Friday, June 29, 2007

we're half awake in a fake empire

What happened is what happens every day. I get up, get ready, go to work. Some mornings I pick raspberries in the backyard, or play with the cats more, or open the laptop while I eat breakfast and start to savour the cocktail of websites that I usually read during the day.

For the past few days I've been shutting down, staying home, doing less. All of my muscles ached on Monday and Tuesday, my tongue was oddly swollen, and I felt like I was getting sick.

Well I paid my dues and last night I went out. I went straight over to Donna's house from work, and we played with the four-week-old kittens for two hours. Donna brought them out in a towel-draped crate: a box of kittens! Such a thing is nearly a religious relic.

We tore ourselves away to eat dinner on NE Alberta and walk around a dampened Last Thursday. Then we picked up Erik and went to see the National at Berbati's Pan. The performance restored some of my faith in going out to see live music-- they changed the songs just enough but did a good job with their instruments. Is it more disappointing to see a band play their songs straight from the recordings, or just not sound as talented in person? At any rate, I had a great evening and Donna's placid lake presence left me feeling calm this morning, even when my alarm went off less than five hours after I went to bed.

This morning in the shower I theorized that perhaps our synapses wear out with time, and that is why the emotions of our youth fade from sharp melodrama to the slow tides of ocean depths. Technically, synapses strengthen and grow with use, though, but it wasn't a very scientific idea to begin with. I'll see what I come up with tomorrow morning when I wake up extra early for a long run, after Dan & Abby's wedding tonight.

Monday, June 25, 2007

weekend log

Friday after work I went for a run, and then we had Aspen & Mae over for pizzas on the grill. Yes, on the grill. We sat outside as dusk fell down around us, drinking wine & beer and laughing at the antics of the cats-- safely in the house and away from Mae's allergies.

Saturday morning we went to the farmers market, I worked in the garden, and then Erik and I worked together to make riblet panini on the grill. I was so excited to use Alton Brown's foil-covered-brick trick to compact the sandwich. Next time I'll preheat the bricks and it will be even better.

Erik went off to Dan's bachelor party, and I went to my favorite garden store, Garden Fever, to buy groundcover plants for various bald spots in the yard. I also bought hazelnut shells to spread in the tiny, difficult garden bed between the back door and garage; I discovered that it is the neighborhood cats' litterbox.

After spreading the mulch I rushed over for Abby's bachelorette party, which was billed as featuring a "striptease class." No details of that to follow, except that I did have fun, I discovered that some things still do embarrass me, and I still got up at 7am the next morning to go for a 13 mile run.

It was an icky, cold, rainy, painful run. I felt completely wrecked afterwards, and spent the afternoon working on my thrift store glass garden sculpture while watching "Tenacious D in the Pick of Destiny" with Erik.

I made a big fancy Indian dinner, Ted came over, and we ate in the backyard.

Friday, June 22, 2007

ISBS

Salon.com publishes weekly highlights from their forums; this week is a particularly wonderful piece about dandelions, extolling their virtues and power of symbolism.


Aspen showed me this upcoming collection of short films by a great artist: Dave Mckean's Keanoshow.

Leaves are shivering outside in the wind, a rain dance that will bring clouds down on our heads. Last night I sat in the big hammock in my little backyard, dwarfed by rope and plants and clouds, watching the sky jealously as it fell dark at 10pm. Now I'm filled with the knowledge of days getting shorter again and I feel it in my guts-- deep in my intestine, although perhaps that's TMI. I mean, I don't have Irritable Summer Bowel Syndrome or anything, but I feel it deep in my center of gravity. It makes me unbalanced. It's a solstice hangover, the payment without the payload.

I am so tired and out of sorts today.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

weekend log

Friday I gave Cory a ride home and went for a run. Erik & I picked up Josh & Tiffany, and we ate dinner at Por Que No on N Mississippi before going to the Architecture in Helsinki show at the Wonder Ballroom. I ran into the superheroishly named A. Storm, my replacement at my previous job. He was light and humorous, everything one could hope for in running into someone from previous employment that didn't end well. The show was great, and with Tiffany's enthusiastic encouragement, we danced the whole time. The opener was even enjoyable-- an 80s throwback trio of two interpretive dancers and a singer who are probably way too young to remember much of that decade.

Saturday we rose from the bed like zombies to the klaxon alarm at 4:45am. We left the house just barely before 5:30am, at which time Julie had convinced us to be in Tigard for the Festival of Balloons for the first launch. The balloons didn't go up as scheduled due to weather (even the slightest breeze can push them off course) but they were all set up and inflated in order to dry out from the previous day. It was like a visceral dream from childhood to wander among them, watching the bright colors unfold and grow, shapes the wrong size in the early morning.

As we stood around between the floating behemoths an announcement was made that one of the balloons would be giving tethered rides. We happened to be standing next to it, and so we signed up-- the first ones in line.

My next morning task was to replace my lost drivers license at the DMV express in Lloyd Center. It went pretty well, although my photo reflects my comatose state unlike my previous photo, which showed my joy at moving to Oregon.

I gardened for a while, and then met up with John for two short waterfall hikes in the Columbia Gorge. The first one, Wahclella, I had done before and the second, Elowah, got too rainy, windy and muddy so we didn't get too close to the falls.

Julie came over and we went for a pedicure business meeting. Yes, that was my idea. Afterwards we walked around Hawthorne a bit and got tea & books at Powells. Later, we got takeout from Saigon Kitchen and I sure as hell can't remember where the rest of the evening went.

Sunday morning my usual running crew met earlier than usual due to special request by the two sadist earlybirds among us. We ran 14 miles-- my first long run in a month since I'd been gone the past three weekends in a row. I met Ted and two of his coworker friends for "breakfast" at Paradox; they had gone out on the BarFly bus the night before and were fun of good stories from it. Julie came over and we worked in the garden and went to the thriftstore, where I picked up more glass for my vertical garden sculpture. Erik and I went over to his parents' house for dinner, and then I went out with Shetha to take photos of public fountains downtown. The Salmon Street Springs was top on her list, and we were excited to see that it was on as we drove up. After parking and walking over, it had turned off, but we still managed to see a few interesting things.

Just writing this has exhausted me all over again. Yesterday was the first "brick" of the season with the Luna Chix-- a bike and immediate run workout. I got home late and spent some time watering garden beds and picking raspberries. Hoping to find peace.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Eight Random Things

about myself, for Eric.

1. I took piano lessons for eight years and then switched to guitar, at which point I started biting my nails (since they had to be short, suddenly).

2. When I was eight I had a story titled "The Last Unicorn" published in a children's writing magazine. I don't remember the name of the magazine.

3. I saw a UFO.

4. I have owned four pairs of jeans in my life-- one black and one blue pair of Palmettos in junior high, a $180 pair that was 75% off (seven years ago), and a cheap, looser pair from H&M last year.

5. Two things make me cry-- other people crying, and roadkill.

6. I have lived in twelve different places, and all of them were between the ages of 17 to 25 [Ed note: does not include stints being without a place to live].

7. I have only dated southpaw guys.

8. After a lot of rumination, I think that walking is the most interesting activity in the world.

I am tagging Donna, Aspen, and Wenchie.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

communication breakdown, baby

In moving all entries from Myspace over to Blogspot, the latter grew suspicious of me and now I must type out a security word verification for each entry. What, don't many people post fifty entries in two days?

Reading back over the past few months, I noticed that I tend to write about three things: nature, having a boggled mind, and transcripts of goings-on. I'm fairly happy with that. It just about spans my daily experience.

Yesterday Erik and I had an odd lapse in communication. He left the house earlier than he told me, so I couldn't have him take my change of clothes. I was already late, so I drove to OMSI to meet for a run, instead of running there and getting some mileage in. On the way I called him to make sure that he would still pick up something for me to eat during the movie. It was during the call that I learned that we were meeting at a mall twelve miles away, instead of OMSI, to see Spiderman 3 on an IMAX screen.

I went for a short run, took off towards the theater, and called Erik back. He was bewildered, wondering where I was. Somehow he didn't realize that I went for a run, but he had a movie ticket and dinner waiting for me. When I arrived at the movie theater he was a bit mad at me for being late, but we scooted into the theater with only a few minutes missed. The dinner, unfortunately, didn't turn out as well as the movie. I opened the warm, greasy box in the dark and between frame flickers saw my nemesis: cheese.

Argh, cheese! Great blanketer of flavor and disguiser of other tastes. Erik had insisted on no cheese, but this often goes awry when ordering takeout. I sat through the movie, hungry. Afterwards we returned the food and got a new order, but it was 10pm and too late for dinner.

Today I had a mini panic attack (and the phrase "mini-pani" popped into my head, an odd-humored joke on the annoying, cutesy term "mani-pedi") thinking of what Kids These Days will do when they're old enough to want to buy their first house. I make decent money and often worry about making house payments on my 1924 crapbox. How will my nephews and friends' kids make it? I don't even have children, and I'm worried about them. Yet another sign of true worrywartdom.

Monday, June 11, 2007

a new york weekend

After work on Thursday I drove straight downtown. Anna had arranged a small gathering of running buddies for Sara's birthday (the big three-oh, as they say) at Henry's. Argh, the Brewery Blocks in Portland-- it's the Pearl reaching out to tentatively touch downtown. After walking through the main part of the restaurant and working through the tanned-body business-casual crowd of the bar, I went outside to call everyone I knew who might be there, to tell me where they were sitting. I went in to ask the hosts if they had reservations for Sara or Anna, and ended up accidentally finding the group when I went to try the back entrance to the bar. It was a very pleasant get-together seeing some people I haven't talked to in quite a while.

We broke early, and I still had time to clean, take out trash, plant the last of the seedlings I started in my basement, and water the yard. I did laundry, finally packed, and Julie took us to the airport.

I could give the transcript list of what we did in New York, here, but other people's lists are never as fascinating as one's own. I will say that we landed at JFK at 8:30am and took a cab in to Tribeca. Instead of taking a nap at my cousin Kelley's house after the sleepless flight, we showered and headed right out. We zigzagged everywhere below 34th Street, and didn't return til our dinner appointment.

As with Vancouver BC two weeks ago, we went to walk around. New York is a feeling that you breathe through your skin as you try to visually take in everything around you. Possibility everywhere in the sticky air made thicker with all of those people wearing articles of clothing whose origins you can't fathom, tiny apartments with lacquered-over hardwood details hidden above crumbling storefronts, bricks in tall buildings that may not exist because no one notices them.

Walking around New York is also vastly different depending on whether you're on a street or an avenue. Avenues are what you see in all of the photos and tourist brochures. They're wider than dreams and lined with big stores. They're like miles of red carpet, rolled out to lead to those famous skyscrapers. Streets are New York's secret. They're quiet and residential, charming in their quirky stoops and shop fronts. The air is lived-in. You can feel at home, walking a long crosstown block.

I think it was Saturday night when Erik and I were strolling one such street, maybe walking the dog (Julie's cousin Kim's, Berlin), and the wind picked up the scent of rain just hinting at breaking the edge off the humidity. The back of my mouth had a sudden tang, and I knew that my eyes were about to tear up. It was the breeze of my youth, early summers in Maryland. At that moment, I wanted to move back to New York, and in my desire I believed that I could make it work this time for Erik.

It was a beautiful moment, and then it was gone. We had a great time, too little of it spent with loved ones, and then a consumerism overload panic hit us early Sunday. Mine hit in the subterranean H&M on Broadway-- the low-- and resounded in the multi-story, glittering, white glassy vastness of a brand new Japanese tshirt chain store-- the high. After that we wandered, listless, and waited to leave. Returning to the quiet green backwaters of Portland never sounded so good.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

to sleep, perchance to dream

Airport, leaving, the part I hate. I'm disoriented a bit from the wine, and with my glasses I can't see well. I have impressions of people rather than the details of their appearance. Across from me is an older tweaker couple-- she with fried hair out horizontal in a shapeless oversize hot pink top and a new foot tattoo, he balding with huge high hightop sneakers, a fanny pack and a really deep laugh. The sounds of one-sided cellphone conversations, planes moving outside, and luggage crashing through metal detectors all sound sinister. Erik's falling asleep in drifts, listening to music through headphones. The alcohol and time have already made me sleepy, but I know how my mind will resist it. When do I take the Diphendydramine? Should I take this blue pill? Will I be out of it when we arrive in New York?

I am such a worrywart. As Cory says, I'm fretting.

kitchen science

We leave tonight for New York, and as usual we don't have plans. I love that about returning to places I used to call home. You can show up, no list of things to do, stay with friends or family, and visit old haunts. Surely we will end up ambling down St Marks, eating at Red Bamboo and Crif Dog, Kate's Joynt, Zen Palate, the cheap bubble tea place named only in Chinese on Canal St... If all of my favorite places seem food-related, it's because they are.


Food is a huge part of my life, but it wasn't always. Growing up, my mom's cooking was not particularly good, punctuated by instances of true mealtime horror. It was a treat when my dad cooked his microwave gourmet meals-- baked beans with hot dog pieces or turkey and mashed potato sandwiches.

I can't think of a distinct time when food became so important to me, but there were at least three key influences. The first is Nate Cook, a unique, energetic friend in high school who opened my eyes to so many things. He lived just off Sligo Creek Park, he had his own car plastered with bumper stickers, and he played drums. He also introduced me to cilantro, the unmapped and unlighted roads through Rock Creek from Maryland into DC, and the now big-time Spanish tapas restaurant Jaleo.

During a summer of travel in college, I spent a week or two outside of Watsonville, CA, crashing with a group of people picked for a special marine science internship. One of the guys, whose name I can't remember but might be John, was an enthusiastic cook and came up with a plan whereby we'd all pitch in to buy fresh ingredients at the farmers market, and he would cook. The only meal I remember is an asparagus fritata, but something about his zeal for creative dishes really rubbed off on me. I think I may have claimed to the group to also be a good cook, which would have been a total fabrication. After leaving Watsonville for San Francisco, I spent the rest of the summer unable to afford more than one meal a day, eating a lot of French bread and tomatoes from the grocery store.

My final and most evident culinary influence is giving up dairy products. When I returned from that summer of travel and got a job as a short-order cook in a health food cafe, I had money again to eat ice cream every day. My usual was a scoop of rocky road and one of chocolate peanut butter stripe from Baskin Robbins. I was so enamored of ice cream that when my second job-- working the late shift at one of the university dining halls-- started back up for the school year, the student manager bet that I couldn't go without dairy for two weeks. Being a stubborn lover of challenges, I took him up on it. At the same time, I had to come up with daily specials for the cafe, so I read many of the cookbooks that were also sold there.

Now I have my own kitchen, garden, and local farmers market; I don't smoke, so my tastebuds are more awake; and I run so I eat a lot more. Food is a favorite subject, so I could go on and on, but one of my far-off, dreamiest dreams is to have my own cozy tea house with no set menu, a relaxing atmosphere, and customers who don't talk to me very much. I'll be in the kitchen.

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

pointless thought

For days this thought has run through my head: show me a room of truly intelligent programmers, and I'll show you a room (mostly full, and I debated myself on percentage here) of people whose deepest desire is to produce a great work of literature. You think they're all just computer nerds, but a surprising number of them truly care about our literary canon. Really.

Monday, June 4, 2007

empty boxes

Empty can mean two things: fear or opportunity.


The first box is always the hardest to fill, when you're moving. Take a deep breath, pour a glass of wine, brace yourself to sit down cross-legged on the floor in front of the first, yawning, empty cardboard box. What stays with you? What is thrown away? What is kept but packed away carefully, knowing that it will not see the light of day for some time to come? Where do you begin?

My mother moved to Port Angeles, WA, this weekend. She has lived in England for the past eleven years, and this was the first time she had been to the Olympic Peninsula, the second time to the Pacific Northwest, and the fifth time to the west coast. She recounted these statistics aloud during the long drive that my brother, Erik and I took to help her move.

The drive up was beautiful. I-5 follows the Columbia River for a while, giving peekaboo glimpses of imposing Mt Hood and Mt St Helens' snowball dome, and the deja vu views recalled last weekend, when Erik, Aspen and I drove up to Vancouver, BC. Soon after the turn onto 101, in Olympia, the terrain grows more dense as civilization drops away, and everyone in the car got more restless.

The snow-studded Olympic Mountains appeared, impossibly steep. My mom got so excited, almost bouncing in her seat, keeping up continuous chatter. We turned off the main road, wound in on roads skirting semi-rural parcels of lived-on land. Abruptly up an overgrown gravel track, steep and hung over with tree branches, brambles, tall grass. It's dark with all of the green, Ted forcing the car along, until we emerge in the clearing of the house. We're not sure it's the right one-- there are abandoned cars around, which my mother didn't know about-- trying different doors before one finally opens with the key and this Thing, her move, is made concrete.

The house inside is a monument to consumerist pack rats with far-flung interests. Empty brown beer bottles from what must be a lifetime of drinking, books, a plate of buttered rye bread, a small bowl with gelled scrapes of mayonnaise, clothing, boxes, bags, hats, pillows, glass display cabinets of tiny figurines, stuff, stuff, stuff. I have not seen its like since high school, a friend who grew up in a home like this. All four of us wander around. Ted tries to open things, fix them. Erik tries to get a computer up and running. Mom follows Ted. I flit like a butterfly, looking at books, alighting on some from my childhood love of scifi. I keep thinking that I will see something in the massive piles of stuff that will call to me.

Finally, after an hour of this, Mom asking Erik which bed we want to spend the night in as if that's possible through the years of dust and piles of possessions, I realize: we cannot leave here unless she has somewhere to sleep.

Ted, Erik and I set to clearing the room she finally chooses. We clean out fur from a long-haired white cat, urine stains, abandoned spider webs, mouse turds. Ted takes apart the bed, dusts and vacuums. Erik moves piles and boxes and shelves into other rooms. I go through drawers and throw things away into black trash bags, which just get stacked with everything else. Mom coughs, gasps for air, disappears for hours.

We clear and clean her entire room, and most of her bathroom. It's an island of calm in a hurricane house flooded with junk. At 8pm we finally go into Port Angeles for dinner, and to Walmart for supplies. And then we leave her. Ten at night, we say goodbye and quickly put up the tinted windows of the rented SUV. It's not completely dark out yet. I see her face, red even in the low light. We're gone before her expression can change.

It's impossible to think. Ted drives the whole way home. Even though it's 2am, we've been in the car for nine hours that day, spent six hours cleaning, none of us sleep.

It is done, but it's just the beginning.

Friday, June 1, 2007

last night, thursday

I grew up in a dreary neighborhood of post-war houses, brick boxes built for hunkering down inside of. I'll never forget the light that turned on in my life when I discovered Takoma Park, a nearby town with grand, gingerbreaded Victorian houses, colorful playgrounds set in lush parks, and a shopping district of quirky, independent stores. The Takoma Park Street Festival, each autumn, was the highlight of my year. People dressed up in costumes of every stripe, with velvet, fairy wings, and garlands of cascading tinsel stars predominating. I would spend the whole day walking around, people-watching, eating exotic snacks from food stands, admiring the handmade wares for sale. It felt like my element, a temporal home.


Then I moved to Portland, and discovered Last Thursday-- a monthly "art walk" along fifteen blocks of NE Alberta Street. Modeled after First Thursday, the mass art gallery opening event in the yuppy Pearl neighborhood, Last Thursday is a street fair free-for-all with people hawking everything from jewelry on blankets, to paintings hanging on a chain link fence, to barbecue served from a front porch. It's touted to happen year-round, but it's really when the weather is nice that the whole mess is hot and lovely. It's normal to see fire dancers, bikes made from three frames welded together vertically, solitary people playing instruments on street corners for their pleasure alone, hand knit pet accessories, graffiti art on old records, and a slew of things to eat, wear, and look at.

I went last night, by myself, and it was both disappointing and perfect. It is my tradition to first get a slice of pizza at Bella Faccia, and walk around while eating, but the line was out the door of the restaurant. People were dressed in their finery-- piercings especially stretched for the occasion, dreadlocks colored, shoes tall, layers of clothing varied and tattered. I enjoyed taking in the scene and the delicious summer evening air, floating along through the dense crowd. I enjoyed not seeing anyone I knew, and being alone amongst so many people.

But something was missing. None of the art or goods or people grabbed me. There was no spark.

I don't want to be a naysayer who always thinks that the golden age is behind us, but it sure felt that way last night. Are twelve Takoma Park Street Festivals a year just too many? Have I grown up and moved on? Regardless of my letdown last night, I know that I will try again next month. It's still too nice-- if just for the walk-- to write off completely.