Sunday, May 18, 2014

Sunnyside Down

For Mother's Day, we wanted to get out of the city.  Max listens to stories on CD every night when he goes to bed and one of his favorites is "Rip van Winkle".   Naturally, we thus decided to visit Washington Irving's Sunnyside estate in the Hudson Valley for our Mother's Day excursion.

The Historic Hudson Valley website describes an "enchanted adventure in a romantic landscape", with "bucolic grounds" and a tour guide in period dress.  What's not to love! 

Mostly everything, as it turns out.

First of all, Sunnyside is a two story house, with some grass around it.  There's a stream on one side of the property.  You can see the Hudson River from the yard, as long as the Metro North train isn't roaring by at the moment.

Our tour guide had to be the least-welcoming-tour-guide-in-period-dress ever.  Either that, or nobody in the 18th and 19th century ever smiled, so she was staying in character.

We were the only people with kids on the tour.  Obviously going on a guided tour with a 1 year old and 3 year old is a completely foolish idea.  However, the only way to see the inside of the house was through the tour.  Also, it is possible that Max believed we were in fact going to meet Washington Irving and/or Rip van Winkle, and was both bored and disappointed from the instant our dour tour guide opened her mouth.

After dragging out the tour of the yard for what seemed like eternity (Nava ate grass; Max ran around searching for Rip van Winkle under trees), we entered the house.  It's a neat old house.  Well-preserved.  The individual rooms are blocked off with gates or ropes, of course, so you mostly stay in the hallway.  After a minute or so, Nava got bored and started to yell.   MDC tried to distract her by pointing out the stairs leading to the next level. Nava promptly began crawling up the stairs, resulting in both Nava and MDC getting kicked off the tour and asked to wait outside the house.

At Sunnyside, they are VERY serious about staying with the guide.  Because in a maybe 2000-sq-foot house, who knows what kind of damage could be wreaked if not in immediate proximity to the guide.

Max and I tried to stay the course.  But the tour was seriously boring.  And we thought MDC and Nava had left by choice.  So we discovered the (forbidden) stairs, and ventured up to check out Washington Irving's bedroom (also roped off, of course).

Within a minute, the tour guide found us, explained we could not be upstairs without the group, and kindly invited us to exit the house.

That's right, we all got kicked off the tour by a grumpy girl in a hoop dress.

But we were still in a lovely region, and wanted to make the most of this Mother's Day experience.  We headed to a restaurant recommended by one of MDC's co-workers only to find out that, despite having called the day before with no mention of this made, they only offered a prix fixe menu at $60 per adult and $30 per child.  Oh, and they do not have any high chairs (code for: please do not bring your young children to our establishment).

We ate in an overheated diner in Tarrytown.

Come on, Hudson Valley!  Reach deep, and pull one out for the team!  We ventured over to Stone Barns Center (which I obviously knew about from Top Chef - and some people say television is a waste of time!), which is where wealthy people go to pretend they have been to a farm (don't get me wrong - I very much like pretend farms.  It was just strange to feel under-dressed...at a farm. And I was wearing a skirt.).  

There was a "farm market", featuring very expensive pastries and charcuterie.  There are the original silos where they used to keep animals or corn or something, and now are very contemporary restrooms. There is valet parking.  There are very well-dressed people on their way to eat at the very fancy restaurant, Blue Hill (this is the part that was on Top Chef).

You can venture down the road into the pastures and see some real animals.  Unfortunately, MDC had a slight mishap on a concrete curb and banged up his knee.  Two minutes later, I let Nava get too close to the chickens, and one bit her hand.  She cried (understandably).  There was blood.  We left the farm.  (Which, I might add, we paid $10 to park at.).

It was not the best day trip.  After Sunnyside, we realized we are suffering from post-chateau snobbery, in which all homes and gardens visited will be compared with this and this and this.  Now, is it fair to compare a family home in upstate New York with a chateau in the Loire Valley?  Of course not, but that's hardly the point. 

When life gives you a boring house, mediocre pancakes, and chicken biting, make a trip to Whole Foods.  Fifty bucks spent on cheese, bread, and chocolate will fix most problems.   It certainly salvaged our Mother's Day.

PS Yes, my French friends I know you are thinking, how does baguette and brie cost in NYC?  More than you could possibly guess...



Saturday, May 17, 2014

BK Life #1

A few weeks ago, I had the rare opportunity to spend an afternoon alone with M.  After picking him up from school, we headed to Prospect Park.  As we passed the street vendors in front of the Brooklyn Public Library at Grand Army Plaza, M asked if he could have a "giant pretzel" for snack.  Wanting him to feel the same sense of joy and appreciation of our time together (read: yes, I use food to buy my kid's happiness), I agreed.

Just as I said, "One pretzel, please," to the vendor, a homeless man (this is assumed, of course, but at the least, he was low on disposable income and personal hygiene) asked if I would buy him some food.  Still caught up in the lovely spring afternoon with just one child, and wanting to be a role model for M,  I asked the vendor how much a hot dog cost.

"Two dollars," he replied.

I turned to the homeless man and said, "Ok, I will buy you a hot dog."

He responds, "Actually, could you buy me a shish-kabob?"

My mouth actually dropped open at the audacity of this man. I want to help those who are less fortunate than me, and I want my son to want to do the same.  But if you are going to beg me for food in front of my kid, and I agree, then take the darn hot dog and say thank you!  What I actually said, though, was "No, I am not buying you a shish kabob."

I told the vendor we would just be getting the original pretzel.  The homeless man jumps in and says, "Wait, you're not buying me a shish-kabob and a soda?"

When did the soda enter the equation?!

I looked at him, and just said, "No."  To which he responds, "Fine, I guess I'll take the hot dog."

"No, now I'm not buying you anything. Have a nice day."

Pretzel in hand, we hurried away.  Was this the right response? Was it somehow even more patronizing than simply refusing his initial request?  One of the challenges of raising kids in an urban setting is coming face to face, on a regular basis, with real poverty.  Most of the time, M and N have no idea what they are seeing.  Preschoolers and toddlers don't know about social cues, about what clothing and language and other physical signs tell us about each other.  Another time, on the same walk past the library, there was a mentally ill man walking up the sidewalk shouting angry rhetoric at the sky.  M wanted to know why he was angry, and he also asked if he could tell the man that he wished he could be happy.

I explained that some people are just angry, that it's a sickness just like when N has an ear infection.  That it's not his fault, but also that we weren't going to talk to him.  Do I want my children exposed to these realities of life so early?  I want them to be compassionate, and have perspective on just how privileged our lives are.  But they are also my kids, and I want to protect them, shelter them, and keep them safe. 

It turns out that M was so focused on getting the coveted pretzel that he missed the entire hot dog-shish kabob exchange.   Score:  Child 1, Over-analyzing Brooklyn mom 0.