10 Facts You Might Not Know About St. Patrick’s Day

Male hand holding clover green necklace

The tradition of St. Patrick’s Day began hundreds of years back. A boy in Roman England was captured and taken to Ireland as a captive where he found God. It is said that St. Patrick could hear from the angels, and that he had raised people from the dead. He was a very active missionary throughout Ireland for 30 years, and that is why he is called the patron saint of Ireland. There have been many legends attached to this saint, and they have lasted throughout the centuries. This holiday began as a Holy Day in the Catholic Church, but over the years this religious Catholic saint’s day has turned into a more secular celebration of the upcoming new spring.

Here are a few facts for St. Patrick’s Day:

  • March 17th, the day of celebration, is the day of Patrick’s death.
  • St. Patrick, the patron saint of the Irish, was not from Ireland.
  • Patrick was an old time missionary in Ireland during the 4th century.
  • He brought many people to conversion and into the Christian religion.
  • The Shamrock, symbol of St. Patrick’s Day, was a plant with three leaves that Patrick used to demonstrate to the pagans the trinity of God – Father, Son and Holy Ghost. It is a common figure and accessory for St. Patrick’s Day costumes.
  • Maewyn is the name St. Patrick was born with. His name was changed by the Bishop in a monastery in France, after he escaped his captivity. He was not religious at all when he was a child.
  • The first St. Paddy’s day parade in America was in 1737, 40 years before the Revolutionary War.
  • The first day of spring is March 21st and this could be the reason St. Patrick’s Day celebrations have caught on so big.
  • Everyone turns Irish for a day – just wear green, the sign of life.
  • Irish dishes include Corned beef and cabbage, Irish stew, Irish cream pie, Irish soda bread, scones, Irish cheese bread, and all of this would be a good choice on St. Patrick’s Day.

Celebration

There are many traditions and legends that have been passed down through the generations, so even the barest of facts have gotten confused. It is not even certain exactly when Patrick was born, the actual date varies about 30 years in early 300 A.D. but the day of his death is certain, March 17, and that is the important day.

Whether you are celebrating the life of a glorified Catholic saint or the oncoming spring and all the new growth and new life possibilities that a new life can encompass, it really doesn’t matter. Wear something Green, grab a green hat, give someone a shamrock and join in the parade. Good luck and Blessings are meant for all!

 

My St. Patrick’s Day Romance

Retro couple

My St. Patrick’s Day started like ever other day. I awoke in my small, dreary apartment to the sound of my leaky bathroom faucet dripping slowly. I sighed and then I crawled out of bed and put on my green-colored clothes because it was St. Patrick’s Day. I pinned a small, round button on my sweater which said, KISS ME I’M IRISH! I was only going into the office, but I thought maybe Charles would notice it, and that old spark of excitement would return to his eyes.

I grabbed a container of strawberry yogurt, and headed out the door. On the first floor of our building, I literally ran into my neighbor, Jack Diehl. He was coming out of his apartment reading a book as I hurried by, trying to eat my breakfast on the run. Neither of us saw the other until it was too late.

“I’m sorry,” I mumbled, as I tried to catch my tumbling container of yogurt.

After reaching down to pick up his book, Jack smiled a warm smile, and insisted the accident had been all his fault.

That wasn’t the truth, but I didn’t have time to stand around and disagree with him. I mumbled, “That’s okay,” and raced to the door, leaving Jack standing there with his mouth open as if he were about to continue the conversation.

My old car made its way into the city, until I arrived at my usual parking space.

My legs were sore as I walked up the stairs because they hadn’t yet recovered from the aerobics class I’d started two days earlier. Our old building had two sets of elevators, and both were out of order. “I need a change!” I muttered, thinking of how each day seemed a little worse than the one before.

“Denise,” my friend, Claire, said. She tapped my shoulder, as I pulled my swivel chair out from my desk and sat down. “His majesty wants you in his office. Now!” she said, rolling her eyes. Claire also lived in the same building I did.

His majesty was Charles Baldwin, our department head, and my boyfriend for the past seven months. He was the best-looking guy in our office. He was so gorgeous, and he was popular with all the girls.

In our department, however, Charles’s good looks couldn’t make up for the demanding boss that he was.

“I’d expected those new account reports on my desk yesterday,” he said, barely looking up from the papers in front of him, as I walked into his office.

“They’ll be ready today,” I told him, annoyed that he was so cold. “You didn’t tell me that you needed them yesterday. They would’ve been here,” I tried to say in a forceful voice.

Charles and I had agreed when we’d started dating, that our working relationship would not change. But lately, I felt as if Charles expected twice as much work from me as he did from the others in our department. It seemed that nothing I did was right.

As I turned to leave, I remembered that we had plans to go to a small, Irish pub that evening. We had been planning our St. Patrick’s Day date for a long time. We had decided that we would stand in line for several hours, if that’s what it took to get into the little pub that was known for its good food and great music.

“What time are we going this evening?” I asked.

Charles stood and turned to face the file cabinet that was behind him. “About tonight,” he said.

He didn’t need to finish. I knew he was canceling our date again, but he continued and muttered some excuse about helping his sister and her husband to install new living-room carpeting. I knew it was a lie.

He turned back to face me. “And take that silly thing off!” he said, pointing to the small, green pin I’d placed on my sweater, hoping to perk him up.

My eyes began to sting with tears, but I fought to hold them in. If Claire saw me leaving Charles’s office upset again, I was afraid she’d march in and throw a large stack of his precious account folders at him.

I grabbed the doorknob and began to pull, just as Cecily Dawson stepped in. She’d started work six weeks before, and my heart went out to her. She looked so young, and I guessed that it was her first job. It’s too bad she’s been placed under the supervision of such a tyrant as Charles Baldwin, I thought, as I left the room.

I headed straight for the water cooler hoping Claire wouldn’t notice me. She couldn’t believe that I was still seeing Charles after what a jerk he’d been. In fact, Claire couldn’t believe I’d ever started dating him. “He’s not your type, Denise,” she’d said, shocked when I’d first told her I was going out with him.

She was absolutely right. Charles wasn’t the type of man I’d usually gone out with. That had been one of the reasons I’d found him so attractive I was the girl who’d barely had a date through high school, and things really never improved. I’d been known for turning bright red if any reasonably good-looking guy even spoke to me.

When Charles had first asked me out, I’d nearly fainted. I couldn’t believe that this handsome guy, who could have his pick of any girl in the office, was interested in me.

I’d forced myself to remain calm, and for once I’d manged to throw my shyness aside and accepted his offer.

As I went back to my desk, Claire stopped me and asked if I was plat going to the St. Patrick’s Day party that was being held in the party room of our apartment building that evening.

“I don’t think so,” I whined, still wounded by Charles’s words.

Despite the condition of our old apartment building, the tenants had decided to all pitch in and go to work refinishing the party room. We usually had a party for every possible occasion, making sure our hard work had been for a good cause.

“Why not?” Claire asked.

“I thought I’d stay at home and work on that leaky faucet,” I told her, trying not to sound whiny. I didn’t want another lecture about how I should stop seeing Charles.

“Yeah. You sure wouldn’t want to go out to some stupid, little party when you could be at home working on your plumbing!” she said.

I had to smile. Claire always had a way of making me smile. I guess that’s why she’d been my best friend since fourth grade.

“I’ll stop by for you,” she said.  “We’ll go down to the party room together.” She finished her sentence, and walked before I had a chance to refuse.

I knew it would be a good idea to go to the party. Charles certainly wouldn’t be sitting at home all evening.

Then I remembered Jack Diehl. He’d only moved in three months before. Claire was always telling me what an interesting guy he was. According to her, he’d been all over the world to study sea animals, and then he wrote about his findings. He’d started teaching a course about his work at our local university.

I decided I’d like to talk to Jack. I was also very interested in sea animals. I’d even taken some courses in sea farming at the university. Of course, I didn’t know interested Jack would be in talking with me. After all, how exciting could I make my boring job sound to someone who’d traveled all over the world and really experienced life?

Claire and I decided to go to the little diner across the street for lunch. I usually had lunch with Charles, but ever since he become so distant, he preferred to stay at his desk and eat.

I tried not to think about him, as we prepared to leave. I knew he had a great deal of responsibility as supervisor of our entire department. He’d probably been overworked lately, I decided.

Claire noticed Cecily Dawson sitting at her desk behind a tall stack of folders as we headed for the door. “Do you think we should ask her to come along?” Claire asked.

I nodded, once again feeling sorry for the young woman. She looked like she could really use a break.

“Thanks. But I can’t,” Cecily said in a whispery voice. “If I leave my desk, I’ll never finish all of this.” She pointed to the papers piled up in front of her.

Claire and I shook our heads in disbelief as we left the building. We couldn’t believe that Charles had given her so much work.

After we each ordered soups and salads, Claire filled me in on the details of the party our neighbors had planned. There were going to be plenty of games, and it was going to be a lot of fun.

Our conversation was going fine, until Claire asked me if I wanted to invite Charles. I told her he was going to be busy and wouldn’t be able to make it. She sud­denly remembered Charles and I had been planning our St. Patrick’s Day date for a long time.

“What excuse did he give you this time?” she asked, as she buttered one of the hot rolls that had come with our lunch.

“He’s helping his sister,” I said.

“Sure he is!”

We ate without talking for a few min­utes, until Claire felt that it was her re­sponsibility to warn me about Charles again.

“He can’t be trusted, Denise,” she said. “Remember Debra Fulton and Susan DeMayo?”

I nodded. Charles had been dating Debra when I started working there. Everyone in the office expected the two of them to get married. They seemed so happy together. Then all of a sudden Debra started show­ing up for work nervous and upset, and she’d break into tears at the least little thing. That lasted about two weeks, and then she told us she was leaving work.

Susan was gorgeous. She started about a week after Debra’s departure. It was obvious to all of us that she and Charles were an item right from the beginning. They were both so good looking. Everyone thought for sure they were a match made to last. But after a few months, there seemed to be trouble in paradise. Then Susan shocked us with the announcement that she was quitting her job and going to marry an actor from our town.

“But we don’t know what really hap­pened with Debra and Susan,” I said. “It could have been just as much their fault as Charles’s,” I argued, trying to defend him.

Claire just rolled her eyes and sighed loudly.

Charles had asked me out a few weeks after Susan had left. I’d figured he wouldn’t want more than one date with me anyway, so I was safe. On our first evening together, I’d made it a point to ask Charles what had happened with Debra and Susan. He’d tried to explain, but he got so upset that he couldn’t. I’d figured he’d been truly hurt by those breakups. So when he asked me out again, I accepted.

The first few months we were seeing each other, Charles was wonderful. He always made sure we were doing things that I en­joyed doing, and going places that I liked to go. When he began to change, and in­sisted on planning all of our dates around the things he liked to do, I had no com­plaints. After all, we’d been doing every­thing my way for some time. The real trouble started, when Charles began cancel­ing our dates at the last minute, or didn’t show up for them at all. And when we were out together, he seemed distant and cold. On the job, he’d become more demanding than ever.

Maybe I’m not the only one who needs a change, I thought. Charles had been working awfully hard. He could probably use a nice, relaxing vacation away from the hectic pace of work.

After we finished lunch and started back across the street, Claire told me that Jack Diehl had been awarded a grant from the government to study animals in the Atlantic Ocean. She said he’d be taking off once again at the end of the summer. This time to spend a year aboard a boat.

“Now, that’s a life,” I said, thinking of how Jack would be out in the vast, blue ocean carrying on his work.

As soon as I reach the office, I thought, I’ll march right in and suggest to Charles that we take our vacations and head south where we can find some hot, sandy beach to lounge on.

Charles’s door was closed when I reached it. That was his signal that he didn’t want to be disturbed, but I felt my news was too important to wait. I was hoping that he’d become as enthused about a vacation as I was.

I knocked once and then quickly pushed the door open. I don’t know who was more surprised, Charles and Cecily, or me. Cecily was perched comfortably on Charles’s lap. Apparently, she and the boss had decided her large stack of work didn’t need to be completed so quickly after all.

Young couple having sex at workplace

Cecily slowly slid off Charles’s lap and slipped out of the room with a smile of satisfaction on her face.

“Denise,” Charles said. “Come in and sit down. Please.”

But I didn’t feel like sitting down. I felt more like walking over and knocking Charles off his chair and onto the floor!

“That won’t be necessary,” I told him, trying to keep my voice from cracking or the tears from starting. “There’s no explanation for the way you behave, and I don’t want to hear anything you have to say!” I walked out of his office, and slammed the door as hard as I could.

Everyone was staring at me with looks of sympathy on their faces. I guess they didn’t have to be geniuses to figure out what had just happened. Claire rushed over and started to put her arm around my shoulder, but I stopped her.

“I won’t be seeing Charles any longer I told her. I walked to my desk, sat down and started working.

That evening as I dressed for the partyI tried not to think of Charles and Cecily but of how I was going to fulfill the promise I’d made to myself.

Maybe I can go back to school and continue my studies in sea farming, I thought. Or maybe, I can move to a new town, start a new job, and meet new people.

I was concentrating on all of my options when the doorbell rang. I wondered who it could be. It was still too early for Claire to be stopping by.

I was surprised to find a deliveryman standing there with a large arrangement of flowers. “Denise Madison?” he asks

“Yes,” I said, and he handed me the large bouquet.

I ripped open the tiny envelope, anxious to find out who had sent them. The card read: Sorry about bumping into you this morning. I hope you’re coming to the party tonight. It will make my St. Patrick’s Day something special if you’re there, Jack Diehl.

I took out a vase and began putting flowers in it. I weaved the delicate baby’s breath and tiny shamrocks among them. It was a beautiful arrangement, and a very special one. I actually began to feel that a different and exciting life was possible me.

When Claire arrived, I was dressed in green and had placed a small flower from Jack’s bouquet in my hair.

“Wow!” she said. “You look great!”

“I feel great,” I announced, as Claire studied me with surprise.

“What’s this?” she asked, noticing flowers.

I handed her the card to read for herself.

She didn’t say a thing. She just smiled and I knew she was happy for me.

As we started for the door, I asked her to wait a minute. I ran back to my room and grabbed the small pin I’d worn to work that day. Maybe Charles didn’t appreciate my St. Patrick’s Day enthusiasm, but someone else might.

That evening, my life really did change. Jack was so kind and sensitive. Between games, he explained his work to me, and I was pleased to find that the classes I’d taken did help me to keep up with him. He also listened carefully as I explained what a fool I’d been to trust Charles.

Before we realized it, the party had ended. Claire told us they were turning off the lights and leaving the cleanup until the next evening.

After Jack walked me up to my apartment and we stood by the door to say goodnight, he looked at the pin I was wearing. The pin that proclaimed, KISS ME I’M IRISH!” May I,” he said, before leaning and kissing me tenderly.

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After that St. Patrick’s Day, my life was busier than ever. I worked each day, and spent each evening at the university taking classes. When Jack Diehl went off to at the end of that summer to continue, work, I went along with him as his wife, Mrs. Diehl. Now all of our St. Patrick’s Day celebrations are special, whether on land or sea!

Are You A Good Date?

beautiful woman is applying makeup

In the world of contemporary romance, it has become common knowledge that there isn’t one perfect solution for finding love. The large number of dating platforms in existence today has created numerous opportunities for both men and women to find the perfect mate and, in the process, make the best possible impression on a date.

While most singles today seem to be making use of these outlets for dates, whether it is online, singles events, speed dating or social media, there are those who feel like nothing is working to help them find love. If you are single and have been using one or all of these vehicles for dating with no luck, it might be time to look inwards and evaluate your personal dating skills.

Sometimes, it is hard to be able to take such a different perspective, but can often help bring new light and more understanding about how you interact with others on dates. Becoming increasingly aware of your dating approach, demeanor, or language can make a huge difference in how successful your dates turn out. If you are feeling less than satisfied with your dating results after trying what feels like everything to meet the right person, perhaps it is time to take a fresh look and see how you might be measuring up. Below is some of our expert dating material assessments for you to consider and determine if you are a good date.

Tip #1: Listen Up.

Young man mad at his uninterested wife

There are a ton of distractions in the world today. Thanks to smart phones, we have a lot going on right in the palm of our hand. When you are on a new date, are you constantly texting or checking your phone? Do you even realize if you are checking your phone too much? Not only can this be a major turn off to your date, but you might also miss a lot of important information being said.

There is a lot that people discuss when on a first date. When meeting someone for the first time, it is important to pay attention to what the other is saying. If you are taking the time to get to know someone, make it count by paying close attention and trying to remember what the other person said. This will help make your date feel like you are interested in them and help you learn more about the person you are sitting across from faster.

Tip #2: Speak up.

Man and Woman Talking at a Diner

As much as your date will appreciate you paying attention to what they had to say about themselves, don’t forget to compliment the conversation overall by giving your two cents and helping drive the topic train throughout your date. If you are the kind of person that gets shy or lets others dominate the discussion, you might end up seeming standoffish. Worse yet, if you tend to be tightlipped on first dates, you might even come off as forgettable or boring.

Try to avoid awkward moments of silence by being inquisitive about your date and bringing up discussion topics that you might find relatable on both ends. Use topics like sports, weather, careers, family, celebrities, favorite foods, hobbies, travel, etc. to make conversation and get to know your date better. Not only will this help further the conversation and keep both individuals invested in the date, but it will also help nurture and develop an emotional connection between new romantic partners.

Tip #3: Be Polite.

Man Giving Vase of Peonies

When on a first date or while getting to know someone, it is simple to forget the basics of being polite. Something as common sense as a please or thank you could be left out at important moments when your date is just starting to formulate their opinions about you as a person. Believe it or not, chivalry is still alive and well today. For singles that are invested in impressing their romantic partners, courtesy and respect are two of the most important attributes they need to succeed.

Tip #4: Look Sharp.

Fashion Couple Portrait, Woman Red Dress, Man Suit, Flying Cloth

First impressions play a big role in how people view each other. If you have made dating into a common occurrence whether it’s after work or on the weekends, be sure to stay up to date with looking fresh and sexy. With so much going on during our busy workdays, it is easy to forget to dress extra hot or do a last minute spruce-up before heading from the office out to the dating circuit.

Sometimes dates happen at a spur of the moment. To make sure you are always prepared to look your best, keep some grooming essentials at work, in your bag or in your car. The investment in some extra perfume, a comb or emergency outfit will pay off!

You might be just joining the dating scene or feel like you have been dating forever. Regardless of where you are at in your dating career, don’t forget to stick to the basic dating tips above to ensure you are bringing your dating-A-game to every experience.

Tips On How To Find Your Soulmate

Milky Way. Silhouettes of hugging and kissing man and woman

1. See Yourself with the Perfect Partner

Envision the perfect relationship. That’s the start of your journey to a great relationship. Imagine someone with all the qualities you’re looking for and having that special someone as your soulmate. Your imagination will open doors and lead you to that special person. Take time out of your day and see yourself in this situation. Before you know it, that person will be in your life. In this case, mental imagery is your tool.

Often couples will say they knew he or she was the right one. This is because prior to meeting, each partner had envisioned some set of ideas they wanted. In other words, they had the perfect partner with those qualities in their mind. It’s very important to pay attention to what you’re thinking. You might be thinking of a special relationship for yourself but have a friend in a poor relationship. You need to not think of your friend with a poor relationship and continue to think yourself in a great one! Remember, your relationship is special for you. Believe it or not when we see other people in poor relationships, it can rub off on you since you’ve been exposed to the idea of a poor relationship.

2. Ask Yourself What You’re Looking for

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Doing a self assessment of your needs in a relationship is tantamount to your relationship success. See what makes you happiest in a person. You might want a great wife and parent and might find that in someone. You might have more money than you’ll ever need and not need the financial support of your partner so a wealthy or well off partner isn’t a requirement. Or you might want to be a homemaker raising children. You’ll want to make sure your partner can provide the basics so you can raise your children and take care of your home with peace of mind. Having a partner who meets your needs in a relationship is the basis of contentment in your relationship.

3. Look in the Right Places

Romantic lovers with eiffel tower

Everyone has heard the phrase “Looking for love in all the wrong places”. Well you want to make sure you’re looking for love in all the right places. Join interest groups such as bird watching or book clubs. There are lots of activities that bring people together that are perfect places to meet new friends and lovers. You can meet people from online dating sites or join online communities and meet new people this way as well. You can check your local newspaper or magazine for a list of great places where people are getting together. You can take a cooking course for example, learn a new skill and meet new potential mates along the way! There are as many ways to meet new people as your imagination can take you. Stay open to new ideas and be ready.

4. Make Sure You Meet Each Other Halfway

Couple Enjoying Picnic On Cliffs By Sea

Relationships are not one sided affairs. It takes two to tango! And you have to remember you’ll have to negotiate everything from the start including seeing each other. You’ll need to compromise on some things from time to time. Some couples have different tastes in movies . He likes action adventure and she likes art house , relationship driven movies. They compromise by having every other movie they watch be one he likes or she likes. This way they get the companionship they love while going to the movies and the opportunity to explore movies they wouldn’t see otherwise. Meeting each other halfway is a building block of any great relationship. And it’s not just movie decisions. It could be where to live, schools to send children to or other decisions that require both partners to meet each halfway.

5. Keep Your Standards Up

Couple touching with heads before kissing

While it’s important to make compromises and meet each other halfway sometimes, your relationship shouldn’t be so many compromises that you don’t enjoy the relationship. Keeping your standards up will help you keep your chin up in this situation and be proud of yourself and your partner. Meeting at interest groups is often great since you can get insight into the person on an objective basis before any relationship has ever begun. Before one famous couple married, she worked for him. She was able to rise to head her own division at this company. He was able to see all the great qualities she possessed before starting any relationship. Now the two of them are married and coworkers in one of the world’s largest charitable organizations. I’m sure each partner in this case had mutual respect for each other as coworkers. Each partner has a sense of satisfaction in their choice of mate based on work ethic and productivity based on respect. Keeping your standards up helps you in the long run enjoy a more satisfying relationship.

These tips are a few that will get you on your way to a great and satisfying relationship. Seeing yourself in a great relationship is where it starts. There are lots of great places to meet that special someone including free online dating sites. Following these simple steps will lead you to your soulmate and true happiness that you’ve chosen wisely.

Bette & Joan’s Legendary Feud Is ‘Star’ of New FX Series

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Joan Crawford and Betty Davis were not friends. This was one of the most commonly-known “secrets” in Hollywood history. Of course, they both would play nice when the cameras were rolling and Crawford even firmly dismissed any longtime enmity in a 1947 magazine article entitled “Can Women Trust Each Other?” by saying, “Why should there be a feud? I believe there is a place for every actress in this wonderful business. Certainly Bette and I don’t fear each other.” Bette & Joan -- On Set The rivalry between the silver-screen icons is the stuff of legend, a decades-long battle sparked by both professional and personal resentments and fueled by an industry that loved nothing more than to see its women tear each other apart. Much of their fighting played out as back-and-forth sniping in the tabloids, though Crawford was always less openly hostile than Davis, whose iconic burns include the classic: “[Crawford] slept with every male star at MGM—except Lassie.” Bette & Joan -- BETTE The premise behind FX and Ryan Murphy’s latest anthology series, Feud, which premieres on March 5, is so deceptively simple that it’s hard to believe it hasn’t already been done. Each season will see Murphy and his co-producers focus on a different famous feud—much as each season of American Crime Story tackles a real-life crime—and it’s already clear that the first set of eight episodes, subtitled Bette and Joan, will be a very tough act to follow. Susan Sarandon plays Bette Davis while Jessica Lange takes on Joan Crawford. Bette Davis: Beautiful, Gifted and Hard to Love So how did these two legendary starlets end up being the centerpieces of a four-decade long feud? Bette & Joan -- JOAN 1933: It begins with Crawford’s divorce overshadowing Bette’s starring role. Crawford began her on-screen career at a younger age than Davis (Crawford made her first onscreen appearance in 1925) and was already an established star by the time Davis moved to Hollywood in 1930. In 1933, Davis had reached a pivotal moment in her still-nascent career—the comedy Ex-Lady would be the first to feature her name above the title. Warner Bros. had planned an elaborate publicity campaign announcing Davis’s new phase of stardom—until Crawford announced that she was divorcing her first husband, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., on the same day. According to celebrity biographer David Bret, The New York Times relegated Davis’s film to a small paragraph in the Review section, while devoting several pages to Crawford’s news, and other papers followed suit. Ex-Lady was dropped from theaters after a week thanks to poor ticket sales, and Davis’s beef was supposedly born. 1Bette & Joan -- Joan & actor935: Joan marries the man Bette loved. “I have never forgiven her for that, and never will.” So said Davis in a 1987 interview with journalistMichaelThorton, 52 years after the defining incident in her lifelong hatred of Crawford. In 1935, Davis starred in the drama Dangerous and fell hard for her co-star Franchot Tone. “I fell in love with Franchot, professionally and privately,” she said. “Everything about him reflected his elegance, from his name to his manners.” Unfortunately, Crawford got to Tone first. Rumor has it that she invited Tone to her home and met him naked in the solarium. The couple would announce their engagement during the filming of Dangerous. “He was madly in love with her,” Davis said. “They met each day for lunch… he would return to the set, his face covered in lipstick. Davis would go on to win an Oscar for her performance in Dangerous—and yet Crawford still managed to upstage her. 1943: Joan leaves MGM for Warner Brothers and is now directly competing for studio roles with Betty. Bette & Joan -- Bette smoking Back in the day, actors were more or less owned by a studio and couldn’t work on any other productions, unless specifically loaned out. Crawford was part of MGM and Davis was part of Warner Bros. so, even though they were competing for America’s attention, they rarely had to compete for the same roles. Until now. Crawford had her heart set on the title role in the film noir Mildred Pierce and got her wish when Davis—the studio’s first choice—turned it down. Two years later, Crawford would take another lead role originally intended for Davis, in the crime drama Possessed, and win another Oscar nomination for it. Despite Davis’s oft-quoted line “Miss Crawford is a movie star, and I am an actress,” it had become clear that the industry saw more common ground between them than Davis would like to admit. Joan Crawford: Tough, Talented, And Unlucky in Love Given the comparisons, it’s no surprise that some producers were keen to get Davis and Crawford on screen together. Their unlikely vehicle came years later when their careers were fading via the horror film What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? — about a demented former child star (Davis) who holds her crippled sister (Crawford) captive. Crawford signed on first, but knew she needed the perfect co-star to make it a career-reviving hit. Putting ego aside, she flew to New York and asked her rival to take the part. Amazingly, Davis did. Bette & Joan -- Actress Meeting Davis agreed to sign on to Baby Jane on two conditions: that she play the title role of Jane, and that the film’s director Robert Aldrich assure her he was not sleeping with Crawford: “It wasn’t that I cared about his private life, or hers either,” Davis reportedly said. “I didn’t want him favoring her with more close-ups.” Though the film was an unexpected box office success, and did to some extent represent the comeback that both actresses desperately needed, it became remembered most powerfully as a public document of their real-life rivalry. Baby Jane and the behind-the-scenes stories born while making this film, will all be revealed during the anthology series Feud.  Was their feud real? Or was it a media creation that Bette and Joan capitalized on? Maybe it’s a bit of both, but this Feud is not to be missed. bette2 - CopyFor more info on Bette Davis Click Here           joan2For more info on Joan Crawford Click Here

Joan Crawford: Tough, Talented and Unlucky in Love

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Lucille Fay LeSueur was born to a single mother in Texas and spent her childhood moving from state to state, struggling to get a proper education. She dreamed of a better life as a famous dancer. After some time in various chorus lines, Lucille decided to switch gears and landed a $75 a week gig as an actress at MGM. The studio publicist didn’t like the sound of her name (too close to “sewer”) so he organized a “Name the Star” magazine contest for $1000 prize. And a star (named Joan Crawford) was born!

A prolific and long-lasting film career was to follow, with Crawford ultimately going on to star in more than sixty films. She took on talking roles with projects like Hollywood Revue (1929) and Grand Hotel (1932), and her dancing skills were prominently displayed with Fred Astaire in the 1933 hit Dancing Lady. Clark Gable was also featured, and was a recurring co-star in works like Possessed (1931) and Strange Cargo (1940).

Joan Crawford and Clark Gable

Joan Crawford and Clark Gable

Was Clark Gable the love of her life? At times, Joan intimated as much, even though she had had four husbands—actors Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Franchot Tone, Phillip Terry, and Pepsi-Cola president Alfred Steele—and many lovers. Clark Gable co-starred with Crawford in eight movies, more than anyone else, and the two are rumored to have pursued an affair on and off for decades. They were certainly good friends, and when Gable’s wife Carole Lombard was killed in a 1942 plane crash, Crawford took over her scheduled role in the film They All Kissed the Bride and donated her salary to the American Red Cross.

Bette & Joan’s Legendary Feud Is ‘Star’ of New FX Series

joan3Crawford adopted four children, one of whom, Christina, wrote the 1978 memoir Mommie Dearest, in which she writes of enduring highly erratic and abusive behavior from her mother during childhood. The book was adapted into a 1981 film starring Faye Dunaway as Crawford.

Though garnering a series of notable roles, including her Oscar winning performance as the lead role in Mildred Pierce, Crawford’s career had grown quiet, only to be revitalized yet again with the 1962 horror classic Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, co-starring her “buddy” Bette Davis.

Crawford died of a heart attack in 1977. Her exact age was unknown as her birthday was a subject of numerous rumors.

Bette Davis: Beautiful, Gifted and Hard To Love

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Ruth Elizabeth Davis was born in Lowell, Massachusetts, on April 5, 1908, the eldest daughter of Harlow Morrell Davis, a lawyer, and Ruth Favor Davis. She was called Bette as a child and kept the name throughout her career.

Davis got a break when she was offered a part in The Man Who Played God. She received good reviews and a long-term contract from the Warner Brothers studio. This began a series of films with Warner, mostly unremarkable and insignificant, but critics began to notice Davis’s talent and unique quality. Davis began to claw her way to the top of the film world. She fought for and won the right to appear in another studio’s production of Of Human Bondage. Suddenly, the world was introduced to a brilliant new actress.

Bette & Joan’s Legendary Feud Is ‘Star’ of New FX Series

Davis won her first Academy Award in 1935, for her role as a troubled young actress in Dangerous. She then appeared in The Petrified Forest with male stars Leslie Howard and Humphrey Bogart in 1937. After a rocky period at Warner Brothers, during which time she was suspended for turning down roles, sued the studio and spent some time in England, she returned to Hollywood, and was offered a higher salary and better choice of roles.

bette2 - CopyDavis received her second Oscar for her performance as a rebellion Southern belle in 1938′s Jezebel. A number of critical and box-office successes followed: She played an heiress coming to terms with mortal illness in Dark Victory and Elizabeth I in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (both released in 1939), and went on to deliver several well-received performances in films of the 1940s, including The Little Foxes; the comedy The Man Who Came to Dinner; the American drama Now, Voyager; and the drama The Corn is Green. By the time she severed ties with Warner Brothers in 1949, Davis was one of its largest talents.

Her feud with Hollywood icon Joan Crawford was legendary. Crawford approached Davis with a request to play opposite her in a new script called, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane. The film was a desperate attempt to take advantage of the public’s interest in the two fading stars and their history of contempt for each other. The film worked, and was quite the box office success story.

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During the 1970s and 1980s, Davis continued to appear in films, mainly on television. She also appeared on many talk shows, delighting her audiences by her refusal to give in to old age. She was the fifth person to receive the American Film Institute’s Life Achievement Award in 1977 and the first woman to be so honored. In 1979 she won an Emmy Award for Strangers: The Story of a Mother and Daughter.

Davis wrote two books about her own life, The Lonely Life (1962) and This ‘N That (1987) (the second of which answered charges by her daughter that Davis was an alcoholic who had abused her children). She was also married four times.  Her first marriage, to bandleader Harmon Oscar Nelson Jr., ended in divorce; her second husband, businessman Arthur Farnsworth, died in 1943. With third husband William Grant Sherry, Davis had a daughter named Barbara. While married to Gary Merrill, her co-star in All About Eve, she adopted two children, Margot and Michael; the marriage ended in divorce.

She passed away from breast cancer while in France in 1989. Davis was 81 years old.

Soccer Mom Hooker

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I’d do anything to give my kids a better life!

From the first moment that I gazed into my baby daughter’s eyes I made a silent promise that she would never be deprived of any of the opportunities I’d missed out on. Years later, I made the same promise to her brother and sister.

My childhood was not what you’d call a horrible one. I had a roof over my head, food on the table, clothes to wear. I’m sure my parents loved me, but they didn’t cherish me. There is a difference. I never felt that they were interested in making sacrifices to help me get ahead in life. Mom and Dad were content to see me graduate from high school, take a menial job, and hopefully someday get married.

I had to sit on the sidelines and watch my classmates win awards for talent, beauty, and athletics. Oh, how I envied those girls who got to take piano and dance lessons. I dreamed of becoming a dancer, an actress, a famous writer. But to develop a talent, you need to be nurtured.

I wasn’t too bad at sports, but because my parents wouldn’t shell out the money for a park league team, I never had the opportunity to really show off my skills.

In short, if it cost money, I had to forget about it. So I did all that was expected of me: I finished high school, but I couldn’t go to college. My parents didn’t have the money for tuition, not even with me working to earn part of the expenses. With college out of the question, I did what so many other girls have done—I got a job.

I’d taken secretarial courses in high school and was able to land a position as a file clerk in a trucking company. It was there that I met Carson Brooks, one of the truckers.

Carson was about six years older than me and very good-looking. I was flattered that he wanted to date me. We went out together for eight months, and then he asked me to marry him. I said yes for two reasons; the first being that I wanted to get out of my parents’ house. The second was that I thought Carson was the best I could do, and he loved me.

Our combined income gave us a decent living, but he was gone a lot. I was always lonely. I was thrilled when I became pregnant. Having a baby would fill those lonely days. Carson was excited about the baby. He agreed that we needed a house instead of our small apartment. I knew exactly what I wanted, which was a home in Brookline Estates, the upper-class area of town.

I never considered the cost. Providing a lifestyle that would give my child the very best was my only consideration. Carson, however, felt differently. “Jessie, we can’t afford to move into Brookline Estates. The taxes alone are more than we pay in rent now.”

“Maybe so, but it’s worth it, considering the education our child will get. Think of the opportunities the baby will have.”

“Can’t we compromise a little and find a house in a good neighborhood that we can afford? I’m not asking you to move into a slum, but there are lots of nice neighborhoods that would serve our needs without crippling us with debt.”

“Sure, if you don’t care what sort of future your child has, I suppose we can compromise.” After that, I refused to speak to him for days. How could he be such a penny-pincher when it came to our child’s future?

After a week of the cold shoulder treatment, Carson caved. “Find a house in Brookline if you can get one that we can have financed. I’ll take on some extra runs to pay for it.”

I hugged him and made love to him passionately that night. The next day I started a serious hunt for our house. Carson was right about one thing: Financing wasn’t going to be easy. We couldn’t get into the four bedrooms, five bath homes with the swimming pools.

I’d almost given up hope when the realtor showed me a house that had just been put on the market. It was in desperate need of repair and quite old, but in the right zip code. Even in such dismal shape, it was twenty thousand dollars over budget, but it was the best buy I’d found.

Carson was a hard sell. “I’ll do most of the redecorating,” I said. “You’ll only have to do the heavy stuff that I can’t.”

“But it needs so much work, Jessie. It’ll take every spare minute I have just to make the place livable.”

“Yes, but once we have it fixed up, it’ll be a great investment. We’d be able to sell it for almost double what we’re paying.”

Eventually I pressured him into buying the house. Moving was no big deal because we didn’t have much to start with. On our second day in our new home, the next-door neighbors dropped by with a welcome gift. Darla and Hal DeRossa were definitely an upwardly mobile couple. She owned her own interior designer business and he was a CPA. I felt embarrassed having them see our tacky old furniture.

“What a marvelous piece,” Darla said, running her hand over the dining room table. “Where did you find it?”

“My grandmother gave it to me. She moved to a retirement community in Florida and didn’t need her furniture.”

The truth was, Grandmother moved in with her sister, who lived in a trailer in Florida. She told me I could have her old furniture if I’d haul it out.

After Darla and Hal left, Carson turned to me, completely disgusted. “Why did you lie about your grandmother to the DeRossas? It’s no shame not to have money.”

“Yes, it is. If you don’t have money, you’ll always be on the outside looking in while someone else gets all the prizes.”

“Jessie, anyone worth knowing won’t judge you on what you have. They’ll look at the kind of person you are inside.”

“Carson, we’re in a different world now. Appearances count for a lot. I know Darla thought the furniture was tacky, even if she did compliment Grandmother’s dining room suite. We’ve got to furnish our home with nicer things.”

How? There are only twenty-four hours in a day, and I can’t take on anymore trips. All my spare time is spent fixing this house up, so where will the money to buy the things you want come from?”

“I’m going back to work after the baby comes.”

“No way, Jessie. You agreed not to work until the baby was at least a year old.”

“That is so old-fashioned. Darla didn’t stop working because of her kids.” Darla and Hal mentioned that they had two children; one was five and the other was ten months.

“I don’t care what Darla does or doesn’t do. I want you at home with our baby.”

“Carson, I’m going back to work and that’s that.”

9044718By spring, the house was almost finished. April brought rain, flowers, and our beautiful little daughter. Kristal was more than I’d dreamed of. Her hair was dark, like Carson’s, and she had my green eyes and dimples. Going back to work and leaving her was the hardest thing I’d ever done, but we desperately needed the money.

I worked hard and saved as much of my earnings as possible so that Kristal could enter the baby beauty pageants when she was old enough. Darla’s daughter, Morgan, had won her first at two years old, and I was determined that Kristal would do the same.

Carson and I hadn’t planned to have another child right away, but sometimes you are taken by surprise. This time it was a boy, and we named him Lance. I could tell from the way he kicked that this little guy was destined to be a soccer player or on an NFL team.

Mom had helped with Kristal but wasn’t up to caring for a second child. When I told Darla about my problem with childcare, she suggested I hire a nanny to look after both children. Carson, as usual, complained about the cost, saying we could put the children in day care. I won that argument. Weren’t our children worth the expense of a nanny?

Two years later, Jennifer was born. After that I had my tubes tied. I loved children and so did Carson, but it is wrong to have more than you can provide for. Besides, I was already working overtime to cover Kristal’s pageants. She’d also started taking dance lessons and modeling. As beautiful as my little girl was, I knew that a talent agent would someday discover her and she’d be in commercials.

At six, Kristal won her first overall best of show. I’ve never been prouder in my life. The trophy was bigger than she was!

“We’re going to have to get serious about Kristal’s future,” I told Carson.

“Jessie, we spend every spare dime on her lessons and pageant fees as it is. How much more serious can we get?”

“She needs a modeling coach—a good one to guide her career.”

Career? Kristal’s only six. She’s a pretty little girl with a great personality, but frankly I think she’d be happier if you cut back on the pageants and just let her be a kid.”

“I’m not doing this for me. I’m going to see to it that my children have the opportunities they deserve, no matter what the sacrifice.”

“The hell you’re not doing it for you! Jessie, you spent six hours on the phone calling people to brag about Kristal winning the contest.”

“I want people to know how special she is, and how proud I am of her.”

“Have it your way.” He slammed out the door.

Kristal didn’t get the coach I wanted to hire because we couldn’t afford the woman. It broke my heart, but Kristal took the disappointment well. “Mom, it’s really okay,” she said. “I like Miss Wren at dance school better, anyway.”

Her understanding made me all the more determined. Kristal, Lance, and Jen would have the best that money could buy, no matter what Carson and I had to do to get it for them.

Just as I’d predicted, Lance was a born soccer player. Even at five he showed talent. When he joined a park league team at age eight, I signed on to carpool with other soccer moms. To fit all the kids into my car I traded the one I had in for a new SUV.

Carson was furious when he returned from a trip and saw it sitting in our driveway.

“I work for money, too,” I protested. “And if I need a car I shouldn’t have to wait until you have time to help me find one.”

“We can’t afford it,” he said.

“That’s what I’m putting on your tombstone, Carson. ‘We can’t afford it!’ ”

“At the rate things are going, with all the financial stress, it might be a good idea to go ahead and order that tombstone. You’re killing me, Jessie.”

We barely spoke to each other all weekend. There was a subject I wanted to bring up but didn’t dare. Jen was just the right age to start on the pageant circuit. I desperately wanted to enter her in the Beautiful Baby contest at the Civic Center. The entry fee was two hundred dollars, plus photos and awards.

Somehow, I would have to come up with the money without telling Carson. I’d recently changed jobs, taking one that paid more. My boss, John Rogers, sold medical equipment to doctors and retailers. I was his administrative assistant. I’ll admit it wasn’t my computer skills that landed me the job. John had an eye for blondes with big . . . dimples.

Not that we messed around or anything. John just liked to flirt. At least that was what I told myself when he’d make suggestive remarks. One of his major accounts was a plastic surgeon. The doctor, whom I’ll call Dr. Miller, mentioned to John that I had the kind of build that his patients paid big bucks to achieve.

When John told me what he’d said, I was flattered. After three children, I’d still kept my figure. John asked me to stay a little late that day, after the rest of the staff had gone. I didn’t usually do overtime, so this being a first-time request, I felt I couldn’t turn him down.

“Jessie, there’s something I want to talk to you about. You can say no and we’ll pretend we never had this conversation, but if you’re interested, then . . .well, we’ll see where it goes.”

“Just tell me. If I don’t like what you’ve got to say, I’ll let you know.”

“Bruce Miller has a thing for you.”

“Do you mean Dr. Miller?”

John smiled slightly. “Yeah, he’s going ape over you. Jessie, if you’re interested, he’d be very generous to us. He said he’d give me all of his business, and if he does, there’ll be a substantial bonus in it for you.”

“What are you suggesting?”

“Nothing. This is between you and Bruce. I’m only the messenger.”

“But I’m a married woman,” I said.

“Right. But I have to say . . . you don’t act like a happily married woman. And there’s nothing wrong with having lunch with Bruce. You could enjoy a nice meal and then make your decisions. Jessie, lots of women do it, and from what I’ve observed, you’d be justified. It’s obvious that your husband doesn’t appreciate you. I’ve seen the look on your face when other women get flowers for their birthday or Valentine’s and you don’t.”

That was true. Carson never sent me flowers. In fact, I couldn’t remember the last meaningful gift he’d given me. For my birthday he took me out to dinner at a cheap restaurant. John was right: It wouldn’t hurt to have lunch with Dr. Miller. Maybe he was just lonely and wanted someone to talk to.

I’ve always been able to justify my actions, and this time was no exception. I had lunch with Bruce Miller. Afterward, he took me to see his office. No one was there. We sat on his lush leather sofa and sipped cognac. Bruce put his arm around me and moved in for a slow, lingering kiss.

It was wrong, I know, but it felt so tender and good. Carson seldom kissed me like that anymore. Having a man really desire and appreciate me went to my head faster than the cognac.

“I have to get back to work,” I said.

“No, you don’t. I’ll call John and tell him you’re taking inventory for me.”

Bruce and I talked for a long time. I told him all about my children and my dreams for them. He understood; he felt the same way about his own kids. His wife was a lot like Carson, so we had that in common, too.

Soon we were making love on the sofa. Afterward I felt shame and guilt. How could I face my children? I’d cheated on their father. On the drive home I promised myself that I’d never see Bruce again.

The next day, a messenger arrived with a letter for me. It was a paid-in-full entry form from the Beautiful Baby people. I almost cried, I was so happy. She would get the opportunity I’d prayed for. I called to thank her silent benefactor, Dr. Bruce Miller.

Bruce kept his word and gave John all his business. I received a very nice bonus. Bruce and I saw each other a couple of times a week, and afterward there was always a token of his appreciation. I didn’t consider myself a prostitute for taking gifts and money from him. I just saw it as his way of showing me how much he cared for me.

Was I in love with him? I can’t honestly say. After awhile he stopped calling me. John said that Bruce’s wife was giving him hell about not spending more time at home, and Bruce was afraid she’d find out about the affair. In a way, I was relieved to have it end.

There was a downside, though, one that I felt immediately. The money Bruce had given me paid for the extras my children needed. I was able to get a good modeling coach for Kristal, and she’d improved her runway presentation a hundred times over. Jen was in the best dancing school in the city, and her fees were coming due soon. Lance needed to attend soccer camp to improve his game.

I told John about my problems. He had a solution ready at hand. Another of his customers had commented that he’d like to get to know me better. I agreed to lunch, like before, but this time the man wasn’t the gentleman that Bruce had been. He laid it on the line for me, that it was sex he was after. Conversation was something he avoided with women; if he was going to have to chat a lady up, he’d do it with his own wife.

This time I said I’d have to think about it. I did, too, and almost made up my mind to say no . . . when John told me how much the bonus would be. It was wrong; everything I did was wrong, but I felt obligated to do whatever I had to do. Carson certainly wasn’t taking an interest in helping the children excel.

Young-woman-standing-young-man-DVP4948830In a short time I’d gone from soccer mom to corporate hooker, sleeping with my boss’ customers to land big accounts. I got my share of the loot but paid for it with feelings of shame and degradation. I’d die if my children found out, even though I was doing it for their benefit.

Lance was able to go to soccer camp, and did very well. Kristal was now taking piano and voice; little Jen was the darling of the pageant circuit, as well as a star in her dance class. Their trophies lined the mantle in the living room. I’d kept the promise I’d made to them when they were born.

Unfortunately, karma has a way of kicking us in the rear. One of the secretaries left the company and went to work for John’s chief rival. Neither John nor I had noticed just how disgruntled Rosemary had been with her job. We also didn’t know that she knew about our clandestine relationships with some of our customers. How she found out, I’ll never know. John and I were both extremely careful.

Rosemary must have told her new employer about my arrangement with John, and how we were able to land such large contracts. It didn’t take long for the rumor mill to circulate the story all over town. Soon the customers who’d given us their business stopped buying from John; they wouldn’t even return phone calls. At that time we had no idea why it was happening.

There were still a few guys I saw, and since I wasn’t aware of the rumors, I didn’t see any reason to stop. It took a lawsuit to open my eyes. The wife of one of the doctors I’d been sleeping with wanted to divorce her husband and take everything. She’d heard the rumors about me and wondered if I was the reason for her husband’s late nights.

Doing what so many scorned women with money do, she hired a detective to get the goods on her husband. I used to see the doctor in his office after hours. Somehow, the detective had rigged a video camera inside, which caught us on tape. Now the wife was suing for divorce—and I was subpoenaed to be a witness.

“You’re lucky she didn’t sue you,” John said. “I’ve heard of cases like that, where the wife sues the other woman.”

I was furious at the casual way he was taking the lawsuit. My life was going to be exposed in open court, and John acted as though it wasn’t a big deal. “You’re in this, too,” I said.

He sneered. “No, I’m afraid you’re on your own, Jessie. I covered my tracks. I haven’t done anything that’s illegal or could cause a civil action to be brought against me.”

“It was you set me up with all of those men.”

“Dear, I didn’t ‘set you up’ with anyone. I told you that a couple of guys admired you and said they’d like to take you to lunch. You made your own dates, and you decided how you’d handle things.”

“What about the bonus you gave me when I landed an account for us?”

“What bonus? I have no record of a bonus being paid to you. Have you claimed a bonus on your income tax?”

He had me there; I hadn’t claimed the money. I’d kept it, just like any common whore would have. I felt dirty and disgusted with myself. How could I have been so delusional?

When the particulars of the divorce were revealed and my name brought out, people stopped speaking to me. The other soccer moms in the carpool refused to let their children ride with me, and neither would they pick up Lance.

“Mommy, why won’t the guys play with me at school?” he asked.

“Honey, they’re just jealous of you because you’re better than they are.” It was the only excuse my son could possibly understand. How could I tell him that the reason the boys he’d been friends with since he was five couldn’t play with him was because I’d prostituted myself?

Unfortunately, Carson learned about the affair in the worst way possible: He overheard some guys at work making jokes. He’d been on the road a great deal and never suspected what I was doing.

He confronted me with what he’d heard. “Is it true, Jessie?”

I could see the hurt on his face. “I can explain—”

“No, I don’t think you can. There’s no excuse for being unfaithful to me.”

“I only did it to help the kids. They needed things we couldn’t afford.”

“The kids never needed anything we couldn’t afford. You just wanted them to have things that other people in this overpriced neighborhood had. Please don’t make yourself out to be a martyr, Jessica. It’s not like the kids had a fatal illness or needed money for an operation. You whored yourself so you could parade your children in front of others and show them off.”

“I wanted them to have what I never had!”

“Well, I’d say you did a bang-up job of giving it to them. You never had a whore for a mother. That’s what they got.”

“No, they got a mother who supported them in everything they wanted to do!” I screamed. “You have no idea what it’s like to have to sit on the sidelines while other people get all the good things in life.”

“I know what it’s like to have men make nasty jokes about my wife. Jessie, I fooled myself into thinking you really loved me. Now I see that was never the case. I’m tired of it. I’m going to pack and move over to my brother’s place, file for divorce, and end this sham of a marriage.”

Carson shoved past me, went into the bedroom, packed, and left the house. Later, the children asked where Daddy was. It was supposed to be his night at home with them. He always made their favorite dish, spaghetti. Then we’d watch a video together.

“He had an emergency trip,” I said. Using a headache for an excuse, I let the children order a pizza for dinner, then I went to bed.

How would I make it without Carson? He’d been a good provider and a loving father. As I lay thinking these thoughts, something occurred to me. I’d taken a very good man totally for granted. In my obsession to push my children into the limelight, I’d forgotten how to be a wife.

So what if he didn’t send me flowers? When had I ever done anything special for him? I was always too busy with the children to consider Carson’s needs. Now I’d done the unforgivable. What man could love a woman who’d prostituted herself behind his back? Certainly not my husband. I cried myself to sleep.

The next morning I woke to a ringing phone. It was Carson’s brother, Peter. “Well, Jess, I hope you’re satisfied. Carson just left to beat the hell out of that guy you work for.”

“Why?”

“He found out that your boss was the one who was setting you up with men. Seems a secretary who used to work there dates a trucker who works with Carson. He was happy as hell to fill Carson in on everything.”

I hung up the phone, pulled on some clothes, and drove like a maniac to the office. Carson’s truck was in the parking lot. I prayed I wasn’t too late. Carson could kill John in one blow.

Their argument was so loud that I heard it before I opened the door. I’d never heard my husband yell so loudly, or say the words that were pouring from his lips. I rushed inside John’s office to break up the fight and found Carson holding John pinned to the wall.

“Let him go!” I said. “He’s not worth it.”

“Get the hell out of here, Jessie,” Carson ordered me. “This is between him and me. The bastard bought his Porsche by pimping my wife. I think I have a right to bash his brains out!”

“He didn’t make me do anything I wasn’t willing to do,” I said.

“You wanted those men?”

“No, Carson—I wanted their money. I was an idiot, and I’m paying for it now. The kids are going to learn what I did and they’ll hate me as much as you do. No judge in the world would give me custody, and I doubt that I’ll have a penny awarded to me in the financial settlement. Most of all, I’ve hurt a really good man, and I don’t want to hurt him anymore.”

Carson slowly lowered John to his feet. “Get out of here while I talk to my wife,” he said.

“I should call the cops!” John shot back.

“You do that,” I said evenly. “You call the cops—and I’ll call the newspaper and tell them everything, and I’ll mention names. John, I don’t have anything left to lose. Don’t push me too far.”

After he left I let out a long breath. Carson stood glaring at me, as if he was seeing me for the first time and hated what he saw. “Was he one of them?” he asked.

“No. I never slept with John. It was only the customers. This will sound insane, but I didn’t think that what I was doing was any different from typing up a contract. It was just a way to earn extra money. Frankly, I didn’t think you’d care. I mean, you never even sent me flowers or bought me nice things—”

“I’ve always cared about you. Hell, Jess, I’ve worked myself half to death just to give you what you wanted. Lots of times I’ve wanted to do something special for you, but every time something came up. Kristal needed a new dress for a pageant, or Jen needed ballet shoes. Lance needed to go to a better soccer camp. My money would only stretch so far.”

Was he saying that his neglect of me was my fault? “Surely you could have managed something for me, if you’d really loved me enough and wanted to make me happy.”

“Jessie, you’re like a grownup who still believes in Santa Claus, and you’re treating me like I’m the one who forgot to mail your list to him. Baby, I work as hard as any man alive. I want to give you and the kids the world, but I’m not capable of supporting you in the style you demand. Maybe it’s best that we do get divorced. This time, try to land a rich husband.”

“All the rich men I know are married. And they cheat on their wives. Carson, did you ever cheat on me?”

He shook his head. “I had offers, but no. I never did. I always thought of you and the kids and wasn’t even tempted.”

He made me feel two inches tall. There wasn’t anything left for us to say. I had to face the children and talk to them before they learned about me from someone else. Kristal was fourteen and knew about sex, but Lance and Jen were innocents without a clue. Somehow, I’d have to find the words to make them understand.

I left the office with Carson. He got into his truck and drove away. I went home. The children were with their nanny. As soon as I came in the door and put my purse down, she handed me her letter of resignation and asked for her final paycheck.

“I can’t work for you anymore, Mrs. Brooks. Everybody knows what kind of woman you are, and my husband said he’s afraid you’ll try to get me to go into prostitution if I keep working for you. I’m sure you can find someone to watch the kids.”

It felt as though everyone was deserting me. I had to take my final lumps, though. How much would the children hate me? Would they even want to see me again? I could stand to lose anything easier than I could give up my children.

Kristal was the first one I talked to. I explained as delicately as I could that I’d done some very bad things in order to get money.

“Mom, I didn’t need all of those dresses and the lessons,” she said. “I only entered the pageants because it made you happy, and I wanted you to be proud of me. I’m sorry that you did bad things just because of me.”

“No, honey, I didn’t do bad things because of you. It wasn’t your fault, Jen’s, or Lance’s. It wasn’t Dad’s fault. It was mine. All mine. I wanted to give you children things I never had.”

“We’d rather have you and Daddy and our family together than to win another trophy or buy new clothes.”

“I’m so sorry. People are going to say things about me, and it’s going to hurt your feelings, but I hope that someday you’ll forgive me.”

“I forgive you now. You’re my mom and I love you. I’m sorry you did bad things, but in Sunday School they teach us that everybody does bad things sometimes and we’re supposed to forgive them.”

There it was—forgiveness. I’d never learned how to forgive my parents for not having the money to give me the advantages I’d hungered for. Would I have wanted my mother to sell her body, or my father to pimp out his coworkers, just so I could take piano lessons? Absolutely not. Carson was right. I was like a grownup who believed in Santa Claus. I thought I deserved to have everything I wanted, and in getting it, I’d lost everything that mattered.

I wanted to die, I hated myself so much. But would that help anyone except me? It would just be a continuation of what I’d done all of my adult life, thinking of my own needs first.

That night I faced a truth that I hated: I hadn’t done things for my children; everything was for me. I was having a second chance at popularity and adoration through their achievements. They’d never wanted to be anything except kids, but I’d pushed them harder and harder to reach goals that only mattered to me.

Somehow, I made it through that night. The next day I explained to Jen and Lance that Daddy wasn’t going to live with us anymore, and that it was because I’d done something so bad that he couldn’t forgive me. They cried and then went quietly to their rooms. I walked around the house that I’d invested so much of Carson’s hard-earned money into and wondered if there was anything in it that mattered.

I’d sacrificed a life most women would envy. My husband loved me, was good to me, and tried to do everything in his power to make me happy—and I hadn’t cared. I had three healthy, smart, sweet children, and didn’t really know any of them. What was Kristal’s favorite movie? Which action figures did Lance enjoy the most? What flavor ice cream did Jen like? I didn’t know, because I had never let them tell me. Every conversation was about this pageant or that dance competition or the next soccer game.

A few months later I had to testify in the divorce hearing of one of the men I’d slept with. I’d never felt such shame as I felt sitting on the witness stand and admitting to my disgusting relationship with another woman’s husband.

Gossip spread so fast that when I pulled into my driveway, the neighbors were all watching. I wondered if I should have a scarlet letter embroidered on all my clothes. When I went inside, I smelled spaghetti cooking and wondered who was making dinner.  The sitter who watched the kids after school couldn’t thaw an ice cube.

I found Carson in the kitchen making his famous dish. “Hey, hope you don’t mind,” he said.

“Of course I don’t mind. This is still your house. We’re not divorced yet, and you have as much right to be here as I do. Actually, you have more.”

“Rumor was that you had to testify today,” he said.

“It was hell.”

“Jessie, people have done worse for reasons less noble. Not that I approve of what you did, but it wasn’t the unpardonable sin.”

“Are you saying you forgive me?”

“I’m saying I’m trying to. Kristal and I had a long talk. I think we’ve raised a missionary. She could be the next Mother Teresa if we were Catholic. Kristal thinks I should work on forgiving you. I’m willing to give it a try.”

“How can you forgive me? I’m the most selfish woman in town. I’ve been a lousy wife and mother, and I’ve broken up homes without giving a second thought to the pain I’d cause the wives of those men. I can’t forgive myself.”

“Then maybe we should all work on it together. As a family.”

I didn’t understand what he was saying. Was he trying to tell me he’d consider coming back? No. That couldn’t be. “What is it you want to do?”

Carson set the spoon down, took one of my hands and held it. “I’m not over what happened, Jessie. It might take a long time, but one thing is for sure: If I’m ever going to get over it, I have to start somewhere. I’d like to move back into the house. We’ll have separate rooms. I can fix up that room we were planning to make into a den. Maybe, in time, we can find our way back to each other.”

I wanted so much to kiss him. I’d never known a hero before, a white knight who rescued damsels in distress. But here was this man, whom I had shattered, offering to forgive me and to work things out. I’d taken him for granted once, but I’d never make that mistake again.

“I do have a few conditions,” he said.

Okay, I thought, here it comes.

“Kristal doesn’t want to do any more pageants. She’d rather work at the recreation center for underprivileged kids. Jen liked her old dance school better, and I can afford it. Lance wants to stick with soccer, but he doesn’t want to go to camp anymore, unless it’s one he picks for himself.”

“That’s really not much to ask.”

Carson smiled. “Jessie, I think you’re finally growing up.”

He was right. I grew up in those months after my shameful exposure. In time, people stopped staring at me, and the other kids stopped teasing my children. It took a lot of work on Carson’s part, but he forgave me. Now we share a marriage that is the most precious thing in my life.

Not many women can say that it took them sixteen years to fall in love with their husbands; not many would want to. But it took me that long because I wasn’t seeing the blessings right before my eyes. I see them now, and I’ll never take them for granted again. I’ve finally forgiven myself, thanks to the love of my family.

Big Little Lies Series Delivers Superstars and Suspense

Woodley-Witherspoon-Kidman in BLL

Big Little Lies (HBO, 9 p.m.), a glossy, new 7-part series about rival moms in ritzy Monterey, California, would be notable if it only had Reese Witherspoon as its star and executive producer, but it also has Nicole Kidman, who co-exec produces, Shailene Woodley, Laura Dern, Zoe Kravitz, Alexander Skarsgard, and Adam Scott rounding out the cast.

Told through the eyes of three mothers – Madeline (Witherspoon), Celeste (Kidman) and Jane (Woodley) – Big Little Lies paints a picture of a town fueled by rumors and divided into the haves and have-nots, exposing the conflicts, secrets and betrayals that compromise relationships between husbands and wives, parents and children, and friends and neighbors.

Reese Witherspoon explained what drew her to the project in the first place: “With this piece I feel like it was such a unique opportunity to have women of every age, of every color, talking about motherhood … that’s the common denominator. Reese Witherspoon -- BLLMotherhood is the great equalizer. Parenthood is a good equalizer, socioeconomically, and everything brings these five different women together in a way that they clash but they also understand and discover each other.”

The pilot (which aired last Saturday the 19th) adapted from Liane Moriarty’s novel, has high-class bickering and behind doors marital tensions, but also at the center of it is a murder that is alluded to but not fleshed out for several episodes. Not only do we not know the culprit (it could be anybody of course); we don’t even know the victim. Woodley’s character is ostensibly at the center, since she’s a young, single mom and a newcomer to town, who is trying to fit in and get along with the privileged mommy group.

Kidman in BLLNicole Kidman was struck by the strength and quantity of female roles in the series: “This piece for me was the story of women that I know, and it was a way which we could go to other women with five great roles that were complicated and deserve to be told. It’s very rare to find five roles in one piece that we’d all jump at a chance to play.”

Co-Exec Producer David E. Kelley (The Practice) adapted the Moriarty best-seller on which the limited series is based, with the setting changed to Monterey from Australia, with Moriarty’s blessing. Big Little Lies is really into the marriage of apparent opposites: congenial and contemptuous, beautiful and ugly, loving and abusive, big and little. Everything with these characters is simmering resentment, very low-key microaggressions, and secrets—there aren’t the big epic takedowns and glasses of water in the face one might be conditioned to expect from a story about rich housewives one-upping each other. It’s all very subtle, and for every dig, there’s a thousand self-deprecating remarks, concessions, and compliments.

Moms with Kids in BLL

From the book:

Sometimes it’s the little lies that turn out to be the most lethal…
A murder…a tragic accident…or just parents behaving badly?  
What’s indisputable is that someone is dead. But who did what?

Big Little Lies follows three women, each at a crossroads:

  • Madeline is a force to be reckoned with. She’s funny and biting, passionate, she remembers everything and forgives no one. Her ex-husband and his yogi new wife have moved into her beloved beachside community, and their daughter is in the same kindergarten class as Madeline’s youngest (how is this possible?). And to top it all off, Madeline’s teenage daughter seems to be choosing Madeline’s ex-husband over her. (How. Is. This. Possible?).
  • Celeste is the kind of beautiful woman who makes the world stop and stare. While she may seem a bit flustered at times, who wouldn’t be, with those rambunctious twin boys? Now that the boys are starting school, Celeste and her husband look set to become the king and queen of the school parent body. But royalty often comes at a price, and Celeste is grappling with how much more she is willing to pay.
  • New to town, single mom Jane is so young that another mother mistakes her for the nanny. Jane is sad beyond her years and harbors secret doubts about her son. But why? While Madeline and Celeste soon take Jane under their wing, none of them realizes how the arrival of Jane and her inscrutable little boy will affect them all.

Zoe Kravitz in BLLBig Little Lies is a brilliant take on ex-husbands and second wives, mothers and daughters, schoolyard scandal, and the dangerous little lies we tell ourselves just to survive.

“It’s so refreshing to spend time with all of these women,” Witherspoon added, giving a nod to her cast for the “collective performance,” going as far to say, “I really feel more strongly than anything I’ve ever done, and this is the greatest ensemble experience I’ve ever had.”

Gorgeously shot, neatly directed and beautifully acted from start to finish, Big Little Lies is an achievement in almost every way. It should get lots of Emmys, unless its superstar leads cancel one another out.

5 Ways He’s Saying “I Love You”

Romantic Hispanic couple in a park

One of the biggest steps in a relationship is when one person decides to say those three little words: No, not “I got food,” the other important words.

Saying “I love you” catapults your relationship into a new level. No longer are you only “in a relationship,” but now you’re in love. Those words hold a severity that can put a lot of pressure on the parties involved.

Once you reach the point where the L-word starts creeping into your mind, there’s a million new things that you start to stress over:

Should I say it first? Why hasn’t he said it? How do I know if he feels the same way?

If your boyfriend hasn’t dropped the L-bomb yet, though it can be tempting to start questioning the sincerity of your relationship, don’t start to worry quite yet. Words are just that—words. They are meaningless if they’re not reinforced through your significant other’s actions.

Even if he hasn’t said that he loves you, there are many different ways he could be showing his love for you—you just have to pay attention.

Here are a few signs that your boyfriend does love you, he just hasn’t told you yet.

  1. Asking About Your Day

Couple deep in conversation

It may seem like common sense, but when someone loves you, they care about your well-being. If your boyfriend, completely unprompted, takes the time to ask you about your day, that’s a good indication that he cares about you.

But not just that.

It’s important that you distinguish between him asking for the sake of conversation and him asking because he genuinely wants to hear the response. If your boyfriend is really falling in love with you, he will listen as you complain about what your coworker said at work, or that project that you need to finish, or what drama is happening between your girlfriends this week.

Maybe he’s not saying “I love you,” but he is saying: I’m invested in this conversation and I’m invested in this relationship. I’m here for the long haul.

  1. Remembering the Little Things

Couple relaxing together at home

You most likely spend a lot of time talking to your significant other, and, in that time, you share a plethora of details: your favorite ice cream flavor, what you’re looking forward to, what your scared of, etc. You may think all that information goes in one ear and out the other, but your boyfriend remembering all the quirky little things about you is a sure sign that he’s feeling the love.

Maybe he calls you right after your big meeting because he remembered the time and that you were anxious about it. Maybe he instinctively grabs your hand during the part of a movie that he knows scared you. It could be as simple as him sending you a picture of something that he knew would make you laugh.

As cliché as it sounds, it’s the little things that count the most.

Maybe he’s not saying “I love you,” but he is saying: I’m paying attention to you and what makes you happy.

  1. Making Sure You Get Home Safe

A smiling girl looking at her mobile phone

Like I said earlier, if he loves you, he cares about your well-being. This means making sure that you are always safe and taken care of.

Just a simple text of “let me know when you get home,” or “did you get home safe?” is a small gesture of love. Your boyfriend can’t always be with you, so taking the time to check in on you shows how much effort he’s putting into your relationship and how much he cares about you.

Similarly, if he checks in to ask if you’ve eaten or if you’ve taken your medicine, he’s making an effort to take care of you.

Maybe he’s not saying “I love you,” but he is saying: I worry about you and want to make sure you’re safe.

  1. Letting You into His Life

Portrait of happy young couple on scooter enjoying road trip

While him listening to you talk about your day can be a sign of his love, telling you about his day can also be a big indicator. If he calls you just to unload some stress from work or tell you a joke he overheard, he’s opening up his life to you and he wants you to be a part of it.

Maybe he lets you in on secrets or starts to open up about his family. Whenever he allows himself to be vulnerable or to let down some of his defenses, he’s showing you that you’re the person he can be himself around.

Maybe he’s not saying “I love you,” but he is saying: I trust you and feel comfortable enough to tell you anything.

  1. Introducing You to His Friends and Family

Group Of Friends Enjoying Meal In Restaurant

To me, this is one of the surest signs that he’s falling in love. This is a huge step in merging your lives together and it can, sometimes, be a make-or-break moment.

If he proudly introduces you to his friends and family, he wants everyone he’s closest to to care about you as much as he does. Put simply, he sees a future with you. If a guy is still unsure of his feelings, he’ll try to keep your relationship quiet. Telling everyone he knows is a big commitment; if you break up, that’s a lot of people who are going to have questions.

Maybe he’s not saying “I love you,” but he is saying: I’m proud that you’re mine and I want everyone to know it.