bike basket full of farmer’s market flowers, basil, and fresh bread.
Idyllic Sunday
{10 July 2010}
{10 July 2010}
{18 May 2010}
{01 November 2009}
one of the things i like best about the part of califonia i’ve moved to is the variety in flora: on the hillside surrounding my apartment, the following plants are growing: palm trees, deciduous trees: cherry, live oak, eucalyptus among others, coniferous trees: redwoods and others, ferns, bamboo, blackberry bushes, wild grasses, cactus, agave, and ivy. what do all those plants have in common? basically, nothing, except that they all live in my front yard. its kind of an amazing climate.
the other thing about northern california is that the colors of the seasons are all mixed up. growing up in the Idaho rocky mountains, the seasons work thus: summer is green, fall is golden, winter is brown, and spring is…mostly more brown. the same general rule applies to Chicago. but here, everything works backwards: there is so little rain in the summer that everything turns golden brown by july, and stays that way until the rains start in october or november. then suddenly everything turns green, and the morning fogs cease and the skies are deep dark blue, and the world continues to green throughout the winter. spring brings flashes of color as the early flowers bloom. i remember being so surprised by this pattern when i came to northern california for college. being away for eight years, most of which i spent in chicago (or idaho) i’d forgotten how upside down the color palettes are here.
mind you, i’m not complaining. it’s november first, and i woke up to sunlight from my south-facing windows at 7am. by 8am it was warm enough to have the front door open, an zeke went out and slept in the sun on the porch. B and i spent the morning hiking in the hills above MV. recent rains have caused the ferns to spring out of the ground in force, whole hillsides of lime-green fronds unfurling in the shade. the trees that do respond to the changes in light are throwing down their leaves, crunchy, a smell of rotting leaves that evoked some memory from childhood.
but golden gate park shows no sign of impending winter:
{28 September 2009}
on saturday Chris, Teresa, Geneva and i drove up to Petaluma to go to the Windrush Farms FiberFest — basically an expo of yarn, spinning, dying, felting — all kinds of fiber arts that start with wool. one could follow the yarn-making process from start to finish in a single afternoon — there were alpaca and sheep on the farm, great piles of greasy, newly-shorn wool, tools for carding and cleaning the wool, spinning wheels and drop spindles, dyeing vats and beautiful skeins of yarn for sale, looms for weaving and knitting swatches.
aside from being really much too hot for late september, it was an awfully pleasant, pastoral scene: everyone was so friendly, sitting in the sun watching kids run around the yard and pet the animals, skin tanned and weathered from spending seasons out in the sun and the wind, trading stories and sharing knowledge of something that, now an art form, was for thousands of years, a basic skill. a pair of golden retrievers trotted around the yard loving up to everybody. there was a wood-fired oven in the yard and a guy making hand-made pizzas and lemonade, to be eaten at folding tables and chairs set up in the shade. the farm animals suffered to be petted on the nose (or fed tasty leaves).
the turn of the fall weather (fall arrived on sunday, by the way, the day after our hot trek up to Petaluma), plus the imminent arrival of several friends’ babies, means that i’m inspired to start crafting again. somehow the direct mail gods know this, as i have received three knitting catalogs this week (and, naturally, have earmarked more patterns that i want to knit than i shall ever have time or funds for). but anyway, getting knitting catalogs lets me play the “who would knit this?” game. see, that’s the tricky thing about knitting. finding nice yarns and patterns. because for every beautiful, modern or classic (classy classic, that is, not “christmas sweater” classic) pattern out there, there are a dozen hideously frumpy things to knit out of terrible, cheap plasticky nasty synthetic yarn. it’s almost too easy to play the WWKT game, especially with the patternworks catalog. so for this week, i submit this, to you, dear readers (knitters and wearers of sweaters and non-knitters or sweater-wearers alike): who would knit this?
{13 August 2009}
{11 August 2009}
So I was supposed to drive to Ashland and see a show at OSF, but I discovered that the Pothole that Nearly Ate My Car last week actually really did nearly eat my car, and I need two new tires and a NEW WHEEL (wtf?) before the car is road-trip worthy. So much for saving up for a new tv…but, I decided to take advantage of a non-ideal start to the trip. Instead of dropping money on the car w/out having time to shop estimates around, I decided that the repair could wait till Monday. So I played hooky with the rest of Friday, burned some frequent flier miles, and hopped a last minute flight to Chicago.
Saturday morning I played in the Ultimate Frisbee Collective’s Finale Game*. As teams sports go, we were a scrappy group of theatre geeks, most of whom have some innate athletic ability but little or no talent for team sports. But for the past two years, we have played nearly every Saturday, rain or shine (or snow), and the ultimate game has often been the best part of my week.
For my efforts, and in recognition of being the only non-carnivore (also the only girl) on the team, I received a trophy shaped like a piece of tofu with arms and legs,** aptly named the “Facon [Fakon?] Awardâ€. The winning team received a trophy with a piece of bacon on it, also similarly anthropomorphized.
In the afternoon Shinjinkai held the fourth annual fall-a-thon fundraiser, raising money for the zendo (rural retreat center) we are building in Wisconsin. I had planned to drop in, cheer and generally be supportive, but a minor injury sustained by someone in an earlier round meant that i got to jump in as nage for one of the later rounds. In 15 minutes I threw a contestant 305 times! The impressive feat isn’t the throwing – it was the guy taking the falls. Last year I took 206 falls and was pretty sure I was going to barf by the end. Anyway, it was so so so good to see all of my fellow aikidoka. Just being back in the room, the scent of the incense, the polished wood floors and textured mat under bare feet – it all felt so comfortingly familiar. I’ve been short on familiar and comfort, lately.
As I was changing into my gi in the locker room I looked at myself in the mirror and remembered how at first I felt so awkward in my uniform, it felt too big, goofy, poorly fit. I felt too tall, long-limbed, my balance too high in my body, i moved like a dancer, not a martial artist — no grounding, my center of gravity up high in my chest rather than centered low in the abdomen. I know those feelings of impossible awkwardness weren’t just born of insecurity because I see that look in new students, in their faces, in the way their gi hangs on their body, in the way they move on and off the mat. I felt that way for a long time. And I’m not sure when I started feeling at home in my gi, in the dojo, in the martials arts. When i started taking newer students under my wing and helping them through the maze of confusing rituals, when to bow, where to leave your shoes, how to sweep the mat in a smooth, even rhythm in step with the student before and behind you.
I’m not saying I’m accomplished or anything. On the contrary, the point here is perhaps that it took me two and a half years of training just to be confident in the most basic of rituals. Any wonder, then, why aikido is a martial art that takes a life time of dedication and study to master.
Since I moved to California I haven’t made any effort to find a dojo yet – there’s just no time for training. And I know how frustrated I would be if I were training once or twice a week, never moving forward or improving, just see-sawing back and forth. Right now there is pretty much time for work, and running. But being back at Shinjinkai for the afternoon reminded me that this is not a part of my life that I want to leave behind in Chicago. I will need to be patient in order to find the time to resume a proper study of it, but I’ll also need to make the effort to find that time. My profession isn’t one that just hands over free time if I don’t make an effort to wrestle some away now and then.
The trip at once was good for me to shake me out of my all-work-all-the-time routine here and remind me that I am more than the sum of my days and nights, that my life is bigger than the work I am doing here now. But I was confused all weekend that I was on vacation in Chicago and returning to San Francisco. I’d forget which airport I was coming from or going to, invert “back home†and “out here†when I was speaking about my new home or my old one. While waiting for my connecting flight in Denver, I had a moment of confusion when a Chicago-bound flight was directly across the hall from a San Francisco-bound flight. I’m headed home, but where is that? This weekend was restorative and troubling all at once. Restorative because it was a reminder that work is not me. I am not my job. I spend long hours at work, and when I’m there I work hard and care passionately about it. But it does not define me any more than any other single thing defines me. I am a sum of many parts, of preferences and fears and activities and plans for the future. I am martial arts and running marathons and making theatre and crafting things with my hands and wanting to explore the world. I am staying up too late and never getting enough sleep, hating to wear shoes and carrying around deep fears of vomit, spiders and mediocrity, a love for fireflies on Chicago summer nights and lingering over after-dinner coffee after a good meal. I am a terminally off-key singing voice and an aunt and someday maybe a parent, someday maybe a very good production manager. Right now I’m mostly working on the career part. But all in good time. My friend Callie handed me a bit of wisdom a few months ago when she pointed out that the great thing about getting to your thirties and facing big life-changing unrest like moving is knowing that you are not defined by your place. That you are still your same self no matter where you wake up in the morning. She’s right, and it’s a good feeling to realize that.
And it was troubling because being back in the community of Chicago makes me feel more sharply the lack of community in my new life. I’m new here, of course, and I know it takes time and work. But it’ll be an uphill battle, I think. Mill Valley is not a community where I am going to find like-minded artists or people my age. It’s an adorable and ritzy little Marin County hamlet that eschews chain stores and has polymillion*** dollar mansions in the hills where successful doctors and lawyers who commute to the city for their jobs raise their kids, disaffected spoiled teenagers who slump around downtown and congregate on the lawn in front of City Hall after it closes, looking as bored as one can possibly be in a town filled with the most spectacular weather and nature that one could ask for. I will have to go further afield to find my community.
* For some reason, the west coast is responsible for breaking up the band: at least four of the core players are in the midst of either executing or contemplating moves to various west coast cities.
** which seems to be working at cross-purposes, doesn’t it? Anthropomorphizing the thing that people eat who don’t like to eat things that have legs or eyes?
***I’ll make up words when I want to make up words. This is my blog. Bug off.
{28 July 2009}
as i mentioned before, i live in a tree house, 142 stairs from the street to my front door. not surprisingly, UPS doesn’t deliver up here. neither does the pizza guy or the mail man. garbage and recycling must be packed down the hill to the cans at the bottom. moving men must be bribed with large cash tips. late night thai food must be sought out on foot.
on the other hand, i can see all the way to san francisco from my front porch. there are trees on every side of my ramshackle little house, blackberries growing out back, and baby deer in the front yard most mornings and again at twilight. spiders consider my house a modest inconvenience on their route from one side of the forest to the other, and make frequent appearances, but i am slowly adapting.
the thing about living alone is that there is the same answer to every “who used up all the….” question. who didn’t change the toilet paper roll? oh, right. who used up all the butter? ate all the cookies? forgot to wash the dishes again for three days in a row? ah, yes. me. i frequently quiz the cat as to why he hasn’t done the dishes when he’s home all day long and i’m at work earning us both a living, but he seems to feel no guilt. the upside to living alone in a tree house is that i can crank music up at any hour and make coffee in my underwear if i want to. i confess, internets, that i’m excited about finally getting a DDR game – no downstairs neighbors to torture with my awkward dancing and stomping.
it’s lonely, some nights, coming home to no one but the cat. chicago exists out there, 2 hours’ time difference but still only a phone call away. the light on the city fades while i make dinner, then a few hours of sleep, and miles to run in the morning. the trail running here is breath-taking. i don’t even have to drive to a trailhead; it’s right outside my front door. i wake to fog most mornings, but as i run up the side of mount tam, i run above to fog level and into the sunshine.
outside of marathon training, my job is taking everything i’ve got, so there hasn’t been a lot of energy left over for building up a new social life. it’ll come, in time, and i knew this first year was going to be like this. i’m doing good work. i believe in it. every day is a series of victories and insurmountable challenges that, the next day, i somehow figure out how to handle and move on to the next one. there’s some serious character building going on here.
but if i haven’t returned your call, or your email, or fb message, just know that i don’t have much left over at the end of the day right now. but your love is much appreciated, and much needed.
{09 May 2009}
as of june 20, give or take a couple of days, i live here. oh yeah, i’m moving to california. i haven’t officially blogged about the big move here yet, tho i’m pretty sure that most everyone who reads this already knows i’m going.
i was trying to figure out why i’ve been putting off blogging about something so obvious and significant, while making time to blog about the color of the lake on a morning’s run, or what color Ira Glass’s dreamy eyes were, or puns on swine flu. i think, in part, because i dislike it when i put up poorly-written “catch up on the last few weeks/months” posts, because i never really intended for slithy tove to be a news wire of my rather ordinary life (update! i had a cheese sandwich for lunch. update! it’s raining. *yawn*). i’ve been thinking lately about what on earth slithy tove IS for. it’s not the same thing that it was when i started, and i’ve thought about closing the doors a number of times, but i just don’t quite want to. i love writing to the ether. of course, when i write some part of me is aware of and governed by my actual readers, made up of a few friends and family, mostly, but there’s something lovely and poetic about writing to the universe, putting it out there for anyone or no one to read. my blog is a language sketchbook. a place for me play with words, and maybe, once in a while, the exercise of writing routinely leaves me with a turn of phrase here or there that i’m pleased with. in the mean time, i process, i learn from the act of writing and re-writing more about what’s in my head than i would if just scribbled it down in a private journal and filed it away. which is why i dislike half-assed posts that are just announcements of what i did yesterday, with no attention to language or shape or texture.
but, putting that aside for a moment: I AM MOVING TO CALIFORNIA. there, announcement made.
i think the other reason i’ve putting off blogging this post is because i don’t have a succinct way of writing about this change, because it’s not a simple decision and my feelings about it are all scattered about on the floor. professionally, i’m moving to take a job, it’s a good promotion with a good company, and i’m lucky to have it. i’m excited about finding work that challenges me again, work where i feel like my contribution truly determines the direction that the art takes. i was tired of feeling superfluous. and personally, i was feeling this profound sense of stasis. i love my life here. i love my friends, the arts community here, the sports i play, the way chicago blooms in may and comes to life in june, warm summer nights and sunrise over the lake. i love cheap falafel and cheering for the underdog cubbies as tho i actually care about pro sports and riding my bike to work and my aikido dojo and walking into a party and knowing that i’ll know half the people there because i am an integral part of this arts community. but my life today is pretty much the same as it was three years ago. i’m better at the jobs i’m doing, i’m making a little more money, but basically, nothing was changing. and around me, the lives of my friends are changing in big dramatic ways, and rather than feeling secure in my stability, i was feeling stifled by it. i can’t stop time, i can’t cling to the things and the people that i love, so i need to move forward, boldly, gracefully*, instead.
so here i go. off the cliff. i tippy-toed around and whined about it for a good long time, but i finally made the plunge (and signed the contract and the lease, just to make it stick). it’s time for the next chapter.
well, we strive for grace, anyway. it can be elusive.
{28 April 2009}
+ overheard: “after my palm reading last week i really had a come to jesus moment about my health.”
+ actual pickup line used on me in a cafe: “so which Meyers-Briggs are you?” he then proceeded to guess my MB type based on my sandwich order.*
+ flyer left on my car: “free organic dry cleaning with purchase of a solar-power pizza!”
+ upon meeting a potential landlord: “o-m-g! i totally used to have, like, the exact same one!”** we weren’t talking about shoes, here. we were talking about the $45,000 BMW M Roadster that, through happy kismet/the generosity of my brother, was mine to drive for the weekend. the car did, however, put me at a significant disadvantage when it came to negotiating rental terms: “$1300/month is really a lot for me,” she says as she rolls back the top on the roadster, dons sunglasses and a headscarf, ala audrey hepburn, and roars off down hwy 1, pacific ocean glittering in the rear view mirror.
* goat cheese and avocado with celery, walnut pesto, and watercress on multigrain. gastronomically, if not culturally or economically, i have come home. though i am still unclear as to where my love for the chevre-avo combo places me on the Meyers-Briggs grid.
** please read with your best so-cal valley girl voice setting turned to FULL
{04 March 2008}