The Ten Best Days of My Life

Table of Contents
A PLUME BOOK
THE TEN BEST DAYS OF MY LIFE
ADENA HALPERN is the author of
Target Underwear and a Vera Wang Gown: Notes from a Single Girl's Closet
, a memoir that was based on her popular “Haute Life” essays for the back page of
Marie Claire
magazine. In addition to
Marie Claire
, Adena has written for
Daily Variety
and the
New York Times
. She has a bachelor of fine arts degree in dramatic writing from New York University and a master of fine arts degree in screenwriting from the American Film Institute. A proud Philadelphia native, she resides in Los Angeles with her husband, television and screenwriter Jonathan Goldstein.
PLUME
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Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published by Plume, a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
First Printing, May 2008
Copyright © Adena Halpern, 2008
All rights reserved
REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Halpern, Adena.
The ten best days of my life / Adena Halpern.
p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-4406-3836-7
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For my husband, Jonathan, my seventh heaven
Acknowledgments
To Whom It May Concern:
I wish to thank my editor, the divine Allison Dickens, for her passionate support and expertise in shaping this book and to everyone at Plume who had a hand in seeing it come to fruition.
I would also like to thank the amazing Brian DeFiore. Brian is the agent every writer hopes to have.
A standing ovation of gratitude for my dear friend Eric Brooks for his astute legal expertise.
To Erin Moore, Susan Swimmer, and Lesley Jane Seymore, who I will never stop thanking.
And finally, with all my heart, I thank my family and friends on both heaven and earth for your endless love and, most especially, for contributing to my own ten best days.
With my deapest gratitude,
Adena Halpern
aka:
Arlene and Barry Halpern's daughter
David Halpern's sister
Samantha Chaikin-Halpern's sister-in-law
Michael Halpern's sister
Jonathan Goldstein's wife and truest love
THE TEN BEST DAYS OF MY LIFE BY
Alexandra Joan Dorenfield
Knocking On Heaven's Door
I died today, which is so weird. I honestly thought I was immortal.
It's not that I ever took fantastic care of myself. I did go to the gym three times a week (okay, two . . . okay, one or none on a lot of occasions). I ate well. I was very conscious of my figure (though I might have substituted Doritos for something more substantial more times than I should have). I kind of drank a lot on weekends and sometimes on weekdays (like last night and maybe the night before . . . I can't remember). I always got my full eight hours of sleep (with an Ambien). Still, though, it never occurred to me that one day I'd actually die, be dead, not be alive anymore, ever. You know what I mean?
Anyway, none of that matters at all. If I knew how, and had accepted the fact that I was going to end up here, I could have smoked and drank and done all kinds of drugs. I would never have gone to the gym or to the doctor for yearly checkups. All that worrying about what I was doing with my life was pointless. All the complaining to my girlfriends about the direction my life was headed was pointless. All those times my parents sat me down and told me they were worried about where my life was heading were pointless. I should have slept with Steve (and without protection) before he dumped me instead of trying to look virginal and telling him that I never slept with someone until we'd been dating for a month. On the other hand, I feel so content that I maxed out my credit cards on clothes and shoes and bags. I'm so thrilled that I never saved a cent for retirement.
So, here's how I died.
The good news is that it wasn't a Mack truck that struck and killed me at four o'clock this morning, because I would never want to be an old joke. The bad, pathetic news is that it was a MINI Cooper. I can just hear my best friend, Penelope, laughing through her tears at the thought of my fat ass (which to be honest is not that fat, but you know how best friends are with each other) couldn't cushion the blow of a MINI Cooper.
In the end it was simple:
A red MINI Cooper hit me at about four in the morning as I was crossing Fairfax Boulevard in Los Angeles, with Peaches. Peaches is my miniature beagle. I normally don't walk Peaches at four in the morning, but that was when her bowel obstruction finally decided to clear. She was whimpering beside my bed for a good forty-five minutes before I finally got up to take her for the walk. I still feel bad about that. Peaches is such a good, sweet, wonderful dog. But you know that feeling when you're sleeping and nothing else in the world matters, even if your dog is holding it in despite a painful obstruction. Get up to take her out?
Obviously, I finally did take her out. I'm thrilled that I was tired enough to fall asleep in the clothes I was wearing the night before, my J Brand jeans and my favorite black, sexy cowl-necked sweater that drapes over my left shoulder, instead of throwing on some old sweats and a dirty T-shirt (I'll get to the why of that later). Anyway, Peaches died too, and she's here with me.
I feel awful about that, too. Little Peaches didn't deserve to die just as she was getting some relief.
Isn't it weird that that's how it all went down? Can you imagine all the things you'd do differently if you knew that a MINI Cooper was going to take you out at twenty-nine years old, at four in the morning, while you were walking your dog? I keep thinking about that. People up here keep telling me that's the way life goes. Would I have done anything differently? Yeah, no, probably not. Maybe I wouldn't have been so nuts with my teeth. I really brushed and flossed a lot because my grandmother told me on her deathbed to take care of my teeth because dentures are a bitch. I might have seen all the sights I meant to see, like the pyramids or the Sistine Chapel or the Mona Lisa. I grew up in Philadelphia and I never saw that Liberty Bell. I should have stayed with my tenth-grade class when we went to New York City to see the Statue of Liberty, instead of running off to Bergdorf's with Penelope. I probably wouldn't have had all those “age defying” facials that cost $90 a pop and the twice-a-year Botox shots. I definitely would not have been so adamant with the sunscreen.
I know I should be really upset about my parents losing a child and my friends losing me. But you feel serenely okay about everything when you're up here. I don't think they give us any drugs, but that's what it feels like. You feel like you're hooked up to an Ativan drip. I asked if I could go down and look in on everyone, even one last time, but all the people here say there's nothing I can do right now. They keep telling me that when my family and friends die, when they get here, they'll see that the whole mourning thing was pointless. Isn't that mean? They tell me that it has nothing to do with heaven. It has to do with the process of growing and learning on earth. Isn't that just awful? I know my parents are beside themselves right now. I really wish I could do something, scream out, “It's okay! I'm fine!” Truthfully, I miss them already. I mean, it's been a pretty busy day with dying and coming here, but I would really like to make sure they know how much I love them. People who die in accidents, like that terrible mining disaster, get to write notes to their families, but I never had that chance. What the hey? That just doesn't seem fair, though I'm glad for those miners and their families. At least someone's got some kind of peace.

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