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Keyword: ‘tricia’

May
23

The name “Debbie Harry” has come up frequently this week in relation to me. Most of the time by me. My twelve year old niece thinks that in the 80′s I looked like Debbie Harry. I was so excited that she knew Blondie I told this to everybody I know.

Actually, I almost stopped strangers on the street to tell them that. I’m totally in love with my niece and think she’s the coolest person I know. Jacquelin thinks that I’m the coolest person she knows with the coolest apartment and stuff. Got a little nervous when she loved the microwave so much but then realized she had never seen one not built in.

She has a model’s build and prance, and was doing the moves in front of the Mac’s photobooth; “I look like Angelina Jolie. Yes, I really look like Angelina Jolie.” She really does.

Then Tricia mentioned Blondie in regards to some poetry I wrote;

Bone supplies three words. I wasn’t planning to write this story. It just came out.
Pia Savage Fiction

Cassandra had long ago admitted she sold her soul to the nearest bouncer in exchange for an hour or so of pleasure with whatever rock star was playing at a concert hall or club.

Like most groupies she liked sex but desired more. She wanted to be a rock star’s old lady. That had never happened. Nobody ever talked about groupies who married rock stars near her.

She lived in the same one bedroom she had always lived in near Tompkins Square Park in the East Village. Then it had been filled with roommates, talk, guys brought home, drugs and liquor. The constant smell of sex permeated, along with incense and flavored oils.

Cassandra’s been alone in the apartment for many more years than there were roommates and fun. Walking up five flights takes longer now. After a day spent taking orders, delivering drinks and food, in a coffee shop that used to smell of too many stale cigarettes, she really doesn’t care if the apartment’s filthy.

When she remembers she takes the garbage down. Sometimes the empty beer bottles and cigarette butts remain a study in still life, or so Dinah thinks.

Dinah was Cassandra’s bunkmate in camp. They had never been close. But Dinah felt a responsibility for everyone she had ever known.

When they turned seventeen, Dinah would walk into the club or concert hall with her boyfriend, a British rock star she married at nineteen and was still with 35 years later. It had always saddened her to see Cassandra waiting outside the doors or in the aisle waiting with the other groupies. They looked as if they were waiting to be fed, over eager or sullen and bored looking, it didn’t matter. They weren’t girls who counted. Read more…

Jan
26


“Just one. What’s the matter with you?” The maitre de said as I went for my first meal in Cancun. I was stunned and incapable of thinking of a smart comeback. Of course I thought of many later.
I had never been to Cancun** before and had never thought of it as “real Mexico.” Mexico the land where I learned to say “no” as a lifestyle when I spent high school summers there. The first, the summer I turned sixteen in 1966 in Oaxaca, the most beautiful and mystifying place I have been to. Fourteen girls were “selected” to live in a villa with the widow of a famed anthropologist, and we got to know it in all its glory and sadness.

The second summer I spent three weeks in Guanajuato, on a teen tour, where we “taught” English to young kids and then traveled to Mexico City, Oaxaca, Acapulco, Merida in the Yucatan and Isla de Mujeres. If you want to know more about my life in Mexico, read my memoir because Mexico is where the story of me really began.

“AFTER YOU CHECK IN, ALL YOUR TROUBLES WILL DISAPEAR. AS OUR PAMPERED GUEST YOU WILL BE SO HAPPY. LET US RELAX YOU. NO OTHER HOTEL WILL TREAT YOU SO WELL. IN OUR INCLUSIVE RESORT YOU WILL FIND JOY. WE WILL MAKE ALL YOUR WISHES COME TRUE. NO OTHER RESORT HAS OUR QUALITY OF SERVICE, YOU WILL EAT IN ONE OF OUR MANY WONDERFUL RESTAURANTS AND THE FOOD AND SERVICE WILL BE BEYOND YOUR MOST EXPECTATIONS.

WE WORK HARD TO MAKE YOU BE HAPPY

RELAX IN OUR MANY BARS. LET US BRING FABULOUS DRINKS TO YOUR DIVINE LOUNGE CHAIRS. YOU WILL BE ASSURED TO RELAX IN OUR HAMMOCKS. OUR BEACH IS UNSURPASSED. OUR POOLS ARE INCREDIBLE. NO OTHER RESORT HAS SO GOOD WONDERFUL ACTIVITIES. LET US SHOW AMAZING ENTERTAINMENT.

YOUR STAY WILL BE THE BEST IN YOUR LIFE. YOU WILL NEVER WANT TO LEAVE AND ALWAYS HAVE A SMILE ON YOUR FACE. WHEN YOUR REMEMBER YOUR VACATION, YOU WILL MAKE NEW RESERVATIONS TO COME BACK TO THE MOST LOVELY VACATION YOU HAD.”

Oh, Cancun**, land of superlatives and mangled English, where the drinking begins before breakfast and you can get anything you want except respect if you’re a single woman. I have been to many countries by myself and have always found people to reach out if I just smiled. I didn’t expect or want everybody to speak English, at least not the way they did. Read more…

Jan
14

I tried to second Jacob’s nomination of Cooper’s Darfur: an unforgivable hell on earth for the Koufaxes but my URL–put in correctly wasn’t recognized. Cooper has made me very aware of issues that really hadn’t registered.. When I didn’t want to care, I began to because of her. And she’s multi-talented. Since she’s no longer no the queen of Courting moderation, I award her the first ever “she blogs too many places to keep up with” Courting award.

I give myself the first ever I love Frank Rich for his mind and want his mind award. Being a Times Select customer I feel it important to share his mind.
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞

If you’re new to Courting we were a cover story last spring. A good blogging friend says that it does a great job of explaining me. Do I really need to explain myself? :-) Rather, does it take a newspaper article?
Courting Destiny Feature

We might never have met G if not for this article, so it has served one great tangible purpose already, and many many intangible ones Read more…

Dec
30

I moved to 5 East 63rd Street in early January 1976. Here’s an article from The Times with a picture of my old building in it.

While I didn’t think I belonged in this neighborhood, I spent fifteen amazing years there. An escaped murderer Buddy Jacobson owned two buildings. The police thought that he might be hiding out there. I forget the exact numbers of his buildings but they were dismal and badly in need of repair, Read more…

Oct
03

I’m Pia and back for one day this week. Will be back next week twice, with a guest post or two. If you would like to do a guest post for Courting, leave a comment or shoot me an email. I will be blogging twice a week. Three times at the most. More and Doug will shoot me. An executive committee decides who will guest post.

Again I can’t thank the guest bloggers enough. They have created something rich and wonderful, and are all better blogs hosts than I am.

If you have sent me an e-card, thanks very much but I couldn’t open them as I have been having some computer problems. So I don’t know who sent me any.

Saw my Mom’s best friend Edythe, of 40 years, tonight. She’s 92, a practicing interior designer, elegant, worldly, on top of issues, drives, travels and dances. Will write about her next week as Lucia and I want to become her when we grow up. She’s an amazing model of aging.

My Dad had wanted her to decorate my apartment on East 63rd Street. She agreed to give me the discount and go to some stores, but refused to decorate, because she liked my edgy modern taste, and I did want to decorate my own home.

My Mom ended up living in the same three tower golf course apartment complex as her her and my Mom’s best friend since she was eighteen. My Mom dreaded living so close to her friends. She did grow to love it.

Edythe talked about how everybody knew and was drawn to my Mom. It was wonderful.

My Mom could become friends with anybody. But she told me that she learned about true friendship from me because I had so many intense friendships. At first she couldn’t understand my friendship with a married male hair stylist, but she saw that it was a good friendship, and that Rafe was always there for me.

My Mom loved Lucia and my friendship. Well, uh, some people do call us The Bobbsey Twins. We have been friends for almost 30 years, and after fifteen realized we were in our friendship for life, even when we weren’t gettting along.

I had a wonderful time at my sister’s tonight. The break fast after Yom Kippur was always my favorite meal of the year. When we were young, we would go to a faux-mansion–the life long best friend’s house, where 50 to 60 people would eat the best smoked fishes one could find. My sister recreated that atomsphere in her own French Provencal style.

What’s a Jew without guilt? Sounds like a riddle; maybe it is. The following post is an exercise in fiction, not on real life.

Guilt: An internal debate

Her hair is the subject of much debate at the salon. It has grown over three inches in seven weeks. If she were too shave it, would she become Samson?

She gets up from the fuchsia love seat, goes into the small bathroom, takes off the facial mask, washes her face with the Clarisonic battery charged brush that really does minimize pores. She puts on anti-wrinkle cream, moisturizer, glimmering moisturizer foundation, lip plumper, lip liner, and lip gloss. Her eyebrows are dyed the same color as her hair, and her eyelashes are dyed several shades darker.

Her hair is 40′s wavy fullness. It’s look at me hair.

Delilah is such a pretty name, she thinks idly, and a name she would have hated just a few years ago. But this is the era of Beulah’s, Bella’s, Tillie’s, Rose’s, Sophie’s, and other names from times before hers.

Tonight is one of the holiest of nights. This holiday she won’t be celebrating it with her family. What family?

She used to have a large one and they are all dead or dispersed or she isn’t speaking to them, or they aren’t speaking to her.

There is her sister who needs her to keep her from spending 48 hours recovering from her mother in law. Sometimes, she thinks that they deserve each other. Really though she loves them both.

Today her sister told her that the children of women converts should have to go through a more rigorous Hebrew School to be Bat Mitzvahed. The only time she finds herself at a loss for words is when she speaks to her sister. Yet she knows that her sister has a good heart, though some people would disagree. She feels so guilty for writing something not wonderful about family.

Guilt, guilt, guilt. Guilt engulfs her. Guilt is taking her place at the dinner table tonight. And guilt for having guilt sit in for her. On this second holiest of nights, after every Saturday, she should be with family.

When she and her sister were growing up, girls who came from families that ate bacon* on Saturday mornings never went to Hebrew school, just dance school, music school, and any other after school things their parents deemed necessary to becoming a true upper-middle class American girl.

She takes her hair out of its pony tail, and brushes it fiercely.

Tonight, tomorrow, on Eruv Yom Kippur and Yom Kippur, two day a year Jews go to Temple. Many celebrate both days of Rosh Hashanah. Some services are so hot, tickets are scalped. But for her it was always a family holiday. Her father only went to Temple for the sermon and the late afternoon discussion, never the prayers. She likes the prayers but never knows when to stand and when to sit.

She should initiate phone calls or emails to friends and family. That is traditional. She hasn’t received one card in the mail, and can’t seem to access the email cards. So she has no idea to whom she owes cards for she sure hasn’t sent any. Lazy, she is really lazy.

Should she put that in her blog? That she can’t access the cards? Her blog is supposed to be “big.” But she was blackballed by Mediamatters dot com.

Bloggercelebrity has likened her to a prostitute, and she can’t really dispute that.

Her goals in life never included blogging. Her blog was a happy accident. So why does she feel so guilty? Is it a bad thing to be quotable?

Like the Jewish holidays, blogging has become increasingly hot and mystifying. She thought it might actually help her career.

What career?

She looks in the full length mirror. Passes for just another woman on the Upper West Side. Black jeans, black spandex tee, Black Nike Mary Janes, and a blue jean jacket. It’s almost leather jacket weather. No, the jeans won’t do.

She wonders when the food stores won’t have lines going into the street. On Jewish and Christian holidays, and of course Thanksgiving and the Superbowl stores could have multi-hour waits.

She wants Weight Watchers cookies & cream ice cream bars dipped in c
Cool Whip Free. Fairway or the West Side Market must have some.

Though most people, including her sister’s mother-in-law take out or use caterers, there’s always more to buy.

Six thirty. That will be safe. Jews aren’t supposed to spend money, go to movies, travel on anything but foot, or do any work on major holidays. Jews are supposed to contemplate the Torah readings, plus their own lives.

She’s a writer. She does that every damn day minus the Torah.
“Shit Cool Whip Free isn’t dairy. It’s all artificial. Will be sold out.”

She really should put on the all purpose, from black tie to lunch, good black skirt, out of respect as her mother would say. When she lived in an Orthodox neighborhood, her mother didn’t even think that she should use her laundry room on Saturdays “out of respect,” for the Orthodox. But they would use the pool, say they couldn’t carry money and would pay during the week and then of course “forget,” and do it again the next week.

“Respect” was a big thing to her family. “Respect Christians for letting us live here without killing us.” Her parents were born in New York. They never seemed to remember that.

“Respect your teachers even if they pick on you.” “Respect people. Never ask personal questions. Let people tell you what they want you to know.”

But she lives in a different world than her parents did. People think that you’re not interested if you don’t ask the price of their new SUV. And she can’t decide what to wear. Maybe a denim pencil skirt would be a good compromise.

She’s a blogger with a somewhat recognizable name, in blogging circles. And that translates to what?

She knows how to weave a good story. Why does that make her feel so guilty?

It’s too damn personal. She isn’t respecting the tenets of her upbringing. But every therapist and every pop-psychologist would tell her to get with the program.

Maybe she should have accepted an invitation to go to Temple. Maybe if she were truly religious she could feel less guilt and more worthy.

Why is she mired in family tradition?

Her parents moved with the times. Her mother looked better in a mini skirt at 50 than most 20 year old girls did. Never micro-mini’s. If they happened to be away on a Jewish holiday, they didn’t always celebrate them. Her parents were known for being modern.

Even modern sounds old fashioned, she thinks, as she puts on more lip gloss. People marvel at how young she looks. Immaturity will do that, she thinks. Though her parents looked much younger than their ages.
“A lady never has to give her age…” And something else that she can’t remember. She’s no lady.

She decides to wear the jeans. On the way out of the apartment, she vows to have a truly great agent by the first signs of snow.

With her luck there will be an early frost.

Guilt: Food makes the Jew

*Bacon is from a pig which is very unKosher. Most regular families, when she was growing up ate bacon with eggs on Saturday mornings, and lox, salty smoked salmon, with bagels on Sunday morning.

Fortunately, smoked salmon became cheaper and her family was richer by her early teens.

Jewish families would have spare ribs, fried rice with pork and shrimp in Chinese restaurants. After her long roast young Tom Turkey stage at Patricia Murphy’s, the restaurant with English gardens, aquariums, women in colonial costume serving baskets of honey buns and popovers, she graduated to shrimp stuffed with crabmeat;

The first time her parents ever ate shrimp in a home was at her apartment when she was 25. They liked it.


Jan
19

moi

Hadn’t meant to post this which is why it ends in the middle of a sentence

No! No! No! Really off blogging until Monday but the more I think about the attorney on Boston Legal as compared to me, and as much as I adore David E Kelley and the cast of the show, I think that they did people like me a big disservice.

I’m not looking for empathy or accolades. Need to tell this story but damned if I know how to. Read more…

Dec
10

Mrs Mogul who needs our plug like that D woman needs postpartum depression is nominated for a parenting award in a blog award. She isn’t actually a parent yet, but writes about my future blogging niece or nephew as though she/he has been born. And you can vote once a day. Mrs. M tells great stories and is going to be a fabulous mommy.

I bought a TVO about three years ago. For six months after 9/11 I couldn’t get network TV, and I really wanted comfort TV on their original homes not Nick at Nite. Have no idea why I didn’t want to watch them on cable. I hadn’t watched TV comedies since halfway through Mad about you I’m a big Helen Hunt fan; but it became boring.

Weird side note. The first month having intermittent cable TV and more important to me computer cable service seemed patriotic. We were London during the blitz: self sacrificing, stoic, and going on and on. That got old fast. As most of you know my mom died a month after 9/11 very suddenly, and the cable being out so much cut off comfort and communication. Read more…

Sep
21

Higher Ground

Last night was an embarrasment of couch potato (remember that?) riches: higher ground, a benefit for Katrina was on the radio while the Gilmore Girls, Bone and Law & Order: SVU were being recorded by the DVR. And next Tuesday, next Tuesday marks the return of James Spader in Boston Legal.

I don’t know know what this says about me, but I can pick Emmy winners. Patricia Aruqette, so much bigger boned but facially so similiar to Rosanna, won for Medium, along with the new Closer, two of my three fave girl shows the other being, of course, The Gilmore Girls. And I will take Candice Bergen anywhere. Think Boston Legal’s incredible. Not just for James Spader, my absolutely favorite actor alive, but for how it uses older actors. Older than me is a good thing; it keeps me helpful, and they’re all wonderfrul actors playing great characters in a David E Kelley show that has dared to question the federal government albeit in funny ways since the show has been on.

I couldn’t have written the above until I hit 40 as I was the one person I knew, outside of my immediate family, not to own a VCR. Finally realized that while certain members of my family might have had an intellectual snob thing going I didn’t have to. Now fave sis, who has every new product for her eleven year old daughter, introduces me as:

“This is my sister, Pia. She could have been an intellectual but chose pop culture instead.”

No comment. Yes comment: my love of pop culture became acceptable when I began reviewing film; but I would have rather reviewed DVD’s; much more intellectually stimulating, the extras; the assumption that you will review the DVD in bed, and can replay at will.

The weather, last night, might have been sultry but there was an Autumnal chill in the air, and I could seep without air conditioning. Rafe couldn’t find parking which made it the true beginning of the Fall season. And he looks; never have met a person with more patience, and ability to find a parking space where other people only see a small spot and a do not park sign; somehow he knows how to circumvent them. Read more…

Sep
13

Some of you know that hot humid weather makes me very happy. Today was the first bonus day; but September used to always be the most perfect month of summer with the best weather, and warmest ocean water. Today was the first clear blue sky day I could look at without feeling just a little sick in four years.

I found a city college with a great adult ed program and registered for classes–none are academic; one is Buddhist inspired meditation, my hippie Buddhist aunt would be so proud as my sister said when I told her. My aunt’s alive; we just don’t speak much. Us Savage women, we’re the dark side of a Woody Allen film. Read more…

Jul
20

I was just going to leave yesterday’s post up for the rest of the summer, and change the date, but, uh, not only would I be doing something stupid, I would be aging way too rapidly.

THANKS ALL OF YOU FOR HELPING MAKE MY BIRTHDAY GREAT!

Thank you all; never had an Internet birthday before, and I recommend it. Wasn’t going to do, but it’s a great experience, and one that I hope to repeat many times.

Last night was so great! Yes, it really was. But before I get to that, I think being born in the midpoint plus a few days of July is incredible. When I was a kid, I had to have my school party in June because, yes, we didn’t have school in July. I would also have my personal birthday party for my ten or so best friends in June. Fave-sis and I went to sleep away camp for six weeks each summer. It always seemed to begin on July 21 or 22nd.

While I logically knew that my parents didn’t arrange this, it felt like they did. Or, more probably, my dad told me that they did, and I believed him. We would have our extended family party on my birthday with whatever friends happened to be home. Then in September we would have a private just the four of us adoption day dinner at my favorite restaurant, Patricia Murphy’s, in September. Patricia Murphy’s had a giant aquarium, and beautiful gardens. They also had women dressed in colonial costume who walked around giving popovers and sticky buns. I only cared about the popovers which I thought were magic.

Though I had been adopted in November, it was too close to my sister’s birthday, and my parents wanted her to have the full birthday experience without my big sisterly interference.

I have to admit that I still believe the entire summer is my birthday, and nobody can ever dissuade me of that feeling. Summer’s always been magical; it’s the time of the year that anything can happen as long as it’s fun and preferably near or on a beach. I will never outgrow the feeling that summer brings great adventures and promises of future happiness. I love seeing summer through the eyes of kids–real and grown up ones.

Yesterday was the first time I didn’t buy every paper or look up my horoscope everywhere I could on the Internet. Think that means I will have an uncharted year. Know it doesn’t work that way but leave me to my delusions please; or maybe my illusions; or my truth. Fave niece made me a card that she was so nervous would be late, it arrived three days early and asked three times if it had arrived on time. That alone would have made my birthday.

Yesterday was the most oppressive day of the year. It was so oppressive that the heat went straight into my nose, but last night, the humidity broke just a bit to make it tolerable. Had been thinking of going to Cafe Luxembourg, Compass or another very trendy neighborhood restaurant. But I was in a weird mood, probably brought about by going out too many times during the day. Didn’t even try to make reservations. Read more…