she’ll now need to absorb the more feminine practices of her elder sister, like wearing pantyhose and painting her nails.  Roseanne — whose own mother had tossed her a pamphlet on the subject and skirted further conversation altogether — sits on her daughter’s bed and tells her: “It’s not a disease. It’s something to celebrate. You’ve become a full-fledged member of the Woman Race.”  Then the following ensues:

Roseanne: “Now you get to be a part of the whole cycle of things.”

Darlene: [Scoffs.]

Roseanne: “You know, the moon and the water and the seasons. It’s almost magical, Darlene, and you should be really proud today ’cause this is the beginning of a lot of really wonderful things in your life.”

Darlene: “Yeah, cramps.”

Roseanne: “Well, I’ll admit that’s one of the highlights.”

Darlene: “I think after a good night’s sleep, I’ll feel better in the morning.”

Roseanne: “I don’t know how to tell you this, but you ain’t gonna feel better for about 40 years.”

Darlene: “Name one good thing that could come out of this whole mess!”

Roseanne: “Okay, I can name three. Becky, D.J., and what’s that other kid’s name? You know the kind of bratty one?”

Darlene: Mom!

Roseanne: No, it’s not Mom. It’s… what is it?

Darlene: …Darlene.

I love this exchange.  I love her positioning of her daughter’s period as a part of a powerful vision of womanhood, something that is not to be feared or hidden, but instead celebrated, both because it ties Darlene to “the Woman Race” and to the natural cycle of the universe (mystical!) and because it is the harbinger of good things to come.  I’m dog-earing this conversation for the future with mini…

There are dozens of other similar exchanges and happenings that have caught my attention with their evolved, to-the-point, wise tenor, and I can only sit back and applaud the producers of this show for making space for an alternative — but no less nurturing and positive — view of motherhood.

#Shopaholic: The Unfussy Slide.

+I predict that the mule/slide will continue to reign supreme for the next few seasons — a simple and unfussy slide like this will stand up against the test of time.

+Y’all know how much I love my packing cubes.  These ones come in the coolest prints!  The marble set!!!!

+Guys, these gingham heels are BEYOND.  They remind me of a pair that Carven had out a couple seasons ago that were all over the place.  These are $130?!?!?!  LOVE.

+Love these baskets, which come in great colors for a nursery or living space, and at a reasonable price!

+A monogrammed bathmat — love the font/monogram design! — in light of my personalized gear blitz.

+This is one of mini’s birthday gifts.  I die over it.

+I wish I had known about these before Valentine’s Day.  NEXT YEAR!!!

+This cashmere sweater is marked down in select colors.  Love.

P.S.  Dress like one of my favorite TV characters of all time.

P.P.S.  My all-time favorite beauty products.

Are you a private person?  How did you come to be that way?

The other day, I was sitting at a communal table in a coffee shop, writing (soooo Carrie Bradshaw OMG LOLOLOL ROFL), and a mother and daughter duo sat down across from me.

“He was driving me crazy — he shouldn’t have talked to me like that.”

“But Mom, that’s how you talk to me.”

“–because then he got into this whole thing about going to the hospital–”

“Yes, you. need. to. think. about. how. you. talk. to. people.  Served you right.”

“I don’t talk to anyone like that, but Rodney was saying that — ”

“Mom, you seem very agitated.  You need to calm down.”

“–well of course, because Rodney–”

The dialogue went on and on, with the daughter scolding her mother and the mother barreling along obliviously with her own narrative, steamrolling over her daughter’s snarky comments and half-hearted entreaties, in turn leading the daughter to heave loud sighs and troll the room for someone with whom to lock eyes in a moment of understanding.  I fastidiously kept my eyes averted, though it was impossible to tune out the fracas.  When her mother a few minutes later accidentally referred to the biopsy she’d just had (why do I know this) as “an autopsy,” her daughter let out a sound midway between a shriek and a gasp and then burst into laughter.

“Lord help me,” she said, to no one and everyone at the same time.

The entire exchange was stressful and irritating and dark and I almost packed up and left 34 times, uncomfortable with the tenor of the conversation and of their relationship more generally and unable to get any work done in the midst of it.  The exchange stayed with me for two days, though, percolating around, provoking self-reflection and, well, the writing of this post.

So Nora Ephron proves herself right once again: everything is copy.

Why was the exchange so troubling?  Setting aside the unkind conversation between the mother and daughter and the mother’s richly disturbing Freudian slip, I realized it was entirely foreign to me to imagine having such a personal conversation in such a public place.  In college, a French professor of mine made the point that architecture and the use of space more generally can be expressive of cultural norms, and that the French tend to build houses and public buildings with gates, fences, shutters, and other physical barriers that serve to partition and separate, which he saw to be indicative of the “closed off” and “private” nature of the French.  In America, on the other hand, we tend to favor open floor plans and big windows and glass facades — reflective, he contended, of the more open, friendly style of the American.  If that is true, I thought, after observing this exchange, I was born in the wrong country: I am French through and through.  But then, I thought, though I consider myself rather private IRL, shielding my emotions carefully and shying away from any kind of communal display, this blog enables a rather public airing of my innermost thoughts and whimsies.  Then again, this is a different space, with the advantage of a smaller audience of like-minded women who opt to be here (rather than the general public in a restaurant who were unwitting accomplices to a familial disturbance) and the revisionist kindnesses of the editorial process, which is often a prophylactic against foot-in-mouth disease, from which I am known to suffer from time to time.  (Though the frequency of grammatical errors on this blog may suggest otherwise (#grimace), I do routinely take a few days between writing and publishing a post in case I get cold feet.  Which has happened.)

My point is this, though: the conversation led me to reflect rather intensively on my perception of private vs. public matters, and why and how I’ve cultivated those perceptions.  Would this exchange have stood out to you, I wonder?  Or am I partial to inheritances of my own on this front, having adopted my family’s WASP-y tendency toward dealing with private matters privately.  We’re talking about a family of introverts who routinely need “quiet time” apart from one another over the course of a day together.  And then there are my parents, who travel exclusively by quiet car on Amtrak and built a backyard oasis with a tall fence, a canopy of trees, and a running water feature to drown out the noise in order to sequester themselves from an already rather serene, sparsely populated, and arborous neighborhood in D.C.  And then there’s Mr. Magpie, who would sooner die than have someone tune into a private conversation of ours.

“We’ll talk at home,” he’ll say with a definitive nod if we’re out to drinks and he thinks someone else is within earshot, even if we’re only discussing the banalities of deciding on a nanny or switching doctors.  Part of this stems from a gentlemanly concern for the comfort of those around him (he’s the type of guy who will make space for you on the subway), but most of it relates to his fiercely private nature.   You should see him when we have housekeepers or repairmen at home while he’s around; he turns into Ricky Bobby in front of the camera: “I don’t know what to do with my hands.”  But he’s like that with his whole body, awkwardly maneuvering around — “I’m a hostage in my own home!”

So, yes.  We are private people, and we come by it earnestly.  And the very public display of rather intimate relationship nuances left me itchily uncomfortable.

What say you?  Am I unearthing a New Englander streak I never knew I had?  Are these preferences inherited?  Cultivated?  What bearing, if any, do they have on personality?

Post-Script.

+Oh heiiii — the sunglasses I raved about all last summer that sold out are now back in stock!  Under $70, and they look like a million bucks.  Well — maybe not a million, but certainly the cost of higher-end designer shades!

+I love the pearl trim on this elegant dress — on sale, plus an extra 20% off!  I walk by a Sandro on my way to Church every Sunday, and I’m obsessed with everything they have on display.

+These chic sandals are a dead-ringer for the Hermes Oran sandals I live in all summer long.

+I love stripes.

+My desire for organization is getting a little out of control — it’s next level ever since I moved to New York, where every spare inch of space is so precious.  Therefore, I currently have this in my cart as a solution to our under-sink area, where foil/saran/parchment are currently living in a chaotic bundle.  Or maybe this one (good reviews!), but I don’t think the dimensions will work well for us.  If you’re in a similarly petite home, check out my top picks for small apartment gear.

+I’ve written about this too much, but mini received the most darling Maileg mouse set when she was born and she loves playing with it right now.  I think I’m going to give her a new Maileg mouse every birthday — which one should I get her for her first?!

P.S.  More lessons learned from keeping my ears and eyes open.  And, possibly, my favorite lesson learned from this method.  (<<This last story makes me cry for some reason.)

P.P.S.  What have you learned recently?

 

 

 

 

Gather round, ye fellow SAHMs, for a grueling yet enlightening tale of life lessons learned while attempting to replace a broken dishwasher, starring the dunce-like novice known as myself, her spirited, wily, and loving Airedale, and her beloved daughter…

Our dishwasher broke.

I informed our landlord and he told me to pick out one I liked within a certain budget and that he’d write me a check to reimburse.

Simple.  Easy-peasy.  Another to-do to be ticked off on an uneventful Tuesday.  At this point, I consider myself moderately skilled in the household management department; I unceremoniously rated this endeavor a 3 on a 1-10 scale in terms of difficulty.

This was two months ago.

We still have no dishwasher.

Le chain of events:

  1. I picked this dishwasher after doing my research.  I really wanted a Bosch 300 Series (the best-reviewed, quietest machine on the market, I believe), but it was out of budget once I tacked on delivery and installation.   If you’re in the market and have the budget, do yourself a favor and buy a Bosch.  I’ve been obsessed with that brand ever since I nannied for a family while in graduate school and noticed how silent their appliances were — and this was well before I thought about such things as appliances, so my notice of them stands out to me even now, many years later — and they were all Bosch.
  2. I called before placing the order to confirm that they would be able to provide a certificate of insurance before delivery, which is required for all deliveries and installations in my building.  (Such a royal pain in the ass, but not uncommon in old buildings like mine in Manhattan.)  I was assured, after playing ring around the rosy with multiple customer service reps and being placed on hold four times, that it would be no problem — I was to “call after placing the order to arrange it.”  (<< This should have been a red flag.)
  3. I placed the order.  I called to arrange “it.”  I was told I needed to call back 6-8 hours later, once the order had processed with their delivery subcontractors.  (<<Pit forms in stomach.)
  4. I called 8 hours later.  After spending a blissful, spa-like12 minutes waiting, I explained the situation, played ring around the rosy again, and then got confirmation from good old Jane that this would be taken care of.  (<<I did not trust Jane.)
  5. I called two days later to confirm that they had submitted the required paperwork to the building.  Played ring around the rosy.  Pondered taking up knitting to pass the time, bought something online because I was bored, and then was “patched through” to the subcontractor delivery people with JCPenney on the line as well to explain in detail what was needed.  I did so.  I then asked whether they would be able to call me or email me to confirm once it was done.  I was told, intriguingly, “we can’t place outbound emails or outbound calls.”  Hm.  Problematic.  As that would make it impossible for them to send a COI to my building.  I let it slide and asked the JCPenney rep to call me or email me after they had checked into it to confirm it was done.  “Sure, yeah…only…well, maybe you should call us.” “No.  I spent a lot of money on this dishwasher and I’ve wasted too much time on this.  You call me once you’ve confirmed.”  (<<I knew she wouldn’t call me.)
  6. She never called me.
  7. The night before delivery day came and the subcontractors called to confirm the convenient (har har) 6 hour window for delivery the following day.  I said: “As a reminder, you will need to submit a COI to the building before entry.  Can you confirm that this will be done.”  “Did you leave it in the notes?” “Yes.  I’ve called and spoken to 238 people.  You need to have it.” “OK, then it will be fine.”  (<<Strong suspicion it would not be fine.)
  8. It was not fine.
  9. Delivery day came.  No COI had been submitted.  The delivery men were turned away.  I was yelled at by the delivery team because it was clearly my fault and oversight (!!!), who then attempted to rush a COI over email, but it wasn’t approved in time, and they left my building for another job.
  10.  I rescheduled.
  11. Second delivery day comes.  The team shows up an hour before the scheduled time and is not permitted into the building, which does not accept deliveries until after 9 a.m.  They have grumble at me and ask if I can “do anything” by “going downstairs to talk to the building.”  No.  No, John, I cannot.
  12. Once they’re angrily at my door, they spend three minutes in the kitchen and then inform me: “The hose we brought is not long enough.  And your counters are marble.  [Ed. note: they are not.]  So we can’t install.”  I look longingly at the bottle of wine in our wine rack and then exasperatedly tell them to just leave the damn washer in our house and I’ll find a local plumber to finish the job.
  13. We have a box the size of Alaska taking over our meager entertaining area.  This, when I’m preparing to host three couples in our home for the first time since moving to New York in a matter of days.  I call the building handyman (he’s amazing) and explain the bind I’m in.  He’s not technically supposed to touch certain appliances like dishwashers — he’s more for repairing minor problems like leaking faucets or dripping pipes — but he senses the distress in my voice and offers to do it as “a private job,” meaning I pay him to do the job after hours.
  14. He arrives the next day and informs me that the hose is, in fact, the appropriate length and that the delivery guys could have installed it. (<<Oh. my. God.)
  15. He spends an hour and a half wrangling the old machine out, disposing of it (praise be to God — I would have had no idea what to do with the old one), and installing the new one.  He even breaks down the box and disposes of that for me.
  16. We test the dishwasher.
  17. Water floods all over our kitchen.
  18. The machine is faulty — there’s a missing piece: some sort of plug that just was not in the machine.
  19. I pay the handyman because, I mean, it’s not his fault that there’s  a missing piece and he just spent two hours working on it.  It’s like watching two hundred-dollar bills ignite in flames before my eyes.
  20. I call FREAKING JCPENNEY BACK, now terrified that I’ve disposed of the dishwasher box.
  21. They tell me that the manufacturer will come to install a new one free of charge, but I’ll now need to coordinate with them on delivery, install, a COI, etc, etc etc.

So that is where we are.  No dishwasher, no dignity, and I’m still unconvinced that our disposal of the box the washer came in will not factor into future problems in this never-ending story.  We’re currently living that Amish life, cleaning plates by the moonlight.

I should also mention that I know there are many people who live in New York (and beyond) without dishwashers, but those people are not us — a dishwasher was a baseline requirement in our apartment hunt because we cook A LOT.  In fact, we rarely eat out!  My friend recently asked me, mystified, eyes wide: “I mean, you cook every night?!”  Yes’m.  And with mini’s bottles and separate mealtimes and me working from home most of the time — IT IS A LOT OF WASHING BY HAND THANK YOU VERY MUCH.

But the point of this post is not to dwell on this petty and admittedly humorous tale of frustration (though please learn from my mistake and do not order from JCPenney ever…ever, ever…and if you’re in Manhattan, only use local folks that do deliveries and installs routinely in the area).  The point is that I learned a lot about being a part-time SAHM through this experience.

Lesson No. 1: SAHM = SAHM + Household Manager

One of the biggest surprises in becoming a part-time stay at home mom has been the assumption of all household management duties.  Mr. Magpie and I used to shoulder a fairly equal burden — but now, with me working from home three days a week and then caring for mini the other two, it simply makes more sense for me to handle the home.  Why would Mr. Magpie take a day off of work to coordinate a dishwasher delivery when I’m here?  Why would he be responsible for arranging Costco deliveries and grocery shopping after hours, or mapping out mini’s meals when he’s not here during the day?  Etc.  But, my friends, it is a lot to assume on your own.  It took me a good several months of frustration (“ughhh where does the time go?!?!!”; “I have no hours in the day!”) to realize that running a household on your own — especially one in the complicated city of New York, with a dog and a baby, after you’ve just moved states and dissolved a business and are in the midst of selling a house — can eat up a good couple of hours of your day…every day.  I finally realized, during this dishwasher debacle, that the “admin to-dos” on my list every morning aren’t “getting in the way” of me doing my job — they are PART of my job.  Dealing with the bozos associated with the dishwasher disaster is part and parcel of my new role: just like filing expense reports or turning in performance reviews in a more traditional job, they’re inconvenient things that need to get done to keep the ball rolling, and they’re annoying, but it is what it is.  I don’t know why, but this revelation was freeing for me.  Oddly, it made me feel more in control.  I had been racing against the clock for weeks and weeks, confused as to why the hell I was only “starting”  my day at noon.  Now I understand that all of the errands and phone calls I’ve been handling in the morning are the day.  This is part of the job!  Part of the territory!  So now when I’m sitting down and I see that the number one thing on my to do list is to follow up with the manufacturer to coordinate the COI, I don’t feel enraged — I view it as something that needs to get done before I can move on to work on this post, or take mini to the museum, or what have you.

Lesson No. 2: Don’t Overstuff Your Days

The morning of the installation of the faulty dishwasher by my handyman, I almost tossed another fly in the ointment owing to an annoying habit of mine to “overstuff” my days.  On this particular morning, I hustled out the door at 9 a.m. to run to the grocery and drugstore and then rushed back home to unload the groceries, transfer mini into her umbrella stroller, and head uptown to the Children’s Museum for an hour or two of free play before the dishwasher would be installed at noon.  I should have known to just forgo the museum because the handyman had said “noon-ish,” I was having a baby-sitter come by for an interview in the early afternoon and I needed to take Tilly for a walk, prep for a meal I was cooking for company that evening, and clean the apartment — it was just too much for one day.  But I did it anyway because I’ve been hell-bent on taking mini on adventures twice a week, and I felt I owed it to her.  Sometimes it’s a playdate, or lunch out, or a music class, or a museum — but I have this idea in my head that if I’m going to stay at home with her a few days a week, I need to make the most of our time together by exposing her to new things around this magical city of ours.  Not a bad aspiration, I don’t think, but, on that particular day, when the handyman called at 11 a.m. to say he was outside my door, I realized that I was letting some bizarre vision of myself as supermom get in the way of practicality and reason.  And honestly, I probably took some of the joy out of the experience because I was worried about the 34 other things I needed to get done, and how they’d all fit together, and when would she go down for her nap, besides?!  Do other moms do this to themselves?  Make their lives unnecessarily complicated in pursuit of some inborn image of what it means to be a “good mom”?  Reality check.

Lesson No. 3: GET.OUT.

After the shady deliverymen told me (ahem, lied to my face, but that’s neither here nor there) that the dishwasher hose wasn’t long enough, I was — despite my resolution to view these petty frustrations as “part of the job” — annoyed.  I bundled mini up, threw the leash on Tilly, and went for a long walk through Central Park. I was instantly restored.  The bite of the January air, the drama of the grandiose manmade cityscape against the arborous Godmade park, Tilly’s exuberant trot — I was re-centered, made whole.  This reminded me of my discovery, over the past many weeks, that the secret to staying at home with a child is to get out of it.  Even if just down the block for coffee, and even when said excursions can require a good 10 minutes to get out the door in the first place, thanks to the cold weather, the necessity of packing snacks, bathroom trips and diaper changes, etc, etc.  It breaks up the day and can feel — oddly enough — like a little pocket of alone time for me, because mini is usually happy in her stroller, not needing a thing from me, for a good thirty minutes.  I also find that when I’m home, I’m trying to do 23 things at once: fold laundry, throw the toy to Tilly, read mini a book, preheat the oven for lunch, answer the call from the doorman, etc, etc.  When I’m out, I can focus more intensively on mini and her reactions to the world around us.  I feel more dialed in, more alert.

Lesson No. 4: Keep It in Perspective.

In the midst of one of the many botched steps of this experience, I received a phone call from a dear friend who shared that she was going through some seriously bumpy times.  Hearing her so upset about things that really matter put things in perspective for me.  It can be lonely when you’re staying at home with a baby — and startlingly easy to get caught up in the trivial dramas of dishwasher installations and mishaps with the dog and strange interactions with other parents.  I can’t fault myself for this because — well, these happenings are the fabric of my daily life; together, they form the web of experiences that now inform how I feel any given day, and what I think about, and who I interact with, just as the projects I was taking on and the dynamics with my team did back when I held a more traditional job.  And yet.  My friend’s call reminded me, once again, to put things in perspective.  So we haven’t had a dishwasher for two months.  OK.  Handwashing it is.  Next?  So the deliverymen lied to my face.  Shrug — OK, we’ll ask for money back.  I mean, these are trifles.  I need to conserve my energy for the big stuff in life — for the relationships that matter.

All this, my friends, from a dishwasher.

*****

Post-Script: SAHM Gear.

+I’m all about efficiency at home.  I use these wipes to clean mini’s high chair (not her tray — that gets cleaned in the kitchen with proper water and soap) and these wipes to clean mini’s hands after meals.  I know a wet paper towel would suffice, but sometimes it’s just easier…

+Now that I probably won’t have a dishwasher for at least another week or two, I’m going to bite the bullet (shoulda done this ages ago) and buy disposable cutlery (how chic is this?!) and plates.  I give up.

+This is going to sound weird, but Mr. Magpie and I only have one tupperware to our name.  We tossed a huge set when we moved and, frankly, don’t have the space for much here.  Instead, we stow things in bowls with saran wrap over the top.  (This also cuts down on the washing…)  I think I might snag these to help with the situation.

+Per this post, I’m planning on ordering this backpack to use as a diaper bag when traipsing around with the umbrella stroller.  (When we use her full-featured stroller, I’ll stick with this one.)

+I’m obsessed with Scout Bags — I have one of these, which folds up into a tiny square that fits into a pouch.  These are great for travel (i.e., fold it in your suitcase and then toss toys/beach gear/clothes in it to accommodate whatever adventure is in front of you), but it’s honestly also come in handy underneath her stroller as a makeshift grocery bag!  (I also always have this in my diaper bag nowadays.)

+I saw a very chic mom wearing these sneakers the other day — I’ll stick with my Golden Goose babies, but these would be a strong contender if I had decided against splurging!

+Adorable.

+Elon Musk has made space cool again (it never was uncool to any of us children of the 80s, but…) and I love all of the space-inspired pieces out right now, like this adorable coat for a little boy!

+A great and reasonably-priced Easter dress for a mini!

Guys, I featured the padded headband uber-micro-trend last week, but can we talk about this knotted Eugenia Kim headband (available in black here), shown above on the ridiculously chic and gorgeous Arielle Charnas of Something Navy?!  I love the way she’s styled it, with her flowy Ulla Johnson dress and suede boots (get the look with these — on super sale!  LOVE them in the gray!).  So chic.

Inspired, a couple of other ways to get the look:

+This silk Tibi (love the architectural sleeve) with this less-expensive chiffon knot headband ($18) — maybe in fiery red for a statement?

+This floral maxi (omg — under $200 and SO CHIC FOR SPRING) with this knot headband in the white ($14).  (I also just ordered this headband in the blue and white pattern!)

+Major statement: this enormous Chanel-like tweed headband with a simple black shift.

And, while we’re on the topic of magical statement dresses:

+This one by Ganni with the coolest frill details and the chicest micro print.  Also, it’s called the Tilden dress!  (My airedale is named Tilden — it’s the street I grew up on in D.C.!)

+This mixed print stunner, which reminds me of a Saloni I lusted after last season, and is similar to this one from their current season.

+Speaking of Saloni, this dress is AMAZING and is on sale!

+Ulla-esque.

+Gucci-esque.

+For an expecting mom, how darling is this for a spring affair?

+I love the sleeves and bold color of this.

+I wore this dress to Christmas dinner and loveeeed it.  Now it’s on super sale!

+Less of a loud statement, but this sweet white linen dress was just restocked in all sizes!

P.S.  Other fashion-forward things I want to be wearing RN.

P.P.S.  Can I pull off a backpack?

When I was six, my mom gave me a pink-and-white polka dotted duffel bag from Lillian Vernon with my name embroidered on it in thick white cursive.  I’ve been a monogramming fiend ever since; if there is an option for personalization, I’ll lunge for it.  (Also, how many of you also owned that Lillian Vernon bag?!)

I recently shared details on my Goyard-esque phone case with letters affixed to the back, and I’m not joking when I say that about 50% of my girlfriends now own this case…and, if link-clicking is a proxy, possibly 50% of my lovely Magpie tribe, as well.  Maybe we can now use it as a signal with one another, sort of like visual morse code: you see a Goyard case with letters on the back out in the wild, you exchange a knowing look — “Oh, you read Magpie, too?”

Below, a couple of other personalized favorites.

+For the most stunning monograms: The Loveliest Company.  (Shown above!!!) Just check out the many styles and colors of thread available!  Possibilities are infinite.  These are heirloom-quality monograms — the kind of thing you might find in great-great-aunt Irma’s silver cabinet or something.

+For the coolest hand-lettering: Paravel.  I am contemplating this as my diaper-bag-backpack situation, but I’m not sure it’s big enough on closer inspection.  Sigh.  If I do go with it, I like the robin’s egg blue or yellow hand lettering.  But also, I would love this as my duffel.  And this would make a great, chic gift.

+For the chicest font: Clare Vivier.  I’m very particular about fonts — I actually hate the standard font that comes with LL Bean bags; it feels at once dorky and standard-issue to me, but I live with it because it’s in its own way timeless.  Clare V., on the other hand, has REALLY great fonts — and I like that you can choose to place the monogram in like 5 different locations.

+For personalized sleepwear: Claridge + King sleepshirts or J. Crew’s Vintage Pajama Set.  Super traditional.  I loved the sleepshirt when I was breastfeeding; I’d had it since I was married, and I had it monogrammed and then personalized with our wedding date as well.  (If you’re a new mom or looking for a gift for a new mom, it could also be cute to personalize with the date of the baby’s birth!)  Also, I can’t speak to the quality because I’ve not yet ordered from them, but how cute are these PJ sets (also like the funky prints)?!

+For the most elegant personalized desktop: Smythson Journal + personalized tissue cover + initial notepads (very Goyard, n’est-ce pas?).  I bought my best friend a Smythson wafer notebook for wedding planning with her new initials on it when she first got engaged, and then another little notebook in white to keep notes when I was pregnant with mini.  They’re a lovely personal touch to commemorate new life stage that involve a lot of details.  (They have several on sale right now, including this phone/address book and this appropriately-titled “devil is in the details” notebook, both of which can be personalized!)

+For serious statement stationery: Hard to pick just one here — there are so many incredible letterpress studios, and I’m such a sucker for anything letterpress.  We had our wedding save the dates and invitation suites designed by Bella Figura, and they were lovely to work with, especially when we discovered, AFTER WE’D APPROVED THE PROOF, a typo in the address for the reception.  They graciously offered us a discount on the reprint and rushed them out despite the fact that it was entirely our doing.  Yikes.  I later had mini’s birth announcements from Dinglewood Design, which does a lovely job and is more reasonably priced than most letterpress outlets.  I would recommend both of those for stationery — personal and social both!  I have also been eyeing the personalized letterpress stationery from Sesame Letterpress and the fun designs from this Etsy boutique.  I might do a set with the vintage typewriter and THE FASHION MAGPIE emblazoned on the top…

+For baby stationery: I’ve ordered super-cute sets from here (don’t order in pale pink, though — the font is hard to read!) and here.

+For fashionable, personalized dog accessories: Shop Mimi Green.  I can’t get over the hand-stitching on this collar!

+For utility: Though I’m not a fan of the font, these LLBean bags STAND UP to the test of time.  They’re a must-have.  We have a bunch — one for Tilly, one for mini, one with our last name on it, one with my initials on it, and I use them constantly.  They come in particular handy for car travel, when I want to be able to access mini’s stuff without undoing a suitcase or unzipping a bag.  Also — if you’re more clever than I, you can come up with clever sayings or cute nicknames instead of a more straight-forward monogram.

+For Easter baskets: OMG and OMG.  (Most Instagrammable Easter ever?)

+For bedding: Restoration Hardware Italian Hotel Bedding.  We have this personalized with our monogram on our bed and it makes me feel like we’re staying at a luxurious hotel.  I have also been eyeing a set of Hill House Home pillowcases detailed with nicknames Mr. Magpie and I have for one another on them FOREVER.  For accent pillows, I absolutely love the quality of the monogram applique pieces from SouthernLinen — pillows like this are STUNNING.

+For parties: Personalized frosted glass cups + personalized napkins + gift tags.

+For baby: My sister gifted me a set of these thick and absorbent burp cloths monogrammed with mini’s initials and they are easily the most-used burp cloth of the lot.  I also love everything from here — the bloomers, the hairbows, the throw blankets…MEEP.

+For DIY: Use these letters to add some pizzazz to a big, affordable tote like this or this.  For a smaller bag (clutch or cosmetic bag?), you could use these gold ones from Kate Spade [<< Ed. note: these sold out, but I also tracked down these less expensive leather letter stickers!], or go high end on any bag with these beauties from Anya Hindmarch, which are leather!

No preamble, just things on my radar aujourd’hui:

+V. into pleated, midi-length skirts right now (see above).  Not sure where I’d wear one these days (sigh), but I would love to wear this (teehee) or this (more practical).

+Eminently possible: this darling heart-printed, pleated skirt dress.

+These are in my cart.  Debating whether to order them last-minute for our Florida trip this weekend…

+This lamp would be the perfect finishing touch to my desk…

+I’m on the waitlist for these in pink, but should I just cave and order navy while they’re still in stock?

+Tea lovers: check out the reviews on this utility play.

+I’m dying over these vintage-looking earrings.

+Chic stationery at a good price — the liners!!!!

+I love jammies like these.

P.S.  What words do you hate?

P.P.S.  That time I bowed in front Caroline Kennedy

P.P.P.S.  Women of a certain age.

I don’t even know where to begin with Erin.
I’ve tried to start this post about ten times and can’t quite figure out the lede — she’s a big heart with big ambitions; the gentlest, truest soul; and one of the most adventurous spirits in my life.
So how do we capture this beauty?!
For starters, she’s huge-hearted: the type of gal who would actually give a stranger the shirt off her back, the last coin in her wallet, the sandwich she was taking home to eat.  No exaggeration; I’m pretty sure I’ve seen her do each of these things IRL.  She lives her life in the service of others.
But don’t let that give you the sense that she’s mild-mannered or pious: she’s adventurous, smart as a whip, and unflappable in the face of…well, anything.  She’s a tough cookie.  She once dog-sat Tilly, who found a dead rat that she proceeded to carry around in her mouth for half a block.  “Oh my GOD!” I shrieked in horror at her recounting.  “What did you?!”  She shrugged: “I took it out of her mouth.”  Bare handed.  “What are you gonna do?” she asked, unphased.
I’ve also seen her burn herself horribly while cooking, unflinchingly tend to the wound, and then quietly return to preparing dinner without so much as a whimper.  And she’s entirely unsqueamish in the kitchen — cleaning raw octupus, mincing chicken livers, stuffing sausage into casings — she doesn’t bat an eye at any of it.
In fact, she leans into adventure — she was always our first call when we wanted to take on a massive cooking undertaking or try a new experience of any kind — food or otherwise — in Chicago.  I remember wanting to take a letterpressing class and knew instantly that she would be the only person worth asking; of course she said yes, and we set off to sip wine and letterpress together.  We’ve talked into the wee hours of countless wine-fueled nights about our pipe dreams of owning a Mid-Atlantic-influenced tapas restaurant (think patatas bravas with Old Bay or blue crab croquetas), of traveling to Sicily together, of running a small farm stand featuring her jams and breads and Mr. Magpie’s garden yield.  She’s got the entrepreneurial bug like Mr. Magpie and I — part dreamer, but mainly a major doer.  She’s one of the most industrious people I know.  Just let her professional record do the talking:
After graduating with a B.S. in dietetics from Miami University and a diploma in Culinary Arts and Bread Baking from the French Culinary Institute (now called the International Culinary Center), she worked as a baker in several bakeries, including, most recently, Eataly, where she has worked since 2014.  In July 2016, she was promoted to Quality Head for all of Eataly’s U.S. bakeries, meaning that she oversees all existing stores; opens new ones (she’s opened three in the past year and a half!); streamlines and documents all recipes, processes, and training programs; creates new recipes and menus; and fosters relationships with Eataly’s millers and other producers.  Let that gamut of responsibilities sink in for a minute — think about the intricacies of operations, quality assurance, management, and even geography involved in her day-to-day.  And what’s not listed here is that she will often step in to bake when someone is out for the day, or there’s a shortage of some kind — and that she travels probably 90% of the year from store to store.  It’s a big and tough job and I can’t imagine anyone else pulling it off with as much grace and industry as she does.
Many years ago, someone asked what I did for a living, and I said: “I work for a non-profit focused on educational access.”  The man sitting next to me said: “Aha.  That’s when you know someone has a lot of responsibility — when they talk more about the work their organization does than about their role in it.”  That could not be more true than with Erin, who will humbly and unassumingly tell anyone she works for Eataly’s bread department, and chat about their bread menu and their new stores, without at any time tipping her hat to the enormity of the role she plays in its success.  (One example: when I asked her for photos for this post, she sent me about a dozen of the bread and one of herself!) The Fashion Magpie Eataly Bread 2
When I think about Erin, I think about the countless nights we spent cooking together in our home in Chicago, just the three of us (Landon is as enamored of Erin as I am and just about the only person in the world he’ll cook with), with a few bottles of wine, an unwieldy spread of charcuterie, and Robin Thicke or John Mayer or the cheesy but good-for-the-soul soundtrack of a Nora Ephron movie (we’re both huge fans) on the speakers.  We would laugh, rave about recent culinary discoveries, vent and commiserate, and, more than once, cry.  She was the first person we had over to our house for dinner after mini was born — just two weeks into new parenthood!  We made a lot of fresh pasta dishes — I particularly recall corn and truffle agnolotti, walnut and zucchini pansotti, a meat ragu — with her standing at the corner of the granite countertop cranking our janky old metal pasta roller.  And then there was Vietnamese pork dumpling soup, paella, veal scallopini, fried chicken, and — always, multiple times a season — thick, bone-in ribeye steaks that Mr. Magpie would sear on the grill and we’d serve with oven fries dipped in malt vinegar.  (We were in the Midwest, after all.)  Her joy and ambition in the kitchen are electric: she makes just about anyone excited about food, about ingredients, about the process and ritual of gathering around a good meal.
When I think back on those many unforgettable meals, her considerable culinary skills fade to the background, and I can only think this: that Erin is a true-blue, ride-or-die friend.  Aside from family, she is the only person I would unhesitatingly call at 2 a.m. for a favor, or put to work in the kitchen (not that I would ever need to ask: she comes over, sets her bag down, and gets to work without asking where to begin), or ask to help with mini.
One of her favorite phrases is, appropriately, the Italian “fare la scarpetta,” meaning “make the little shoe” — referring to the act of using a small bit of leftover bread to mop up the last of the sauce on your plate.  This is just how she lives her life, too: savoring the experience of it, taking time to linger and enjoy what’s in front of her.
Get to know Erin a bit better by visiting Eataly and trying some of their bread.  (I love their focaccia in particular — especially the one topped with slabs of Italian ham and hunks of mozzarella!)  You might even see her in the kitchen; she travels a lot.  Alternately, check out her responses to the Proust Questionnaire below.
Your favorite qualities in a woman.
I love when a woman speaks openly and confidently about her accomplishments. Traditionally, I think women are taught that they should be modest and downplay their strengths, which is a shame because there’s nothing wrong with owning your accomplishments!
Your favorite heroine.
I’ve always identified with Meg Ryan’s character Kathleen Kelly from You’ve Got Mail. It’s a love story, but that’s almost the secondary plot line.  She has lived this full life without it hinging completely on the need for a romantic relationship. She’s brave and independent and also not afraid to ask for advice and help. I’m a sucker for anything by Nora Ephron…
Your greatest fault.
Procrastination in my personal life, hands down.
Your greatest strength.
I have a habit of being positive and (probably annoyingly) upbeat all the time, especially in the face of hard days, long hours, and moderate disasters. I think it makes me especially well suited for kitchen work and entrepreneurship.
Your idea of happiness.
Being anywhere in the world, surrounded by family (or friends that have become family), eating good food and drinking wine. Preferably while outside on a warm patio strung with twinkle lights.
Your idea of misery.
A long flight when I forget to bring snacks.
Currently at the top of your shopping lust list.
Majorly lusting for a cute suitcase (and a trip to take it on!) I’ve been dying to go to both Sicily and Spain for years, so this summer, it’s on. I hemmed and hawed over styles, but will probably go for a sleek, sensible hard-sided version from Away.
Desert island beauty product.
SPF 50+ sunscreen. Lots of time inside (the kitchen) has really brought out my inner fair-skinned Irish girl.  Plus, I’m pretty tough, so I’ll probably live, like, forever on that island, and I’ll need SPF to keep lookin’ fresh.
Last thing you bought.
A salad and wine (balance!)  Basically all my money is spent on snacks, and transportation to and from said snacks.
I feel most empowered wearing…
Probably leggings and sneakers. I feel like I could maybe save the world while wearing stretchy pants.
Favorite Magpie post.
I love a post you wrote a couple of years ago about how much you adored each of your sisters. And every post about mini magpie just melts my little heart!
Erin-Inspired Items…
(Ed. Note: Erin loves color; her apartment is the cheeriest real-life Anthropologie store I’ve ever seen.  Click images below to see details!)
P.S. See more women of substance here.

My Latest Score: The iPhone Case.

This is actually a score from a few weeks ago, but I got so many direct messages in response to the Instastory above that I thought I’d share details below.  The case is from Etsy (under $20!) and I was pleasantly surprised by the quality.  I then added these letters, which are on SUPER sale.

You’re Sooooo Popular: The Kitchen Appliance Everyone’s Raving About.

The most popular items on Le Blog this week:

+Apparently I majorly missed the boat on this wunderproduct — had no clue about it until recently, but check out the comments here!

+This cool print, which would be a lovely addition to a gallery wall…

+Mini’s new joveralls.

+Super cute dopp kits for little boys.

+Mini’s birthday banner!

+Well-priced cashmere.

+This darling top, which just went on surrrrious sale.

+Can’t get enough of statement shirting styles like this.

+Cozy is the most overused word in the blogosphere, but this is…well, the coziest.

#Turbothot: The Handmaid’s Tale.

Have you read or watched The Handmaid’s Tale?  Mr. Magpie and I tuned into the first episode last weekend and were so distraught that we switched it off, turned to each other, and solemnly agreed not to resume watching it ever again.  The premise of the series is so dark and disgusting that it was hard to watch.  I felt like I was carrying around a weight in the pit of my stomach for the next two days.

I respect art that goes there.  And I’ve read my fair share of gut-wrenching books (I was wrecked after The God of Small Things and The Year of Magical Thinking in particular).  And I’m further aware that the cognitive dissonance we were experiencing is probably, in certain ways, healthy: we were thinking, reacting deeply, processing.  But sometimes I feel that life is too short for such worrisome imagery; there is enough unhappiness and pain in the real world.

What were your thoughts?

#Shopaholic: The Scalloped Swimsuit.

+This scalloped swimsuit looks an awful lot like something from Marysia…but at a fraction of the price.

+GUYS. Have you had chicken salt before?  Mr. Magpie and I went to see the Magician Upstairs at The Nomad Hotel (SO COOL) and they served popcorn seasoned with chicken salt and it was OUTRAGEOUS.  This is now in my cart for movie night…

+These are so pretty for spring.

+I like the heathered look of these leggings.

+A cool storage solution for toys/magazines/recycling/what have you.

+I’m DYING to try this primer.  I’ve read great reviews!

+These are now marked down to $130.  Do I need another pair of statement slides?  There are only two pairs left in my size!!! (#Bitesnails)

+So many cute party accessories here.

I recently wore a voluminously-sleeved Caroline Constas blouse (on super sale!) to drinks with the lovely Christina Bryant, and we got to talking about fashion trends:

“I wonder if I’ll look back in a year and cringe at the size of these sleeves,” I mused.

“Well, at least they’re timeless,” she quipped — “I’m pretty sure women in the Renaissance age wore them that way, too.”

HAHA!

I thought today I’d share some uber micro trends — meaning extremely high-fashion, of-the-moment trends that will undoubtedly be a flash in the pan, and share thoughts/alternatives.

Uber-trend 1: The Padded Headband.

Super fashion-forward outlets and bloggers like Man Repeller and Chiara Ferragni have been pushing the padded headband for the past few weeks.  I actually love headbands — every now and then I’ll pull out my tortoise-shell headband, throw on a black sweater and black skinny jeans and Chanel flats, and feel all Blair Waldorf.  The padded style is taking me a minute to absorb…but I’m kinda digging it.  Splurge on this trendy velvet style (<< you know it’s on trend if Five Story carries it) or save with this $5 steal.

Uber-trend 2: The Exaggerated Cat Eye.

Trendsetters like Gigi Hadid, Kendall Jenner, Kourtney Kardashian, and Beyonce have all been spotted in extreme cateye shades.  Balenciaga featured them HEAVILY in a recent runway show.  They’re not my cup of tea — they look like they’re trying too hard.  I’m much more interested in the whimsy of the of-the-moment heart-shaped sunnies from YSL.  But, if you’re a bit more daring and intrepid on the fashion front, these are your best bet (also available in white here).  And if you’re in the mood for a more traditional shape with some pizzazz, I implore you to consider these $60 shades from Le Specs.  I bought a pair of Le Specs last summer in a style they no longer make and get asked about them CONSTANTLY.  They do great sunglasses at reasonable prices.

Uber-trend 3: The Balenciaga Knife Mule.

These super exaggerated pointy-toe mules (also shown above) have caused quite the controversy among shoe-lovers: people either love ’em or hate ’em.  I tend to fall prey to trends in footwear but these feel overly impractical for me–which is saying a lot, because I’m the type of gal who can rationalize a pair of 5″ heels or a twelfth pair of black flats or what have you.  I feel like I’d trip over them all the time.  Still, I have to admit that they look pretty cool out there in the wild…I like them especially as they are styled in the last picture below, with the exaggerated sleeved sweater and simple black jeans.  Tres chic ca.  So maybe I am warming to them?!  These Alexandre Birmans are a little less dramatic, but get the vibe, and these $60 channel the look for a fraction of the price!

P.S.  More fashion-forward finds I’m lusting after here.

P.P.S.  If you’re into the frayed sweater trend, this one just went on sale.

P.P.P.S.  This would be cute for an expecting mama at a shower for her baby boy…or, ya know, just rocking the ice blue trend!

Gulp.  We’re one month out from mini’s first birthday and I’m seesawing between nostalgic tears and beaming pride.  When I’m feeling weepy, scrolling through images of her when she was just three days, three weeks, three months old, I let myself wallow in the tenderness for a few seconds and then turn my focus to the present and its many blessings.  For starters, we’re sleeping through the night–we have been since she was about nine months old–and I won’t let myself forget how exhausting those first nine months were.  It’s amazing what you can do on very little sleep–but it’s even more amazing to score eight hours of uninterrupted sleep.  Ha.  So I’m still celebrating a full night’s sleep!

One of you smart readers wrote to say that though the going may get tough during the exhausting newborn phase or the terrible twos or the moody teenage years, “Never wish your child’s age away.”  The phrase struck me, and I’ve thought of it often–not so much from the perspective that I’m wishing mini would hurry up and get older, though.  I think about it more when I’m feeling emotional about how big she’s getting; I find myself swooning: “Ohhh what I’d give to go back in time and cherish those newborn snuggles.”  But then I’m not focusing my energy on giving her cuddles now, when she can nuzzle her head against my neck and put her arms around me and cling to me.

Which brings me to mini’s eleven-month update!  (Her 10 month update here!)

*In the above snap, mini is wearing a Kissy Kissy peter pan collar bodysuit, which I own in multiples and layer under everything, and classic Osh Kosh B’Gosh joveralls.

Minimagpie: Mealtime at 11 Months.

Mini’s eating habits have been a touch confusing to me.  She happily ate falafel drenched in hummus from Taim last Saturday, but Sunday afternoon wouldn’t touch it — she just flung it around the room.  Two days later, she would strain her neck away from macaroni and cheese; the next day, she was shoveling it into her mouth.  This brings me to three observations/thoughts:

  1.  If at first she doesn’t like it, try, try again.  I continue to try to feed her eggs; she continues to spit it out.  But I’m convinced that if I expose her enough, she’ll eventually come around to it–just like with mac and cheese earlier this week.
  2. I think she’s especially interested in food when it comes from my plate.  For example, I had been eating my falafel sandwich and breaking her off bits to eat — and she was excitedly eating from my hand, her little bird mouth open with excitement and anticipation.  Not sure where this leaves us, but it seems to be a tried and true way to get her to test a new flavor.
  3. Occam’s razor: the simplest explanation is often the right one.  Meaning, maybe she just wasn’t that hungry at lunchtime on Sunday!

However, mini always has room for fruit.  She loves it.  Especially berries (we’re being bankrupted by the price of berries in winter in Manhattan), clementines, and kiwi.  She’s also a snack lover — she currently likes Ella’s Kitchen Milk and Vanilla Cookies; shredded cheese; Bamba peanut snacks; and, of course, puffs.

I am running out of what I call “fallback” meals — basically, lunches or dinners that I can pull together in a few minutes when I don’t have leftovers on hand or whatever we’re eating is too spicy/not going to be ready in time for her 5 p.m. dinner.  Lately, I’ve been feeding her lots of peanut butter sandwiches, quesadillas, raisin bread with cream cheese, fish sticks, Dr. Prager’s veggie bites, and pasta/mac and cheese.  What other suggestions do you guys have?

Minimagpie: Playtime at 11 Months.

Mini is officially on the move.  She’s crawling everywhere, pulling herself up on baskets/chairs, and testing out a range of new gymnastic feats (she routinely hoists herself up into downward facing dog).  She’s nearly impossible to keep in one place for more than a few minutes, unless she’s surrounded by a stack of books, which tend to hold her attention for a decent amount of time.  (Much to my delight.)

Mr. Magpie and I really need to babyproof the apartment a bit more — I have my eye on these for our coffee table, these for our kitchen cabinets, and these for our sockets.  The only alternative would be to buy a gate to section off her play area (one of my friends has this one), but the problems are as follows:

  1.  Where would we keep said gate when not in use?!  We’re allergic to the idea of keeping it up permanently because our apartment is tiny and it would clutter everything and also make us feel like grownups living at Gymboree.  But I just have this sneaking suspicion that if we had it, we would tire of collapsing it and putting it away 10 times a day.  And finally — where is “away”?  We have no space left in our closets, and I’m loathe to keep it leaning against a wall (we’re already resigned to keeping her stroller out and on display in our foyer…sigh).
  2. We own an expensive Nuna playard/travel crib, and though playpens are highly out of vogue these days, the crib is not that much smaller than the area we would confine her to with one of said gates.  (We would probably put the “pen” around the carpet in our living room in front of the TV.)  So, why would we buy something new when we have something that would suffice?
  3. How long would we even use a gate?  Like, when does it stop being practical?  Once they start walking?  Which is…in a few months?  Meep.

Mini’s favorite toys right now, which aren’t too different from last month: her babydoll (our nanny has taught her to cradle it and rock it back and forth and OMG I DIE; she clutches it in her stroller; she even sleeps with her hand curled around it); her music set (Mr. Magpie and I were both percussionists — he, a drummer; me, a pianist — so this is exciting to us); her Maileg mouse set (<<this entertains her for about 20 minutes every morning while I am getting dressed and making the bed; I put her in her crib with this, and she happily moves the mattresses around from one stack to another); crayons and paper (<<requires heavy supervision, since she tends to like to “test” how the crayons taste; she also prefers the jumbo crayons to the egg-shaped ones — they’re easier for her to grip and control, but my mother informs me both are good at teaching he different motor skills); silicon bowls in the kitchen; vintage wooden nesting blocks that belonged to Mr. Magpie.

Minimagpie: Sleeptime at 11 Months.

I’m happy to report that we’re still in a happy pattern of going down to sleep around 7:15 and waking up for the day at 6:30.  The big change is that she’s shifted from two naps to one.  [Big sigh.]  I didn’t realize how much I loved and needed the twice-daily breaks to grab a quick shower or tend to emails or tidy the house, but…such is life.  Right now she’ll go down for a nap around 11 a.m. and sleep until 1; I’m trying to gradually shift that nap until 12 or 1 — after her lunch — because I think it will make more sense that way in terms of meals.  It doesn’t feel quite right to feed her at 10:45 a.m. and then put her down on a full stomach; and it also doesn’t feel quite right to feed her lunch at 1:15 or 1:30, after she’s woken up.  But then again, I’ve never been super into artificial schedules to begin with, so we’ll see how things go…

Minimagpie: Wishlist at 11 Months.

I’ll do a separate post on all of the items I’m eyeing for her big 1-year birthday (!!!!), but here are a few items less of the gifting variety I’ve been eyeing:

+This transportable playmat bag.  I love that hedgehog print, and it might be helpful for containing the mess while visiting friends/grandparents.

+Beaba cutlery — she’s getting to an age where she can start feeding herself with something other than her fingers!

+Stacking cups — she loves anything that stacks/nests these days.  These are super inexpensive and would be nice to keep in my diaper bag.  (Also, HOLY REVIEWS!  Have you ever seen a 5 star review across 1500 reviewers for a product under $4?!)

+I had SO many great reactions/responses to my post on wearing a backpack as a diaper bag — please check out all the ideas here if you’re in the market! — and then one of my good friends texted me and encouraged me to look at this one, too.  I’m still undecided, but it’s becoming increasingly clear that this may be a part of the puzzle for me when taking mini out.  I just got her Yoyo, which I will more fully review in a few weeks, after I’ve thoroughly tested it out, but the one thing it’s made apparent is that it will be borderline impossible for me to take her out of the stroller and fold it up while also holding a bag over my shoulder.  I guess that’s what benches are for?  Or…backpacks.  The other backpack I’m considering is this one, which you can get handpainted with your initials!!!!

+A friend of mine has a baby two months mini’s junior and she recently told me that she started giving her baby baths in the big tub.  I realized I had never even thought about when mini might transfer to “the big girl tub” — she certainly can sit up on her own now…!  Suddenly I imagined myself trying to bathe her in her baby tub until the age of six.  Womp womp.  Sometimes it takes another mama to make you realize something very, very obvious.  Anyway, I have this sitting in my cart because I’ve been very impressed with EVERY Boon product I’ve purchased thus far.  I also saw another mom on Instagram using this inside her bath, but I’m thinking that mini has probably outgrown the need for that…?  (Though — what a great idea for travel if you’re not sure if you’ll have an appropriate bath tub for baby?!  I can’t tell you how many times I had to awkwardly “bathe” mini in a fancy pants marble rain shower while we were waiting to move into our new apartment, while crouching on the ground of the shower with her…I would have killed for this.)

+This should give you a clue into what a baby gear geek I am: I was legit excited when I saw the new colors the Ubbi comes in.  Not that we’ll ever need a new one, but — what great and chic options for nearly any nursery!

+I snagged a few pieces from Primary — a few of these tees and one of these zipped footies in the stark white color (so yeezy season three).  I like their emphasis on inexpensive, unfussy, basic-colored cotton pieces; it makes for easy mix-and-matching.  But I have to say I’m a little underwhelmed by the quality of the cotton on the t-shirts.  The jammies seem to be better made.  I think this could be a good resource if you’re looking for something to coordinate with a specific pair of pants or overalls or need an extra pair of play clothes for school as a backup for accidents, but I’m not sure I’m bought…

+I seriously considered this dress for mini’s first birthday, but went with another…which will be a SURPRISE!!

P.S.  Have you checked out my updated LeShop page?  There’s a whole section just focused on minimagpie gear if you scroll down, and I’ve updated each to include a description!