Hi! I'm Lindsay Ferrier. You might remember me from a blog called Suburban Turmoil. Well, a lot has changed since I started that blog in 2005. My kids grew up, I got a divorce, and I finally left the suburbs for the heart of Nashville, where I feel like I truly belong. I have no idea what the future will hold and you know what? I'm okay with that. Thrilled, actually. It was time for something totally different.
June 21, 2007
This column originally appeared in the Nashville Scene.
“I just don’t know if I’m ready to date again yet,” a recently divorced mommy friend of mine sighed not long ago. “I don’t even know where I’d find a man.”
“How about Library Pete?” I suggested helpfully. “Or The Professor? I know you’ve been wondering what’s under that lab coat.” We both snickered wickedly.
If you’re an urban Nashville mom, you’re probably snickering, too. Library Pete, The Professor and their female counterpart, Mary Mary, all star in the downtown library’s weekly story time, a half-hour children’s program that’s developed a cult following among the stay-at-home moms of Green Hills, Belle Meade and Bellevue. Three times a day on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, the trio entertain scores of preschoolers with a high-energy extravaganza of stories, puppets and songs, while the pert and well-tended moms look on with the kind of rapt devotion they once reserved for Evan Dando.
Some of you story time virgins out there may not be able to imagine what’s so appealing about a trio of librarians singing along to a karaoke machine and playing with hand puppets that boast names like Cedric the Dragon and Tommy Dog. But just wait until you see The Professor juggle an impossible number of balls in an arc that stretches to the ceiling and hear the chortle of delight burst from your Tasmanian Devil of a toddler. You’ll be smitten, I guarantee it. I’ve never invited a mom to join me who hasn’t come back for more, and if some of them are harboring secret fantasies about a Library Pete/Professor sandwich, well, I can’t say I blame them.
“They are local celebrities!” explains local mom and story time junkie Paige La Grone Babcock. “To see The Professor out in public, my son goes nuts.” Paige makes sure her toddler son gets his story time fix almost every week. She was there two weeks ago when Mary Mary delivered some shocking news to the buzzing fans seated before her.
“At the beginning, Mary Mary announced that due to the proposed city budget, the library might have reduced hours beginning in July and would open at 10,” Paige recounted. “That means no 9:30 story time Tuesday or Wednesday.” In fact, Mayor Bill Purcell’s proposed budget cuts library funding by $800,000. If the Metro Council approves it, hours at all branches would have to be shortened and 18 positions eliminated. Maybe Mayor Purcell figured no one would care that the libraries might open an hour later or close on Sundays, but if some local mommies have anything to do with it, he figured wrong. Stiff the city hospital. Slash tourism funding. But don’t f*ck with story time.
When she got home that day, Paige, a self-described “apron string revolutionary” and local coordinator of the activist group Mothers Acting Up, immediately wrote a letter to her local council member, Mike Jameson, pleading with him to reject the library budget cuts and save story time. Next, she sent emails with the news to everyone else she knew. “This is not about me and my kid,” she explained. “It’s about us as representatives of kids and parents everywhere.”
Metro Council member Jim Shulman says the council is getting the message loud and clear. “The library is definitely one of the biggest issues we’re hearing about,” he says, and story time is one of its major selling points.
Shulman sounds like he takes story time seriously, which is good considering that he represents many of the Green Hills MOMS Club members. I can tell you from experience, you don’t want to cross them. “In a $1.6 billion budget,” he says, “surely we can find something to put in for the library.” Good call, Shulman. Now maybe you won’t find a baby doll with its head ripped off on your front doorstep.
The Metro Council will meet next Tuesday to discuss the budget. They have until June 30 to make changes and approve a final version before the fiscal year starts July 1. In the meantime, Paige is hoping Nashville’s moms will dust off their Ann Taylor LOFT capris and do something. “I so hope there will be an uprising of parents,” she says. “I really hope parents will take this as an opportunity to speak out for something they love so much.”
Maybe the mommies will stage a sit-in outside council chambers and sing the famous story time “Rainbow” song over and over again until the council members’ ears bleed. Or maybe they’ll march down Broadway using hand puppets to shout their message of, “1, 2, 3, 4, save story time or we’ll spank you ’til you’re sore!”
Or maybe they’ll at least write to their council members and ask them to restore the library funding to the budget. After all, Paige just informed me that The Professor is married. How much more bad news can these mommies take?
SaveSave
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
>This is my favorite column of your so far and I’ve never even been to story time!
>Thanks for giving this issue ink, Lindsay! I remain hopeful that enough parents will speak up and OUT! I hope you’ll encourage your readers to email the budget committee, even IF they’ve already emailed their council person. I’ve been told *that’s* how we are best heard! Here’s the email address: MetroCouncilBudgetAndFinanceCommittee@nashville.govI SAHMs are joined in this fight by parents and lovers of literature / community / culture of ALL stripes.
>Thanks for bringing this up! I, too, was dismayed when Mary Mary made the announcement.One side note: As someone who likes to read your blog and someone who has met you once, long ago, during your “playgroup investigation”, can you please stop encouraging the zip code lines in this city with your articles and blogs? I’m not a green hills mom. I’m not a Belle meade mom.. I’m a mom, who lives in Nashville (doesn’t really matter where) who goes to storytime every week – along with other moms who don’t live in neighborhoods that make this issue important. I know it’s a small thing but, ultimately, one of the reasons there is such a territorial type feel to raising kids in this city is because people (sometimes without even realizing it) won’t stop the crazy zip code madness. I know that wasn’t the point of the article, buuuut, just sayin’.
>Why do libraries get the bum rap? Two of our counties here in Oregon (Jackson and Josephine Counties) had all of their libraries completely closed down. That’s 19 libraries in all. Closed down. For good. The one ray of light for them is that a local Storytellers Guild has taken over Story Time at the community centers so that the kids still have something to look forward to each week.http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/stories/index.ssf?/base/news/1182309935147430.xml&coll=7
>http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/stories/index.ssf?/base/news/1182309935147430.xml&coll=7 Not sure why, but the link didn’t post right the first time
>Okay, the link is just not going to work. If you go to http://www.oregonian.com and type in “libraries shut down” in the search field, it will bring up the story.
>Next time, pls. accompany b**g with picture of mayor with red ears.
>Thanks for the heads up Lindsay! I missed that storytime where Mary Mary made the announcement, but I have already sent my email to the Budget & Finance Committee. Those storytimes are GREAT! That would be a HORRIBLE loss. As a mom that LOVES free entertainment (especially free educational entertainment), I’m all for supporting this cause.
>Holy Crapola!!!!! Nashville has it going on.
>I’m hoping to see pics of the performers!
>Nashville is the place to be!Great article.
>LOL – This was a wonderful post. You can’t mess with story time, nap time or snack time. I love my kids!
>As a father of one who is currently beginning to appreciate storytime, I am glad to see you take on the fight and plight of the futures of our libraries. Budget cuts should not be a term used in any program that affects the growth and positive development of our children. Best of luck in your situation and to all of you out there willing to stand up for what is right 🙂