Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Today





If you're out there and you know a way to keep the delicious, cool air conditioned feeling of a hotel room and transfer it directly and permanently into a silver Volkswagen - - I'm all ears. In a related quest, it'd be great if this king-sized uber-soft bed could be somehow attached to the roof of the car (and air-conditioned as well) in such a manner to allow me to nap today on the way from Scottsdale, Arizona to . . . wait for it . . . Las Vegas.



It feels a little like the wheels - - an important part of any road trip - - are coming off of this one. Moments of clarity and purpose happen almost daily and when they do, if taken advantage of, decisions can be made, thoughts catalogued. Often times, however, this happens instead:



"What is that we're doing today?"



"I don't know. What's today?"



"Thursday?"



"No, I think it was already Thursday."



"Monday?"



"Could be."



"Is there something we've planned to do or are you asking if there is something we're supposed to be doing?"



"Tuesday, it's Tuesday."



"Okay. What does that mean?"



"Yeah, I don't know."



You'll notice that dialogue tags are conspicuously missing from the above conversation and that is easily because we take turns not knowing things. It's an equal opportunity ignorance experiment we're running here. Either way - yesterday's twelve minutes of clarity resulted in an impromptu research trip to Las Vegas to scout neighborhoods, talk to service people, gawk and point at drunks/nudists/drunknudists.



Meanwhile, I'll let you in on a word about how hot it is in Phoenix during the summer. It's hot. It's really, really, - truly - hot. We both thought for sure that the heat was a constant - much like sitting in a sauna. The nice thing about a sauna is that one enters them for the purpose of relaxing. How about adding an industrial hair dryer to the sauna, and then making the test subject think about things - calculate figures like days without a job, cost of living ratios to three or four major domestic cities, gas prices, proper breathing protocol, water where is the water, what day is it for the love of the world, what DAY IS IT?



So I'll wait here for another hour in this plush, dark, cool hotel room and then scribble an itinerary on the back of my hand for ease of use and certainty of retention: Go to Vegas. Learn about Vegas. Today is . . . Tuesday? Wednesday? Dammit.

Saturday, June 23, 2007

And The Trip Stalls A Bit. . .

Having escaped the treachery of the PCH and learned our way through
the wine country regions of the Central Coast (a story that deserves
its own individual posting) we have arrived tired in Phoenix.

Where we will stay for the moment, and perhaps even the moments that
comprise the following month.

And after this - - yes, wait for it - - we will once again begin with
what people might call a normal life. This means sleeping in the same
place over and over again. Exchanging skills and time for payment, ie
employment. This also means that we will have chosen a location to
live - - which at the time of this writing - - is still up in the air.

We've narrowed it to three. And maybe not the three that most would expect.

More on this, and an apology for such an obvious cliffhanger, when
time permits.

Aloha

Monday, June 18, 2007

The Little Differences

Yes, it's been a while, but a while is how long it took for all the following things to go on. I'm keeping a backlog of moments and stories to tell, but the more pertinent and local information will shine through until there is more time for typing and more time for reflection. As I type, we are winding the Volkwsagen south on America's favorite road: The Pacific Coast Highway. There is a smooth layer of smoky fog that hangs just above the sunroof most of the time and as the road dips into and out of its bushy underside we are treated to miles and miles of ocean, bright green Bob Ross trees, and craggy mountain roads that lead seemingly nowhere. Once in a while one gets a view right down the edge of the coast line and with the fog and the rocks jutting from the water like they are it feels as if outside the GoonDocks.

It also looks a lot like the north western lip of Maui, minus the fog and then trade the Bob Ross trees for the leafy-wet kind that Arnold Schwarzenegger would rustle around through in Predator, part one not part two, in two it was Danny Glover before he was too old for that shit.

In any case - it's breathtaking every three or four minutes and scary as all hell every other five as someone without a bicycle helmet is going way too fast on a road that isn't wide enough for everyone to begin with. The other odd quality are the mailboxes. We've been outside of REAL human contact for about an hour on this road - no gas stations or lodgings or roadside stands for hand-picked cherries or lamps made of antlers - and there are mailboxes on the side of the road. You can't see the "driveways" because the cliff face is straight down, but somehow people (a lot of people) live down there. They can't get groceries or toss a baseball around their yard, but the JCrew catalogue is never late.

I think Krissy has had enough.

"I'm over this road," she says. "Steep foggy cliffs, I get it."

Our good friend and geography afficionado Brian True has estimated our trip down the PCH at ten hours from the Bay Area to Orange County. After consulting the map and the clock a few moments ago, I think I will up his estimate to a scant thirty-eight days. But it will be a gorgeous thirty-eight days. A steep foggy cliffy thirty eight days.

Anyone familiar with this stretch of things, we're looking for LimeKiln State Park because after LimeKiln is a road called G18 that will (maybe) intersect us back with the 101 so that we can make Orange Country before August. While we look, I'll tell you a few stories. But before I do I'll offer this one trivia quiz: What makes a foggy, sometime sprinkly cliff-side mountain road even more fun and exciting? Road Construction!

Krissy's flu subsided on the road out of Colorado and left behind a ball of phlegm she named Fred. Fred lives just below her Krissy's Apple and slides uncomfortably up under her chin and down almost into her diaphragm as if Fred were a phlegm yo-yo. Fred is getting smaller, from the size of a golf ball to maybe the size of a fava bean, but Fred won't leave and Krissy can't evict him. This is the source of several pleasing noises at all hours of the day, followed by angered disgust and head shaking. "Fred just won't leave." Recently Fred grabbed onto an ibuprofen Krissy took and held it there in her throat until finally letting go under a deluge of hot tea and Fiji Bottled water ( www.fijiwater.com).

(The mileage signs on the PCH go like this every ten minutes: Los Angeles 286. Los Angeles 283. Los Angeles 283. Los Angeles 283. Los Angeles 282. Los Angeles 283. You could fund three inner city Compton music classes with hopeful white female teachers for the money you'd save by not manufacturing these signs and instead every once in a while having someone just spray paint a sign in the gravel on the side of the road: Los Angeles 38DaysAway.)

So Fred, Krissy and I started what would be twenty straight hours in the car together north out of Denver and into Wyoming and then west through Utah, Nevada and into California (states 15-19 since May 1st). Due to limited and continually dwindling resources, as well as the desire to not stop in Utah, we decided to make the trip straight through, caffeinating irresponsibly with only thoughts of staying up, and not thoughts of being able to come back down. For this reason, after nine hours of me driving and Krissy trying to sleep but not being able to - we switched, nearly brawled on a highway on-ramp, and then experienced eight hours of Krissy driving and me trying to sleep but not being able to. But oh the money we saved! Fifty dollars probably! We rolled into San Francisco a fidgety and grumbling trio (Fred likely was the only one to sleep being that he's inanimate and also mostly comprised of mucus) and checked into the Hotel Monaco ( www.kimptonhotels.com). Thursday ended quickly with a nap, some sushi, and another nap.

Our plans in San Francisco were research based. In Chicago for example (yes, I know the stories from Chicago haven't been all the way filled in) where the apartments were plentiful, it was finding a location we liked with access to transportation and schooling and several restaurants etc. Luckily, Chicago is flush with apartments of all shapes, sizes and price ranges.

"It's cold in the winter, like really cold," an apartment broker would say. "But that's why we've included all these amenities into your building. A wine bar in the basement, a pool table and big screen tv in the loft area, on sight laundromat and fitness center and on the first floor is a 7-11. Your key works to the back door of the 7-11 so you don't have to go outside when you want a microwave burrito at two in the morning. Thank you for choosing Chicago!"

San Francisco was different.

Utilizing Craig's list as a resource and several walking maps (I lose them so quickly) of the city, we saw four apartments over two days. Friday we saw one that was in Russian Hill - a lovely area - that was about 440 square feet and $1900. It also smelled of burnt straw and new paint, a thrilling combination for the senses.

Neither of us wanted to be the bullet that broke the balloon, so we made small talk as we wandered down the hills of San Francisco to where we thought the Marina would be. (The map was way gone at this point)

"So, what did you think of that one?"

"Well," I said. "The neighborhood is a little, I don't know."

"Quiet."

"Yes, quiet. Even the storefronts written all in Chinese were closed. I'm not sure I can live in an area where not a single thing but a dry cleaner is open in a solid two block radius. What did you think of the apartment?"

"Well," Krissy says in this very kid-glove way we've developed to sugar coat the worst and most expensive shit hole I've seen in a long time. "I think the bathroom was, what should I call it?"

"Quaint."

"No," she says and throws her hands up a little, a sign of surrender. "It was small. It was SO small. You'd have to turn sideways to brush your teeth in there."

"And did you smell that lobby? What was that? And the view from the living room into that dilapidated pain factory? Who pays $1900 for that? And for what? To be close to the run-down and empty Chinese butcher shop?"

Discouraged, we began drinking. I must have been very discouraged because I drank everything I could get my hands on. We enjoyed dinner (I think) at a restaurant with the word BEAR in the name (I think) and then went for more drinks (I'm pretty sure) at a bar (a lounge maybe?) at the top of a hotel (I think) and then went back to the hotel where I (maybe) threw up and passed out (definitely.)

You can imagine how much fun this made Saturday morning. With a handful of listings for open houses and neighborhoods of interest, nothing but half a glass of water and four ibuprofen in my stomach, we took a cab to the first one and walked to the door. I kid you not, this is what happened.

"Are you Jason? With the open house? It looked like you have five or six of them today on Craig's List?"

"Yea." This guy has that fat-face, perfect teeth, trust-fund gaze on real thick. He's chewing a power bar and holding the front door open with his ankle. This is, at its very lowest amount of energy, how to hold a house open - - not how to run an open house. "It's number 6, go on up."

"Um okay."

Earlier in the morning, under the guise of professionalism, Kris and I have updated our resumes, written a cover letter and created a little information packet to give to prospective renters that says: Hey, we're good people who use computers, give us a chance..

The apartment is ripped to shreds. The bathroom is gutted. The windows are being painted and or replaced. It is a nice space - maybe 700 square feet - and this time only for $1500. Curious to know more, we go all the way back downstairs to where the doorstop, ahem APARTMENT BROKER, is still chewing on some massive oat cud, his designer sweat pants bunched at his stupid knee.

"When will the unit be ready?" Krissy asks. It is important that you see that Krissy, a female of the age of 26, not by any means androgynous and to be perfectly honest quite lovely and enjoying the curvaceous figure of a woman in society - - Krissy is the one asking.

"I don't know. . .man," he says.

This is not acceptable. I can see this being a good response when pulled over and the police office finds a duffle bag of uncut heroin in the back seat of your car beneath severed body parts - - and you're high - - try that. What are you doing son, the officer says and you reply: I don't know. . . man.

Or maybe you're untangling Christmas lights and somehow your shoe has fallen off and there you stand in the snow covered front yard of your house in the dead of winter, hopping around and wrapping green wires and broken bulbs about your body as if it were a mink coat. Your neighbor walks by: Hey Ted! What exactly are you doing there? And it would make sense for you to grin stupidly and say out loud: I don't know. . . . . . Man.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Travel Schedule: "Hectic"

I suppose I didn't realize that a week has gone by since my attempt at locating my toes. It has been a sinfully quiet week at the end of which my travel partner and sayer-of-nice-things-about-my-new-beard Krissy fell to the flu.

She was very sad, and also "her skin hurt."

It was a serious affliction by all accounts, but two days of regulated thera-flu and bedrest and she is back on the trail towards adventure. Two nights of sleeping on the couch and two days of making soup has me in "full-nesting mode" which doesn't play well with "get in the car and drive for 18 hours mode."

All the same, and update will appear shortly, please be excited and diligent.

Aloha

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Where Are My Toes, Seriously.

In the hope of lessening the "pizza region" on my body, I recently went and lifted weights. They are as heavy as I remember them, and in some cases, way heavier. My toes, in a totally unexplainable feat of nature, are getting farther away. When coaching gymnastics years ago and tossing my body around much like one would a ragdoll, my toes were at the bottom of my reach. I could flatten my palms there to the right and left of my toes and exhale quietly, feeling blood flow and muscles in my legs and back move around quickly to accommodate my wish to touch my own feet.

It is different now.

My arms have gotten shorter. My legs have gotten longer. My back - I don't even want to guess what has happened to my back, but it doesn't work anymore. And as for quiet exhaling, what a thing of the past that has become. From the standing position I begin by bending at the waist. The key is to keep my knees straight as it is they and the muscles of my legs that I am attempting to loosen in some fashion. As my torso passes the 90 degree right angle and closes the margin towards my thighs, not only do my knees bend slightly but a noise like that of being hit in the chest with an aluminum baseball bat comes forth from my mouth and my eyes close.

I'm certain this is a call to arms for the young men and women who make their living teaching people like me how to touch my toes again.

"Uuuuugh. Ooooooh. Ehhhhh."

"Sir, are you interested in personal training?"

"Ooough?"

When left alone, the stretch will quickly turn into my moving each of my feet to a very wide stance so that my palms once again lie flat on the floor. Having achieved the desired result, looking flexible enough to "palm the floor", I can move on to stretching my groin which has attained the spring-like elasticity of a broken thigh master. Sitting on the floor with my feet pressed together, in what comically goes by the Butterfly stretch, I must physically push the insides of my knees apart. This also hurts, both my ego and my back, legs, groin, arms, fingertips, ears nose and throat.

Suffice it to say, the hibernation period in Maui has left me tight as a knot and with the beginnings of a beach belly - that distended but beautifully tanned thing that protrudes from an unbuttoned Aloha shirt when silly rich men wander the decks of their yachts with a $12 bottles of imported beer. Problem of course is that I'm 27, not retired, and do not consider this robust-body quality to accurately proclaim satisfied wealth and lifestyle. I consider it to be that I'm getting lazy and thus, fat.

Also the bottom hem of my t-shirts wave free in the wind as if hanging over a clothesline. Do I buy bigger t-shirts? Do I begin what I should rightfully call my Paternity Wear Clothing Line "For Men Who've Given Up Trying To Look Or Feel Good. Sizes XL - 5XL"

"Are you tired of being able to walk seven or eight stairs in a row? Are you just flabbergasted that running ten miles doesn't even knock the wind out of you? Can you perform in bed without cramping in eight to ten different muscle groups? Have we got a system for you! In no time at all, six months or less, you can look and feel horrible! Your body image will plummet! Your self-esteem will become subterranean! Your toes will get so far away you'll have to fasten your velcro with a mechanical claw at the end of your doctor prescribed cane! Stop exercising, eat shit that is bad for you at all hours of the day and you too will feel and look disgusting in no time!"

I think I took that too far. I have some sit ups to do, but I will try to feel better about myself one day at a time - perhaps soon I'll be able to change my own clothes or take a shower with the light on again. In the meantime I'll just melt some dark chocolate on this fat-free caramel rice cake, maybe have a diet coke. I hear there's good tv on until morning so I should be set.

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