Categories
Awesome Drew Love Religion Sentiment

Showing off love

The other night at the theatre, it was about 6pm and it was all warm and sunny and beautiful, and this 20-ish-year-old couple came walking through the courtyard, holding hands. He let go and vaulted over this low railing, and then turned around and looked at her, needing approval. I thought that was so cute, that he was showing off for her. Then he tried to help her jump over the railing, which of course she pretended like she couldn’t do. Then she got up on this planter box and he stood about 20 feet away and took pictures of her. And I was watching them and thinking, Isn’t love great?

Then an hour or so later, this 60s-ish couple came in and they were waiting for the box office to open. When I looked back at them again, she had gone up to the first landing of the stairs, and he was standing at the bottom taking pictures of her. And I just melted, because love and showing off love doesn’t just apply to 20-year-olds.

It’s springtime and people are twitterpated. I don’t know what it is but I know that I’ve felt a little giddy the past few days – the warmer weather? The extra vitamin D? The opportunity for more exercise outdoors? In the fall, my favorite season is the fall, but at this time of year, spring is definitely it.

So show off some love!

Categories
Memoir

Temporary Lease Sweet Temporary Lease

Last night, while failing to fall asleep (failing asleep?), I realized that in the last 9 years I have lived in like 10 places.

Until August 2002: Lakeport
Sept 2002-June 2003: Davis, dorms
(Summer of 2003 I lived at home in Lakeport again.)
Sept 2003-Aug 2004: Davis, Almondwood
Sept 2004-Aug 2005: Davis, Drake Dr.
(Also, summer of 2005 I basically lived in Drew’s apartment at Oxford Parkside.)
Sept 2005-July 2006: Davis, Adams St.
Aug 2006-Nov 2006: Brooklyn, NY
Dec 2006-July 2009: Queens, NY
Aug 2009-Sept 2009: San Francisco, CA
Oct 2009-now: San Bruno, CA

No wonder I have an anxiety attack any time Drew wants to throw away old empty boxes.  I knew I wasn’t just channeling my Hoarder self when I thought frantically, But that’s one of those good boxes!  Hammermill!  It still has its lid!

I think I just had some kind of breakthrough.

Categories
Being a girl Drew Fiction

Situation: Comedy

Yesterday, DMP informed me that each of my stories sounds like it is just the set-up to an actual story.  Every time I finish one, he is apparently left waiting for the action to begin.  I don’t tell stories, I tell situations.

When pressed, he admitted it’s endearing.  (“But don’t you like that about me?”  “Not really.”  “But, if I died, wouldn’t you miss it?”  “Um…yes.”)  I think it’s an interesting character trait.  Something I will keep an eye (ear) on.  Pay attention to what my “stories” want to be, and whether they seem complete.

In celebration! of endearing character traits, here are a few actual stories I have told him recently…and then the endings I am inventing now to fulfill him (and whoever else jumps on this train).

1. The Misplaced Priest

“The Hayward Daily Review had a story today about how, sometimes, when priests are accused of things like inappropriate behavior around children, and stuff, sometimes the Catholic Church just sends them away to faraway countries where they are already doing outreach and missions and stuff.  And there was this picture of a priest who was accused a few a years ago, and in the picture he’s in like Venezuela or somewhere, and he’s holding this little boy, and there are two more standing next to him, and they’re all under 5 years old and they’re all just wearing shorts, and he’s got this look, like, this half smile on his face, and I’m like, This is a bad idea, right?  Does this guy not look exactly like Ronnie McGorvey in Little Children?”

This is where my story originally ended.  But maybe DMP would have been happier had it gone on:

“So then Craig says, You know what?  My favorite cousin down in Santa Barbara is a Catholic priest.  And about 8 years ago one of the families in his church got in trouble, and he helped them personally as well as through the church, with money and food, and he even let them stay with him for a week or so, a single mother and her two boys.  Eventually she got back on her feet and she was very grateful and gracious.  Now one of the sons is like 18 or 19, and is calling my cousin asking him for more money.  My cousin keeps saying no, he’s helped them a lot, he’s not exactly well-off by anyone’s standards, and this kid doesn’t need money, he just wants money.  So a couple weeks ago my cousin calls my parents and tells them that this 18-year-old kid said he is going to go to the police and say that my cousin abused the two kids all those years ago, which is absolutely not true.  So he’s dealing with the possibility of this accusation – which would be devastating even if unfounded – and he’s thinking about just resigning before things get messy and saving himself the trouble.

“But then he finds out through one of his superiors that he’s been talking to about this, that the church is looking for a few priests to send to Afghanistan to do outreach there, and even before this mess with the 18-year-old he was praying about a way to reach out to more people.  He had even been thinking about going over to the Middle East, or to Africa, and trying to do some work there.  Building wells or whatever, helping people, like priests do.  So he talked to whoever is in charge and now he’s working on all the paperwork and going through the process to fly over there and minister to people.  And he’s not running away from guilt or from fear.  He’s going because he felt called to go, and now he’s even wondering if this kid was just the one last sign from God that he needed to take the plunge.”

I figure in a good, full story you always learn a lesson, and my lesson in this story is not to judge people by a single picture in a newspaper, even when accompanied by a pretty thorough article and some pretty compelling evidence.

2. The Case of the Rude Driver (Installment 35 of 119 – I seem to often have “stories” about rude drivers)

“Dude, so all the roads in Mill Valley were flooded from the rain and high tides today, and so everyone is driving really slow.  And there’s this part of the road where it splits into two lanes for like an eighth of a mile, so more people can fit behind the traffic light, and I was driving carefully through this sort of deep water, when a red jeep zooms by me on the right, and splashes a huge tidal wave of mud over my car.  My windshield wipers had a hard time cleaning it off.  And now my car is coated with this film of dirty skanky gutter water.”

Continued…

“So, I freaked out, because on top of being rude, it was really dangerous, and I decided, the heck with my calltime, I can be a little late today.  And I followed that jeep for about 6 miles out toward Stinson Beach.  They finally pulled over, and I got a little scared, because I thought maybe they were ready for a confronation and would jump out of the car with a crowbar or something.  But when no one got out of the car I turned my car off and got out (carefully, expecting an ambush).  I walked up to the driver’s side and looked in the window, and there in the driver’s seat was a 9-months-pregnant woman!  I knocked on her window and she rolled it down but I could hear her Lamaze breathing even before that.  “Do you need help?” I asked her.  She nodded, fearfully.  But luckily I had my emergency first-aid kit in the car, along with plenty of distilled water and road flares.  I set it all up, called the hospital and had them send out an ambulance, and decided to wait with her and talk quietly to keep her calm.

“That probably would have worked, but she had waited too long before leaving her work, because she wanted to stay long enough for her workday to count as a whole day, and not waste a half-sickday.  So she was already pretty far along.  I ended up delivering that baby on the side of Hwy 1, right before the ambulance arrived.  Thank goodness!  They took care of it from there, but I made sure they had my name and phone number, and she promised to call me.  She also hinted that she was thinking about naming her baby after me, but it was a boy, bless him, and I told her it’s okay if she wants to go with something more traditionally male.”

This story has action, suspense, a hero, and new beginnings.  How can you not love it?

3. Fergie Who?

“Today, in Safeway, Fergie was on the cover of a magazine, looking hot as usual, and the woman behind me in line was studying the cover pretty intently.  Out of the corner of my eye I could see her glancing at me a couple times too, and finally she asked me, “Is that Fergie, who was married to Prince Andrew?”  I said, “Oh, no, that’s Fergie the singer, from the Black Eyed Peas.”  “Well, I didn’t think she was that nice redhead!” she said, sounding relieved.

Okay, even I know that’s not a story.  But I would still totally tell it to someone like it was.  What is wrong with me?

Let’s continue.

“Fergie the Duchess is a lovely person,” she went on, “just lovely.” 

“You know The Duchess of York?” I asked her, being kind since I was still third in line and the person at the register was still trying to remember their phone number. 

“Oh yes,” she said, now turning to face me full on.  “Well, I used to date Prince Andrew before their marriage, so we met several times, and then we would get together and she would ask me how I dealt with certain habits of his…” 

“What type of habits?” I asked. 

“Well, he would clip his toenails in the bathtub but forget to rinse them down the drain,” she said, “and he would never finish a bottle or carton of anything – he always left just a half-inch in the bottom, not even enough for a full glass.  So irritating.”  She sighed.  “Fergie – the duchess Fergie – would call me up sometimes and ask how I ever put up with it.” 

“That is very interesting,” I said. 

“You know Andrew told me once that he didn’t like redheads.  Just thought it was unnatural.  That’s why I always took care to keep my hair very dark.  To blend in.” 

“Wow,” I said.  “So that’s why they got divorced.”

“Yes,” she said.  “That’s why.”

And then it was my turn at the register and I scanned my way through quickly.  Before leaving I turned back and did a little half-wave to the crazy brunette behind me in line.  “It was nice talking to you,” I said.

“Don’t eat any underripe persimmons,” she said back to me, and I left.

Categories
Awesome Drew Nature

Tafoni Sandstone

On Monday, Drew and I went for a drive out to Woodside, CA, to visit the Tafoni Sandstone that he has told me about for years.  To get there, we first put on our walkin’ shoes, then we drove about 30-40 minutes south.  Then he remembered how to get there (after not having been there for years).  We found the parking lot and the trail entrance and started walking.

We walked through the trees and I prattled on about the Apple IIe computer game Oregon Trail, until he said kindly that he apparently didn’t play as much as I did and didn’t remember such details.  Here is a picture of one of the many trees we saw, and imagine me saying, “And there were all these jobs that you could have, and bankers started out with more money, but money only gets you so far when your entire family has dysentery…”

Soon thereafter we saw a banana slug, which led to me theorizing why I’ve never been in a situation where I’ve had to kiss a banana slug, and why is it super mean to pour salt on a banana slug but not a regular slug?  (I’m starting to realize that Drew may have felt like something of a babysitter or possibly a camp counselor right about now.)

Then the hills started to get steeper and breath started to get shorter and I started to talk less, which may have been why he took me out there in the first place.  Eventually we arrived at the sandstone:

This particular formation is called stone lace.

Tafoni refers to any of the formations that occur in sandstone, I’m given to understand.  This particular piece used to be in a deep ocean cavern and has been pushed up over time by tectonic plates.  Geology, etc.  Water containing CO2 seeps into the stone, and meanwhile, particles build up on the outside, forming a crust.  When the water evaporates, it it sucked out of the stone, leaving pits inside where the CO2 has eaten up the rock.  Then the crust breaks and it erodes more.  But it’s pretty, right?

We completely ignored the sign about how delicate this structure is and how we should please stay on the path and preserve this for our grandchildren, and we climbed over the fence to see the other side.  There were caverns and columns over there, we were almost gypped out of seeing them.

There were also some large caverns that, I’m sorry to say, looked like they had been defiled, as there were remains of fires and possibly a beer can or two left inside them.  We did not really hurt the rock, we just climbed around it, so I think we didn’t really do any damage.  Our grandchildren are safe.

If you are ever hankering for some geological adventure, I would recommend hiking out there.  I’ve never seen anything like it (although maybe you have, if you have frequent hankerings for geology).  It was a nice little walk too, altogether quite the outing.

Next Monday: I want to cook things out of this cookbook I found today called “Passion for Cheese.”

Categories
"Other people" Being a girl Drew Family Not awesome

The Wedding Photographer from the Black Lagoon

So, I got married last November.  It was a wonderful affair, with wine and family and dancing and cake and guests coming from New York and Spain to help us celebrate.  It was really much better than I expected and lots better than I even wished for.  The caterers were thorough and invisible when they were supposed to be, the DJ played all the right music and none of the wrong music, and the cake was 5 layers, not 4 like we were expecting, because the baker wanted to give it some extra drama.  I love me a 5-tiered cake.  The photographer and his assistant were everywhere at all times, stayed from 11 in the morning until 11 at night, and didn’t mind when our set-up shot plan changed 3 times.  They left the reception when we did, and promised us our pictures in “4-6 weeks! by Christmas!”

Here is a timeline of how the next 4 months have gone.

Dec 15, haven’t heard anything from him, so I email him just to find out if he’ll post them soon. We’d love to sit down with our sets of parents and go through the pictures.  Photographer doesn’t respond.
Dec 22, Facebook informs me he’s going to Mexico for Christmas.
Dec 22, I email him again because I haven’t heard back.
Dec 23, Photographer informs me via email that he’s “out of the country” for the holidays and will return after the New Year.
Jan 6, I email him again asking because I haven’t heard anything.
Jan 6, He writes back saying he’s almost done!
Jan 11, They’re posted! We’re so happy. I email him back asking for a couple others shots – one, a group shot with the girls I used to babysit, which I definitely remember being taken. Two, anything, from any point in the night, of me and my mom together. He tells me he’s out of town until Jan 17 so he’ll get back to me.
Jan 26, I call him. No answer.  No callback.
Feb 12, I email him. No answer.
Mar 2, I call him. No answer.  No callback.
Mar 6, I call him around 9:30 in the morning..  He answers!  Holy cow!  He tells me he’s “just looking at the pictures” and he can’t find the one of me with my babysitting girls.  Also, he says, “this has never happened before” but he can’t find anything of me and my mom.  He’s “never had to set that up before, it always happens naturally.”  I basically give up and say sweetly through my teeth, “Okay, well, everything else is great, so can you mail us the DVD?”  He says he’ll do that right away.
Mar 11, Silly me, I assumed “right away” meant he’d mail the DVD on Saturday, or Monday at the latest.  No DVD has shown up yet and shipping from San Francisco to San Bruno shouldn’t take long.  I email him asking if he’d sent it because I wanted to take it to my parents’ house over the weekend (not true).  He writes back saying he’s at a “wedding photography convention” in Las Vegas to get some new slick DVD cases that he likes.  He’ll overnight one to my parents’ address, if I’ll give it to him.  I give it to him (anything to get a copy of that DVD!).
Mar 12, In the morning he leaves me a voicemail saying he’s been to the post office, UPS, and FedEx and no one can get it there by Saturday.  I text him saying to just send it to me here.

Today we got home and there was a (granted, pretty slick) DVD case leaning against the door.  Which means he just brought it by and left it at some point today?  There are 2 DVDs inside, one saying in Sharpie, “Copy 1” and the other, “Copy 2.”  For needing to be placed in such a slick case, the DVDs are pretty unimpressive, but if I pop them into the computer and my wedding pictures exist thereon, everything will be forgiven (if not immediately forgotten).

So here it is, over 4 months later, and we have our pictures.  The next step is to upload all 600 onto some photo sharing-and-purchasing website, send the link to everyone, and then order the prints.  Now the only thing to kind of bother me is the fact that everyone else has that one great the-happy-couple-kissing-in-a-very-posed-manner-in-front-of-a-tree picture, and we, for some reason, have none of those.  I mean, we have lots of good candids and that’s what I wanted anyway, so it’s all good.  I just kind of miss not having that gazing-at-each-other-lovingly-in-front-of-a-pond picture.

Oh yeah, and I need to write that photographer a scathing review on Yelp.  My only question is, is this the kind of thing where I should warn him beforehand?  Or should I just cut into him via the faceless internet?  Major dilemma.

Categories
Endings Theatre

Longer & More Introspective Than I Was Expecting To Be

Sunlight closed yesterday.  When I woke up feeling slightly head-cold-y I knew it was going to be a long day.  Over the next 12 hours the cold settled in, through 2 shows, strike, and then the obligatory going-out-for-a-drink which I avoided through the entire run of the show.  By that time though I couldn’t stomach the idea of alcohol (I was light-headed already from sinus congestion) so when Liz the Stage Manager asked if she could buy me a drink I wimped out and asked for a diet Coke.  Which came with a peppercorn (?) in it.

Closing was kind of a weird experience, it’s just not the same as it was in high school and even in college.  I remember getting major post-show depression and it just hasn’t happened in years.  I thought it was because for the last 4 years all the shows I’ve worked on have been in addition to a job, and so closing them has just meant that I get to go back to working only 40 hours a week.  Turns out that it’s actually not that pessimistic – everyone agreed that closing (and opening) just don’t mean as much when it’s your job, and it’s just another show.  Jen the Production Manager said her parents were still saving all her programs and ticket stubs on the wall of their laundry room and I grinned from the familiarity: my parents moved their wall of theatre stuff from the hallway to the laundry room sometime while I was in New York.  Although I guess they’re not even saving stuff anymore, my mom told me they threw their Sunlight programs away like the day after they came to see the show.  That’s fine, what are they going to do with that anyway?

I still saved a program and I still felt a slight urge to ask the actors to sign it…but don’t worry, I resisted.  I have learned a thing or two.

I was thinking about past shows and some of the past facilities I worked in, and how great Marin is in so many ways.  I thought maybe I would share some of them.

Brilliant Traces:  Well, we rehearsed and performed inside a school during the summer.
A) Rehearsals were on the 5th floor, air conditioning controls were on the 1st floor, and I often had to run up and down the stairs several times in a 3-hour rehearsal period. 
B) It was summer which means the school was locked most of the time, so if I arrived and the actor (who worked at the school) wasn’t there yet, I had to wait outside. 
C) I often ended up washing the dishes in a drinking fountain.

Kraken:  One of my least favorite theatre spaces ever (Soho Rep) – an unmarked door in a fairly dirty part of Soho, it always reeked like someone had just peed on it (which they probably did, it was set back in the wall and next door to a bar, all the guys working on the show remarked it was exactly where they would go if they stumbled out of the bar and had to go).  I washed dishes in a dimly lit dirty bathroom, which incidentally had no doors.  At one point the toilet broke and I fixed it myself.

The Vietnamization of New Jersey:  Okay, I actually liked this show and it was in Theatre Row so it was a great facility.  But they did throw cornflakes ALL OVER the stage and it was crazy hard to keep it cleaned up during rehearsals…luckily I had two crew members for the run so they did all the sweeping and mopping work.

Eccentricities of a Nightingale:  Giant bowl of “eggnog” which was really powdered milk in water. Washing dishes in a bathroom again!  Except for when I would use the slop sink.  And I hated the stage manager for some reason.

Recent Tragic Events:  While this was one of my favorite things I did in New York (I really liked the script, the people, the time commitment, and my life while this show was going on), the theatre itself was incredibly small and the booth was really just behind-a-curtain in the back row of seats.  For a couple of the performances, I know the audience could hear my stomach growl.  But I can’t really complain about this because I still smile when I think about the entire thing.  I loved buying a pizza from the $.99 pizza place every night, and I loved having to play all the sound cues (and there were a million) on a CD player, even when I had to change the levels quickly and precisely.  I guess I did have to wash dishes in a bathroom again.  Really, I just don’t like washing dishes in bathrooms.

Brunch:  OMG. The American Theatre of Actors is terrible and I would never work there again, and I say that with complete honesty even if I did live in New York again.  The guy who runs it is crazy and the director almost got arrested for taking out the trash.  To get to the booth I had to climb up a ladder on the wall and I was convinced I was going to fall and die at some point in the run.  The place was messy and dirty, and the house lights sometimes didn’t work at all and sometimes wouldn’t go off.  Too many ladders and too many perishable props that had to be bought daily.  I was in the grocery store on the corner constantly for limes and ice, down the street at the flower stand for roses, and in the ice cream store for balloons, all grossly overpriced but it’s New York so what are you going to do?

I guess I can’t say anything bad about TACT or TACT shows…

So I guess that leaves my two lists.

The things I will not miss about Sunlight:
-Snow.  Sweeping snow, scooping snow, loading snow, shaking snow, finding snow in my clothes.
-Certain actors’ warmups
-The fight
-The smell of low sodium vegetable broth mixed with water. Gross!
-Cumulative hours of references to old films and actors that everyone else is unfamiliar with, but has to nod and smile along to, as one actor describes exactly what he’s doing with this line

The things I will miss about Sunlight:
-Liz the Stage Manager
-Hanging out and making fun of the actors during intermission (when they turned on the charm they were really awesome)
-Headset chatter and movie games with Liz and Myles the Board Op
-Only 4 actors! Minimal laundry!
-The last 30 minutes of the show when I had no more duties and could just sit on the floor in the dark and drink Juice Squeeze

But we start Equivocation this weekend and so I am not feeling too sad.  Onward and upward!

Categories
"Other people" Not awesome

Trouble in Mill Valley

Yesterday I saw a couple high schoolers scam an old man.

I was at the Safeway in Mill Valley, one of the ritzier parts of already affluent Marin County, and the Safeway happens to be across the street from Tamalpais High School, so every afternoon it and the shopping center around it are flooded with high schoolers making trouble and buying energy drinks.

I was in the checkout line, with an older man behind me buying mostly yogurt and high fiber bread, and a high schooler behind him.  Another kid comes up to that kid.

Wandering kid: Hey Aiden, loan me a dollar.
Kid in line (Aiden): No, why?
Wanderer: I don’t have any money and I’m starving.
Aiden: Why didn’t you go home?
Wanderer: I missed the bus.  I’m going to have to sleep here tonight and I need dinner.
Aiden: You’re sleeping here again?
Wanderer: Yeah, I’m going to sleep at the bus stop.

At this point, the old man behind me pulls out his wallet and passes the kid money, I don’t know how much but it sure looked like more than one dollar, and the kid goes, “Really? Oh, really? Thank you sir!” (At least he was very polite.)  Then he kind of leaves but lingers in the aisle behind us looking at ice cream toppings, which he was surely not going to buy for dinner.  The kid in line very kindly helped the old man unload his groceries onto the conveyor belt and then kind of…left, at which point I realized he didn’t have anything to buy anyway.  Then I also realized the poor sleeping-at-the-bus-stop kid was the one that I had seen walking back and forth across all the checkstands (casing the joint?), deliberately making his shoes squeak, which I noticed because it annoyed me.

The thing is, it was pouring rain and for a minute I felt bad for the kid too, like, I was wondering if I should buy him a sandwich with my nonexistent money.  But then I became pretty sure that if he’s going to high school in Mill Valley, dressed as well as he was, he’s probably not starving or stuck without a ride home.  Although if it was a scam, it was sure a polite one.

Then this reminded me of The Great Fake Scavenger Hunt…but that’s a story for another time.