| While out on the town
with Stanford, Carrie runs into a woman who identifies
herself as the person who went out with Aidan post-Carrie.
The woman, Nina Katz, makes a scary face implying Carrie
really did a number on Aidan.
Miranda is a sleepless cranky mess. Baby Brady won't
stop screaming and crying, leaving mommy Miranda at
her wits end. Charlotte's screaming problem comes in
the form of her ex-mother-in-law Bunny who is fighting
tooth and nail to get Charlotte out of the MacDougal
apartment. Charlotte hires a fierce lawyer to get Bunny
off her back.
Carrie anxiously reads the New York Times review of
her new book. She gets a rave review but she's bothered
by the writer's characterization of her having a life
"where the men are disposable." She worries
that Aidan might also feel that way. She wonders why
we only believe the negative things people say about
us.
Frustrated mama Miranda is saved by the kindness of
a stranger - her neighbor - who brings her a special
vibrating baby chair that works like magic. Even more
magical is a surprise visit from Samantha who offers
to baby-sit while Miranda takes her appointment with
a top hairstylist. When the vibrating chair fails to
keep Brady at bay, Samantha pulls out her brand-new
vibrator, and Brady goes back to happy baby land.
Carrie is obsessing over the bad things Nina Katz might
be saying and thinking about her. She meets with Steve
and asks how Aidan is doing. Steve says he's fine now
but that he was devastated and depressed for quite a
while. Carrie runs into Nina again and defends her relationship
and break-up behavior with Aidan. Right after she says
it, Carrie realizes that the critic she was most afraid
of - and the one whose opinion counts most - is herself.
- from HBO.com
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