Jessica Ashley facebook twitter babble voices pinterest is a single mama in the city, super-savvy editor, writer, video host and shameless shoe whore.
read more »
Mama Needs New Shoes
Subscribe to Sassafrass by RSS or Email
Follow by RSS feed

OR

Follow by email to have Sassafrass' blog updates delivered to your inbox:

Mama Likey

This area does not yet contain any content.
Search Sassafrass
Tuesday
Jun282011

That day again


Sethe It's June 29th, the survive-iversary of the day my brother overcorrected, drove his motorcycle off the side of a road and began a journey to a new life that we now celebrate once a year. You've read the story before. If not, much of it is right here and here and here. 

This year, over ice cream cones on a beautiful summer night, I shared some of my brother's story with my little boy. I didn't mean to. But perhaps it was on my mind. Maybe the timing was right. It could have been the energy of this week, with its peace and heartache and hope and divinity all wrapped in blue skies and big clouds and warm breezes and something around the corner none of us could predict.

Lil E and I were walking home, trying hard to keep our ice cream from dripping down our wrists. I was holding his hand as we crossed the street, mindful of the corner where drivers often cut close to the curb when they turn and of taking a few more careful glances each way even after the light said it was safe for us to walk. 

"What is a coma?" he asked, and I told him. 

"It is when your brain has been hurt in some way -- in an accident or by an illness or for some really big and unusual reason -- and it becomes very quiet. It is like sleep, but deeper. It is a time for the brain to heal, to repair what has been hurt...hopefully."

[pictured: My brother and my boy, 2009]

I am straightforward about these things with him. He is often not fazed my the scientific nor the spiritual. He thinks deeply and if I avoid questions like these or skim them over, he would ask a thousand questions to get to the root of them. Plus, this is our vibe, the way I've always spoken to him. He received it and asked more . How long was Uncle Seth in a coma? Were we there with him when it happened? How did we find out? Was Lil E's daddy there, too? What did he say?  What did Uncle Seth look like in the hospital? Was there blood all over his body? What happened next? Where is the motorcycle? Did Uncle Seth ever want to ride one again? Is Uncle Seth the same as he used to be?

I answered all those questions, too. I told him about the phone call I got while I was coincidentally at my parents' house, just off the dial-up computer line, only moments from leaving. I told him about flying to Virginia immediately, about seeing my brother in the ICU, about what the ICU is and how the people there saved his life over and over again. I told him about finding the names of the couple who witnessed the accident and who called the emergency crew that medivaced my brother away from the scene. I told him that I called the woman, heard the story that only she and her husband knew, how I thanked them. I explained how grateful I am that those two people, angels alongside the highway, ran to his side, comforted him while he cried and bled, called for more help. What a miracle, what kindness, I said. 

"Are you going to cry now?" He gets protective when he sees my tears.

And then I told him about how hard I prayed for Seth to live, to be OK, to find his way back from unconsciousness, that I was scared...very scared.

"Were you afraid your brother would die?" 

"Yes," I held on, trying not to cry as I answered. "I couldn't imagine a world without Uncle Seth in it and it made me feel very afraid and lonely and sad."

Lil E wanted to know if we were angry, how many other people prayed, what his friends did when they came to visit. I shared many details. I tried hard not to be too grim or upsetting. I tried to hold out the hope and the blessing that I really do see in this day every year.

"It scares me a little to think of Uncle Seth bleeding and crying."

That hurt my heart to hear. I shouldn't have shared that part. But I so wanted him to know about the lady -- the wonderful stranger I must someday find again -- who held him and helped him to safety. That was a selfish and parental need of mine to explain, I know, beyond the Good Samaritan thankfulness of it all. It was a need to believe that if something awful happens to the person we love most in the world when we are not there, some other arms will envelope him in our absence. And that it will help.

"Yes, I am sorry," I said. "That is a very hard part of the story. And a lot of is that way. But there are also so many things we can't explain that are amazing and hopeful and full of love and faith."

He nodded. He understood. But the pain and tears was still tense in the air between us. 

Lil E understands that in our family we can talk about motorcycles and play with toy bikes, but that we don't ride motorcycles. He knows that we went through Seth's accident as a family and that through that, we all got a second chance to live our lives. He knows it is one story -- one story of many -- that makes up thousands of integral moments together. 

What he doesn't have to learn that we all have, however, is that June 29th is not the only story of my family's life. It was defining, yes. But it time has enabled us to have more heartache and hope, more stories and survivals. Yes, the crying and blood will always be on this day. I never, ever want to feel that hole of pain pull me in again. But I always want to acknowledge the beauty and thanks and days that have enfolded since. 

So here we are. Now a new generation has heard the story of this day, and June 29th will continue on with its provenance. I hope the sun shines down on all of us. I hope the clouds float lazily by. I hope a warm breeze finds my brother, hundreds of miles away, reminding him of the love and words and history we share. I hope the universe adds an extra layer of protection around him today as we all whisper our thank you thank you thank yous.

 

In honor of Seth's Survive-iversary, won't you please take extra care with your helmet as you bike today? We strongly believe that Seth's helmet and the helmet laws in the Commonwealth of Virginia protected his precious brain and life.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Jun262011

I take that back

Photo Remember what I said about the Sally Hansen Salon Effects Nail Strips being miraculous wonders of manicure manna? I take some of that back. After a few lovely lady friends who always have amazing nails and happen to write about such styley things for a living told me that they had mediocre experiences with the marvel stickers, I decided perhaps one go was not enough. And so I bought (yep, with my real money) three more packages.

(A pause for the bloggers shaking their head at the lack of swag in this post: I KNOW! I spent $27 whole dollars of my own -- $36 if you count the first box I tried. My accountant is going to be super psyched to add those receipts to the pile.)

This time, I chose a pink metallic flavor. The color made my disco heart pitter-pat but twirling them around the dance floor was far more disappointing than my first daisy-nail partner. The strips were far thinner than the first kind I tried (which were akin to photo paper, but about half the thickness and still pliable). That made the pink metallic strips much harder to apply to my nails and much easier to crumple up. Sure, I was putting them on while traveling on a plane cross-country and had a tiny cup of ginger ale and a sleeping lady leaning a tad too close to contend with, but I still ended up trashing two strips and barely saving another. During my first go-around with the strips, this wasn't an issue at all.

The thinness of the metallic strips also meant that I had perfectly lovely pink glitter nails for seven whole seconds before I cleared my tray table and turned the tiny plastic dial to secure it. With that simple move, I a corner of the thumb peeled off. When I itched my arm a moment later, it somehow left a scratch in my middle finger nail strip as well. That went on for two more hours until I arrived at my destination with nails that looked like the sweet-smiling manicurist really put the clamps on me for information rather than helping me look pristine for a trip to see my Not Boyfriend.

The next day, the nails were a total mess and I desperately peeled them away somewhere between my fourth conference call of the day and dinner out with the cute guy who can't remember what dress I wore yesterday but always notices my nails. 

I have not given up yet, but I am not necessarily as sold on the whole nail strip idea as I was at first peel. We shall see what the gold leopard print and black-and-white-daisies-take-two hold for these hands and the dates to come.

 

Any tips on nail strips to offer?

 

Click to read more ...

Thursday
Jun162011

Sassy Single Mom Style: Perfect DIY date-night nails

Nails Oh, how I love the luxury of a mani-pedi. I love it when the nice ladies beat their fists against my calves and try desperately to scrub away the calloused signs of my high-heeled sole-abuse. I love the buzzy reclining chair and stacks of old celeb goss magazines. I love that my only dilemma for that bit of time is French or rhinestones upon my toes. Even though it is hard for me to sit still for the whole hour, my fidgeting is not a sign that I want to be anywhere else other than reading six or seven Us Weeklys cover to cover while someone else tends to my cuticles.

I admit, I start to fidget as the clock ticks toward an hour, but I also recognize how necessary that time to just sit, relax and enjoy six or seven UsWeeklys cover to cover is for a mama. I used to make it a habit to head to my nail salon every time Lil E had a weekend with his dad, but with some attempt to exercise and errands and desperately wanting to sleep innnnn, that easily slips off the schedule.

I try to go to the nail salon on the weekends when Lil E is with his dad, when my schedule is open and I can use it as a reward for running a few miles on the treadmill at the gym next door. It's easy, though, to let that slip while I make one more stop at Target or have brunch with my friend Fabulous Shawn or just sleep in...wayyyyy innnnnn. The problem with putting off regular mani-pedis means that I'm suddenly crunched with time and crap nails, just when I need to look extra gorgeous to go see the Not Boyfriend or head off to a blog event. While I've certainly curled up my fingers and have done a schlocky touch-up on my toes at stoplights with a random marker hidden at the bottom of my purse (oh, yes), it is so much better to walk in to greet your favorite bloggy ladies or beau with fingernails that shine like justice.

Lucky for us, I found the perfect way to cheat. Hellooooohhhh, nail stickers.

No, not the teeny tiny kind you used to meticulously use to add little butterflies and flowers over your nail polish that peeled off the next time you washed your hands. These are nail stickers that replace polish. Pretty. Easy. Brilliant.

I  was skeptical of the Sally Hansen Salon Effects Nail Polish Strips but I bought them (with my own money!) and tried them anyway. I expected them to be tricky to get on properly and to look trashy. But they didn't. I easily put them on in about ten minutes while my attention was partially diverted by the Maroon 5 guy on "The Voice". All that is required is choosing one of the slightly formaldehyde-smelling strips for each finger, peeling back the paper, placing them on your nail bed and then filing off the end with a few quick swipes of the enclosed mini-emory board.

I chose a black and white daisy design and I love that my nails look funky and perfectly polished, which they totally would not if I DIYed it the regular way (the secret's out: I am a terrible and impatient nail polisher). The package says the strips last up to ten days. Mine started chipping at day five. Still, I got tons of compliments on them.

While I won't give up my mani-pedi time completely, I love having the option of slapping on cute nails without worrying about smudging or how in the world I will pull out cash from my purse to tip the nail tech. These strips are perfect for a date night or if you'd rather invest your budget outside of the salon.

I got my Sally Hansen Salon Effects Nail Polish strips at Walgreens and have since seen them at CVS, Target and online here, all for about $9.

 

This review is not sponsored. All products purchased came out of my own pocketbook. This time, I was very happy to be the sugar mama.

More Sassy Single Mom stuff:

 

 

Click to read more ...