Read Straight Up and Dirty: A Memoir Online

Authors: Stephanie Klein

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Personal Memoirs

Straight Up and Dirty: A Memoir (31 page)

Had she mentioned her compassion and willingness to share in her online dating profile? Or was he lured there by her beach photographs, the one of her in a bikini, a dusting of freckles on her shoulders. Had he lied about his smoking habits or zodiac sign in his? I wondered why they chose to date each other, what the deciding factor was in their agreeing to break bread. Something seemed to work between them. Maybe it was the lighting. Though I think it was more.

 

According to Phone Therapist, there’s a subliminal fabric that ties us to people. It’s beyond attraction. We’re drawn to those who push our buttons and who will hopefully create a safe environment for us to work on our issues. I wondered why I was drawn to Stephen.

He was a pain in the ass, for one. He gave me my way, most of the time, but he made me work for it. Stephen challenged me when I acted out or pouted unfairly. We debated often, which usually led to teasing, which later I would learn sometimes led to sex. Verbal foreplay. But it was more than that. Part of what made us was the timing. I finally knew my worth, believed in myself, and didn’t need some guy to tell me how great I was to believe it, so I could see Stephen for Stephen, not for how much he liked me. It was no longer about need and became about want.

 

It wasn’t about the charming Jewish doctor with the Ivy League education and George Clooney looks. That’s what you look for in a guy when you’re incomplete. With Stephen, I realized it’s about a man who’s my equal and best friend, a man who loves me most when I leave him at the bar to chase down a stranger to get the photograph. For the first time in a long time, he was someone I wanted to make happy. I wanted to be the best person I could, for myself, and for him. And that would take work. It would mean opening the wounds that hurt and taking a chance.

My cell phone buzzed with a text. I knew it was Stephen before I opened my phone. When I looked at the screen, though, I saw it was a text message from Alexandra:

Dulce, Adele, and I are at Pastis having yumsies and drinksies. Scene is rye-dic!
Get your loverly ass here, my pritts.

I’d have jumped at the opportunity to be out, prowling once upon a time, but I was staying put. I still love to love my friends, but I punctuate those moments with solitude. In the past, sitting by myself at Compass, watching the couple beside me, would have instigated tears. I’d have scoured the pages of my journal, stared at my “life list,” and panicked about how off-track I’d become, chanting
But, I want that, and I’m running out of time
. I would have worried I was failing myself.

 

But now, sitting at Compass, I realized it’s about abandoning your stupid wristwatch and giving your compass a flick to make sure the needle still moves…having the courage to follow in the direction to which it points. I opened my journal to a blank page. I still do want that: the husband, babies, and house in the suburbs, but I’m no longer envious because I know I can have it, all of it, with Stephen or any other man. Success isn’t about crossing things off life’s to-do list. It’s having the grace and fortitude to move through change, curls intact, and smiling. I certainly didn’t need to craft a new “designs for life” list because the blank page of my journal wasn’t about what I didn’t have. It was possibility. The plan should be learning how to live without one, or how to carry a big fat eraser in your petite handbag. It’s comfortable to have plans, but you’ve got to be loose enough to accept change. Plans get revised, new blueprints get drafted to accommodate the expansive garden. And nowadays, I’m planting my own, even if it is in crapass Central Park. I’m digging my feet into the warm soil, retaining and nourishing everything I’ve got left—and that’s a lot.

My cell phone buzzed again, this time with a text message from Stephen reading:
So, whatcha wearin’, Red?

I laughed and responded:
A smile.

COUNTLESS THANKS ARE DUE MY PUBLISHER, JUDITH REGAN
, first and foremost, for her vision, belief, and boldness. Thank you.

 

I’d like to express my gratitude to my agents, Diane Bartoli and Joe Veltre, for seeing what could be before it was, and for really, at the end of the day, making me excited to write with each interaction. Thanks to Diane for walking me through it all, setting me at ease, and letting me know when my writing was getting in the way of my writing. She championed my work and believed in it when I needed it most. Thanks to my editor, Maureen O’Neal, whose diligence, guidance, and complete adeptness helped carry this book, and to Marc Chamlin, Beth Silfin, and Francine Wachtell for their expertise and dedication.

I have learned so much from the helpful members of my New York JCC writing workshops, especially Charles Salzberg. Sally Koslow, Sharon Gurwitz, Ellen Schecter, Marian Nash, and Vivian Conan were my daily editors, who “got” my work. Barbara Cole and Kimberlee Auerbach are more than writing peers; they are my providers of white light and laughter. The group’s feedback and encouragement helped me grow as a writer and person.

 

My heartfelt thanks to Kimberly Gilman, Jennifer Hanser, and Kelly Wick for shouldering burdens, sharing tears, and becoming my middle of the night over the years. For reading that shite over and over, for bickering over the car radio, for squeezing my hand through the scary bits, and for reminding me of the good, sing-out-loud parts, not just in the book, but in life. True friends help you celebrate your successes; these are my truest.

My deep appreciation extends to Michael Pryor for reading version after version and making me laugh through each one, to Chris Di-Clerico for encouraging me to write publicly (and come to terms with it), to Jennifer Barako, Amy Bellotte, Monique Ellenbogen, Jaimee Loewy, Erin Maunder, and Yasmin Mehrain for the important girl moments involving adult beverages, instant messages, and my anxiety, and to Heather Hunter for commiserating and cheering so often. I would be remiss without properly thanking AT for adding so much to my life, and to my teachers Colin Harrison, Mary Gordon, Faith Toperoff, and Katy Roberts for their profound inspiration, wisdom, and encouragement.

 

While writing this book, my blog kept me committed to writing, especially when I didn’t feel like it. I never imagined receiving such a gift of making so many friends from all points of the world. Their wishes, insightful observations, and camaraderie are immensely appreciated. It is through their daily involvement that I’ve come to learn the true successes in life have nothing to do with praise or criticism and everything to do with inspiring change. I’m thankful for the readers who’ve reached out and made me realize this.

My deepest gratitude is reserved for my family: my mother, for reminding me how young I started, for saying, “I always knew,” for homemade rice pudding, for being the nicest person I’ve ever known; Lea, for making me laugh until I snort, for her laugh and heart, for being my memory and friend; Carol, Erica, and Amanda, for always making me feel at home beside them; Ted, Barbara, Hollis, and Mikayla for their warmth and open arms; my grandfather, Samuel, who has supported and encouraged me and offered wisdom at the hardest times; and to my father, Donald Klein, who deserves his own page. He has taught me to live a life of worth and integrity. To live straight up. And when things were at their most solemn, he urged me to “write it all down.”

Finally, to Philip Beer, my family by choice, who, by now, knows every word by heart and has mine. He transcends language and improves everything, especially me.

STEPHANIE KLEIN was born and raised in New York. She graduated magna cum laude from Barnard College in 1997 with a B.A. in English and a concentration in writing. There she worked with writers such as Colin Harrison, Dani Shapiro, and Mary Gordon. Klein is a freelance writer and a popular blogging mistress (www.stephanieklein.com) with a readership averaging more than one hundred thousand unique visitors a month. She has been published in the UK, Belgium, and China. Her latest photography collection, “Au Jus,” is featured in the suites, rooms, and corridors of the Hotel Gansevoort in Manhattan’s meatpacking district.
Straight Up & Dirty
is her first book. She now lives in Austin, Texas.

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Photography by Stephanie Klein

Jacket design by Matthew Cacciola

Jacket photography by Stephanie Klein

STRAIGHT UP & DIRTY
. © 2006 by Stephanie Klein. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

Mobipocket Reader July 2006 ISBN 0-06-119516-2

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Klein, Stephanie, 1975–

Straight up & dirty: a memoir / Stephanie Klein.

p. cm.

ISBN-13: 978-0-06-084327-4 (acid-free paper)

ISBN-10: 0-06-084327-6 (acid-free paper)

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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