Moxie and the Case of the Missing Underwear
Sometimes, as a mom, you have to become a detective, questioning your child boldly, using techniques that would rival any interrogation scene in Castle or Law & Order. Here is where I demonstrate those skills.
July 30, 9:03PM
CHARACTERS:
Moxie: 7 year-old, blonde girl, wiggles a lot, loves fairies and animals, wants a hedgehog for a pet, hates pants.
Me: 40 year-old, multi-colored hair woman, too tired to wiggle, loves cooking and cats, has a stuffed buffalo next to her bed, hates pants.
SCENE: ME, in bed, about to fall asleep. Sound of footsteps. MOXIE approaches bed, wearing a nightgown with Jurassic-sized flowers on it.
MOXIE: Can I cuddle with you?
ME: Okay. Just for a little bit.
MOXIE: I just want to warn you, though, that I’m not wearing any underwear.
ME: Uh, okay. What happened?
MOXIE: They fell off.
ME: Your underwear fell off.
MOXIE: Yes.
ME: Wait. What? You mean, you were wearing underwear and they just randomly fell off?
MOXIE: Well, I was wiggling a lot.
ME: So what you’re saying here is that you took your underwear off.
MOXIE: Yes.
ME: That’s okay. I can deal with that. Come here and cuddle.
CASE CLOSED.
My Mom Explains The Real Reason For Embroidery In The 60s
Every once in a while, my mom tells me a story I haven’t heard a million times, and one that’s actually pretty interesting. (That’s not to say her other stories aren’t interesting; they are. Just the first and second time around, not over and over.) Today, she presented this story while we ate Chinese food.
MOM:
Dammit. I thought I’d make it through one meal without getting something on my shirt and, well, oh well. Look. I told Marilyn yesterday…she’s...well, she was my sister-in-law when I was married to your dad. I guess my step-sister-in-law since they were step, but now she’s not anything. Anyway. Yesterday we were laughing about when I was pregnant. This was back in the 60s and I just spilled stuff all the time all over my chest. Then Marilyn would take my shirt and embroider a flower over it. I’d spill. She’d embroider. Over and over. Well, pretty soon, I had a shirt that was covered with flowers. Flowers from my hip and wrapping all up the front of my chest. Some lady said “Oh, I just love your shirt” and I said “Thanks. I made it myself”.

Now I know why embroidery was so popular in the sixties. It wasn’t the drugs or free love. It was because women figured out a way to make clothes last longer when they spilled stuff. It’s fricking brilliant. I now want to learn to embroider.
Thanks, Mom.
I Thought Being An Adult Would Be More Fun
I’ve been in another fit of what Anne Shirley would bemoan “The Depths of Despair”, not to be confused with The Princess Bride’s “The Pit of Despair”. They’re both dramatic places to be but one involves torture by albinos, and the other just involves moaning. And possibly hair dye.
I don’t know what’s wrong with me, but I have a feeling it’s hormones. I mean, I’m not going through THE CHANGE or anything (that’s a reference to menopause and not lycanthropy), I’m just…moody. I just thought….I don’t know….I guess I thought that grown-up life would be different. I thought…I thought I’d have more fun. More friends. More potlucks.
I envisioned my life at forty as something like the Ya Ya Sisterhood or something. You know, hanging out with my girlfriends, wearing vintage swimsuits, drinking margaritas and stuff while our kids run around and our husbands try to feel us up in the kitchen.

But, I don’t have a group of friends, nor do I own a vintage swimsuit, and my kids are at their bio dad’s half the time. Sometimes I get felt up in the kitchen, which is nice, but…it’s just not what I envisioned.
I’ve tried to make friends with different women lately, and I pretty much came off as drunk and desperate, mostly because I was drunk and desperate.
I’ve given up. I’ve given up on asking people over to play games and eat food, of trying to maintain friendships, and I’m realizing that life isn’t like the movies. THAT’S WHY THERE ARE MOVIES.
So there’s that.
Then there’s that I’ve sent out 50 query letters on “Popsicle Toes” and not one agent has asked to see the manuscript. I never heard back from the agent who asked for it back in April. And I’m telling you, this memoir is GOOD. It’s raw and vulnerable and awkward and real, because it’s pretty much me. On paper.
And then I was meeting with a nice writer fellow and having so much fun talking about writing again and critiquing and being critiqued, but he’s moving now, so I put up a somewhat sad and desperate personal ad on Facebook looking for a new writer group, and I got nothing on that too.
I’m like the reverse of Sally Field’s infamous acceptance speech. “No one likes me! No one really likes me!”
Waaaaahhh!!!!
Sometimes I get really sick of living in my own head. I’m very glad that Kealoha likes me and likes hanging out with me. Maybe I can get him to put on a vintage bathing suit and I can pretend we’re girlfriends.
Actually, that’s a horrible idea. I’m now firmly creeped out, which I guess is better than being in the Depths of Despair.
On MasterChef and Macaroons
Kealoha and I were relaxing with a oh-so-not-summer-menu dinner of pierogies with sautéed mushrooms, onions, and bacon and decided to catch up on some MasterChef. The episode included the contestants cooking up a pig head (they didn’t put it on a stake and dance around with it though), then at a wedding for a bride with enormously arched eyebrows, and then the Pressure Test of cooking macaroons. Here is our conversation:

ME: Oh! They’re cooking macaroons! We love macaroons!
KEALOHA: We do?
ME: Hello? Remember Paris? We should eat some macaroons. It’ll remind us of our trip!
KEALOHA: I’ve never had a macaroon in my life!
ME: What are you talking about? Remember last year when we were in Paris and that hotel in Versailles gave us that whole box of macaroons? They were so delicious. Don’t you remember that?
KEALOHA: Yeah. But you ate all of my macaroons. You ate the whole box.
(Pause while I mentally flipped through my memories.)
ME: Ah. That’s right. Well, we should get a box of macaroons and I’ll eat them all and it will be just like Paris all over again.
Vote On My Next Novel
I’m ready to start my next writing project, but I just can’t figure out which one to do. I have several ideas. It’d probably be good to start something especially since I’m trying to find an agent for my memoir and that’s super depressing to say the least. The search for an agent is depressing, not the memoir.

A few years ago I asked you dear readers to choose the book I would write and post as a blovel. The result of that was ‘Tunnel Vision’…which is (I think) one of the best things I’ve ever written. So I thought I’d turn to you again. Can you help an unfocused writer focus?
It’s possible I could post this next piece as a blovel too, if there’s interest.
So. What book would you like me to write…or…which of these would you be most likely to read?
THE CONTENDERS:
1) A sequel to “Pepper Wellington and the Case of the Missing Sausage” called “Pepper Wellington and the Case of the Bad Curry” in which Pepper and her friend attend a dinner party when people start dying. They’re on an island so Pepper must solve the crimes before she’s dead too. It’s sorta like a “And Then There Were None” but with more food and less British stuff.
2) A sequel to “Foodies Rush In” in which the characters from the first book celebrate the holidays. We’ll meet new characters, see multiple layers of disfunction and bad holiday sweaters. This would, hopefully, be a comedy and a feel-good type of book.
3) A suspense/action novel in which a young girl discovers that her chemist father made her resistant to drugs so she’s the only one that can see that the happy world she lives in, isn’t really happy. She goes on an adventure to stop the poisoning and mind-control of her people. Lots of running, explosions, and a little darkness.
So. Help a girl out. Which book should I write? And if you know of an agent who wants a memoir called “Popsicle Toes” that’s in a similar style to “The House on Mango Street” lemme know.
POLL CLOSED
Thank you for voting!
#3 wins with 63% of the vote! Let the writing commence!
!!!!
Mermen!
Kealoha and I stayed in Grand Haven last night. I’m narrating all week long and I thought it would be nice to A) Not have to drive for two hours (round trip) and B) Stay at a hotel. Instead of a 50-minute drive home, I had a ten minute drive to the hotel and Kealoha met me at our room. I’d envisioned a conversation with the desk clerk. Here’s what happened in my brain:
ME: I’m here for the night. Last minute idea.
CLERK: But you don’t have any luggage!
ME (nervously): That’s because, ehm, my, er, husband is coming and he’ll bring the luggage. Yeah. My husband. That’s right.
(In my head I sounded suspicious even to myself.)
CLERK: Oh. Okay. I got you. Your ‘husband’. (wink wink wink)
ME: No! Really! My husband is meeting me at this hotel! With my luggage! I’m not that kind of woman to have a tawdry affair. I’m only tawdry with my husband!
I guess I like drama. Or at least I like envisioning drama. The real conversation went like this:
ME: I’m here for the night. Last minute idea.
CLERK: Credit card, please.
Then Kealoha and I had average burgers in the restaurant and then used the whirpool where my swimsuit immediately filled with air and farted along to the beat of the bubbles in the water. I was afraid that my boobs looked so big that random hungry babies would run after me crying for milk and my soul, but no babies chased me. We saw one baby, but he was more interested in chewing on his fist than my enormous tatas.
I fell asleep at 9, while Kealoha giggled to “Hot Tub Time Machine”. In the morning, we had breakfast and then walked along the pier. It was all foggy and moody and slight creepy. Then out of the darkness we saw something truly horrifying! A sump truck pumping sewage! The smell hit me in the face like an old-timey boxer. Rat bastard. And I noticed that the guy doing the pumping (ahem. Sump-pumping) did this WHILE SMOKING A CIGARETTE. Again, my brain took over as I imagined gigantic green fireballs and me screaming to Kealoha RUNNNNN!!!!
We didn’t run. We turned around and crossed the street.
Then we made our way back down to the water and SPLOOSH!
I saw a merman! A MERMAN! That fucker was huge, jumping out of the water like Greg Louganis in reverse. At least I think it was a Merman. I sorta only saw it out of the corner of my eye.
ME: Jeez! Did you see that Merman?
KEALOHA: (sigh)
ME: Maybe it was a fish.
KEALOHA: Yes. That was a fish.
SPLOOSH! Another ‘fish’ took a leap and splash.
ME: Nature is freaky.
Kealoha held my hand to calm me down and then drove me back to the car. Then I was back in the studio and falling in love and doing naughty things in a cabin, and then winning second place in a holiday window competition.
Just another day of narrating and life in general.
Brief Thoughts on Game of Thrones, Hairy Knees, and
I’ve had a week of being 40, and…whatever. I’m over it. I’m more interested now in WTF happened in “Game of Thrones” and why, why, WHY when I shave my legs and get them all silky smooth do I always forget to shave my knees? Seriously. My knees are like the Sasquatch Bermuda Triangle. I don’t even know what that means, exactly, except that it’s bad. And I need to wear longer dresses.
Luckily, Kealoha just ignores my knees entirely. For a while, when he’d touch my leg, I thought he just had a thing against knees. They’re angular, not particular sexy, but then I looked down. He was just nice enough not to say anything about the crop circle growing on my knees. Now that’s LOVE.

Whatever.
I’m now officially old enough to have permanently crossed into Quirkyville. So, I leave cabinet doors open, I routinely ignore shaving my knees, I’m trying to eat healthy so this means I now have salads for breakfast, and after years and years of trying, I’m pretty sure I’m incapable of relaxing.
It’s all good. I’m okay with this. Plus, I’m too engrossed in gorging on “Game of Thrones” episodes to care about piddly things like my smoothness, or lack thereof. Priorities, right?
Desiderata by Max Ehrmann--Good Words To Remember
My uncle just sent me a lovely birthday card where he put some of his favorite quotes. They included "A peasant must stand a long time on a hill with his mouth open before a roast duck flies in" (Chinese Proverb) and a quote from the Desiderata by Max Ehrmann. My mom had this poem on the bathroom wall. It was a heavy plastic thing, sort of like a self-help 1980s self-help poster, but I read this poem over and over. I'm not religious, but if I had a religion, this would describe it. Having my uncle remind me of the line "With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world" made me want to revisit the piece. It still rings true for me. It's self-helpy without feeling self-helpy.
If you haven't seen it, here it is. If you know it already, here it is again:

How 40 Starts
At 1AM last night, I woke up hearing Bruno Mars shouting through my window that he would do anything for me. ANYTHING at all for me. He’d jump out of a plane, step in front of a train, go insane in the membrane…
And then I heard my next door neighbor scream at the top of her lungs: “FUUUUUUCK YOUUUUUUUU! Don’t you even CARE? Who ARE you? Shut off the FUCKING MUSIC!!”
And then I giggled. Welcome to being 40, Tanya.
I then had a very strange dream where I was still living at my stepmom and dad’s house. It was totally decaying. Mold everywhere, water dripping, and I was sitting on the front porch waiting for something when the roof caved in. I watched it cave in and then I texted my dad and said “I’m moving out.” He texted back and said “It’s about time. Everyone else has been gone for years.”
If that little episode doesn’t sound symbolic, then you haven’t been in English class or had any therapy at all.
Then the dream switched and I was in the ocean trying to study new lifeforms. Whoever gave me this job clearly didn’t read my resume. I looked over the boat’s edge (I’m sure it has a technical term but I don’t know it) and there was this huge wall of water coming for us, ala The Perfect Storm. I said “Huh”. Then I saw a giant whale jump out of the ocean, twist, flip, and do a giant cannon ball and I said “Look at the giant WHHHHHAAAAALE!”

Then I was showing my college roomates (Kim and Rachel, who I spent my thirtieth birthday with getting ridiculously drunk) this dingy Chinese restaurant where I would eat lunch and try to pitch my stories to hungry Asian businessmen who didn’t speak English.
The dreaming ended when I bolted upright in bed and thought “Coffee” and then “What a fucked up night”.
I think I was too hot last night. Yes. On the night I turned forty, I’m pretty sure I was having a hot flash that caused mild hallucinations.
It sounds like it’s going to be an interesting decade if last night is how it’s all set up. And, also, now I want Dim Sum.
Conversation With My Kids at Applebee’s Episode 4
Franz, 8; Moxie, 7 ME: You know, some people think I’m really funny.
FRANZ Whatever.
ME: Seriously! I’m like seriously funny sometimes.
FRANZ Mom. Come on. You’re not funny. You can’t be funny. You’re, like, well…you’re a goth.
(He says this like he’s telling me I’m missing an arm and no one has wanted to mention it before because they don’t want to stop pretending to high-five me.)
ME: I’m not a goth.
FRANZ: Mom. You’re a goth. I mean, come on! You’re dressed entirely in black.
ME: It’s a black dress.
FRANZ: It’s summer. You’re dressed entirely in black. You’re hair is dark. You’re wearing dark glasses. You’re all dramatic and serious and stuff. You’re a total goth.
ME: Oh.
MOXIE: Next time, Mom, talk to me before we go out. You really should’ve worn a pink necklace or something.
ME: Huh. Maybe I am a goth.
(I turn to Kealoha)
ME: Am I a goth?
KEALOHA: Sometimes, yeah.
ME: Huh. I do like writing poetry.
FRANZ: See? Goth.
ME: Eat your fish.
***
From Urban Dictionary:

On Starting A New Novel and Muskrats
I’m here. I’m here. I’m feeling a little blech with the blog. I love doing it, but sometimes I just need a mini-break. Plus, I’m starting to think of the new project I want to work on (while I collect rejection slips on my memoir “Popsicle Toes”), and that’s starting to take over my brain. The idea is churning around in my head. It’s like, a novel starts with an idea, but then it starts to branch out and become a web. It’s very insect-like actually, spinning of ideas, seeing what sticks together, how everything connects, what mates are consumed after fornicating. Wait. Maybe one of those things doesn’t actually belong in my writing-as-insect metaphor. Hmmm.
Anyway.
I know I want the next book to be literary fiction and I know I want there to be a high conflict and a lot of action, and now I’m letting my brain do the work. I just sit back and wait.
Last night my brain woke me up. I dreamt I was with the kids and Kealoha and I were all packing to go camping. (We never camp, so you know this is a dream.) Franz and Moxie kept talking about something in the woods. “Ma, Ma! Are you sure we should do this? We’ve heard there’s Something In The Woods”. I said “We’re fine. We’re fine! There’s Nothing In The Woods!” We walked to the car and started to drive away and then my brain went black and I saw the words “The family was never seen alive again.”
Yes. I actually saw subtitles in my dream. And I woke up with a gasp.
First, that is NOT the story I want to write and second, I’m pretty sure the Something In The Woods was inspired by watching reruns of Lost and seeing a muskrat on my walk the other day. I was walking by the pond with my friend K and all of a sudden the cattails started shivering. Then I heard crunching. When I saw the muskrat, it all made sense, but that moment BEFORE seeing it was a little nerve-wracking. I mean, shivering and crunching, that’s the stuff of Stephen King. (Or a decongestant-inspired hallucination.)

So. My brain is occupied with birthing another novel. Luckily, unlike a real pregnancy, this process doesn’t make me nauseous.
It does make me spacey. I mean, more than usual.
I think I have the opening scene ready and I’m almost, almost ready to start writing again.
I’m so looking forward to it.
Big Giveaway
I have to say that being a narrator is a pretty kick ass job. Sometimes literally. Or at least literally kick-ass in the stories I get to read. Sometimes I’m catching criminals, sometimes I’m falling in love, and I get lucky over and over and over again in various degrees of detail. Oh, how I love my job.

June is audiobook month AND it’s also the month where I have a birthday. My birthday is June 30th . This day is important because, in days of old, most coupons expire on June 30th. I don’t know why, but it’s true. AND this June 30th is a big birthday for me. The big FORTY. Which means any time I leave the house wearing tight pants and sequins, people will look at me and think “Huh. There goes a cougar”.
In honor of all that, I’m giving away some of my promo copies for some of the favorite things I’ve narrated. These are MP3 discs so you get the whole book (5-14 hours usually) all on one disc, which you can then put in your computer and transfer to your iPod or phone or whatever.
That’s right. IT’S A GIVEAWAY. All you have to do is comment below. On this blog only. No Facebook or Twitter comments, so we all know it’s fair. Also, when you comment, you type in your email so I’ll have a way to get in contact with you. Your email isn't visible to anyone and I won't share it. After the contest, it all gets deleted. You won’t be put on any mailing list or anything. I’m too lazy for that. If you have a preference for a book or if you like mystery better than romance or vice versa, let me know.
On my birthday, I’ll choose winners of the books.
- Last To Die A Rizzoli and Isles novel by Tess Gerritsen. How lucky am I that I took over this series around book 7? I love these women, and the men they work with and love. This series is a mystery and has great depth of character and emotion. Fingers crossed I’ll get to narrate more of these. I’m really proud of my work with them. [soundcloud url="http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/97284042" params="color=ff6600&auto_play=false&show_artwork=true" width=" 100%" height="166" iframe="true" /]
- A Perfect Evil by Alex Kava. I took over this series in the later books, but then recorded some backlist titles. Here we meet the troubled Maggie O’Dell and her partner Tully. Hard-edged murder mystery with dark killers. Again, love love love this series.[soundcloud url="http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/97284040" params="" width=" 100%" height="166" iframe="true" /]
- Married by Monday by Catherine Bybee. Fun romance series, perfect for the summer. Lots of fun characters.[soundcloud url="http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/97284043" params="color=ff6600&auto_play=false&show_artwork=true" width=" 100%" height="166" iframe="true" /]
- Summer Nights by Susan Mallery. A Fool’s Gold romance. I was lucky to get cast with this series from book one and have been able to grow (along with the stories and the characters). Each book stands alone, but together you get a sense of the town. This book has two of my favorite female characters: Annabelle Weiss and Charlie.[soundcloud url="http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/97284047" params="" width=" 100%" height="166" iframe="true" /]
- Rainshadow Road by Lisa Kleypas. Romance but with a hint of magic. Her work reminds me a lot of Alice Hoffman and I LOVE Alice Hoffman.[soundcloud url="http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/97284045" params="" width=" 100%" height="166" iframe="true" /]
Runners up will get copies to one of my own quirky rom-coms.
Good luck and happy listening, and happy me, almost officially a cougar. Prrrrr.
On Turning 40 And The Magical Powers Of A Mustache
I turn 40 in two weeks. I TURN. The way that milk sours, meat goes bad, and voluptuous crosses over to chubbyville. I’d say ‘insert whining here’ but I think you can tell from my opening that I’m already whining.
I’m also wearing comfortable cotton pajamas with a drawstring waist. It’s only a short distance until this outfit TURNS into a full-on muumuu.

I don’t know why I’m mourning my youth so much…except maybe that now that I’m almost-forty I’m saying things things like “mourning my youth”. I also started a new diet, or ‘shift in eating habits’ where you replace the bottom rung of the food pyramid with fruits and vegetables instead of grains. It’s called the Eat to Live diet, but I think it should be called the Poop to Live diet.
40, high fiber diet and stretchy pants. Bring on the pole dancing, fellas! Mama wants to work it!!!
Er…
Wahhhh!
I’d actually start crying right now if it all weren’t a little bit funny.
It is a little bit funny because, to be honest, I acted almost-forty when I was twenty and thirty. I’ve been almost-forty ever since I was sixteen and a college guy asked if he could shake my hand and I said very primly “I’m not that kind of girl!”
What I need to do is shift my thinking. Like, I can be the hot-young-forty-year old mom in comparison to the moms who had kids late and are now in their fifties. I can watch reruns of Madmen to see how to rock a muumuu. I can make crab rangoons, narrate an audiobook about vampires and/or spiritual awakening, while taking care of my kids, hubby, and working on writing the next book.
And really, all this angst comes down to the same thing: I’m in between projects and I need some place to put my energy. Some place other than a mirror and a bottle of merlot.
As soon as I get out of these stretchy pajamas, I’ll start working on that.
Side note
While sitting here whining , my 8-year-old son just came in here wearing a mustache and gave me a kiss. He said that there’s nothing that a good mustache can’t fix. I find that wildly entertaining and deeply disconcerting at the same time.
And he’s right. I feel much better.
Waiting For A Publisher To Contact You Is Like Dysfunctional Dating All Over Again
Today I stood at my window, and looked out, pondering the universe while looking at my watery reflection . Then I leaned my head and sniffed my armpit. Everything seemed fine, but I was worried that maybe I smelled like onions. Or maybe I’m just weird. I returned to pondering my reflection in the glass. I looked normal enough. Whatever. Surely, today they’d call. Because, it’s just like that dude in those Saturday Night Live sketches used to affirm “I’m good enough, I’m strong enough, and gosh darn it, people like me” (even if I smell like onions).
Then Kealoha came downstairs and said: “Tanya, what the fuck are you doing?” Not in a mean way, mind you. In a soft and gentle and loving way.
Ahem.
Here’s why I was staring at myself: last month, a publisher read the first two chapters of my memoir “Popsicle Toes” and requested the whole manuscript. But it’s been over a month and I haven’t heard anything yet. And then last week, I had a speed dating session where I met five major publishers in audiobooks who all professed to find my narration really attractive and gave me their cards. I have followed up with all the publishers (one for my book and five for audio/narration work for other people’s work). I composed emails that I hope made me seem witty, carefree, professional, totally sane, totally reliable and unbelievably talented. And now…now it’s just a waiting game.

And I’m having flashbacks to my single days where I questioned everything I’ve ever said or done on a date, and tried to read into the dude’s perspective. “He said he liked me and I’m not like anyone he’s ever met so does that mean he’s interested in me, or does that mean he thinks I’m schizophrenic? I mean, does he like me or is he just being nice? And why did he breathe when he said…”
Now it’s the same thing, only I’m questioning my talent and how long do I wait before I contact the publishers again, and if I email them again, will I come off as creepy and pushy…but if I don’t email them again then maybe I’m not present in their mind and, dammit, something or someone smells like onions here and I’m going insane, but I’m totally able to handle all of this and why, why, WHY don’t they want me? Aren’t I good enough? Huh? HUH?
Breathe, breathe, breathe.
I’m trying to remind myself that if they’re really, really interested in me, they’ll contact me. I mean, Kealoha filled out an application to date me so that proves something, right? Except, it took him fifteen years to get to that point, and I really don’t want to wait fifteen years to get my book published or to get a recording gig with another publisher.
It’s time for a big ol glass of wine and to stare out the window again. If it were raining, it’d be even better. I think I’ll make faces like I’m trapped and trying to get out, just to keep the neighbors’ guessing. It will keep me from obsessing over when, or IF, my phone is ever going to ring.
(But they wouldn’t give me a business card if they weren’t interested, right? Right?)
Gah.
On New York, The Audies, And My General Awkwardness
Well, my great New York Adventure has come to a close. I didn’t take my computer this time and obsess over blogging. I figured by going to a conference on audiobooks (APAC) and then the Audie Awards, I’d have plenty enough to obsess about. And I was right!

THE CONFERENCE
I was nominated for a shiny award for my narration of “Great on the Job” by Jodi Glickman, a great book that gives you pointers on how to succeed in business…which is funny because I suck at business AND with people. Case in point: at the conference, there were all these narrators, talking to each other in their deep, resonant voices. In my head, I walked over to them and said in a sultry voice “Hey, everyone, I’m Tanya Eby. Let’s be friends.” In reality, I hung out in the corner, with a slightly psychotic smile on my face, thinking, I can do this. I can do this. I can do this. At least I hope I was thinking it, and not muttering it out loud. Sheesh.
Then there was this speed-dating session where I got to meet casting agents from Random House, Simon and Schuster, etc, and I had two minutes to sell myself. Near the end I was getting pretty good at it. Until…well…here’s the dialogue:
ME: I’m really versatile and can narrate fiction, nonfiction, young adult, even erotica.
MAN: Well, there’s not too much Christian erotica out there.
ME: Errr…
MAN: Yeah. We’re a Christian publisher.
ME: Ah. Probably should’ve done more research. (nervous maniacal giggle.)
I’ve read some Amish romances. I liked those. There were, uh, lots of, uh, Snickerdoodles in them. And, like, God.
But besides that, it went pretty well.
Then I went to a party for Tantor where I met people I’ve been recording for. (They have a sale for audiobook month. Check them out HERE.) I had a big ol’ gin&tonic and then stood around awkwardly while narrators and publishers laughed and did secret handshakes and synchronized swimming. Maybe one day, I’ll learn the moves and be IN the circle.
I lasted through one drink and then made my exit home to the hotel to wait for Kealoha to get back from his David Byrne show.
THEN THE AUDIES

On the day of the Audies, I was pretty much a nervous wreck. I found a random Korean lady to do my hair and she was really nice. At least I think she was nice. We didn’t understand each other very well.
I was too nervous to eat, so my dress fit really well. I got all gussied up, and Kealoha gave me his arm (it was still attached to his body, and clad in a groovy smoking jacket) and we were off. Immediately, he got me another drink and I put on my medal and managed to talk not-too-awkwardly to narrators, narrator-hopefuls, publishers, and the waitress who carried teeny tiny madeleines topped with caviar. About two dozen people came up to us to shake Kealoha’s hand (again, attached to his body) and compliment him on his jacket. I felt famous. I mean, I did buy him the jacket for Christmas.

We joined the Brilliance crew in the theater, and five minutes later, my category was announced, and my mug shot flashed across the screen with the other five men in my category. I didn’t win. But I could finally relax. Being nominated was pretty cool though.
And as I sat back in the theater, watching the Lemony Snicket dude present awards and tell insider audiobook jokes that I actually understood, I sorta felt like when the Grinch’s heart grows three sizes bigger. Or I felt stoned. Whatever. I felt warm and happy and…well…part of something.
I’ve been working really hard to succeed in this business, and I feel like I am, awkwardness and all.
Another day in the city, and a stressful plane ride home where I read “World War Z” (so good!) and now I’m back home with my kiddos, narrating, got new headshots, and a stack of veggies in the fridge I need to cook.
All is well.
Hi, Honey. How Was Your Day?
Using my high-tech recording system (a tiny man who lives in the cupboard and is a certified stenographer) I recorded this conversation with my husband, Kealoha, and our two kids. Here is the transcript. We are eating dinner at this time and I have left out the eating sounds from the transcript:

ME So, tell me a highlight of your day. What about you Moxie?
MOXIE Welllllllll, I had recess and played with Ruby and Viola and we were playing this game and then Ruby didn’t want to so I said I didn’t want to and Viola said she didn’t want to so we played a different game.
ME Nice. How about you Franz?
FRANZ So there are these eggs…
KEALOHA Eggs? What? For breakfast?
FRANZ No, just wait for it. So there’s these eggs and they hatched and I saw them and one of the chicks was all covered with gunk and stuff and there were six eggs that hatched.
KEALOHA Whoa.
ME Okay, Kealoha. You’re up.
KEALOHA Okay. So. At the deli today I asked for half a pound of ham and a half of pound of turkey so she goes to get me the meat and she says “What was that?” and I say “I want a half a pound of ham and a half of pound of turkey” and so she says okay and then gets me the ham. Then she says “Anything else” and I say, getting really heated now, “Yes. I want. A half a pound. Of ham. AND a half a pound. Of turkey.” So she gets the turkey and she says “How much do you want?” and then I…
ME Did you hurt her?
KEALOHA I wanted to.
ME That’s very exciting. Can I tell you about my day?
MOXIE AND FRANZ Okay.
ME So. Okay. I was in my apartment and these assassins were coming to kill me and I had no where to hide so I pulled the stuff out of a bean bag chair and I hid in there all scrunched up…
FRANZ Wait. Wait. Wait! You have an apartment?
ME Yep. And there were assassins coming to kill me. But I hid in that beanbag chair and they didn’t see me. And then, when they left, I jumped out the window, scaled the wall, clinging to it, and then I was lifted up to the roof and it was Choo-Choo!
MOXIE Who is Choo-Choo?
FRANZ Wait a minute! What about Kealoha?
KEALOHA Yeah. What about me?
ME Doesn’t anyone care that there were assassins trying to kill me? All you’re asking about is my apartment and Choo-Choo!
MOXIE Mom. You don’t have an apartment. And I hate Choo-Choo.
FRANZ Is this even real? I mean, what???
ME Kids. I’m a narrator, remember? I’m telling you about my day. That was just the morning. In the afternoon I went all ninja on the assassins.
MOXIE Was Choo-Choo there?
ME Yes.
MOXIE I hate him.
ME That’s okay sweetie. I don’t really like him either. Too much drama. I much prefer Kealoha and his trips to the deli.
I’m Pretty Sure I’m Turning Into A WereCougar
A strange thing has been happening to me. Stranger than the ever expanding/drifting size of my ass, and my vain attempt to lose weight even though I’m eating better and walking 12-15 miles a week. I’m starting to be okay with my shape and…dare I say it…I’m starting to flaunt it a little.
Maybe it’s that I turn 40 next month, and there has to be a time when you stop hating yourself and just say “Fuck it. THIS is who I am. THIS is my body, this is my hair and skin and breasts, THIS is what I’ve got, and I’m going to stop beating myself up for not being a size 6 anymore.”
It slowly dawned on me that every time I eat, I feel guilty. Not just guilty, but APOLOGETIC. And ASHAMED. And that’s awful. I feel guilty every time I look in the mirror and I see size 12 me, instead of size 8 me. The truth is, I was only a size 8 when I was 16, and then again when I was in a marriage that didn’t fit me. A relationship so constricting, that I lost weight to slip away from it. I stayed thin for a while afterwards, but it wasn’t a happy-thin. It was a I’m-desperately-trying-to-get-my-life-together thin, and that ain’t sexy.
So. I’ve got a butt now. And a rack. And I’ve started wearing pretty frilly little outfits to bed, and just in general. I mean, how can you feel sexy when you’re wearing huge cotton undies? You can’t! You can, however, feel that farting is okay in public while wearing enormous cotton panties, because, why not. You’ve already crossed a line. (I speak from experience.)
I bought new clothes that fit THIS body, and not the body I think I should have. I bought some cute swingy skirts, and fitted shirts. Some jeans that hug the curves I have. New bras that lift me up a little bit further. (This may be too much detail for some of the fellas that read my blog. Sorry, brother.)
At any rate…I’m trying to change my mindset and it’s just possible that I may have succeeded in transforming myself into a WereCougar. I’m not going to go after college boys or anything, I mean, I’m very happily married (nod to Kealoha)…but I may randomly start sashaying or purring or something. I’m just tired of being so hard on myself and feeling bad about enjoying good food and good company and good living. It’s just stupid.
Bring on the pretty clothes and soft fabrics and girly, sexy underthings. I figure that at almost-forty, I deserve to celebrate.
Numbers, Numbers, Numbers
Okay. So I’ve taken time off from the blog for a few reasons.
1) On our way to the writing conference, I checked my ‘platform’ numbers. Publishers like to know how many friends you have on Twitter and Facebook and what your website hits are. It’s annoying, but part of the industry. I thought the blog was doing really well, and then I looked at the numbers and saw there’s about 200 visits a month. Then I got all embarrassed because I’d need like 10,000 hits a month or something for a publisher to even blink.

2) I needed time off to work on my memoir. Memoir writing is depressing and hard, but I guess therapeutic. But after working on that, the idea of sitting down and writing more about my day-to-day life just seemed, I dunno, indulgent. Like, annoying-indulgent. Like, why-is-she-showing-us-all-her-back-hair indulgent.
3) I’ve been trying to pull back on the time I’m at the computer so I can ‘be more present’ with the kids when they’re here, and then prep audiobooks and narrate when they’re not.
4) I don’t know what my blog’s Point of View is anymore. When people ask me what I write about, I just say, uh….my stuff. Then I get nervous because then I wonder if they think I mean that I write about my vagina, which I don’t. My vagina does not have a blog, although I bet if it did, it could get at least 300 hits a month.
I’m really not moody OR going through an existential crisis. It’s just blogging takes a lot of time and energy and writing mojo.
Once I figure out more of the stuff to write about, I will. I mean, I have this kick ass trip to New York coming up to go to the Audies. And I might post excerpts from the memoir. And summer is coming, as soon as spring can stick around and I still have that food blog with three more dips to post and…I don’t know.
Maybe I shouldn’t look at the numbers anymore. Maybe I should stop trying to be this big ‘success’ with my blog and books, and return to writing just because I love it.
A Conversation With Franz About The Future
My 8 year old son and I had a little mommy & me time this weekend. So over our frozen yogurts, we had a little heart to heart. Here is our conversation:
FRANZ: So, Ma, what do you think the future will be like?
ME: What do you mean?
FRANZ:
Whadya mean, what do I mean? I mean the future. What will it be like?
ME: Well, you know how we use iPhones and stuff to search when we don’t know something?
FRANZ: Yeah.
ME:
Well, maybe they’ll implant like a computer chip or something in our brain so we can access the web inside our heads, like use our eyes to scroll on a screen that appears in our mind and we can download whatever we want whenever we want and then everyone will wear robes and stuff because it’s more comfortable and…

FRANZ:
What are you talking about? Are you crazy? That would hurt! They’d inject a computer into a baby’s brain? They’d crack the baby’s head open! I mean, that’s so cruel. Your future sucks. In my future, nothing changes. Maybe they discover a few new animals or something, but they’re not going to put anything into your brain for crying out loud.
ME:
You’re probably right. I mean, we pretty much have everything we need right now.
FRANZ: Except Sour Patch Kids.
ME:
That’s true. But that’s a problem we can fix right now.
***
And so we did.
My Squirrel Monologue
I’m telling you, spring makes the crazies come out.
I find that walking really allows you to connect with a person. Maybe it’s because you don’t have to look them in the eye, that you can share deep, personal moments with them. Here is my Squirrel Monologue as shared with Kealoha, followed by a brief scene. Feel free to read allow for full effect: ME: So I was sitting on the back porch in the sun, kinda soaking it in, ya know, when I felt someone looking at me. Like I felt little eyes boring into my soul, or whatever. I looked at the bird feeder and sure enough, there was that fatty squirrel, staring at me. Just, STARING. He had his little hands halfway down the birdfeeder, gripping it, and his dark eyes just looked at me and I thought, holy shit. We’re having a stare down. It made me all uncomfortable because he aasn’t moving, except for an occasional twitch and I thought, this squirrel is going to take a flying leap and attack my neck! So I very coolly broke eye contact, and looked the other way, like, “Oh! Look at the interesting so and so!” I know, I know, I was giving top dog status to the squirrel, but I really value my neck. When I looked back, he was STILL staring at me, and then he made this little uh-uh-uh sound and I sorta started sweating. “Hey, squirrely!” I said in a fake cheerful voice. “Just do what you gotta do! Ha ha!” Sweating bullets! That’s what I was doing. Then the squirrel squinted at me as if to say “Don’t make one move you mother fu…” And I laughed, uncomfortably, the way you laugh when being chased by a murderer and you want to pretend you’re totally not scared. Or maybe that’s just me. Anyway, then the fatty squirrel went back to eating the birdseed.
KEALOHA: Wow.
ME: I know. And THEN I saw another squirrel lying on top of the playset. You know, arms on either side, not moving, its little limbs nagging over the board, just lying there perfectly still and I thought, man, that squirrel’s got polio! And then…
KEALOHA: The squirrel has polio?
ME: Yeah!
KEALOHA: You know, you’re the only person who thinks this way.
ME: What? That the squirrel has polio? No. I’m pretty sure lots of people think like that.
KEALOHA: (Laughs) Nope. Pretty sure they don’t.
We kept walking. And I continued to share my deepest, darkest thoughts with Kealoha about the Whirly Pop and feeling bloated and what to make for dinner. Like a good husband, he listened quietly, occasionally said “Yeah,” so I’d know he was there.
I’m telling you, spring makes the crazies come out. And by ‘crazies’ I mean squirrels. Which reminds me, Kealoha, if you’re reading this, please refill the bird feeder for the squirrel. I don’t want him attacking us in the middle of the night with a little squirrel machete or whatever.
