Showing posts with label move. Show all posts
Showing posts with label move. Show all posts

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Good Housekeeping




Today I finally continued the unpacking project known as the early part of November. I abandoned this project to celebrate some holidays and spend time with people and work at a newish job, and generally live in a day to day way. The entire time, though, Z and I were aware that certain parts of our lives were missing. Z had done a tremendous job designing systems to make our lives work beautifully, but many of the beautiful objects from our old home (photos, paintings, prints and rocks, mostly) hadn't made it onto the walls.

I've been knitting out of a box of needles and yarn... a huge cardboard box of yarn and needles all tangled up. That's still a mess, I'm afraid. But the plants were repotted. Important, fragile bits of decoration (like the well-wrapped Woodsie, here) were unpacked, and certain elements of our kitchen finalized. (Not that final Z, you still have a veto, here.) Here's a couple of snapshots of progress. I DO wish that I'd taken some before shots.

The pretty cabinet full of gorgeous dishes was similar before, only that bottom shelf had a been a "very important paper/object and coin depository since day one", so it was strewn with a laptop, and papers and an old burbon bottle full of change.

The pantry had housed a bunch of dishes and some food, but the food had lived over in the (very sunny) kitchen, so, that had to change.

There's two things in the bottom photo. One, I brought home this oak ivy as a house warming gift to Z, but it's been floating, homeless around the apartment ever since our first week here. We each wanted to suspend it in this (windowless) transom over the kitchen door, but couldn't find a way to get it there. You can see she's happy in her new home AND that the coffee/tea station has finally come to fruition. We thought it would be awesome to have all coffee/tea and associated aparatus in one part of the kitchen altogether, uncomplicated by other clutter, to preserve the sanctity of the first moments of morning. It's finally all together, there in the lower corner of the photo.

The last weeks have been filled with a terrible cold for both Z and me (he NEVER gets sick) and hurried, belated birthday knitting (sorry Pop). With any luck, the next photos on this blog will be my dad in his enormous scarf. (The weather has been cooperating with this project, and I have no doubt that it will still be cold enough when he gets it.)


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Monday, September 1, 2008

You say you want a revolution...

Z and I have been following the Arsenal, an English football team for two seasons now. While I really dig it, it feels kind of funny to put a lot of energy into something so distant (we actually got satellite JUST to watch football!) I was really excited that when we moved here, we could totally follow a local, kickass soccer team... the New England Revolution.

I headed to Providence for various and sundry things on Friday, and was planning my return when Z mentioned that the Rev were playing the LA Galaxy. (The Galaxy are like the Yankees of men's pro soccer in the states... they've got Landon Donovan AND David Beckham.) He looked into actually heading over to the stadium, but since I'm still unemployed, and tickets are not THAT cheap we settled for watching the game in a bar.

In Seattle, we knew where to find soccer on tv. In Fremont, there was the George and Dragon, there's The Dray in Ballard, there's the Kangaroo and Kiwi on Aurora and downtown, there's the Owl and Thistle. When the African Cup happened we called each of them and every Ethiopian restaurant and bar in town and still couldn't watch ONE game, even the final. What I'm saying is, we have practice tracking down soccer bars. Since I was hanging out with the Gray family, Z did all the "legwork" (read: Googling) tracking down the best place to go. I got home, we left for the T, we got out right near Fenway, and headed to a very fancy bar.

"Are you sure they'll show it?"
"Yes. This is where the very devoted fans, the Midnight Riders, come when they can't get to the game. They'll show it."

I put a shirt on over my tank top for decency and we headed in. Every television showed college American football. We asked the bartender, she asked her manager, she told us no. The manager came to us and apologized... usually they do show the games, but tonight they had a private party starting in 20 minutes. He apologized a couple more times and told us he wasn't sure where we could go to see the game.

We headed out, and over to Boston Beer Works which had a plethora of tv's (also showing college ball). We asked, and they said that they could totally put some tv's on the Fox Soccer Network for us...also they were a microbrewery! Score! We sat down and put off the waiter until we were sure that they really had the game. There was the face of Donovan in high def! We ordered beers and food (our waiter just moved here from Portland, Or, so we exchanged secret handshakes and he told us about the floral Ipa "You really can't find that kind of Ipa here in Boston") and then "No Signal". The tv's would show about 1 or 2 minutes of game and then "No Signal" for about 30 seconds. "Watching" the game this way was worse than listening to a radio, worse than not watching at all. All the same, it was all we could look at... we'd watch a play develop, see the pass toward the center then "No Signal". We were crestfallen. We gulped down the beer and the food and bolted.

The Iphone oracle suggested we go to a place called McGinns. En route Z popped into a bar as we passed and they suggested we head to McGinns. Thus bolstered in our faith in the oracle, we walked around the block. McGinns looked like just the place... except that it was inexplicably dark. So inexplicably dark (no sign, no nothing) that we both just stared into the windows for awhile. It was frustrating. We didn't have anything else to do, though and it was early so we figured we'd wander around and maybe get lucky. I had given up any real hope, but I like wandering around, so off we went around the next block. We saw a place called "Porter". We both enjoy porter, so we headed over. We looked through the paned windows, and there over the bar was a television showing the game. Easy as that. There were a handful of people inside, including a broad, atheletic-looking guy with bristly silver hair, staring up at the screen.

It was fantastic. The game was exciting (we'd only missed the first half hour) and Z talked to the fan... he'd played professionally back in the day and was eager for soccer to "catch on" here in the states. He followed Portugal and they had a great chat.

Here's to finding our way in our big home! Cheers.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

I'm very blessed....

So many kind people said "goodbye".

So many kind people said "Welcome".

Now I'm taking things out of boxes again. I feel at home, and like a dog in space.

Yesterday I took an enormously long walk. I found a yoga studio, two public libraries, all the banks, a bakery, the coop, the other hippy dippy grocery, the bike store (w/ bike map), the UU church (apparently there's another close by) fair trade coffee, the bike path through the green space... it was awesome. Wierdly I could NOT find a public bathroom. Not in the place where I bought and consumed my large ice coffee and a bagel, not in the next place I visited, or the Goya-filled Hi Lo Grocery. Finally, I came upon a T Station, and decided to look there for a bathroom. Basically I ended up having this crazy identity crisis in there, just trying to get to a bathroom.

Kendra: Do you have a public bathroom on this side of the turnstyle (I REALLY have to go.)
Guy in uniform: Nope, nothing on this side.
Kendra: Well, if I paid a fare to get past the turnstyle would there be a bathroom on the other side?
GIU: Yeah, there's one on that side.
Kendra: Oh good, I just moved here... where do I put the money?
GIU: You don't have a card?
Kendra: No, I just moved here yesterday from Seattle.
GIU: and you didn't take the T yet? How'd you get here.
Kendra: Well, I'm staying right around the corner.
GIU: If you're staying right around the corner, why not go there, and save the money?
Kendra: Well, I really have to go, and they wouldn't let me go at the coffee shop where I bought the coffee, and then I walked awhile...
GIU: They wouldn't ?!

This guy didn't believe a word I said, and I'm not sure which part started him doubting me. I just had to go to the bathroom! Anyway, I found myself hoping he always worked that stop so I'd get to know him and we could laugh about it later... but mostly I was hoping I could put the money in the machine and get to the bathroom. He had the Woman In Uniform unlock a bathroom for me. It was wierd because it appeared to be an employee bathroom, and someone had obviously been smoking there just before. Also, instead of handsoap, there was hair conditioner.
I am a stranger in a strange land.
I am very happy here.

Today I had coffee with my dad and cooked veggie chili and went to a yoga class.

kp

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

I'm putting things into boxes.

It's really difficult to concentrate/focus/pack. One box at a time. That's all I can do.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Time Warp

In the summer of '95, I had to get ready to say goodbye to my three best friends and my boyfriend because they were all going to college and leaving me behind for my senior year. By September, I could recount what I did every single day of that summer, because it all felt so eventful and poignant. (Also, because we did awesome stuff like, go to the drive-in, hung out at diners and Thai restaurants, drank coffee and swam in Newport at night, and climbed around Lincoln park.)

This summer there are some circumstantial similarities, of course, but weirdly there's been some very visceral experiences that confuse my sense of time.

- Riding in the backseat of a car on the way to the beach around sunset with loud techno music playing, while the driver inexpertly speeds through gears and skids to a stop at every light.

- Believing that coffee can make up for weeks of mild and mostly voluntary sleep deprivation.

- Spending HOURS on the phone with different people, talking until I figure out really big ideas about myself and my future.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

I'm a little dizzy....

Saw the Dark Knight, it was incredible, absolutely amazing. LOVED it.

The to-do list has graduated from the bathroom mirror to the white board in the kitchen. (This whiteboard used to hold shopping lists and lists of all the non-visible foods in the house (pantry, freezer etc.) Now it has lists pertaining to emptying this house, to filling boxes and a truck, to preparing for visitors (?!) and applying to school.

Also, we started feeding the cats Peppercatz because of John's wierd skin problems and their enormity. It's raw meat, which I feel good about for them but a little confused about as a new vegetarian. On the other hand, after two days they're behavior is decidedly more catlike on the cat-to-sofa spectrum which is incredibly charming. Yesterday, we watched John tear ass across the lawn (which generally only happens in the presence of a dog or a vaccuum) and scratch her nails on the fence. "She's THINKING about CLIMBING the FENCE!" Z said with absolute incredulity. We're mixing it with their old food (California Natural) and the kibbles have been left over every single day. (Today, I gave them Evo which the lady at the pet store gave me for free to try. It is still sitting there.) John ignored her bowl in order to plot about how to intimidate Little G out of hers.... again a move away from sofa.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Proof of Packing

Last night my friends John and Paula watched me pack because Z is away for the weekend and I needed some moral support. I went through a box of old stuff (dumped most of it) and two shelves of books. (Most of our books Z and I want to pack or pitch together, but tonight I did my child/youth section, and saved two questionable items to ask him about later.) Unfortunately, since I don't have boxes yet (but will fetch some today... cast-offs from P's wedding gifts) my packing really consisted of stacking. But the hard part for me is really sitting on the floor, and casting off the ones I don't want, and I did that.










































For John the Baptist, hating changes is the hard part, though.

I've found myself really anxious and stressed out about this move, more than I thought I would be. Yesterday I said something about "this family" and how we move. It was a tense moment in a long string of tense moments, but Z laughed when I said that and we realized that maybe there are some other voices speaking in our conversation. I don't remember much of moving as a kid, but we did it a lot because my dad was in the Navy. (The last big move was when I was 9 and I remember that one.) I'm pretty curious about how my family talked about moving, and what my parents were anxious about at the time. I remember the concept of "cleaning for inspection" and that it was a big deal. I think at one point this meant my mother scraping spaghetti off the ceiling in Connecticut (someone had shown her that a perfect way to test your spaghetti is to throw it onto the ceiling... if it sticks, it's done.) and oatmeal off the water heater in California (a kid my mom cared for had been forced to eat his cold oatmeal breakfast leftovers for lunch and the kid had hidden it there when my mom's back was turned). I guess, when I'm feeling stressed out about emptying the basement, I can imagine scraping oatmeal off the heater.
Yeah, that might help.
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Tuesday, July 15, 2008

It's the little things....

That let me know we're moving. No I don't have big boxes lying around yet... there is the Direct TV reciever all boxed up for FedEx... the woman just couldn't understand that I'd only wanted it for Soccer and now that the Euro cup is over, it's worthless to us.

No, I know I'm moving because when I started to taste hot sauces from Zack and Zane's at the farmer's market a few weeks ago, Z reminded me that we would "only have to move it." When I got home, I looked at the pantry. Time to use that 3 year old can of coconut milk... what'll I do with all that rice that the Sprayberries gave us when they moved two years ago... ship it to Allentown maybe?

This morning I used the last of the conditioner and planned to refill a little bottle instead of a big one so that we can take it with "on the road".

Occasionally, when we look at a map together to plan, I find myself imagining the rouute, sure. I'm also imagining our cooler, full of almond butter sandwiches on hippie dippie bread, local blackberries and pluots, a six pack of good beer to drink in Coors country.

When Z and I go out, I find myself memorizing the faces of my favorite baristas, wishing for a recipe for juevos abrogados, just marking the moment so that we can remember it later.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

My Story of Stuff

I have been looking around my house with a new lens. We're getting closer and closer to the move and I'm astounded by how many objects there are, and how dominated I feel by them.

Growing up we moved quite a few times, and I remember stuff getting "lost in the move" or broken by movers. I also remember how comforting it was to see the same stuff in a new place. I was the oldest, so I mostly got new stuff, but I got some hand-me-downs from older cousins. One set of grandparents was always trying to give us stuff... I think that grandma bought most of my clothes until I was old enough to know that Healthtex clothes are not hip... and to wonder why the word "Health" was in the brand name. In fact, I have two parcheesi sets from the 50's that that grandfather gave to me (and that I carried on a plane!) in my closet right now. When I visited them I took pictures of some of their stuff, the fruit bowl, and the weird statuettes that had been in the same places for my entire life. I heard often from my family that my other grandparents had gotten rid of so much of their good stuff. They didn't save anything for their children, like furniture, cars, trucks, a beach house. In fact that grandfather gave away my mother's chickens by accident... somebody asked about them, and he had no idea that his teenage daughter even HAD chickens, so he gave them away without asking. On the other hand, that grandmother was a knitter. Her gifts were afghans, pajamas, sweaters and scarves and slippers. I still have a sweater that she made for my mother. Different people, different times, different stuff.

When Z and I moved here, we had a huge truck and we drove a LOT of stuff here. I feel like I spend some time every day commenting on my stuff without actually picking any of it up and DOING anything about it. (Except books. Z and I have a box for keeping books and a box for getting rid of books. Every so often, one of us will pick up a book and ask the other one "Keep this one?" or "You don't want this one do you?" This is fun, and we've agreed completely so far.)

I've got clothes of course. I buy almost all of my clothes at the Goodwill, which is great; it's reusing, it's cheaper, it's around the corner, I'm not supporting sweatshops, or box stores. I feel really good about it. On the other hand, they tend to fall apart a little more quickly (because they're older) and I think I'm more likely to "settle" for clothes that don't quite fit or aren't just right, so they cycle back to the goodwill, and I tend to be discontent. I'm not crazy about boxing up tons of "Not-quite-right" clothes and paying to ship them across the country. In any case, I've had an annual clothing swap that's coming up in a couple of weeks, so that's one solution to that stuff.

I've got wedding gifts. Most of the beautiful special stuff that Zak and I will carry across the country again are wedding gifts. After our wedding, in Rhode Island, we drove a borrowed Eurovan across the country. We carefully packed our gifts into its small trunk. At one point we accidentally killed the battery by leaving the DVD player on (it was a SWEET Eurovan... thank you Mag) and had to jump it. We thought that the battery was in the back (it actually had two) so, while I fetched someone to help us, Z carefully removed our treasures and set them on a picnic table in an RV park. It felt really wonderful, looking at them all laid out completely out of context like that. The only gifts we won't cart back will be some of our beautiful dishes that have broken over the years. (I admit, we've been saving the pieces in a box, because Peter's Pots, where our dishes were made has a butter fingers day. If you bring in the pieces of a broken piece, you can replace it at a discount! I have no idea if the box of pottery shards will make it to Boston.)

I've got technology... I've got yarn... and books... and old papers and STUFF. I'm actually frozen when I think about how to move or sell or pack all this crap that's hemming me in. (As soon as I'm done with this blog, I've got to spend 15 minutes in the office trying to get a handle on the mountain of papers and yarn on and around my desk that has exiled me and the laptop to the living room.) Occasionally, I look beside my bed, or in the office and I think of a film I watched called Possessed by Martin Hampton. It's a documentary about four hoarders, and it's very startling and sharp and disturbing. The whole video is available if you follow that link, and it's excellent... like any mental illness, it's easy to see the same, if less dire, habits of thought and fear in anyone that are displayed in the film.

Once I met a guy and visited him on his boat where he lived and I was startled by how free and happy I imagined I could be on a boat. "Check it out." I thought. "This guy has only a little bit of crap. He basically could NAME every object that he owns. That's awesome." I imagined how fantastic I would feel if I got rid of all my stuff. Zak was away and I came home and looked around our house and found myself only attached to SOME of our stuff. I met a woman on retreat who lived on a boat. We talked about how free she felt with fewer possessions. I told her that I imagined that it would be hard to get rid of books. She blushed and told me about when her husband built them each a bookshelf, and announced that this was all they got. She asked for a second shelf, which he fit in someplace else, and then still ended up storing some books with her sister.

Recently I helped some dear friends pack up their apartment and in lifting all of their stuff, felt miraculously less and LESS attached to all the things I have with every trip up and down the steps. On the other hand, I've been thinking hard about buying another bike (my old one doesn't really fit me) and it's been very tempting to buy one that's brand new.

Sitting in the sun on our deck w/ Z, I looked lovingly at the prayer flags that I hung the first day we lived here, five years ago. They are so beautifully faded and destroyed, worn to transparent colorful bits with gossamer strings hanging from them. I asked Z... what should we do? Should we leave them (probably to be taken down and discarded by the landlord or the next tenants?) Should we take them down and bring them with us? That does'nt feel right at all. Maybe take them down and bury them in the yard, or do some other kind of ritual? We put off deciding. We are very accomplished at putting off deciding.

Yesterday, our training at work began by watching a video called The Story of Stuff. It's a brilliant 20 minute film describing how stuff is made, sold and then discarded. It discusses planned obsolescence and perceived obsolescence in depth and where they entered our design world and how it's changed our relationship to stuff. Please take some time to watch it, it's really fantastic and compelling. It's a little hard, in that An Inconvenient Truth way, but that's because it asks us to look at a bigger picture, which I'm trying to do a little every day anyway. Anyway, I'm not entirely sure where The Story of Stuff has pushed me. (At work, a friend and I are going to gather a Zero-Waste Lunch discussion group of teachers and parents. This makes me feel a little like a super hero.) I'll have to keep mulling to discover exactly how I'll shift my own personal life from this film.

I'm sure that it'll definitely impact me as I consider how much stuff to keep, what to fix, what to get rid of, etc. Now I'll wash some stuff, and recycle some stuff, organize some stuff and try to change my relationship to other stuff. What do you think about your stuff?

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Beautiful weather= no blog

First I was sick,
then I started learning guitar.
Next came Z's birthday and now I'm hustling to get ready at work and at home to go on a trip to Point no point with my fantastic friends C and T from the NC.

It's going to be awesome. And probably colder than here.

Things currently being worried about/worked on for the move...
how/whether to move newts
our book collection
how crazy it is that time moves ever onward.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

It's time....

When Z and I first decided to move to Seattle, we told everyone... it'll be two or three years. This month, it's been 7 years since we climbed out of that U-haul, and we've decided that we're ready to pack it back up again.

There are so many reasons why we're moving, and why now, but the biggest reason is that we both feel the need to be closer to our family. I am so excited... AND everytime we tell folks out here, I feel like I'm breaking up with them.

We've got plenty of time... Z and I love love love summer in Seattle, so we won't be leaving until August. It's exciting and wonderful, and we're enjoying imagining what will come next.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

exhaustedthoughts

I've been working long hours at my job to pack up our school and get ready to move.

It's crazy, man, and I am tired.

I just got an email from my sister (who also works in an early childhood) detailing Schul Sylvester (Or "School New Years") Where Jessy lives, there is an outlawed holiday all about small children getting up at 5 am to celebrate the last day of school before break. Traditionally (it is no longer endorsed by schools or parents) children would ring doorbells at 5pm. Today, while they are not endorsed, kids use fire crackers to explode the doggy-doo receptacles all over town.

As soon as I recieved the email, I called her because this holiday was too good to be true! I talked to Ivo, her husband, who told me that it was much wilder in "his day" and that the police had to start cracking down in the early nineties when it got out of control. He asked me "you remember the corner a block from my parents' house where the grocery is ?" "Of course" I said. "One year some teenagers occupied it and threw chairs at anyone who came near."

My sister lives in a wierd ass country. (Apologies, J & I) We all know stories of Teens gone ape shit that are way more principled or senselessly violent or unprincipled and more harmful. This holiday is at once kinder, gentler and more brutal and independent than any American childhood celebration.

Meanwhile, I spent the week/day packing up a classroom. Think about how hard it is to move with your loved one. It's not as gratifying to move with your coworkers. Although I have to say it is MORE gratifying to move with parent volunteers... these people are showing up until all hours to pack up our stuff.

Now, to bed.
Goodnight.

Holiday plans? ha ha haha hahahaha.
kp