Tuesday, March 20, 2007

El Cena de Espanol and Book Club

*note: I just (JUST!) figured out how to put links into the text. Enjoy!



Now that I'm back in Jamaica Plain, a neighborhood of Boston overrun with 20 and 30-somethings (38% percent of JP's population was between the ages of 25 and 44 in 2000 according to the Boston Foundation Indicators Project - and a great portal to engage them with each other, Neighbors for Neighbors I jumped in and got involved in the JP Women's Book CLub and revitalized the Spanish Dinner group, which seemed dormant, from what I could tell.

The result? An awesome book club meeting last Tuesday night at Liz's house to discuss March by Geraldine Brooks with about 8 or 10 other women and a fantastic dinner with three other women tonight para hablar espanol. We met at El Oriental, the Cuban restaurant in Jackson Square, an area of Jamaica Plain with lots of Spanish-speakers which re-opened last November after falling victim to the run of arsons in Jamaica Plain in 2005
We met, we ate mofongo , sopa de pollo, yuca relleno, arroz y frijoles, and other yummy treats. We spoke lots of Spanish, told stories of living and visiting Spanish speaking countries, and talked about work in a foreign language. At the book club, I spent 2 hours in a room with women of varied ages and professions who all have a passion for books and the library. Women who put themselves on the hold list for a book and are number 15 in the queue and are willing to wait. Like me!

It felt GOOD. I've been back home for 6 and a half months, which is completely incredible to me. I almost can't believe it some days. I've taken one Spanish class in that time, which was great, but I still find myself losing words every day. So this is great. And I've been looking for a book club my entire life. My mom has been in hers for almost 30 years. Promixo vez, vamos a tomar cafe juntos. (Next time, we're going to have coffee together.) And next month's book is The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey Eugenides the Pulitizer Prize winner for Middlesex. I read it back in 1993 when it came out, in college, and I've seen the film, but I'm looking forward, after reading half of it so far, to discussing it with adults, 14 years after my first impression of it.

Jamaica Plain is home. (At least for now :))

Thursday, March 08, 2007

The Clown Sweater


Bow to the clown sweater. It was $2 (33% off) and was worn to a bar in the height of ski season in Killington, Vermont. Balls, I tell ya, my brother's got 'em.

A cold Boston night with an unexpected experience



Last night on the way home after a 12-hour work day, I got on the orange line at Downtown Crossing as usual, headed for Stony Brook. It was cold. Very cold. When I got on, I partially listened to the announcer voice saying something about shuttling, but mostly ignored it as I read my book.

Two stops later, the announcement was loud and clear "This is the last stop for this train. Shuttles are waiting at street level to take you to Mass Ave where you can board the train again. There is a medical emergency and a police investigation at Back Bay station."

Great, I thought. I'm never getting home. I emerged onto the street at New England Medical Center, and there were well over 100 people on the street waiting for these mysterious shuttle buses that weren't appearing in any hurry on this frigid Boston evening.

After complaining to my mother on my cell, a woman said, I've been waiting 30 minutes. What? Forget it. She quickly said, Where are you going? Want to share a cab? After that, I don't really know where the other two women came from, but soon we were 4 and we were in a very warm cab headed toward Roxbury and JP.



We dropped the first woman off at Roxbury Crossing, and then I got out just on my corner. Each person that got out paid 25% of whatever the meter read at the moment, which worked out just fine. Olivia snd Lynn were in the cab with me and we chatted and laughed about getting home so quickly afterall.

I will most likely never see these women again. Together, we laughed in the face of those who say that Boston is unfriendly, unyeilding, unpersonal. Last night, for me, it was. It was cold, and we were bundled up and soon, because we spoke to strangers and joined together, we were home.

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Drifter-with-a-Mission*


*term cited to Nicholas Barry, March 5, 2007


Written sometime in 2003, remembered today:

I was talking in a guesthouse room in Pokhara, Nepal. Arif, a British man I’d met, looked over at me after I had finished and asked, “Have you always had direction?”

I didn’t even pause. I replied, “It never occurred to me not to.” What an easy summation and explanation for the first 27 years of my life. It was a simple statement to describe an achiever’s life. As I said the words, I wondered for the first time what would happen if I didn’t have such clear direction. I reveled in the idea it isn’t decreed, or forced. It’s my choice.

I’d been traveling for almost 5 months when the above happened. I’d quit my excellent job as a program coordinator for student activities at a small liberal arts college in Los Angeles. I’d earned a Master’s degree to qualify me for such a position – worked for two academic years, written a thesis, lived on very little money and waited tables on the weekends to make ends meet. Before that, I’d attended a private 4-year college in Boston, first as a journalism major and then added sociology for a double major once student services lured me. Direction, all of it. Most things I did were out of interest, but also a means to an end. Taking the assistant-to-the-editor position (one nobody wanted) on the paper first year of college to prepare me for the managing editorship later on. Making certain to only study things that were relevant to potential jobs.

Of course, I was encouraged. My parents were always thrilled. Their daughter was goal-orientated. I showed all kinds of promise in lots of areas. My teachers loved it. I was so easy to advise. I already knew the next step, the planned outcome before I came in to discuss it. All they had to do was sign. I encouraged myself. Nothing is scary when you know what comes next. Nothing is risky when you are certain you can succeed. Direction, in my case, was a way to keep me safe.

So what led me to decide to leave? To do what so many young Europeans do but so few Americans choose: travel the world to unknown places, developing countries, and places I knew little about? I’d never left North American soil. Sure, I’d left home and moved first to Maryland and then to California, but this had begun to feel only so adventuresome. One day, I woke up thinking, “Is this it? I just work and work and work?” and that thought led to this one, “I’ve got to go see the world. Two week vacations aren’t going to do it for me.” Way back then, I requested Peace Corps and Semester at Sea Staff applications. I began to fill them out and slowly realized this wasn’t what I was looking for. I wanted to travel independently, without organization or restriction.

I read and read and read. I began to talk about the idea. I looked around for a travel partner. Amazingly easily, I found her in a friend from college who was discontented with her job and ready for something new. We met at Christmastime 1998, committed to the trip and began to save every precious penny.

As the 18 months before our August 2000 departure date disappeared with swiftness, I became more and more excited and anxious. “Yes,” I told people, “I’m really going.” And “No,” I said, “I’m not worried about what happens after the trip or if I’ll have enough money.” And the biggest of all, “No, I’m not scared of China, or Vietnam, or any other country I’m planning on visiting.” Lies. All of it. I’ve always been able to talk a good game. The truth was I had even convinced myself I wasn’t scared. But I was.

And we did it, that friend and I. We traveled for four months together through China, Hong Kong, Macau, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand. We parted ways then, empowered after time together to set out on our own; she to Cambodia and Laos, and I to Nepal and back to Thailand.

I wound up living on Koh Tao, a seven-kilometer-long island with no mainland power, a 3-hour ferry ride from the East coast of Thailand in the Gulf. I taught scuba diving, a passion I’d found along the way. As well as native people from Thailand and Burma, I also lived with Australians, South Africans, Canadians, and Europeans of countless nationalities. I spent 20 months there in all, and finally returned to the States in October of 2002.

And here I am, after having experienced a three-year detour in my life. A lot happened during those 26 months abroad, and I’m still struggling with the story I have to tell and how to tell it. I went back to college administration and began to settle into what those around me call real life and what for so long I believed was the only life. The most significant lesson learned: there are other choices I can make. I see choices now that too much direction caused me to overlook for far too many years.

I’m a different person. I see options where I once didn’t and I see wide open spaces where I once filled in all the details. I know now that in risk there is failure, but there is also amazing discovery.

Added tonight:

The above could have been written today. And my foray into the Peace Corps was another way of me looking at an option and seeing it instead of looking past it. (Yes, I came home and didn't complete that, but I still speak Spanish a lot better than I did and I lived with a wonderful family in Paraguay, a very weird country I otherwise never would have seen, for that choice.)

The moniker in the title of this post was a gift from a new friend. He referenced himself as another when he gave it to me. I love it. It is a title I believe I'll wear proudly. When someone says, "Tell me about yourself" I think I might start with, "Well, I'm a drifter-with-a-mission" and go from there. It sounds like it fits. It feels like I understand it. Thank you, Nick.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

The Facts















1. Yesterday I moved.

2. For the first time in my life, I hired movers.

3. It was February 28, 2007.

4. I moved back to Boston after 9 years away on February 28, 2004 (it was Oscar Sunday).

5. Since then, I have moved 6 times. 6 times in 3 years.

6. First to Mission Hill (4 bedroom, nice enough but crowded). Then Jamaica Plain (in a home my roommate owned, nice enough, but expensive). Then Dorchester (in a friend's apartment, nice enough but left for PC). Then everything to my parents' house and to Paraguay. Then back to Dorchester when I got home from Paraguay. Then here, back to Jamaica Plain yesterday.

7. I am on a lease for the first time since 2003 in Gettysburg.

8. This is the first time my boxspring has had to be airlifted up my house to get it in. (Once I had to abandon it and sleep only on a mattress for a while.)

9. I am tired.

10. I am staying here.