Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Old
It's official. I am old. 29. That's hardly in my 20's anymore. I am almost 30. I don't know why that is such a big deal, but it is. There's something infinitely more interesting about being in your 20s. So, I had better make the most of this, my final interesting year.

I had a nice birthday complete with a fun joint birthday party which included packing about 40 people into our little 800 square-foot apartment. Always a good time.

The question was recently raised: Do books make you smarter? (ie can you buy smart)
I am going to go with yes. I'm taking a class after work on Mondays in leadership and I have to read two books for the class: Good to Great and The Tipping Point. I have already read The Tipping Point, but that's beside the point. I am finding that reading books for an assignment and sitting in class and thinking about things in a way that is different from how I think at work is making me sharper. And to further that, every book I read that makes me thing about something different and causes me to learn something new makes me smarter. Sure we have innate intelligence, but it has to be used if we don't want to lose it. You have to sharpen your mind by exercising it in different ways and you can probably expand your innate capacity if you work at it hard enough.

I've sat in some meetings with older people lately and I have noticed that they aren't as quick as some of my younger colleagues. I can even notice a difference in my mental speed when compared with people younger than me. I am slowing down ever so slightly (note above wherein I am old). I think the rest of my life will be a battle to keep my brain quick. Let the fight begin!

Sunday, October 28, 2007

When it rains...

Last week it rained for three or four days without stopping. For many people this would be completely unremarkable, but we're having a drought in DC, so I should have been overjoyed at the rain. But, really, it was depressing. Combined with the early setting of the sun and the sudden chill in the air and the fact that my husband was in San Diego all week covering fires, the rain made me feel desperatly sad. By day three of rain, I realized that I was happier at night because at least then it's supposed to be dark.

I suppose it didn't help that there were some tragedies taking place around me, impacting people I know. Nancy's husband's mom died this week and a co-worker had to go home to be with her sick father. It was a week of bummers.

I wish I could make it so silly things like rain couldn't impact my mood - so I could only be sad about the important stuff, not clouds in the sky.

In other news, I had a great time with Andy this week! He was the one thing that made the rain bearable. (thanks Andy) It's always refreshing to spend time with good friends.

More inspired posts coming soon.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Again
I went to Portland this weekend for the second weekend in a row. The flight was incredibly long. In fact, last night's return flight was so long that my 28-year-old knees ached and threatened not to budge when I finally got to straighten them after landing after one in the morning. Should I be taking calcium supplements?

I made the trip to attend my father-in-law, Mort's 60th birthday party. On the airplane to Portland on Friday night, I realized that it was approximately six years ago when Neil and I made another much more tragic trip to Portland after my father-in-law tried to end his life.

Birthdays become significantly more important when there was a doubt that they'd ever be reached. We almost lost Mort once and so we now try to find any and every opportunity to celebrate his life. Amazingly, I didn't realize this for a while. At one point recently I even wondered why I was putting myself through all of the travel just to attend one party. Isn't my presence the weekend before the birthday enough? I asked myself.

At the party, Mort gave a painfully long speech. He had seven handwritten legal pad pages in his hands and he read nearly every word. Overall, it was comical and completely within his personality to give such an oration so we were able to laugh it off... but what he did say at the beginning of the ten minutes he had the mike, clarified some things for me. He said that when he was little he once drove his bike across the street and as soon as he had cleared the roadway, two cars smashed into each other right where he had been. He said he knew that day that G-d was looking out for him. And then, he said, "A couple years ago, I got away with my life again."

That might have been the first time I'd heard him talk about his failed attempt and express his happiness that he's alive. At that moment, I realized why it really was that we were all there, why I flew across the country for only one night of celebration. We were telling him that we're glad he's alive. Everyone's birthday is a celebration of them and the fact that they're alive. But Mort almost wasn't. He almost chose not to be and anyone that loves him is a little bit worried he could make that choice again. We know that life is fragile,that something can happen in any moment that will alter life forever. With Mort, at least in the eyes of his family and friends, life is just a little bit more fragile.

When we were heading to the airport yesterday afternoon, Mort pulled Neil aside and told him that he has a very special woman (me). I think, given our long history, that that's one of the nicest compliments I've ever received.

I could write here about my exhaustion and about the craziness that took place when we tried to decorate for the party, but none of that is really important. I went to Portland last weekend, for the second weekend in a row, to let my father-in-law know that I am very glad he is alive... and it was worth it.
Border Confessions
(an essay I wrote a few years ago and have been revising)
I moved to the U.S.-Mexico border in the summer of 2000. We drove from Chicago, where I had just graduated from college, to El Paso, and before even seeing the big bridges and crossing gates that separated our new city from Juarez, Mexico, we moved into an apartment complex with large steel gates that opened only with the swipe of a card.
Borders in the borderland.

It was not clear whom the gates were meant to keep out other than everyone who did not pay rent to live in the complex. But it struck me as strange that a complex, which was not on the high-end of apartments, deemed it necessary to keep all non-residents out. And it seemed even stranger that the gates didn't really work. I wondered if there would be gates on these same apartments if they were in Chicago or Albuquerque or Detroit and decided that it wasn't likely. After living on the border for a while it became clear to me that first, the gates were for show and second, they were really meant to keep Mexicans out.

Late at night and early on weekday mornings, trucks and old vans with Mexico plates are found by the dumpsters in our parking lot, their drivers picking through the trash. They must wait until some resident or another comes home or goes to work and the gate opens, providing an opportunity to hunt for whatever treasures these apartment dwellers may have cast off – old mattresses, holey t-shirts, cardboard boxes. But before they can come and hunt through my trash, they have to pass through the border checkpoints to enter my country, a much more rigorous ordeal than sneaking into the apartment complex.

Their dumpster diving makes it impossible for me to ignore the reality of living along the border with Mexico. The men in their beat-up pick-ups bring the border to my doorstep. They serve as constant reminders of the poverty that lurks beyond the fences and the lines in the dirt that mark the separation of two worlds.

When people come to visit my husband, Neil and me, we have a spot we like to take them called Monument One. It is technically a park, but in all practicality, it’s a plot of desert with rocks and dirt and a few trees. What’s significant about this place is its location on the international border. The U.S. touches Mexico in this strange little corner where the Rio Grande River stops marking the boundary and monuments take over, drawing a dotted-line from El Paso to San Diego. Other than the white concrete monument that looks much like a smaller version of the Washington Monument, nothing is remarkable about the park. There is dust and some small plants and trees - typical desert landscape. On one side of the park, the Rio Grande trickles along, its brown waters passing unceremoniously between nations. On the other side of the park a desert hill offers cover for Mexican bandits who may decide to sneak up on unsuspecting tourists or local hikers.

Standing at Monument One, you can straddle the border, the only spot in the region where you can do that, because there is no fence. On weekends and national holidays, people from Anapra, Mexico, an impoverished suburb of El Paso's sister city, Juarez, come to this park and have barbeques and picnics. They drive their cars into the river and wash them, blast music from car stereos and sit under the trees that offer shade on the Mexican side of the park. I have never seen these people even approach the white obelisk marking the border. Haven’t seen them set foot in my country. They must know the Border Patrol is watching, that the officers even interrogate U.S. citizens driving away from the park – it’s happened to us more than once. But, on most days, a visitor to the park can’t see any law enforcement. Instead of manning the park with people, the U.S. government installed cameras perched on poles 60 feet up, watching at all times, even when human eyes might get tired, shut momentarily.

When Neil and I go to Monument One, we look at the monument, which is painted white with a black ‘1’ on it, but depending on the week may also be covered with various graffiti. Then we step one foot over the international boundary, which is clearly marked with a brass line in the cement. What is remarkable about this spot is how truly unremarkable it is. There are no big fences, often there aren't any visible law enforcement agents and many days we have been the only people there on either side of the border. It is just us, the river, the dust and a brass line in cement. I like to walk back and forth over the line and then keep one foot firmly planted on each side. Whenever I do this, I get a small rush. I’m in another country. Similar, I think, to the feeling you get on road trips when you enter another state. First Arizona says goodbye and then five seconds later, at 80 miles per hour California welcomes you. “Bye Arizona. Hello California,” my brother and I used to say when our parents would point out these signs. I used to try to notice the moment when our car was in both states at once, just to know what it felt like to be in two states simultaneously– not much different. And it is virtually the same with straddling two nations, because even when I have one foot on either side of the line, I am still just standing in the desert.

After spanning the border, we usually cross over completely and walk down to the river, which is always filthy and surrounded by picnic trash. Chicken bones, napkins, old clothing left behind when its owners shed their t-shirts and pants to jump into the water. Sometimes I feel like we’re on an archeological dig and we have to come up with theories about Mexican culture based on the artifacts they have left behind. “Ah hah, chicken bones and clothes. This means they can eat well and can easily afford new clothes since they left them here.” Of course, the truth is that the Anapra residents are often scared away from the park in the middle of picnicking either by the border patrol or, more likely, by Mexican bandits. And, while the U.S. government can afford to clean up trash left on the American side of the border, Mexican infrastructure is not developed enough - nor does it have the resources - to collect trash at parks in its poorest colonias.

I don’t really know why we walk all the way over to the river every time we visit, but we do. One time, we saw a man washing a red, white and green bus that was probably used to transport factory workers home at the end of their shifts in the middle of the night. Women had been disappearing, so the companies splurged on buses and drivers to protect their workers. But sometimes the buses still dropped them off too far from their homes for safety. The man with the bus was wading in the water and scrubbing the painted metal with an old rag. We took a picture.

We actually have several pages of pictures from Monument One in our photo album. Most of them show us with our out-of-town visitors with one foot in each country or all of us crouching in front of the monument so we don’t cover the part that says it is the international boundary. I think we have enough of these pictures, but I imagine if we get any more visitors, we’ll have to keep repeating this process. If we go on a day when the people from Mexico are picnicking and playing, maybe our visitors will feel the way we often do, like aliens, when we walk down to the river and the stares of the people drill holes in our backs. Or maybe it’s our own discomfort that we project onto them that drills the holes. Whatever the case, the disparity makes it impossible to feel comfortable there. Maybe our out-of-town friends will leave feeling like the border is evading them because it is difficult to conceptualize the entirety of two nations when you are standing in a field looking at a white concrete monument. Maybe they will go home feeling that it’s not really as simple as the line on the map, even if it is only a line in the dirt.

Not far from my apartment complex, wealthy El Pasoans have their homes on the city’s hills and ledges and many of them pretend they can’t see the Third World when they look over the back fence. They build walls to block the view and shop only in the chain stores on the outskirts of town - avoiding downtown, where the blending of two cultures stares them in the face in the form of Spanish language signs and open air markets that are often packed with Mexican citizens shopping for the day and beggars hoping to scrounge a little bit of money to take home to their families.

Many of these El Pasoans who ignore the border are first generation U.S. citizens. Their parents gave birth to them in the public hospital in El Paso after rushing across the border in order to give them better lives. Yet these citizens of the United States have little to no compassion for other parents in Mexico trying to do the same thing for their children.

“There are too many Mexicans in this store,” a co-worker at the bookstore where I work said to me once. She must have noticed my jaw drop slightly as I looked at her brown skin. “They’re just really messy,” she said. And the prejudice extends beyond the bookstore to the local border patrol agents who are sons and daughters of immigrants and have been charged with keeping all the other would-be immigrants out.

The border ignorers control the local newspaper where there is rarely a story about border issues despite the metro section’s title of “Borderland.” The newspaper’s editor has an edict against border coverage, because, according to market research, the readers all live on the West Side and don’t want to know about the border. So as Juarez suffers floods or fires, the El Paso Times runs articles about the first day back to school for El Paso students and the prize-winning gardenia grown by an east-side El Paso woman. When the newspaper arrives in the morning, it is even easier to ignore the border because it’s not written about. But I think that no matter how hard you may try not to look, not to notice what this city butts up against, we all carry the border around with us. It is the burden of privilege that can be made real in no better way than to live in this borderland. It is the always being on the edge of something, the constant feeling of otherness. I carry the border with me even without completely understanding it. After two years of glancing at Mexico every day on my way to work and experiencing border culture, the border still does not make sense to me.

Before I moved to El Paso, when I sat in my college apartment near Chicago thinking about the move, it was easy for me to understand international borders. I pictured the map of the United States that I grew up seeing, the one they passed out in elementary school for us to color, the one that pulled down from those scrolls attached to the top of the chalkboards in all the classrooms of my childhood. The international border is that line at the bottom middle left of the map where instead of the bright colors designating the states, the land below the line is colored light brown to show that it’s not part of my country. Below that line they have a different government, language and currency. Simple. But in El Paso, it is hard to let it be that simple. I am still puzzling over how a line in the dirt can make such a difference. Yet anyone driving east along I-10 can see the difference, the stark contrast. From the comfort of the plush driver’s seat in your car, you see hundreds of ramshackle houses in the hills, across the river. While you listen to Norah Jones on your CD player - cruising along the freshly paved and painted interstate there they are, just beyond the electronic signs warning of upcoming traffic problems. Some are pink, others mint green, others yellow - all looking wind-worn and old. And if you look closely you can see that the roads are not paved - if there even are roads. A little asking around and you will find out that most of those homes lack running water and electricity. And thousands of El Pasoans glimpse these tenements twice a day on the way to and from work, to and from their comfortable homes. Two cultures, two economies, two realities, nudging up against each other in the desert – it’s just too simple for all of its complexities.

After Monument One, we also usually take our visitors to Juarez, the city of more than one million people that is right across the river from El Paso. I say more than one million because nobody really knows how many people live there. Without a census or some other way of counting population, the Mexican government is left to guess. Some estimates put the population of the city as high as three million, which may very well be accurate since people from the interior of Mexico are constantly migrating to the border in search of better opportunities and a better life.

To get to Juarez, you have to walk or drive over one of several international bridges where drug-sniffing dogs walk back and forth between rows of cars and your vehicle may be searched at any time. This entry into Mexico is much less ambiguous than that of the park. Like the signs at the edges of states, each country has flags up and words welcoming you. With such a big production at the bridge -- a small fee is charged, certain items must be declared, searches are performed -- crossing the border there does not confuse. In fact, the bridge is so long and involved that it doesn't even feel like the two nations are that close. It takes at least 15 minutes to walk across and sometimes hours sitting in traffic to drive across the bridge. I sometimes think that by waiting in the bridge lines, people have the chance to transition between the two countries, time to mentally prepare for what awaits them on the other side. Maybe that is one of the reasons the international bridges are so large in scale and surrounded by pomp and circumstance.

On my last trip over the bridge and into Juarez, I wore blue jeans and it was 100 degrees outside. My friend was in town and he said it had been too long since he’d been to a foreign country. “I have just the remedy for that,” I said, and we drove downtown and parked in one of the lots near the bridge, where you pay $3.00 to have your car watched by men who always look a little shady. I have learned that even though they are often very dirty, speak broken English and have missing teeth - and almost always have a bucket of Coronas in their guard booths- these men can be trusted to look out for my pickup truck. I paid that day’s man, a little shorter and cleaner than the man I paid last time I had been down there, and my friend and I headed toward the bridge. The walk is long, but always seems shorter than I am expecting it to be. We went through the first booth and paid our fifty cents and then walked up the long arching bridge, breathing in the hot air mixed with car exhaust. At the middle of the bridge, we paused to note our crossing into Mexico, looked up at the big Mexico and U.S. flags and kept walking. My jeans clung to my legs with sweat.

Once we cleared the last checkpoint and entered Juarez, the weather was the only thing that was unchanged. Signs were all in Spanish; grimy children in tattered clothing begged on the street or tried to sell us chewing gum; the roads and buildings were old and deteriorating; Mexican music blared from storefronts, and the air smelled of cooking meat that was displayed in glass cases along the sidewalk. Of course, most things right on the other side of the border are set up to draw American tourists – inexpensive alcohol medicine you don’t need a prescription to buy, and night clubs with a younger drinking age. Every store accepts dollars. Most shopkeepers and taxi drivers speak English. And the nearby markets are filled with the typical Mexican pottery, glassware, t-shirts and boots. Usually, Neil and I lead our guests the six blocks from the bridge to the Mercado, a large building filled with booths selling things that appeal to tourists. In this warehouse-like structure with bare concrete floors, dozens of makeshift merchant booths and more bright colored weavings and clothing than at any U.S. shopping mall, you can bargain for better prices. But on this day, my friend and I were not in the mood for bargaining. I told him how I usually buy only one item per trip to the Mercado, one item to put in our apartment to remember Mexico by when we move away from the border.

We walked past shops and pharmacies stocked with drugs that anyone could buy without a prescription. We paused to look at a beautiful old cathedral and bought apple soda called Manzana Lift in a market where they didn't understand our words, but gladly accepted our money. We ambled by an important-looking building and my limited Spanish allowed me to translate. “I think that’s city hall,” I said. We kept walking. Eventually we stumbled on an outdoor market selling all sorts of things: sneakers, purses, herbal medicines and most surprisingly, pets. I heard a rooster crowing and we followed the sound to a hot corner of the market where there were scrawny-looking bunnies, chickens, cats and dogs in wire cages panting in the heat. After getting slightly lost on some side streets and walking past a semi-hidden pool hall filled with pool tables and men who were drinking and smoking in the early afternoon on a weekday, we walked back to El Paso and headed home to nurse our sunburns and heat headaches and wash the grime from our skin.

Neil and I take our guests to Juarez even when they don’t want to go. “How can you come all the way here and not set foot in Mexico?” we ask. And we mean it. It’s not that we force cultural experiences on our visitors, we just convince them that they want to go to Mexico and then we take them. If our friend or relative seems to be enjoying the Mexico experience after the Mercado, we walk to a market in a more local part of town where less English is spoken and where in the middle of the afternoon outside of bars along the way, 14-, 15-, 16-year-old girls stand in mini skirts, boots, heavily applied makeup that melts and drips in the hot sun, and sell their bodies to feed their families. “See, they are always here,” we remark in low tones. The girls stand with their backs against the wall and look down as men ogle them and women walk by with heads turned away. Usually, I feel nauseous. I want to rescue them, take them home with me and feed them and put them into sweat pants and running shoes and let them watch cartoons on my couch. Why we make ourselves look at the little prostitutes almost every time we visit Juarez is beyond me. Maybe for the same reason that I sometimes get sucked into violent murder movies on television as I am flipping through channels. Morbid curiosity. But maybe, by looking at the girls, I am trying to remind myself of the problems caused by poverty, of the desperation just a few miles from where I sleep at night. Of course, similar desperation exists in the ghettos of my own country but the poverty in Mexico is not only in ghettos. While we have systemic poverty in the U.S., Mexico has widespread systemic poverty. Why am I fixated on Mexico’s poor and not so concerned with the poverty in the U.S.? As politically incorrect as this answer is, I am afraid it is mostly a matter of proximity.

Neil and I do not go to Mexico very often when we aren’t showing it to somebody else. It is our tourist attraction, our Grand Canyon, our state park, our Disneyland. I realize that even those prostitutes and the poverty and the begging toddlers are part of the tourist attraction. “See how different it is here?” we ask. “See how lucky we are? But look at how neat this Mexican culture is.” And I could feel guilty about this, about mixing my tourism with psychological voyeurism, but I have come to think that it is acceptable to show people from out of town what exists on the other side of the border: the souvenirs and the young whores. Yet, as I show Mexico off like it’s mine and remark on the sadness of the poverty and the prostitution and the police corruption, I often wonder whether I should do something to try to help. But as soon as I ask myself this question I am always struck by the magnitude of the problems and I feel hopeless to effect change. I think this feeling of helplessness is what causes many El Pasoans to turn their backs on Mexico, to pretend they do not live along the border, to close their eyes to the poverty. If all of us didn’t do this to some extent, we would go crazy.

Every morning, about ten miles from my little apartment, thousands of cars sit in traffic at the international bridge that spans between Mexico and the United States. Mexican students wake up at four and five in the morning in order to get through the gridlock and make it to their classes at the University of Texas at El Paso on time. My next-door neighbor, who has an engineering degree from the University of Michigan, rises before five every morning to make it to her job at an auto parts manufacturing plant in Juarez, fulfilling her dream to work in a Spanish-speaking country. Older El Pasoans walk across the same bridge and pay fifty cents to pass into Mexico where they buy prescription drugs and get their teeth filled or capped for a fraction of the price it would cost them in the United States. Older Mexicans walk over the bridge into El Paso to go shopping for the things they cannot buy in their own country or to see their children who somehow became U.S. citizens. Mixed in with the students, the tourists, the businesspeople, are the drug smugglers and the people smugglers, the criminals who somehow manage to live at this crossroads as if there are no laws.

I live in this community too, walking across the border on occasion for entertainment, driving by the colorful adobe houses on Juarez’s western hills each day on Interstate 10. Perhaps I came closest to finding an answer to what it really means to live here on the edge of something during my first November here, while I was working as a reporter at El Paso’s daily newspaper. One morning, one of the many editors handed me a faxed press release about a Catholic mass on the border in celebration of the Day of the Dead, or Dia de Los Muertos, a Mexican holiday celebrated by many El Pasoans. I took the piece of paper and headed toward the little New Mexico town where the event was taking place.

It was not more than five minutes outside El Paso but as with many parts of the border, I had to drive my car along a dusty clearing near a railroad track to get there. Later it made sense to me that there are no real roads leading to that place. I imagined that the U.S. government kept it that way on purpose to protect most of us from seeing what the border really is: a large chain-link fence with barbed wire at the top. What I saw when I arrived is cemented in my memory. About two hundred people on the Anapra, Mexico side of the fence and one hundred people in Sunland Park, New Mexico were singing and praying together through chain links. The people wore mostly black with a smattering of color and, like the shiny fence, everyone seemed out of place in the expansive field of dust and small gray desert plants which could never sustain the amount of life it contained that day. The people were speaking all in Spanish, but a few of those gathered on the U.S. side explained to me that the people at the mass were praying for friends and relatives who had died trying to cross the desert to get to a better life in America.
These people were celebrating a holiday but they were also trying to make a statement. They wanted the fences to come down so that border crossers wouldn’t be forced to journey into the uninhabited desert where they often meet their death. Border Patrol officials maintain that the tall fences and vigilant guarding of the border, all part of a plan called Operation Hold The Line first implemented in the late 1990’s, have decreased crime in El Paso, and that having agents so near the river at all times has prevented many drownings. I don’t know who is right. But the man who developed Hold The Line while in the Border Patrol was elected to congress and now chairs the Hispanic Caucus. Recently, USA Today named him as a possible Hispanic presidential candidate. The people in Anapra protesting his policy have to gather in the dust, invite the media and hope they are heard.

I stood there in the fine deep-brown sand that afternoon puzzling over borders, realizing that similar to the dark line drawn on the map, the border between one of the most wealthy and powerful nations in the world and one of the poorest and weakest is a chain-link fence. The border mass was short but amazing. Two folding tables were pushed against each other with the wire fence between them and they served as a makeshift altar. There was a priest on each side and the men took turns reading prayers. The Spanish floated upward and spread across the desert in every direction. Children shared apples through the fence. Adults swayed in the moment holding white wooden crosses with names of the dead painted on them. Everyone and everything was covered in a thin layer of dust. Some women mourned quietly, several men allowed tears to slip down their cheeks. When the solemn praying was complete four or five men in paper mache masks for the Day of the Dead began to dance. I watched, trying to make sense of what I was seeing. What defines a nation? Who decided this fence would be precisely right here? Why didn’t they put it 15 feet to the left? It amazed me that some line decided by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 could make such a difference. I realized that being born a mere 5 feet to the left or right of a certain line in the dirt could change your entire life experience. You either live on this side of the fence and bring fruit and toys for the children on the other side, or you live in Anapra and hold your arms outstretched as the Americans dump bags of food and gifts over the top of chain links.

I wrote a story about the mass for the next day’s newspaper. Like most stories about the border, the editors decided to run it on the inside of the local section, the part of the newspaper read by the smallest number of people each day. I was shocked when I received at least ten e-mails from readers voicing strong opinions about the border and the fences and the Mexicans dying in the desert. Some of the messages I got did not make sense, others were from angry U.S. citizens who want Mexicans to stay out and others were from people who sympathized with the mass attendees. One e-mail even said, “Go back to your own country.” What country do they suggest? I wondered. Would moving out of Texas suffice? Aren’t all U.S. citizens somehow descendants of immigrants? I grew up hearing sayings like, “The United States is a melting pot” and in fifth grade I memorized the inscription on the Statue of Liberty about the tired, hungry, poor and huddled masses all being welcome here. My naïveté allowed me to believe those myths until I was 21 and moved to the border of this great nation, where it became clear to me that only some of the tired, hungry and poor are really welcome here.

I don’t really think that everyone should be allowed to enter this country. Nor do I believe that we should offer public services to everyone who wants to walk across the border from Mexico. I have seen the strain on the health care system and the legal system that has been created by caring for the indigent in El Paso, most of whom are Mexican citizens illegally in the U.S. But as a nation, we are in the strange and sad position of ignoring the plight of our neighbors because there is no easy way to help them. Their struggle is a spectacle to us, at best a lesson, but we border-dwellers continue to witness the poverty and the desperation, and then turn our backs on it every day.

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Elegy for the Executive Director

More about Liam...I wish I could have attended his memorial in New York, but, it was on Yom Kippur.

David Gates captures the man in a way that nobody else has thus far. Definitly worth the read.

Monday, October 01, 2007

October Musings
It's October and temperatures are still up in the 80s during the day. I am longing for Fall. It's so late that I'm afraid we'll just jump right into Winter and skip over Fall all together.

A couple weeks ago, Neil and I went to the Kennedy Center's annual open house and I've been meaning to blog about it. We arrived and saw a Mexican techno band play, then we saw Canadian acrobats who were amazing and for the last show of the day we got to see a 1.5 hour Ben Kweller concert which was fantastic. He is my new favorite. Best thing about the whole day? All the shows were free. We just had to show up and wait in line. Living in DC can be really fun and culturally enriching.

The next weekend we went for a walk on Sunday. We left our house, walked down the National Mall, saw a live Jazz festival, ran across the guy who danced around the world and saw him dancing in front of the capitol, visited the Washington Monument. went into two museums and then headed home. All we had set out to do was go for a walk.

I like it when life just leads you in a random direction and you uncover unexpected delights. It happens more often than we realize, I think. I'm trying to notice it more - to keep that sense of wonder even in my more mundane days.

In other news, my favorite song of the moment is Home for a Rest by Spirit of the West. Download it from iTunes. You will not be sorry.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Hope

Something I heard this weekend: Hope is not a symptom of naivete, it's an act of defiance.

I like that. Sometimes I feel like I am too optimistic and too hopeful, but maybe I'm not. Maybe I can make things happen for myself just because I maintain hope in the face of life and all that life throws at me.

Maybe...

Sunday, September 16, 2007

I am Jewish

I was at a wedding tonight and going into it, Neil and I knew we'd probably be the only Jewish people in attendance. This is not something I usually think about when going somewhere, but our friends are very religious and Jesus was mentioned more than a few times on their wedding web site, so we knew we might be a little different than most of the wedding guests.

The wedding was great and the party was on a yacht, which was even cooler than it sounds. Everyone was very friendly and we met a lot of friends and family of the bride and groom which is always fun. The bride was beautiful and it was fantastic to see our two friends so in love with each other.

At dinner, we ate with the couple's marriage coaches from the church. Basically, the marriage coaches are a happily married couple that volunteer to council new couples pre- and post-wedding. They were very nice and very committed to their coaching. They said that two of the three couples they coached last year didn't end up getting married. (Wow - think of how much the divorce rate might drop if every couple had to go through similar counseling before getting married.)

I suppose it was inevitable that they would ask what I do for work. I started with, "PR and Marketing for a nonprofit." Then they asked what kind of non profit and I explained that we bring high school students to DC to teach them about the political system and about political and social involvement. And then they asked how we select our high school students at which point I explained that all of our students are Jewish. I told them how we teach the students that Judaism demands that we be involved and take an active role in making the world a better place.
With all of the explaining out of the way, the woman doing the questioning said, "So to do that kind of work do you have to be that?" (or something close to that) I believe she wanted to ask, "Are you Jewish?" but for some reason couldn't bring herself to do it. I took her awkwardness in stride and said that you don't have to be Jewish to work in my office, but I am Jewish. This was somewhat of a watershed moment for me. Even though I am proud of who I am, I have not often felt comfortable coming out as Jewish. It is hard for me to say, "I am Jewish" - probably because of reactions I have gotten throughout my life and because I grew up in a place where not many people were Jewish.

The rest of the conversation at dinner was peppered with people's Jewish experiences - which were VERY limited. The stories ranged from a neighbor who invited someone to his bar mitzvah, and e-mail with a link to a video about Israeli soldiers, another neighbor who shared hamantaschen at Purim, a recently attended Jewish/Catholic wedding, and, a trip to the National Holocaust Museum. No matter where we tried to steer the conversation, if there was a tiny bit of silence, someone would pull out another Jewish story.

Everyone was very nice, and I know they were trying to find commonalities and create conversation, but I couldn't help but to feel a bit uncomfortable. I would have rather someone said, "I haven't met very many Jewish people, can I ask you some questions?" than run through every experience they ever had with a Jewish person as if I would, for some reason, care deeply.

What if Neil and I had been the only Black people at the table? Would we have received a litany of stories about our fellow diners' Black schoolmates and coworkers? I somehow suspect that most people know that would be inappropriate.

I am not offended and I actually think that the couple and the other woman at our table are very nice people. I wouldn't mind having dinner with them again someday, though I doubt that will happen. I just wish that they could have seen themselves tonight. Or I wish I could have found a tactful way to let them know what they were doing. "Hey, you're embarrassing yourself by telling me about every Jew you've ever met." Maybe I should have started telling all of my own Christian stories? I really have no idea what I could have done to stop them and make things less awkward. Probably nothing - it's just human nature.

Maybe I should be thanking them, really, because before all of the inane stories about their bar mitzvah experiences, they gave me a chance to say "I am Jewish" out loud and to feel proud of making that declaration. I am sure there are a litany of reasons as to why I am now, at age 28, finally able to embrace my religion as part of my identity and feel proud of it (I am working for a Jewish organization, I have met lots of Jewish friends since moving to DC, I am more comfortable with myself overall, etc.) But it feels good to be able to own my religious identity and even when it's a little scary, to be able to say "I am Jewish".

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Reason # 472 I Like Living In A Big City

There is something oddly satisfying about grabbing the garbage bag from the can, walking down the hall, opening a small metal door on the wall marked "rubbish" and dropping the trash down a long tube. Trash chutes are awesome.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

A Bucket of Keep Your Shirt On

Who else thinks the Subway ads are completely hilarious? I love them. Neil's watching football and I am enjoying the first-game-of-the-season commercials including the fantastic Subway commercial where the guy takes his co-workers' orders and everyone orders things like, "Make your pants tight combo.," "A bucket of keep your shirt on,"and other hilarious meals... It was almost funny enough to make me want to eat Subway, but I really hate it.

Fall?

It's supposed to begin to feel like Fall soon. It's getting light later and dark earlier, kids are back in school, stores are selling plaid, but because I live in a muggy swamp, it's still in the 80s and 90s and muggy.

I am dreaming of crisp air and changing leaves.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007


Wedded Bliss

I was in my friend Julia's wedding this past Saturday. It was her wedding day and Neil and my fifth anniversary. Funny, I have been feeling old lately, but at the same time, I feel very young to have been married for five years. Strange how ambiguous time can be.

The wedding was a lot of fun. Spending our anniversary dancing with our friends really wasn't bad at all. There were several perfect moments during the evening... you know, those glimpses of divinity when you see your friends really happy, when you're in the moment with people you love and the world slows down for a second.

Julia looked absolutely beautiful, the sunset was amazing, even the rain storm was fantastic.

Of course, the visit to Santa Fe was far too short, but it was nice to be there, to have the chance to see family and have my feet on the ground for a minute.


Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Oh Dear

Several public moments of stupidity in the media today:

Poor Caitlin Upton. I have no idea how she managed to say something so incomprehensible, but there you have it. I am sure that she's not THAT dumb, but somehow she managed to string a whole bunch of words together in a way that made absolutely no sense. It didn't help that she had a vapid look on her face and a blank tone of voice. I know that I was incredibly self-conscious when I was her age, I can't imagine how I would have felt if my most embarrassing moment had been broadcast on You Tube for millions to watch. People are saying that her answer shows how dumb Americans are or somehow makes a broader statement about our culture. I don't believe that's the case. I think she just got scared and nervous, but wow is it funny! Hang in there Caitlin - definitely a classy move to go on the Today Show this morning - way to go.

And for fun. here's a transcript of her answer to why a fifth of Americans could not locate the United States on a world map (yikes): “I personally believe that U.S. Americans are unable to do so because, uhmmm, some people out there in our nation don't have maps and uh, I believe that our, I, education like such as, uh, South Africa, and uh, the Iraq, everywhere like such as, and I believe that they should, uhhh, our education over here in the U.S. should help the U.S., uh, should help South Africa, it should help the Iraq and the Asian countries so we will be able to build up our future, for us.”

I have a bit less sympathy for Idaho Senator Larry Craig who pleaded guilty to lewd conduct in June when he was caught soliciting another man in an airport bathroom and didn't bother telling his wife about it until it broke in the news yesterday. He is a conservative Republican who wants to pass an amendment defining marriage as a union between one man and one woman, but many gay man say they have had sex with him, he has been accused of lewd conduct in the past, and should I repeat the fact that he plead guilty in June and didn't tell his wife??? Today he held a press release during which he repeated "I'm not gay" multiple times in an angry tone and all I could think while watching him was, "Wow, he must really hate himself." And there I am, back to feeling sorry for him. I know it's hard, especially for men of his generation, to be open about sexual preference. But isn't it simpler when we're ourselves? And shouldn't people elected to public positions be as honest and open as possible? Doesn't it all eventually come out anyways? Yes, I am an idealist, but senator or no senator, Larry Craig has some work to do because he's not going to be happy until he is comfortable with who he is.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Things

Thing 1: I saw a great documentary last night called Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore? I recommend it to anyone who's even slightly politically-minded. Not only does it detail an inspirational, though failed, campaign, but it also points out one of the major problems inherent in our political system - legacy candidates who win on name recognition and familyreputation alone. A side note: watching the poor guy make all the painful phone calls and have the door slammed in his face definitely served as a reminder about why I do not want to run for office.

Thing 2: I have been meaning, for some time, to blog about my neighborhood Street Sense vendor, Ivory Wilson. I met Ivory last winter. It was shortly after I'd attended one of the seminars my work puts on for teenagers and I'd heard some speakers from the National Coalition for the Homeless. What resonated with me most that the homeless speakers said was all they want is some friendly human interaction - to be treated like people. I certainly didn't make a practice of being mean to homeless people I passed on the street, but I also didn't often smile at them or even say hello. Armed with my new awareness, I decided to make a concerted effort to be friendly to homeless people I pass each day. It was right around then that I noticed a new Street Sense vendor on the corner between Starbucks and the metro. I walk past his spot each morning and each morning I would smile at him and say good morning. I also began to buy the newspaper from him. He was always very friendly and appreciative and started to call me his friend.

"Good morning, my friend," he'd say.

I looked forward to walking past him. His would be at least one friendly face on my morning commute and often the only friendly face. On days when he wasn't there, I began to miss him.

Then, one day, I bought the paper from him and he told me his profile was in it. The first paragraph of the profile began with an accurate description and ended with a surprise: "He speaks with swagger. He smiles, but always a sideways grin making you doubt everything he says. But if he didn't smile you wouldn't believe him. If he didn't smile you wouldn't see the detail that remains from his former life: four diamonds set in gold in a front tooth. You see, Ivory Wilson III was a pimp."

After the initial shock of reading the intro, I noticed the pull-quote on the page in 24-point font: "I know that some day I am going to meet somebody that is going to give me that opportunity to talk to them and realize that I am very talented at something else besides turning women into hookers. That I am a writer."

As a woman and a feminist, I really wasn't sure how to proceed. Should I talk to Ivory in the morning? Could I still smile at him knowing what he'd done? At the same time, he's reformed and he's trying to become a writer - an aspiration I can certainly identify with. I discussed the dilemma with Neil, I mulled it over for a few days, meanwhile, Ivory was missing from his corner - as if to give me the space to process the new information I had obtained. Later he said that he was very busy because of the profile - the media had done an interview, he had to sell some of his books "How to be a Pimp", etc.

Ultimately, even after reading some of Ivory's disturbingly graphic book about being a pimp (I bought a photocopy for $5), I decided to continue my friendship. Now, Ivory brings printed word documents with new stories and poems he's written each week. I give him a dollar or two for each poem and I buy the paper when it comes out. Sometimes I stop and talk to him for a couple of minutes, but I always smile. I've noticed that I'm not the only young woman who stops and talks to Ivory. In fact, I've never seen a man talking to him on his corner. It's funny, because he's not particularly charming - but there must be something about him?

During a recent conversation, Ivory told me that living in DC doesn't tempt him to go back to his life as a pimp. Living in California, however, does, so he's staying here. I appreciated the courage it took for him to open up to me like that (I don't even think he knows my name) and it made me trust him just a little bit - enough to keep letting him call me his friend.

A couple issues of Street Sense ago, Ivory published a poem called "The Salesman at 7th and E" that chronicled his time selling the newspapers on his corner. He wrote of being cold and sad in the winter and the difference that was made by the people who said hello to him. I like to think I helped make that difference and seeing that poem in the paper felt rewarding.

There is some humor that comes with my "friendship" with Ivory. For instance, I can say things to Neil like, "Oh, sorry, I gave my last dollar to my pimp" after buying the paper from Ivory on the way home from work. I like the novelty of being friends with a reformed pimp. But really, I'm glad I took the chance and opened myself up to befriending someone to whom I previously wouldn't have given the time of day. It sounds a little made-for-tv-movie, but being friends with Ivory, regardless of his past crimes and current homelessness isn't just favor to Ivory, it makes me feel good about myself.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Ugh

This makes me sad.

It's raining today and I think I inhaled too much dust while cleaning the office for new employees yesterday so now I feel sick. I realize it's bizarre that the Marketing and PR director cleans for new employees, but nobody else was going to do it and I think that having a nice space on your first day of work is important. Note to self: Next time, let somebody else clean the office.

Neil is in South Padre Island on hurricane watch. Fortunatley, so far, the hurricane seems to be hitting mostly uninhabited parts of Mexico. Also fortunate, it didn't hit where Neil was. Maybe he will come home soon?

Monday, August 20, 2007

Still Thinking About Liam and Suicide

...and so I present this poem by Galway Kinnell...

Wait

Wait, for now.
Distrust everything, if you have to.
But trust the hours. Haven't they
carried you everywhere, up to now?
Personal events will become interesting again.
Hair will become interesting.
Pain will become interesting.
Buds that open out of season will become lovely again.
Second-hand gloves will become lovely again,
their memories are what give them
the need for other hands. And the desolation
of lovers is the same: that enormous emptiness
carved out of such tiny beings as we are
asks to be filled; the need
for the new love is faithfulness to the old.

Wait.
Don't go too early.
You're tired. But everyone's tired.
But no one is tired enough.
Only wait a while and listen.
Music of hair,
Music of pain,
music of looms weaving all our loves again.
Be there to hear it, it will be the only time,
most of all to hear,
the flute of your whole existence,
rehearsed by the sorrows, play itself into total
exhaustion.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Liam Rector 1949-2007

I was a student in the Bennington Writing Seminars for two years, a program that was started and directed by the poet Liam Rector. I learned this morning that after a long illness, Liam killed himself yesterday morning. To me, a student of his who didn't know him well, but was completely inspired by him, the news of his death is like a star going out. He was brilliant, eccentric, completely devoted to language and literature and his exuberance for life was infectious. Liam described the Bennington Writing Seminars as a vortex or radiant node. We gathered in Vermont twice a year to gain the energy and synergy found in the vortex and then we traveled home for the necessary isolation in which art is created. He was a great man and the world is a little bit less wise, less rich and less bright without him.

A quote from Liam: "I've been a student of music and film, and I think of life as that tragic and embarrassing thing that takes place between the poems, films, and the songs I inhabit."

And a poem he wrote that strikes a chord:

The Remarkable Objectivity
of Your Old Friends


by Liam Rector

We did right by your death and went out,
Right away, to a public place to drink,
To be with each other, to face it.

We called other friends - the ones
Your mother hadn't called - and told them
What you had decided, and some said

What you did was right; it was the thing
You wanted and we'd just have to live
With that, that your life had been one

Long misery and they could see why you
Had chosen that, no matter what any of us
Thought about it, and anyway, one said,

Most of us abandoned each other a long
Time ago and we'd have to face that
If we had any hope of getting it right.



To Liam: Thank you for sharing your joy of life with me. I will endeavor to Always Be Closing. You will be missed.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Slight Panic About Getting Older

Do we become infinitely less interesting as we age? Do we lose our capacity for adventure with each passing year? I have a fear that my days of adventure and intrigue are numbered. If they are, why am I not doing something amazing every day? There is a line in Bright Eyes' Travelin' Song that, for some reason, captures what I am talking about, the could-care-less bad-ass adventure. It is something about parking in an ally and hoping that their shit is safe.

I am such a contradiction. In a way, I wish I could limit my belongings to what would fit in a car and just wander. At the same time, I need to have a home, a community and a sense of place.

I am afraid. I am afraid of growing older, of having regrets, of not seeing everything, of not living up to my potential, of being lost, of losing too much, of missing the people that mean the most to me. I need to harness the fear and use it. I need to stop thinking and act. I need to go skydiving, travel to Thailand, learn Spanish (for real this time), scuba dive with sharks, perform in a dance recital, complete a triathlon, publish a book. I need to get it done.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Hip Hop

I have a confession. Since sometime
in early spring, I have been going to hip hop classes. Each week, Lia
and I leave work right on time, head downtown and spend an hour dancing
to loud hip hop music in an historic library building. We don't have a
ton of rhythm and while we're getting better, I still usually only get
all the steps once in a class even though we repeat the routine at
least 25 times each class. Two weeks ago, the instructor told us we
don't suck (not exactly in those words, but that was the message) and
we were so excited.

But, in spite of a slight lack of natural hip hop talent and my strong instinct to point my toes and dance like a ballerina
instead (damn childhood ballet lessons) the highlight of my week is
dance class. We have so much fun that when we get to work on Friday,
we're still smiling. I love it. I love dancing. It is one of the most
life-affirming joy-filled activities I can do.

So there it is. Now you know. Whew, it's nice to have that off my chest.

Monday, August 06, 2007

Shame by Hello Kitty

Check out this article! This is so completely bizarre that it's hilarious. The Thai police definitly get the award for "most interesting use of Hello Kitty."

My favorite pull quote: "(Hello) Kitty is a cute icon for young girls. It's not something macho police officers want covering their biceps," Pongpat said.

Amazing.
New Mexico

There's a fantastic article on Santa Fe in the New York Times and Neil saw a billboard in Minneapolis that sends you to a website suggesting New Mexico is the best place in the universe. I always tell people I meet that I am from Santa Fe. Then they say, "Santa Fe?" and I say, "Yep, it's the best place on earth." Maybe I will upgrade that to "It's the best place in the universe."

Anyway, all of this New Mexico talk has me longing to be back there instead of the swampy inferno that is D.C.

Next time on j.g.s. "Why I love living in D.C."

Wednesday, August 01, 2007


Really?
So, apparently, I hate the world?

(Thanks to Britty and Amy for capturing this Seattle poster on film and sending it my way.)

You can check this band out here. They are actually kind of good...

Friday, July 27, 2007

More Potter Please

Highlight of the week: Seeing dozens of normal-looking people reading Harry Potter 7 on the metro.

Low point of the week: Running out of Harry Potter 7 to read.

On Monday, the metro had a few people here and there who were reading Harry Potter, but by Tuesday, people were no longer ashamed and every third person had a copy of the book tucked under his or her arm. I have said it before and I'll say it again, but it's a rare cultural phenomenon that can get adults and children alike around the world to read a nearly 800-page book. There really was something magical about reading my Harry Potter with a bunch of other suit-wearing business people on my way home from work Monday. Thank you J.K. Rowling for making me believe in the good in the world and bringing good old imagination to millions.

Friday, July 20, 2007





Odale!

Neil and I spent a week in Santa Fe attending two weddings, rafting, hiking, relaxing and seeing friends and family. Being at Nancy and Justin and Britten and Brooke's weddings was fantastic. There is not much better than seeing your friends happy and celebrating happiness. I do a lot of complaining about going to weddings (we sure do have a lot of them this summer) but really, what better way to spend a day or evening than basking in the joy that surrounds weddings?

Being back in the southwest was fantastic. We slept with the window open every night and I woke up early every morning and always in a good mood. There's nothing like breathing crisp mountain air all night long - it was amazing. If I were to sleep with my window open in DC I would a) choke on humidity and b) breathe the aroma of chinese food all night long.

We got to see my brother who came in the second weekend we were in town and we spent time with my grandma and my parents and cousin Pam. We even got to see some old friends from our time living in Albuquerque. Of course, there were people we didn't get to see as well... but we will be back in NM for Labor Day!

Other than the weddings, the highlight had to be rafting in the Rio Grande. It was so much fun and it was so fantastic to spend time with Britty, Brooke, Rachel, Brian and Neil - five of my favorite people. Neil fell out of the raft which was both terrifying and then when he was ok, hilarious. The boys went to Dairy Queen and made a pact to never admit it. Britty posed for photos while the rest of us paddled. It was a blast. Thank you to Britten and Nancy for scheduling your weddings a week apart and forcing me to take summer vacation. It was much needed.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Inspiration

Inspiration comes from all kinds of places. A beautiful girl on the metro, a reformed pimp selling newspapers, a man who danced around the world, a beautful voice, a glance from a stranger, a smile from my husband, an elevator conversation, an early summer breeze. There are moments in every day that make me feel alive, make me want to do more, be a better person, fulfill my potential, be inspiring. Today, I had quite a few of those moments, when I remembered how beautiful life can be. Last weekend in Los Angeles, I also felt inspired by the ocean, the sunshine, the love between Bella and Maurice, the tenuous joy of adolescence, the bonds of family... Sometimes, all I need to do is take a minute and remember all of the inspiration, all the little moments of joy that lead to renewed hope.

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Travel makes me lonely

Traveling alone is a very isolating experience. As I bustle through train stations and airports with too much luggage, I feel very very alone. Even though people are everywhere, nobody is a part of my journey and nobody knows me.

I have been traveling a lot the last couple of weeks and I'm exhausted.

The first trip was to NYC with Miriam for a work meeting. The meeting was great and then the night with Miriam's family was even better. They are so incredibly nice and all very interesting and intelligent, the kind of people I like to surround myself with. The next morning, after another good meeting, I was on a train back to DC by myself. I made it just in time to go home, switch suitcases and head to the airport for a weekend in Chicago.

Seeing Northwestern for the first time in seven years was awesome and hanging out with amazing friends was even better. Yay girl's weekend!

And now, I am off to LA for a wedding weekend. When I return, one more train ride to NYC and then, I will hopefully get to stay put for a few days. Sometimes I need some stillness to process life's events and get ready for the next adventure.

Also, I am saying a special prayer for Robin's dad. May he speedily recover from heart surgery.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Where Have I Been?

So many things to blog about.
Let's
begin with Jury Duty. On Monday, I spent five hours of my life sitting
in a crowded jurors' lounge waiting for my number (211) to be called.
It was called for two panels, which meant I got to stand up, leave my
seat in the jurors' lounge and wait in a hall outside a courtroom until
I was told that I wasn't needed. Then I got to go home. It wasmind numbing
and felt a bit like I was in jail for the day (or how I imagine jail
would be) because we couldn't leave the lounge for more than 10 minutes
and if someone did, and their number was called - trouble! They would
call the name of themiscreant over the loudspeaker VERY loudly and demand whoever it was report to the jurors' office immediately. All of this would have been fine if I hadn't been robbed of my leatherman on my way into the courthouse.

I have (had) a small pink Leatherman Squirt that I carried with me in my purse at all times. It had such dangerous tools as scissors,
tweezers, a nail file, a screwdriver and a teeny tiny knife that would
be effective at slicing a very tiny block of cheese and that's about
it. I forgot it was in my purse and put it through the scanner. The
guard said i needed to take it out, I did and said, "Oh my goodness, I
forgot to leave this at home. I'm early, so I'll take it home and come
back." To which the guard said, "Once you enter the building with it,
it's mine."

What the???

Even at the airport, they allow
you to mail that stuff to yourself. How can he justify not letting me
leave the building to take myleatherman home? At the end of the day, I
returned to the scene of the crime and tried to talk them into giving
it back to me. It was still there, shiny and pink, in a cardboard box.
They actually handed it to me (I should have sprinted out the door) and
told me to put my name on it, come back to the court on another Monday
morning and ask the chief judge to give it back. I am pissed. I took
time out of my (busy) life to be a good citizen and do my civic duty,
they stole myleatherman , stuffed me into a dirty and uncomfortable
Juror's lounge, treated me as a number and then refused to return my
stolen property.Aaaahhhhhh!

Saturday, March 17, 2007

America's Mayor

Last weekend was beautiful. The sun was out, it was warm enough to forgo a coat and spring was in the air. To take advantage, Neil and I went on long walks on Saturday and Sunday. On Sunday, we were on our way home when Neil said, "There's Giuliani, I'm going to talk to him." And before I could process the sentence, I was whisked across the street and found myself standing in front of Rudy Giuliani who was stylishly dressed in a powder blue v-neck sweater with a collared shirt underneath. As soon as I thought, "What is Neil going to say?" Neil opened his mouth and very enthusiastically said, "It's America's Mayor!" Rudy smiled, and shook Neil's hand as Neil asked, "What are you doing in Washington." The reply: "Just enjoying the beautiful day." And then, Rudy and his advisor and security guard began crossing the street as oncoming traffic barreled toward them. Rudy jumped back to the curb before getting hit by an SUV and said something like, "I just can't get used to not being in New York. In New York, you walk out and they stop."

I was struck by how, in person, Rudy looked like a charicture of himself. His wrinkles were deeper and his features seemed exaggerated compared to the magazine and television images I have seen. He was very friendly and was obviously flattered by Neil's characterization of him as America's Mayor. Did Neil make that up? Neither of us are sure...

Once the light changed, Neil and I walked quickly and were a couple blocks ahead of the Giuliani three and so Neil began telling people walking by, "Giuliani two blocks ahead!" or "Giuliani straight ahead!" Which had me in stitches.

Sure, I'd probably rather run into movie stars on the street, but Washington is really cool in that way. As one student on a summer program through my work said, "Washington has the stars of Reality and LA has the stars of entertainment." It's cool to run into Rudy Giuliani on the street a few blocks from my condo. Next time maybe I will open my mouth and say something, too.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Face Plant

Sometimes you have to fall flat on your face in order to begin again. Maybe the unfortunate slip on black ice this morning that landed me face-down in a parking lot was just a way of helping me to really get back on my feet?

And now I am ready to stand up for myself and be strong.

Or maybe it was just falling on my face, smashing my apple and getting some bruises.

Either way, I suspect I am stronger for the experience.

Now I hope to go for at least a month without falling.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Aah New Mexico

Two news stories about my home state have cropped up over the past week that have had me in stitches. Basically, they typify New Mexico in so many ways and show a little bit of what I love and hate about the Land of Enchantment.

First there were the talking urinal cakes that were deemed so interesting they showed up in the Washington Post's free daily newspaper given out at Metro stations all over DC (Of course, Turtle Mountain was one of our favorite Albuquerque establishments.):

By Tim Korte, Associated Press Writer | February 17, 2007

RIO RANCHO, N.M. --New Mexico is hoping to keep drunks off the road by lecturing them at the last place they usually stop before getting behind the wheel: the urinal.

The state recently paid $21 each for about 500 talking urinal-deodorizer cakes and has put them in men's rooms in bars and restaurants across the state.

When a man steps up, the motion-sensitive plastic device says, in a woman's voice that is flirty, then stern: "Hey, big guy. Having a few drinks? Think you had one too many? Then it's time to call a cab or call a sober friend for a ride home."

The recorded message ends: "Remember, your future is in your hand."

The talking urinal represents just the latest effort to fight drunken driving in New Mexico, which has long had one of the highest rates of alcohol-related traffic deaths in the nation. (The new tactic is aimed only at men, since they account for 78 percent of all driving-under-the-influence-related convictions in New Mexico.)

"It startled me the first time I heard it, but it sure got my attention," said Ben Miller, a patron at the Turtle Mountain Brewing Co. bar and restaurant. "It's a fantastic idea."

Jim Swatek, who was drinking a beer nearby, said: "You think, `Maybe I should call the wife to come get me.'"

Turtle Mountain Brewing owner Niko Ortiz commended the New Mexico Transportation Department for "thinking way outside the box."

Department spokesman S.U. Mahesh said the bathroom is a perfect place to get the message across. In the restroom, "guys don't chitchat with other guys," he said. "It's all business. We've got their total attention for 10 to 15 seconds"

Similar urinal cakes have been used for anti-drug campaigns in Colorado, Pennsylvania and Australia, and for anti-DWI efforts on New York's Long Island, said Richard Deutsch of New York-based Healthquest Technologies Inc., which manufactures the devices.

But Deutsch said he believes New Mexico is the only state to buy the devices.

New Mexico had 143 alcohol-related deaths in 2005, for the nation's eighth-highest rate per miles driven. The problem is blamed in part on the wide-open spaces that make it necessary to drive to get anywhere, and the poverty and isolation that can lead people to drink to relieve their boredom or misery.

Also, some have complained that the state has only recently begun to emerge from years of lax enforcement.

Gov. Bill Richardson led a successful push two years ago to require ignition locking devices for anyone convicted of DWI -- a first in the nation -- and each year the Legislature has agreed on tougher penalties for repeat offenders.

New Mexico also has started a toll-free "drunk buster" hot line, boosted DWI enforcement in problem areas and increased police checkpoints. The state also has a DWI czar.

In November, a wrong-way drunken driver slammed into a car near Santa Fe, killing five family members, authorities said. The governor has since directed state regulators to issue cease-and-desist orders against three airlines to stop serving alcohol on flights to and from New Mexico. The culprit in the fatal wreck had been seen drinking on a flight into Albuquerque hours before the accident.

At the Turtle Mountain, the urinal cakes have proved so intriguing that three have been swiped already.

"I'm mystified why someone would stick their hand into one of our urinals," Ortiz said. "But I'm sure we'll see them on eBay. Hopefully, the seller will advertise it as, `Stolen from Turtle Mountain.'"

And then there were the foul-mouthed CD players that got detonated in front of the cathedral in my home town:

SANTA FE, New Mexico (AP) -- Three CD players hidden under a cathedral's pews blared sexually explicit language in the middle of an Ash Wednesday Mass, leading a bomb squad to detonate two of the devices.

Authorities determined the music players were not dangerous and kept the third one to check it for clues, said police Capt. Gary Johnson.

The CD players, duct-taped to the bottoms of the pews, were set to turn on in the middle of noon Mass on Wednesday at the Roman Catholic Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi.

The recordings, made on store-bought blank discs, featured people using foul language and "pornographic messages," Johnson said. He would not elaborate because of the ongoing investigation.

Church staff members took the CD players to the basement and called police, who sent the bomb squad, Johnson said.

The bomb squad blew up two players outside and kept the third one to test for fingerprints or DNA and trace its components, he said.

Ash Wednesday is the first day of Lent, which marks a 40-day period of fasting and penitence before Easter.


Aaah New Mexico. Amazing climate, incredible culture, beautiful scenery, thriving art scene AND a source of endless entertainment.

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Hope

Sometimes, when you don't know what else you can do and you've tried everything you can think of and you finally realize that no matter how much you love someone, no matter how convinced you are of their potential to be amazing and to be happy, you don't have the power to make them happy...sometimes a miracle happens that has absolutely nothing to do with you.

In November, when I called my brother to say hello, nine times out of ten, he was too depressed to even pick up the phone. Flash forward to February when he picks up after the first ring and sounds happy and...imagine this... actually talks to me about real things, even about feelings. I can hear his smile in the way he talks and every time I hang up with him, it's all I can do to keep from tearing up with this powerful feeling that is hovering between happiness and relief.

And so, I have hope again. (thank you)

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Obsessions and Creativity

I have a new obsession. That obsession is Veronica Mars. In the past two weeks, I have watched all of seasons 1 and 2 and the approximately 10 hours of season three that have already aired. Last week, as a way out of my mopey shoulder-pain, Neil's Grandma slump I ate breathed and slept Veronica Mars.. or, more accurately, did not sleep. I was up at 3 am on a weeknight watching episode after episode. I've never tried crack, but I imagine the level of addiction was right up there.

So, now us thinking people must ask: Why Jodi, why do you love Veronica Mars? I'm not sure, exactly. The characters are awesome. They are attractive and intelligent. And, there's something very appealing about a small girl being the heroine. I like the father-daughter relationship, and I love the way the show reflects the human condition in a way that is so right on. Watching it lets me escape from myself while I am simultaneously learning something about being human. And that might be the crux of it... the reflection of the human condition. And so, my obsession with "mindless" television has led me to feel like I need to begin creating things again. I know that's why I am here, why I'm alive. I feel the most alive and complete when I am writing, or taking photos, or creating art of any kind and when I am using my body in a creative way to dance or ski or do something else that is somehow beautiful. So why have I not found a way to do that every day. Can't I make money while reflecting the human condition and telling people something they didn't already know about themselves? Sure, it's a tall order, but there has to be a way. Should I be making TV shows? Writing a novel? Working in Journalism (again)? Opening my own design business? Starting a dance studio? Will the answer come to me at some point? Neil said that last week when he saw his grandma's body at the funeral home, he knew it was empty - his grandma was gone, but her body remained - and he thought about how our bodies are like rentals. We inhabit them for a while and then - poof - we'r gone. And this was just another reminder along the way that I need to live as hard as I can. So I will mull this over and come up with my next move...in the meantime, only one more week until a new episode of Veronica Mars and I have an appointment with my couch.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Hmm

This has not been the best week. It began with a very cranky Monday. For no apparent reason, I felt like the world was coming to an end all day Monday. Then, at around 7 p.m. I discovered the reason for all crankiness as I slipped on the wet escalator in the Metro and proceeded to fall down about five stairs, dropping my groceries and, more importantly, pulling my shoulder out of the socket and smashing my shin into an escalator step (I have the lined bruise to prove it.) What followed for the rest of the week were trips to doctors and MRI specialists. On Tuesday I get to find out what's wrong with my shoulder.

To add to my misfortune, Neil got sent to Utah for work the night I fell and then, his grandmother got very sick and he flew to Portland to be with her. She died last night and in spite of three hours on the phone to airlines and on the internet with bargain airfare sites, I couldn't find a ticket under $1,500 and even those wouldn't get me to Oregon in time for the funeral. And so, here I sit, on a Friday night, with a wounded shoulder and a grieving husband and husband's family who are all on the other side of the country.

Awesome.

It has been a rough week, but I am finally feeling a little bit at peace with all of it. As today wound to a close, I felt this great sense of relief. Part of it is probably because Neil is coming home soon and his grandma is in a better place and didn't suffer long and my shoulder hurts a little less, but I think the main part of it was that the week was ending. Funny that an artifical construct like a week can so completely form my frame of reference that the end of a week makes me feel like I have a fresh start, a new beginning. But so it is...So here's to new beginnings and to a much improved set of seven days...starting now...

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Things I am not proud of

1) While walking
to the metro on Monday a rude woman passed me going the other direction
and coughed RIGHT in my face. Right before I held my breath and turned
away, my brain entertained the following brief thought: "I should
breathe in really deep and maybe I will get sick and not have to go to
work."

2) The U.S. is playing against Mexico in soccer right now. I am rooting for Mexico. (But I won't be sad if we win either.)

3)
This morning, I was running really really late to work. I can only take
every other train because I go almost to the end of the line and not
all trains go that far. When the third train came (only the second that
would actually get me to work) and I made it to the front of the crowd
and the door chime sounded, I actually shoved some nice people in order
to make it on the train. It's not like they wouldn't have shoved me if
I hadn't acted first. It's not like I haven't actually come home with
bruises from metro shoves. But, still, I pushed some nice people while
trying to get on the metro.

4) Sometimes when I am feeling very unhappy, I resort to online shopping.

Things that I feel good about

1) I have been to the gym every day for the last five days and I feel amazing.

2)
Tonight, when I rolled out a yoga mat at the gym and then went to grab
some free weights and a man sat on my mat and started doingsit ups, I just smiled and got a new mat.

3) My supervisee at work is doing an amazing job and I think that sometimes, I really help her and I think she looks up to me.

4) My little brother is doing awesome in San Francisco.

5) I have amazing friends and I have been getting back in touch with lots of them recently.

Interesting and/or disturbing things

1)
The prehistoric skeletons found near Verona, Italy locked in an embrace
are completely amazing to me and reading about them made me feel, in
some very basic way, that humans are good.

2) I also read today
that the KKK is increasing their membership by hating Mexicans. This
information literally made me nauseous and nearly canceled out the
goodness the Verona fossils imparted.

3) It is absolutely
freezing in Washington, D.C. and I keep dreaming of a beach vacation.
Bath and Body Works sells this amazing body scrub called Island Hot
Spot. If you are longing for summer vacation this winter, run, don't
walk, to the mall nearest you, buy the small tube of the scrub for a
slightly outrageous $13.50 and use it in the shower each morning. It's
completely worth it and will get rid of dead and dry winter skin while
cheering you with it's vacation scent. (Sadly, no, I do not get a
kickback for every tube they sell - I just really like the stuff.)

Monday, January 29, 2007

A quote

Some people of course expect
to be rewarded for stumbling
and rising from the floor
and stumbling again, but we give
no credit for living. We favor vitality
over goodness, even over effort;
we love a great belly laugh
more than anything.

-Stephen Dunn (from “The Soul’s Agents”)

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

A Good Start

I am trying to get a good start on the year and that means blogging!
So here I am. New Years was both awesome and terrible. Terrible because I was feeling ill all of the next day, awesome, because we had a lot of fun.

And now it's 2007. Of course, it doesn't really feel all that different, it's just another day. But I like the idea of fresh starts, of the possibility to make this year whatever I want it to be... and I'm going to set out doing that.

I am sure I will have more to report soon.