Tm1a30_taco_pocket_lg The platters were prepared and placed before the six unsuspecting folks sitting around the table. All the necessary ingredients to put together your very own, to your liking, Taco.

“Go on” the hostess said gleefully, “make it however you’d like it.”
Was that a gleeful statement I thought, or did I detect a sinister tone? A test, I thought. How dexterous are you?

Not very.

Besides, I like my food, like my clothes, already assembled.

Which is why when I came across this article, What Do You Make of This Outfit, I realized that the hostess of the ‘ill fated make your own Taco party’ was, without question, the evil twin sister of Ruth La Ferla, fashion editor of the New York Times. Clearly, both were in cohoots to figure out new ways to humble and humilate.

Coming apart at the seams, she’s come undone, she’s unraveling are all my favorite descriptors for assessing one’s mental state.

Their satorial state, not so much.

 

Wrapping a dress 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Would you rather eat 1 bag of M&M's (236 calories) or 1 broiled skinless boneless 5 oz chicken breast (230 calories)?

Given a choice, I'd rather have a 6 oz. glasses of wine (200 calories) but hey, that's me.

Nonetheless, the debate rages. Weight Watchers, after it's 48 year history of having you indulge in double chocolate muffins, with reckless abandon mind you–as long as you don't exceed your alloted points, are now saying…oh my…it's EMPTY calories.

Really?

They have revamped their point system.  Now you can eat your body weight in fruit. 0 points.  Eat foods high in protein and fiber, beware of carbs and fats.

I ask you, how many bananas, unless your name is Cheetah, can you consume in a day?

To add to the confusion a friend sent me this article The Twinkie Diet.  A Professor of Nutrition, clearly experiencing an adolescent redeux, ate pretty much nothing but Twinkies, supplemented by Ring Dings, Oreos, and Doritos. The chaser, apparently, was a multi vitamin. His caloric intact did not exceed 1800 calories.  In two months he lost 27 lbs. 

The jury appears to be out on the healthy/unhealthy debate. His markers to measure this, gulp, improved. What's a body to do?

Let's look at this realistically.

Any chubbette I know who signs up for Weight Watchers is looking to lose weight. Period. Healthy? Not so much. Except when asked, "do you eat healthy?" Then, of course, the answer is, "certainly. I just eat too much of healthy."

Right.  

 

 

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HDe7E9KeubE&w=480&h=390] 

Don Kirshner the music producer and publisher, who passed away this week, was quoted as saying something along the lines of "I can't tell you how good my life story is, but my songs will make a great sound track." 

Pre Beatles, in an around 1961 (which Mad Magazine called the "upside down year" as the numerals which form the year look the same when rotated upside down, a bizarre factoid) I listened and evaluated every nuance of my life by the lyrics I heard on the radio or on my 45's. Remember 45's?

 "Up on The Roof" and "Under The Boardwalk." I could recite every word of both songs, knowing full well, however, that I did not participate in either of those activities.  A lifelong fear of heights precluded my contemplating life's vagaries from the top of my apartment building and, for the latter, then (and now) a full body dermabrasion wasn't really attractive to me. 

Neil Sedeka sang to me. Had I had someone to break up with, I was pretty clear that it would be really really hard to do. I don't think I ever wanted Neil Sedeka, specifically, but am certain that because of Davy of the Monkees, I sang, on a daily basis, "I'm a Believer."  What I believed in was insignificant.

I desperately wanted to be riding along with Connie Francis, or was it Connie Stevens, to someplace in Florida, for spring break, because that's "where the boys are", one waiting for her and one for me.

I probably hadn't thought about these tunes for years, and while I can't remember what I had for dinner last night, as I listened to these tunes as part of the eulogies commemorating Don Krishner's musical contributions, I vividly recalled who I was with, what I was doing and where I was. 

Splish Splash.

19iht-sumo-popup This time of the year poses challenges for most of us.

Okay, not most, some.

Maybe just me.

Summer is over.

I read somewhere about the biological imperative to store fat during the winter, a hold over from our prehistoric roots. Personally, I would have preferred to have intuitively known how to saute a mastodon, but apparently that wasn’t a trait worth keeping.

What’s a gal to do?

Right.

Think Olympian. A gold medal. A goal, a purpose, a reason to eat everything within reach. Still maintaining a workout schedule, a bone building regiment, to stave off, for a bit, the inevitable, ultimate shrinking frame.

There are, of course, alternative plans, courses of action, ways to deal.

19BEST-popup

You choose.

 

For a brief time….

Crystal ball renewed 6:3:10

As I look into the future….

A new offering from Starbucks, perhaps?

Nicholsondm0302_468x436-1

Not exactly.

Muffins, in this case, refer to those singularly unattractive doughy things that somehow seem to overspill the tops of trousers, “menopaunches.” “Moobs” is a conflagation of man and boobs. (Thank you Howard Jacobson of the London Independent).

My apologies, Jack…clearly not a camera ready pose.

What’s a guy to do?

Spanx.

His and hers.

If having a honey caught rifling through your underwear drawer might have been grounds for divorce, it appears that this might no longer be the case.

He is looking to try on your “suck you in, lift you up, jiggle containment” garment. After all, if it works, why not?

Except, perhaps, as a prelude for an evening’s amorous romp. As women have known for sometime, the truth spills out.

Spill, unfortunately, is the operative word in that sentence.

1887081574_fa428dd674 Dotting the overhead landscape, colorfully flapping in the proverbial breeze, the “what we wore today” is on display.

See any tighty whities?

Rarely.

Perhaps some items are simply relegated to an inside area to dry.

I ask you, do the neighbors need to know everything?

It depends.

I suspect if you were able to be sporting these you might have a change of heart about what the neighbors think.
Man-wearing-swimming-trun-001

For two reasons.

It appears that in addition to activating any fantasies about what is under Pierre’s denims, the coverage of his skivvies may just be the barometer  of economic growth.

Okay, I did take liberties with the undergarment story as this theory of correlation to economic growth has to do with bathing suits…but I imagine that if the theory were to hold true then wouldn’t oversized boxers shrinking down to an itsy bitsy bikini type garment portend the same thing.

So the next time you are in Europe take note of the drying garments suspended overhead.  You might be able to figure out which way the Euro is headed.

IMG_0453 Everything looks better in pink light, don’t you think?

I think I heard somewhere that the Ritz, in Paris, has its dining room illuminated by pink bulbs, with pinkish shades and everyone looks fabulous.

They have to look good, after all, it is the Ritz.  They don’t allow, you see,  unattractive people to be seated …I think the same thing is true for St. Bart’s. When the boat comes into port there stands a sentry picking and choosing who can stay and who has to go back from whence they came.

Anyhow, as I was saying, pinkish light makes you look better.

Which is why I am moving to Roussillion.

Yeah, sure, it is a charming medieval village in the South of France. And yes, there are wonderful ancient sundials to see, beautiful bell towers to visit, and everywhere you turn, extraordinary views.

But I am reasonably certain that the bus loads of tourists, who will start descending en masse in the coming months, arrive there because they know that the snapshots they take of one and other will show a youthful blush with nary an age spot or blemish in sight.

I’m moving to Roussillion.

Samuel Beckett, Andre Derain, Matisse, George Braque and Picasso, to name drop a few, all spent time in Roussillion. If anyone asks, tell them I moved there because I wanted to walk in the footsteps of those creative souls who came before me.

And the bonus of all of this is knowing that my dewy glow is the result of my settling down here, and is not the result of a hot flash.

 

And there I was. Sur le Pont.

Pont-avignon-02 

Neither dancing on, under or near by, I’m way too inhibited.

Nor would I allow myself to sing any of the verses, had I known any of the verses. So sad, but since I was old enough to be in a chorus I was told to just mouth the words. I think it had something to do with throwing off the rest of the kids.

Talk about the “bridge to nowhere.” Does Sarah Palin come to mind?

Anyhow, what really struck me today is that I have been singing, okay mouthing, the words to Sur le Pont..forever.  Never did I  a) know what the words actually were and  b) knew that this was an actual real thing. Saint Benezet’s Bridge.  Go know.

And there it was.

This got me thinking about all the songs that we have sung, particularly rock and roll songs, where we thought we had it right only to find out that the words we were singing were all wrong.

Except, of course, for MacArthur Park (…took so long to make it and we’ll never have the recipe again…) where even if we did have all the correct words it still made absolutely no sense.

Anyway, in case you run into a small child and want to get it right, here is the first verse. You are on your own for the rest.

Sur le pont d’Avignon
L’on y danse, l’on y danse
Sur le pont d’Avignon
L’on y danse tous en rond

Have you been to any of these places?

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Stroll/meander/saunter.

Park yourself at some outdoor cafe, have an aperitif, cafe or some other liquid of your choice and people watch.

And, more importantly, be confident that it’s easy to remember where you’ve been since you’ve seen a zillion photos immortalizing the place.

Actually, for me, another reason I’m seen wandering aimlessly up and down these grand streets is it diminishes all fears I have that if I step off to wander around the smaller side streets I will never be seen again. My iphone would be helpful, I suppose, as a navigational device, but giving any appearance of being a tourist quickly negates that activity.

Unlike My Cousin Vinny, I wish to blend.

ChampsElysees_introSo here’s the deal.

I think that I should tell you right now that I had a terrific time; saw everything there was to see; tasted the local fare; stepped inside of each and every church and museum. I will send you photos, postcards and buy local trinkets to give to you.

This is insurance.

When I can’t remember what I saw and where I was you’d have prompts. Alternatively, you could pass these remembrances onto others regaling them with where you’ve been and what you’ve seen, just to make them crazy jealous.

Who’s to know?

Except for this place. My youthful stomping ground. Haven’t forgotten a thing.

Brx1

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