From: "Jim L. Ellingson" <jellings(a)me.umn.edu>
To: wine(a)thebarn.com
Subject: [wine] Terry Thiese, Bubbles, Scotch
User-Agent: Mutt/1.5.4i
Today Thursday Terry Theise. 6:30 pm at Millenium
Details and Flights (16 wines) on the
Surdyks.com website
$40.
Tomorrow. Carolyn's graduation party at Chez Gregory.
please coordinate w/ Warren and Ruth.
Thursday June 7th, 2007 at 6:30pm
Millennium Hotel -
Aperitif
Item # Name
15221 Milan Brut NV
Flight #1 Austrians
21023 Hirsch Gruner Veltliner Heiligenstein 2005
11961 Gobelsberg Riesling Urgestein 2005
11966 Alzinger Ries Hollerin Smaragd 2003
Flight #2 A Look at 2004
17473 Diel Dorsheimer Burgberg Kabinett 04
97458 Minges Gleisweiler Holle Kabinett 04
64386 Muller-Catoir Gimmeldinger Mand Kab 04
Flight #3 Cool 2005s
95061 Christoffel Erdener Treppchen Kabinett
27771 Loewen Leiwener Klostergarten Kabinett
95094 Weingart Schloss Furstenberg Kabinett
Flight #4 Great 2005s
11927 Deinhard Deidesheimer Kalkofen Spt
17478 Karlsmuhle Lorenzhofer Spt
95087 Leitz Rudesheimer Berg Shlossberg Spt
Flight #5 A Look at 2003
11925 Diel Dorsheimer Pittermanchen Spatlese 03
15056 Spreitzer Oestricher Lenchen 03
15101 AJ Adam Tholey Auslese 03
Surdyk's Everyday Low Price: $40.00
When: Thursday, June 07, 2007, 6:30pm - 9:00pm
June 7, 2007
Listen Up, Everybody: I.m in Menopause
By ELIZABETH HAYT
IT was 8 a.m. on a Friday and Deb Caruana, 51, a personal trainer in Manhattan, had just
finished working out with two of her clients, Jackie Greenberg, an interior designer in
her 30s, and her father, Ronald Greenberg, 59, an art dealer.
The three were chatting when Ms. Caruana, who is in menopause, suddenly blurted out, .I.m
having a hot flash..
The conversation lurched to a halt, followed by uneasy chuckling.
.It was awkward, but then it was funny,. Ms. Greenberg said. .I did a double-take: .Did
she really just say that in front of my father?. .
Ms. Caruana, though, was unashamed. .Why hide it?. she said later of the episode, which
occurred in March. .I kind of call my menopause my .red badge of courage.. People laugh.
They.re never offended..
Thirty-five years ago, television viewers were shocked by a landmark episode of .All in
the Family. when the normally meek Edith Bunker wreaked havoc on everyone around her
because of a condition then delicately referred to as .the change of life.. But these
days, among people of a certain age, references to menopause are just as likely to be
batted across a dinner table as comments about the bouquet of the merlot.
.Five years ago, women would have kept that to themselves,. said Mr. Greenberg, who had
been amused by Ms. Caruana.s immodesty. .Women who used to feel inhibited don.t anymore.
They are honest about things they were never forthright about before..
More than that, though, many women are flaunting their menopausal symptoms. If they are
not erupting in the literal heat of the moment, they are flinging wisecracks, adopting a
single-sex argot comprised of wry, offhanded quips and punctuated by knowing winks and
nudges.
.The wink-wink reaction is a way of saying, .I.ve been there, girlfriend,.. said Jeanie
Linders, 58, the writer and lyricist of .Menopause: The Musical.. The farcical play, with
songs like .Stayin. Awake/Night Sweatin. . and .Drippin. and Droppin,. . made its debut in
New York in 2001 and has since been produced in 150 cities and 9 countries, with an
audience of 8 million to date.
And the ribbing is not restricted to friends. Last December, Beverly Mahone, 49, of
Durham, N.C., had a hot flash in a backed-up checkout line at the supermarket. Madly
pulling at the front of her blouse to cool off, fuming aloud about the slowness of the
cashier, Ms. Mahone said she exclaimed to the woman behind her, ..Girl, I.m having a
moment here and she.s got to hurry so I can get the hell out of here!.
.I know what you.re going through,. the woman commiserated. Then, two women ahead of Ms.
Mahone caught sight of her frantically fanning herself and laughed sympathetically.
Afterward, she said, in the parking lot, the group debated synthetic hormone replacement
therapy versus herbal remedies, and Ms. Mahone, the author of .Whatever! A Baby Boomer.s
Journey into Middle Age,. passed out her business card to the women who promised to buy
her book.
.It opens up a whole dialogue,. Ms. Mahone said. .We.re laughing and making women who feel
less comfortable know that it.s O.K. We.ve embraced it. It.s our exclusive club..
In New York last February, a similar impromptu bonding session occurred at the Park Avenue
office of Dr. Alan Matarasso, a plastic surgeon. Four women in their late 40s to mid-50s,
all strangers, sat wordlessly in the waiting room until one, Joanna Bonaro, 42, an
actress, was called up to fill out paperwork.
She began chatting with the office manager, Lisa Holderby, 46, who mentioned that she had
recently had a hysterectomy, which can trigger menopause. Coincidentally, Ms. Bonaro had
undergone one, too. Within minutes, the two other women chimed in.
.We started talking about hot flashes and having to carry around extra T-shirts because of
the sweating,. Ms. Holderby said.
She remembered when these conversations were so unheard of that mothers were even mum
about the subject with their daughters.
But, according to the United States Census Bureau, some 21 million women are between the
ages of 45 and 59, the span during which menopause usually starts and ends. They make up
nearly 20 percent of all women in the United States and almost 7 percent of the total
American population.
It.s hardly unusual, then, to overhear a middle-age woman grousing about a restaurant.s
lack of air-conditioning . in the dead of winter.
And given today.s openness and even exhibitionism . including tell-all memoirs, diaristic
blogging and YouTube stardom . a personal condition that is common and natural is no
reason for discretion, many women say. Indeed, as far more private matters . erectile
dysfunction, enlarged prostates, sexually transmitted diseases . are served up on sitcoms
and in commercials, it hardly seems daring to air one.s menopausal memory lapses.
At the same time, the market is flooded with cutesy merchandise: refrigerator magnets,
mugs, T-shirts and tote bags that say things like .I.m still hot, it just comes in
flashes.. There is even a board game called .Hotflash!.
Whether such novelties are the fuel or fallout of the new candor is difficult to figure.
In any case, women are striking up plucky repartees to solicit support, deflect
embarrassment or to take the sting out of an experience that can be frightening,
uncomfortable and overwhelming.
.Humor is a great way to dull the jagged edges of menopause,. said the comedian Roseanne
Barr, 54, who joked about it on her TV show in the 90s. .Humor makes everything that.s
big, smaller. You can first recognize it, then you name it and then you manage it..
But for some women, smirking at a sweat storm dilutes the seriousness of their woes. .When
I.m having these symptoms, I don.t understand it and when they come back you.re mired in
it and it.s kind of scary,. said Lee Ann Jaffee, 50, a New York real estate agent. .I
don.t think there.s anything funny about it. It.s a tough time..
And some people have expressed concern that the broadcasting of menopause can backfire,
reinforcing ageist and sexist stereotypes by playing into the notion that women are at the
mercy of biology.
.Women are still in the minority in companies,. said Betty Spence, the president of the
National Association for Female Executives. .They stand out more than men. Women are more
cautious about speaking out in general. They keep their heads down as far as menopause
goes..
Still, some 15 years after Gail Sheehy.s .The Silent Passage. became a best seller, some
women are defying workplace and social conventions and becoming downright garrulous.
At the North Suburban Library District in Illinois, nearly half of the 40 female employees
are in what they call the .hot zone.. At the Roscoe branch of the library, some have taken
over a computer room that is chilled to a bracing 64 degrees, dubbing it the .Hot Flash
Room..
.We all think it.s funny,. said Melody Newton, 56, a clerk. .It.s like a group thing.
Everybody is real open about it..
Recently, Diane Jacobson, 48, a circulation clerk, tacked a poster on the room.s door of
.The Hot Flash Club,. a novel by Nancy Thayer about four menopausal friends.
But not everyone finds it amusing.
.I didn.t have a clue the women were using the room to cool off,. said Peter Caton, 34,
the library.s network administrator who works out of the room. .I only found out it was
the .Hot Flash Room. after they put up the poster. I was shocked and kind of offended.
It.s my office. If I was an older man and I put an erectile dysfunction ad on your
cubicle, how would you feel?.
Some women say they feel snubbed. .You.re not part of the group unless you.re in
menopause,. said Regina Blackmon, 45, a legal assistant at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton
& Garrison in New York. But now that she is, she said, .we send e-mails . menopause
jokes and cartoons . to each other. A lot of chat goes on in the ladies room when we do
our hair. It.s a secret underground..
Some women confessed menopause can come in handy, the middle-age version of claiming
menstrual cramps to get out of gym class.
.A hot flash is an opportunity to get away with saying stuff that you wouldn.t otherwise
be able to do,. said Ms. Mahone, the Durham author. .You can curse at people. That.s your
moment to get even. Afterward, you can apologize and they.ll understand and feel sorry for
you..
Her husband, Nathaniel Gibbs, 50, said he has been on the receiving end. .It.s like a
built-in excuse for everything,. he said. .If she forgets something or something goes
wrong, her final trump card is, .Well, I.m in menopause.. .
.That stops me dead,. he said. .You accept your loss and move on. It.s like a jungle movie
when the guys come upon a bunch of heads on sticks that mark a taboo territory. That.s my
wife. Nobody beyond this point..
But the topic now knows no limits, even in the most unlikely setting. Lest there be any
doubt, consider this: At the memorial service last fall for Ann Richards, the former Texas
governor, her friend, Liz Smith, the gossip columnist, recounted for an audience of
luminaries . including the Clintons . the night in 2005 Ms. Richards brought up the M word
at a gala.
In an e-mail message, Ms. Smith said that the event inaugurated Women.s Voices for Change,
an organization promoting positive attitudes toward women over 40 and menopause in
particular. Among the few male guests at the gala, nicknamed the Menopause Ball, was
Vernon Jordan, the power broker and lawyer.
.I don.t think Vernon had ever expressed any interest in menopausal women before that
night,. Ms. Smith remembered saying in her eulogy.
Millions of people watching C-Span .fell out of seats laughing,. Ms. Smith wrote,
recalling the reaction to her anecdote. .They weren.t laughing about menopause. They were
laughing that menopause was out of the closet and dragging along for laughs the likes of
Vernon Jordan. Now that.s progress!.
--
------------------------------ *
* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, tel: 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *