Blunt Force Mama

by vglembocki

Maybe Barbie Should Keep Her Mouth Shut

Posted on May 5, 2009 10:01 AM

I cornered myself into buying a Barbie for Blair yesterday.

I needed to go to Kohls. Thad wanted to go. In order to get buy-in from a four-year old, we needed to make promises. If we couldn’t promise ice-cream with rainbow sprinkles, a moonbounce, or Santa, we had to promise a surprise. The surprise was this: “We will buy you one thing.”

As I waited in line at customer service, Blair ran over with two boxes. One contained a My Little Pony. I thought the My Little Pony would surely prevail when faced with a choice between the two. It did not. Blair, instead, chose the other box. It contained a Barbie doll dressed in a pink flamenco dress, complete with a stand-up dressing mirror, brush, compact case, and jeweled necklace. Blair would show me later that the only accoutrement her Barbie did not have was panties.

When we got home with Vain and Slutty Barbie, Thad spent approximately eight and a half hours untwisting, untaping, and unstapling her from her pink, cryogenic Vain and Slutty Barbie box. Once she was free, Blair asked the most terrifying question she’d ever asked: “Mommy, will you play Barbies with me?”

Back in the day, I wasn’t just a Barbie-player, I was the mac-daddy of Barbie-players. I had the pink Corvette and the ski chalet/beach house combo. (I did not have the Barbie Dream House. Its absence in my life, I tell my mother to this day, left a deep and hollow void in my soul.) I would turn my entire bedroom into a Barbie castle using wash cloths for rugs and dove-shaped candles for chairs and toothpaste caps for cups. I occasionally washed my Barbie’s clothes, and then hung them on those little black hangers that came with socks. I once stole a shopping cart just to have the means of transporting my Barbies to and from my BFF’s house across the street. Barbie and I had logged some major together time.

But that was then.

This was now.

Now, as I grabbed hold of the Penn State Barbie my mom bought me a few years ago as a joke, and I placed her, standing on her little pointy toes, on the ottoman in front of where Blair had placed Vain and Slutty Barbie, I did not know what to do. I stuttered, then looked behind me to see if Thad was still in the kitchen—not because I was embarrassed, but because I thought I might be able to convince him, perhaps with the guarantee of sex later, to take over this “playing Barbies” thing. It wasn’t the Barbie part that was problematic. It was the playing part. This was real playing. Make-believe playing. Imagination-run-wild playing. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d played like that, which was scary enough. But, even scarier, it seemed I’d totally and completely forgotten how.

Blair stared, waiting for me to do something. She didn’t know what to do, either. She’d never officially "played Barbies" before. She needed me to guide her, to open her up to the world of creative play, to unlock the wardrobe and point her toward Narnia, to slide the Ruby Slippers on her feet. This was part of being a good mother. A fun mother. A Barbie-playing mother. The time had come.

“What’s up?”

There may never have been a longer, heavier silence in my life than the one that followed this enticing piece of dialogue, which I came up with to begin a conversation between Penn State Barbie and Vain and Slutty Barbie. What's up? Though the effect of that silence was topped, rather quickly, by Blair’s face that carried an expression akin to one she might make if I told her that the Easter Bunny had been hit by a car.

“I know, mommy,” she said. “You be the prince. I’ll be Sleeping Beauty. Okay?”

“Okay,” I said, relieved that the kid found it in her heart to give me a second chance. This was it. This was really it. I took a breath. I coughed, trying to clear the bad, no-fun mother out of my throat. Then, I started again:

“What’s up Sleeping Beauty?”

4 Comments
Comments

I loe this story! I too was a Barbie Queen, carefully hoarding anorexic clothing in those old fashioned cosmetic suitcases (where have those gone?). We traeled from garage sale to garage sale in search of better, sluttier, tinier Barbie clothes. I thank god that despite several good faith attempts on our part, my daughter so far uninterested in Barbie's world.

Keep it up lady!

OMG -- I thought I was the only adult who wasn't sure how to play Barbie.

When I was about 7 my sister and I received a beautiful Barbie case with 2 beautiful barbies and a ton of clothes. All older, all pristine, all worth a ton of $$ now if we only kept them in good condition. However, our Barbies liked to fly, as in fly across the room.

The basement was a fantastic place for our home made forts. Barbie & the Lincoln logs made great things to fly from one fort to the next. Especially when the three boys from down the "street" came over to play. Guess I didn't know how to play barbie when I was a kid either. Oh well. Loved the blog - please keep them coming.

This is BRILLIANT! Next time Blair asks me to play Barbies, I will suggest we try and shoot them through the basketball hoop. She'll love it. I'll love it. A total win-win. Thanks!

I totally understand that imagination thing. I suck at it. Especially with 3 boys. My husband thankfully is great with it.
Since we are on the Oprah site here, I wanted to let you know that Karan Kredatus at Edison School, right down the street from us, is going to be on Oprah on Tuesday May 12th. She had a heart attack recently, and will be thanking Dr. Oz in person because she followed the advice he gave on a show about symptoms of a heart attack. Two people in my neighborhood on Oprah within 2 months is pretty cool. I wonder who will be next. Maybe we could all go on and seek out the inner child make believe play in all of us.

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About Me

Vicki Glembocki is a magazine writer (a.k.a. working mom) and author of The Second Nine Months, One Woman Tells the Real Truth About Becoming a Mom...Finally. She's obsessed with yard sales, fountain Diet Coke, yoga, showtunes, her Honda minivan, and her little girlies. Oh. And her husband.