To Neff and Zsen…and to old friends…

Some people you meet and you just know…

There will never be another friend, like this friend.

No one else can make you as angry or as happy.  No one else “gets” you.  No one else can get away with saying the kinds of things you’d let this person say. 

Certain people become a part of your insides.  And when they exit before you do, it’s hard not to spend the rest of your life wondering, “what would he/she have thought about this, done with this, said about this…”

You make your peace with things the older and wiser you get.  Memory becomes a blessing and a curse.

And life’s just life.  It’s exactly what you make of it.  And of old friends…

(The silliest people on earth, after midnight, Fairfax Village – Neff T’s last visit to LA, to shop with ZZZsssen!)

Why I Don’t Blog About Sarah Palin

So the obvious question is, “If this is a Witch/Revolutionary site, then why aren’t you blogging about Sarah Palin”? 

My obvious answer to that is “Do I need to?  Isn’t she doing a wonderful job of scaring the hell out of us entirely as is?” 

What nuance of right wing stupidity could I illuminate that Sarah Palin doesn’t already convey every time she speaks publicly?  Dissecting Sarah Palin has become the national pasttime of all the Democrats anyway.  Fun times.  They love that shit.  And of course their camp doesn’t thrill me any more than Sarah Palin’s scares me. The Democrats and the Republicans have long been the same old boring party to me anyway.  Blah, blah, blah.  There is nothing fresh or innovative coming out of either parties mouths.  Again, we are stuck with the same boring “bail out the middle class” last minute patriotism that have made both parties seem completely penny wise and pound foolish to me. 

Besides, Witches deal with Sarah Palins on a daily basis!!  Always have and probably always will (at least in the US)!!!  We didn’t just wake up to this new American horror, we live with ignorance and prejudice and intolerance on a daily basis.  We don’t slumber on the cultural watch the way those lazy liberals seem to. 

For those of us who are inclined to believe that God and Goddess can be found in yourself, or perhaps does not exist at all, this is how the United States has always looked:

Homogenized.  Self-righteous.  Delusionally religious.  Hypocritical.  Dangerously conservative.  Completely void of innovative and progressive thought. Patriarchal women passing for feminists.  Scary.  24/7 Scary.

Come to think of it, that’s how I usually feel about the Democrats too!  Funny!

Long ago, those of us who were lucky enough to hear what Ralph Nader was proposing and who campaigned fervently for him and who endured the stupidities of those who were angered by Nader’s “spoiler” votes (please deliver me from the hubris and assumptions of the narcissistic Dems) shook our heads when we realized he wouldn’t get the debating time or attention that he deserved. 

I don’t need to say anything about Sarah Palin.  As stated earlier, she speaks for herself.  And for all those like-minded.  To those who woke up recently, to an ugly America in danger of fascism, I say “Where have you fucking been?  We could have used you in the Nader camp years ago…”

For those of us already mourning the loss of our sacred and cherished hope of giving Ralph Nader one more well deserved chance to intelligently CHALLENGE this corporate hegemony of bullshit that passes for a free nation’s government….well, all I can say is “FUCK IT!”  I now have to give my vote to the shitty middle class Dems who appear to be a lesser evil than the ruling class bible thumping Repubs.

To all the earnest Sarah Palin haters, who get off on daily dissections of her, I flap my paws for you.  This election has made me feel about as stimulated as a drunken seal, sluggishly congratulating the already self-congratulatory Dems for their wit: you guys are SOO MUCH SHARPER than those boring old Republican farts.

I hope that when Obama wins, people will blog about the great BAIT AND SWITCH or  ”what happened when Obama got elected and nothing improved”?????

We Witches are looking forward to seeing all the optimistic American children winning their great big Obama prize.  For many of us (we can already feel it on the winds), the next four years (of no lasting change) will be the last stop before flying out of this nest altogether and seeking higher ground, higher thinking in other, less narcissistic lands.

Democrat. Patriot. Lady.

When I was growing up in the South (1976, the year of the Bicentennial and the year Jimmy Carter was elected), surrounded by Southern aunties named Novella, Ruby, Ore and Pearl and taking “White Gloves and Party Manners” classes at Gayfers department store, this was the woman we were instructed to emulate.

It wasn’t a hard sell.  If you couldn’t be a lady yourself, you were still taught how to appreciate one. 

She defined “Democrat”, “Patriot”, “American” and was most of all, the “First Lady”.  The last one. 

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In praise of fiction and fiction writers…

“that’s an interesting perspective…”

Salman Rushdie on human beings, the only storytelling animals

It’s Good To Be Nobody. Part Two.

Camille Paglia called her one of the great Decadents.  Most know her as one of the greatest satirical poets of the English language. 

Structure and syntax aside, I like to think of her as the voice of a snotty twelve year old; a very smart, snotty twelve year old.

This is the poem that really nails what it feels like to be “two snotty twelve year olds, taking the piss, on the playground bench”.  Never gets old. 

Thanks, Emily Dickinson. 

“I’m nobody! Who are you?
Are you nobody, too?
Then there’s a pair of us – don’t tell!
They’d banish us, you know!

How dreary to be somebody!
How public like a frog
To tell one’s name the livelong day
To an admiring bog!”

Sense and Sensibility

Average cost of a woman’s haircut in Los Angeles: $60 and up.

Trip to the hair salon for shampoo, cut, color and blowdry:

  • Shampoo – $10, tip attendant $5
  • Cut – $60
  • Color – $40
  • Blowdry – $10
  • Tip Stylist 20%: $25
  • Products to maintain look: $30
  • Pay for parking: $5

Grand total: $185

__________________________________________________________________________________

Average cost of bohemian enjoying the fall of 2008: $20 and up

Trip to Hollywood Boulevard – spot girl with good haircut – ask who her stylist is.  Go see Mary, said girl’s stylist before registering online for autumn enrichment classes:

  • Haircut: $15
  • Tip: $5
  • No blowdry, no color, no product: $0.00
  • Haircolor at beauty supply store: $5
  • Physics class: $100
  • Art class: $60

Grand total: $185

_________________________________________________________________________________

Cost of fall fashion sense: $185

Cost of art and physics sensibility (and being reasonably tidy for fall): $185

Sense?  Or sensibility?

Hank and Marilyn…

After Monroe, the second most inspirational Marilyn…

First time pre-school mom: relief and reassurance in Weho

Captain’s Log:

Yesterday, July 30th 7:45 AM – the moment I brought Lyric in for breakfast at her West Hollywood preschool, I officially joined the ranks of “preschool moms”. 

The occasion of Lyric’s first field trip, a trip to the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium (adjacent to the beach which she is so afraid of) found me taking a personal day off work so I could make sure that nothing happened to my baby girl on her class’s big day out. 

When I signed up for the event, I knew (selfishly) that I would get to be with my baby all day (translation: make sure no harm comes to my baby).  It never really occurred to me (super-selfish) that “field trip volunteer” meant watching the other kids too!  How totally Lyric-centric I have been!!!!

It was the first time I got to see up close what kind of people are taking care of Lyric (beyond that first day of admissions when all parties were on their best behavior) and what kinds of kids she is interacting with.  I noted, with relief, that Lyric is one of the few white kids in her class.  She is the minority. 

Me, I was moved around from racist place to place; a childhood memory so traumatic that I remember being five years old and trying to cast a spell on myself to make myself whiter.  Yesterday, I counted only three blonde curly haired kidlings in the bunch.  My daughter was one of them.  My deliberate (sometimes extremist) attempts to make Lyric’s childhood so much simpler than mine feel fulfilled, at least for now. 

I watched Lyric eat a hearty breakfast, brush her teeth, join the class in song and dance and then interact with her classmates in the playground as they waited for the big yellow bus.  The older girls were kind to her.  Little girls, most of them with brown hair and dark skin, treated her, to my astonishment like their fair haired baby princess.  A little boy asked me if I was Lyric’s mother.  I replied “yes” very sweetly, with dual images in my head: one, the dominant image, of patient Jackie Kennedy, always kind, always poised, ready to be of service – silly because I was wearing an Emily the Strange tee with black pants and sandals – an attempt to look like a “cool”, “younger” mom, and nothing like the former first lady; the other image, the one from 1972 that I keep trying to drown but is always bouyed back up by resilience, my Mexican mother walking me to primary school in Wickhambrook, England in her classic 60’s era black wool coat.  It never fails to precede the accepted but not forgiven memory of the other kids taunting me as I stood in the playground alone day after day.  “Brownie!  Your mother looks just like a witch!” 

“Brownie” was what they used to say.  “Brownie”, for being the only girl in school from another country.

“Brownie” I remember, as I watch fair haired Princess Lyric holding hands with Jade and Maya.  And later when we’ve boarded the bus, Princess Lyric is sitting ladylike with her mother and a five year old named Samuel who has been seated with us to prevent the distraction of opening the bus windows; my child will never be “Brownie” I realize, as we drive down La Brea avenue in Hollywood on our way to the 10 Freeway and the world-famous Santa Monica pier.  Relief.

The day goes better than expected.  All the children have been asked to wear red shirts so we can spot everyone.  Lyric looks adorable in her fashionable red and white striped pants, crimson peasant blouse with a pocket for seashells and Strawberry Shortcake windbreaker.  She gets scared at the museum and I wait patiently with her at each exhibit, never forcing her.  The other kids can see she is fussed over, but they seem to not resent her for it.  It is at the museum that I begin to have an awareness for the safety of the other kids.  I am mindful of the teachers doing head counts and decide to take up the back of the line to make sure I can watch for the stragglers.  My own pleasant experience as a science camp counselor comes to mind.  Reassurance. 

Beach time is a success.  Lyric witnesses moments of her mother looking after the rest of her class: holding hands, passing out sandwiches, building sand castles (bucket castles really), accepting gifts of found seashells (“wee, tiny ones”) that I have instructed them all to look for, being perplexed by the tears of a homesick child who has just realized he is at the ocean without his mum and the reward that comes from asking the other kids if they want to comfort him and watching in amazement as they work together to do so.  I am looking for bullies in the bunch and there are none!!  I note, with superficial Jackie Kennedy consciousness, the other kids staring at the cleverness of Lyric’s blouse pocket and the seashells she is elegantly tucking in it.  Yes, I’ve gotten my answer – the outfit was worth the ten minutes of self conscious deliberation I gave it the night before.  They come to me wide-eyed saying “the sand is too hot” and I say to the entire barefoot contingent, “just sit down and it won’t feel hot anymore” – we busy ourselves covering our feet with the sand.

The staff never notices my turn at being such a cool and fun volunteer mom.  They have real work to do, minding and counting all the children whose quirks they are familiar with and have had to become experts on in such a short time.  They have to clean off this bunch and get them back to West Hollywood for nap-time.  Back on the bus, they pass out brand new books with an “underwater adventure” theme – everyone gets one with their own name in it.  I tell Lyric out loud so all the staff can hear, “I like your school, baby.  I like it so much.” 

At 1:30 PM, Lyric and her classmates are wiped out and sleeping on playmats back in their darkened pre-school.  My shift is over.  I skip out, thanking the teachers for everything, relieved that Lyric is in such a great school.  As I sit in the park, reading Studs Terkel’s WORKING and waiting for Lyric to wake up so I can take her home, it occurs to me that my office gig is a thousand times easier than that of a teacher.  Stay-at-home moms, child caregivers and teachers really are the hardest working people – I am totally convinced.  I am also convinced that I am finally, really and truly, age forty.  Wickhambrook Primary School and it’s cruelties are a lifetime away.  I don’t look like Jacqueline Kennedy and never will.  My mother didn’t live to see me become a mother.  But there is an entirely new future now, for me and Princess Lyric.  And many years to come as a “volunteer mom” of a “cool kid” who fits in.  Relief and reassurance thrive in West Hollywood.

What’s real? And which generation can tell the difference anymore?

As I get older, the search for integrity becomes all the more urgent.  Especially when I find myself in the presence of a generation of twenty-somethings who seem less motivated by wholesome pursuits than any other age of twenty-somethings in the history of the world. 

Yep, I guess I am just another 40 year old on a bender, who can’t figure out 20 year olds. 

Just another. 

My time as a curmudgeon has come.

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Happy Birthday James

Wherever you are…Happy Birthday (7/23)

I’m wearing my D Train: Bronx to Brooklyn tshirt today.  NYC Subway System.  And wondering how you are.

Come home.  Please.

A drug-free childbirth for a Leo baby girl…

Today was my daughter’s third day at preschool.  She’s going to be four on August 17th and as we transition into her sign, Leo, I am reminded of all the challenging events that led up to her home birth. 

Lyric was conceived the month after my mother passed away and our first hope was that she really was my mother, coming back.  This is a belief that a lot of families of Eastern religion and philosophy support.  In the Western world, I don’t find many mainstream people who are open minded to reincarnation.  I don’t speak for everyone, of course, but in this, I will risk a generalization: most Witches believe in reincarnation. 

Prior to Lyric’s conception, I had been dabbling in baby magic.  I wasn’t trying to get pregnant but I knew intuitively that my mother was going to die and that the wheel of life would be turning in an extraordinary way.  I was open to whatever change was on the winds.  I had been enchanted by a picture of a fairy looking over a baby and had posted it where I would see it daily.  I was also regularly listening to a song Madonna had written for Lourdes and subconsciously inviting a little golden soul to come my way.  If this sounds corny or esoteric, it shouldn’t.  Consider any woman who is desperate to get pregnant, who has wasted time and money on useless fertility treatments – a woman like that would welcome any kind of gentle baby magic if she thought it would work.  I’m sad for these women and sorry to say that I was not as desperate for conception.

My Craft work was limited to caring for my mother while she was comatose.  I was with her when she took her last breath.  She died in October after a long time on life support, just as my father had, also in October, one year before.  Part of my grief process involved filling a new home with their ashes and what I could salvage of their former belongings.  More on that later.

Lyric is my only child and I was 36 when she was born.  Because I had spent so much time in hospitals caring for my parents, I no longer trusted the Western medical system and did not wish to be subjected to patriarchal, limiting ideas of childbirth.  It sounds silly to write a sentence like that.  And believe me, I know how dogmatic it sounds.  But there’s no other way to say it.  Being a Witch, I knew that the only kind of birth I could have would have to be entirely on my own terms.  So I looked to the world of midwifery and self-hypnosis for an alternative. 

I also wanted to put my money where my mouth was.  Being a Witch is not something you do part-time.  If the Goddess calls on you, you have to rise to the occasion.  And in this case, it wasn’t so much that I had to PROVE to anyone that I could give birth without drugs; it was that my INTUITION told me I could, and I couldn’t chicken out on my own instinct.  Therein lies the true journey of the Witch.  I only wish that younger women who dally in the Craft would come to that realization.  I think if they understood just how important the SPIRITUAL CALLING is, they wouldn’t take it up so feverishly during awkward adolescence and then abandon it so quickly post-college.  But that’s fodder for an entirely different essay.

Suffice to say that birthing with midwives turned out to be the most positive and educational experience I had had.  I started seeing the midwives at the Hollywood Birth Center on Gardner (right in the heart of ”Guitar Central” on the Sunset Strip – something we point out often to Lyric) at five months and I planned to birth in a water tub at nine months.  My entire pregnancy was waylaid by complications.  I was fighting a legal battle over my parents property that I lost.  I was living in two different cities, spending two weeks in one and two weeks back in LA, trying to manage my parents estate and keep my personal life intact.  The stress factor was overwhelming.  Other than the midwives, I had no supportive females in my life.  No sisters.  No immediate relatives to take over the role of mother or grandmother to me.  I wasn’t what you would call “physically fit”.  When we think of women who give birth naturally, perhaps we think of yoga instructors or women who had been athletic.  I was nothing like that.  And I was 36 and having a child for the first time.  In spite of all of these things, I still managed to believe that I could birth naturally and I persevered to find competent women in Los Angeles who would help me.  I knew the Goddess would bring them to me. 

I wasn’t reckless.  I was simultaneously seeing a female obstretician at a women’s clinic in Los Angeles.  I was getting regular ultra sounds and blood tests.  I refused amniocentesis.  I didn’t care to know if my daughter was going to have Down’s Syndrome or not.  I wasn’t going to love her any less.  Or view raising a Down’s Syndrome child as any less of a challenge than raising any other kind of child. 

Part of affirming that I could birth naturally was telling everyone the truth of my aspirations.  My cousin who is “successful and well educated” (and works for the hospital where my mother passed away) told me every horror story you can imagine about women being killed by midwives.  So did the female doctor I was seeing.  As time went on and we started discussing hospitals to prepare for, I let her know that I intended to birth in a tub.  She did everything she could to discourage me, even telling me that my cervix was shaped in such a way that birthing without cesarean or drugs could kill me.  As I had spent a great deal of time and energy learning about midwifery and separating fact from fiction, I couldn’t believe how very little people, especially women, in the United States knew about midwives.  Compared to the rest of the world, especially countries where birth with midwifery is the norm, I couldn’t believe how patriarchal the United States was.  And for NO GOOD REASON!

At one point I started bleeding prematurely and was taken to Cedar’s-Sinai Medical Center, supposedly one of the best in the U.S. and the one you hear about when celebrities give birth; Cedars was five minutes from my Los Angeles home.  I was at the start of my third trimester and was being told I would have to spend the rest of my pregnancy in bed.  They gave me steroids to help the baby’s lungs, in case she was born premature.  They hooked me up to a catheter and gave me only ice chips to eat in case I went into labor.  I was miserable.  After several lonely days staring out the window with only the Beverly Center to view, with no visitors except my partner, and no permission to even get up and wash my own hair, I called the midwives and told them what the “Western meds” had done to me.  They flew in like superheroes and within hours I was discharged and back in my own home, where I happily remained (albeit housebound, no walking up and down the stairs!) until I gave birth to my Leo baby in the comfort of my own bed. 

 This is what the birth was like. 

8:00 pm: I felt contractions and had a glass of wine.  I had not imbibed during pregnancy and thought nothing of having a glass for contractions.  I don’t recommend it.  But that’s what I did. 

2:00 am: The contractions were ferocious enough that I felt it was necessary to take a long shower, dry off, drink another glass of wine and try to get to the birth center. 

3:00 am: The midwives were called and told not to go the birth center, that I was very close to birthing and couldn’t (wouldn’t) leave home.

4:00 am: The midwives arrived, our pug was dropped off with a neighbor, birthing ensued.

7:30am: Lyric had arrived.  Curtis went to Buzz on the corner to get coffee for everyone.  The midwives shared food and conversation while Lyric nursed right away; we took her for her first baby visit at Dr. Fleiss’s office the next day.  The midwives had let Curtis cut the umbilical cord which they later shaped into a heart.  They also took the placenta and placed it in the freezer in case we wanted to someday plant it under a tree for Lyric, a common birth ritual that pagan children are delighted by.  I did not endure an episiotomy.  My daughter was not exposed to drugs.  Her first look at the world was gentle, a glimpse of lilac walls, a cast I had made of my belly and breasts on a shelf, the eyes of her father welcoming her into the “cold” of the room, the faces of women speaking calmly to her.  The midwives even did our dishes and tidied our front room while we slept with our newborn.  We were blessed by the Goddess and the God indeed. 

Four years later, I delight in showing Lyric the pictures of her birth.  One of the midwives had the sense to bring a disposable camera and as Lyric emerged, she completed the whole roll and later, when we dropped it off to be developed, warned the technician who would be developing the pictures what she was about to see.  Yes, of course we all had camera phones and digi-cam at the time, but in our ”pagan” setting, no one thought to use them. 

I am hoping to post more about midwifery and using hypnosis to get through labor.  In the meantime, I would like to assure anyone reading this of the following:

Having a baby at home with midwives was in no way an illegal endangerment to my child.  Midwives must be licensed and experienced.  They are also trained to call for emergency back up when a situation warrants it.  Many midwives work in tandem with obstreticians and pediatricians.  They are a wealth of knowledge and resources who view birth as an emergence, not an emergency.  Most births will not be classified as emergencies.  If you think they are, you have been watching too much TV. 

I do not view drug-free home birth as some sort of achievement over other mothers who “gave in” to anesthesia or cesarean section.  Of course not.  What I am saying is this was a personal triumph of my own intuition over impersonal, patriarchal, “lazy” medicine that the medical practitioners were selling me (admittedly, some of them very well educated and very well intentioned other women). WHERE and HOW to birth is a decision every mother has the right to make for herself.

In pregnancy, a woman’s greatest asset is being able to trust her own intuition, about herself and her child.  It is her primal instinct that must be validated.  This is not treated as a sacred state of mind in the United States.  And that’s sad. 

If you are reading about this subject for the first time and would like to find out more about birthing at home, I urge you to read the following books – they are essential in paradigm shifting, especially if you were strongly opposed to midwifery:

1. Spiritual Midwifery by Ina May Gaskin and Ina May’s Guide to Childbirth (the bible!) – I hope to post more about Ina May in future.  She deserves a Nobel Peace Prize. 

2. Birthing From Within by Pam England and Rob Horowitz

3. Choosing Waterbirth: Reclaiming the Sacred Power of Birth by Lakshmi Bertram and Michel Odent (Michel Odent is revolutionary in birthing perspectives and I hope to post more about him here too). 

So after this experience, do I think I’m some kind of superwoman?  Well, yeah…all Witches do.  That’s sort of the point.  But not because I had a natural home birth.  I’ll be the first one to say that I had the easiest birth imaginable and I chalk it all up to two magical things I had in my possession: the ability to think and the ability to read; also, the ability to use the phone book.  Next time around, if there is one, I might find myself in a much different circumstance – we’ll have to wait and see what the Goddess says.  Having a progressive male partner helps.  Suffice to say that modern women are extremely lucky to be living in an age where ANY kind of birth is possible.  To women who secretly wish to have their births at home, without catheters and IV’s and episiotomies…I say follow your heart and use your “guts” :)

Blessed be…

What I’ve learned so far this summer…

1. Borders on Sunset actually does carry Maximum Rocknroll.

2. Dr Fleiss and his staff still run the best pediatrician’s office in the world :)   

3. The people I work for/with are the coolest, most together people in the world :)

 4. 80% of the guitar buyers at Guitar Center on Sunset are still men. 

5. When women purchase guitars at Guitar Center they at least come in knowing what they already want. 

 Topping the list are Strats:

And Les Pauls:

Sorry.  That was wishful thinking. 

They mostly pick up these lame ass, bubblegum metallic Daisys: 

6. Sweet Lady Jane still has the best birthday cakes in Los Angeles.

7. My new favorite neighborhood personality is the guy who dresses like Fidel Castro and works at the newstand by Canters.  He is ALWAYS cool to my kid and treats her with respect.

8. Rocket Video has two for one on Saturdays now.  I tried to like Netflix but the turnover isn’t fast enough for me.  Meanwhile Rocket has EVERYTHING.  And they’re independently owned…

9. Lisa Randall is still my favorite Harvard physicist.

10.  Christopher Hitchens is still my favorite genius.  It once was Marilyn Vos Savant, but I’ve reverted back to Hitch. 

11. I really don’t want a cell phone.

12. I really DO want another pug.

13. I will never date online. 

14. A lot of smart women in the US are absolutely lobotomized when it comes to dating.  Thank Hera I am not one of them. 

15. Life’s great and continues to get better. 

16. Actually life’s phenomenal and continues to get better.

17.  Everyone I know is amazing and continues to impress me.

18.  The full moons this year are going to be “fully” loaded.

19.  The new moons this year command brilliant “new” starts.

20.  Every day in my neighborhood is like being on vacation.

21. If you have the choice to be happy or discontented, always pick happy.  It takes zero brains to be discontented.

The trouble with cars in Los Angeles…

…is not the cars themselves, it is the people who drive them, particularly the way they drive in my neighborhood.

Clearly, I’ve ranted here before about “car culture” (an oxymoron?) in Los Angeles.  And I think it’s necessary to make the following distinctions:

Most of the time, I dig cars.  They’re here to stay and I have to deal with them.  I certainly don’t have a beef with people who choose to drive as their primary form of transportation.  I don’t even have a beef with anyone’s purchasing decisions.  I’m not “classist” – what you drive is your business. 

Sure, I (like everyone else) have opinions about the consequences of driving certain environmentally unfriendly vehicles.  But that’s sort of the definition of “cars” – none of them are completely friendly, if only because there is always a hazard in driving them (to yourself, to pedestrians, etc).  They’ve always been dangerous – but we’ve adapted to living with them.  From certain perspectives, there are clear advantages to using them. 

I’m actually grateful for one of the perks of living in my neighborhood: the Petersen Automotive Museum.  The museum, at the corner of Wilshire and Fairfax, loads new cars in at the back of their building and one of the best things about living in LA is the serendipity of happening upon a new acquisition being brought into it’s new home.   At it’s best, car design is modern art. And viewing one of these beauties unexpectedly from street level is a thrill.  The same kind of thrill you get when you pass any exceptionally cool vehicle in every day traffic. 

In LA we get to see a lot of Ferrari’s and Lamborghini’s on the surface streets.  They’re usually going to Starbucks or The Gap.  Not something you would be likely to see in a small, farming community.  

On the flip side, I once saw a “couch-car” traveling through a Modesto parking lot.  It was the funniest thing ever: two people parked comfortably on their couch, motoring in comfort, from home to the Baskin Robbins in a shopping center on McHenry Avenue.  I was at that Baskin Robbins, enjoying my own evening treat, and I watched in amazement as the couch motored towards me and parked.  The sedentary patrons leisurely picked up cones, went back to the parking lot and enjoyed their couch-ride back home.  No one could EVER do that in the middle of LA.  Aside from it being an aesthetic atrocity, I am guessing that no LA driver would have the patience to drive beside a motorized couch traveling under 35 miles per hour. 

This is a different driver, different locale but this video should give you some idea of what I witnessed:

Amusing, right?

So here is what ugly, debased, “evil” car culture looks like on my side of town.

My neighborhood, the Fairfax district, has the highest incidence of hit and runs to the elderly in Los Angeles County.  You know who the elderly are in my neighborhood?  European immigrants, a lot of them Holocaust survivors who reinvented themselves right in the heart of the Fairfax district.  These are the last people on earth who you can bump into on a daily basis and spy their markings of the Shoah on an exposed patch of skin.  I can also think of at least four senior citizen homes within blocks of Fairfax and Beverly.  That’s a lot of elderly trying to get around their own hood – most of them too old to safely drive. 

There is, of course, a huge percentage of elderly homeless.  I guess nobody cares about them.  We found one in the parking lot of the Out of The Closet Thrift Store on the corner of Fairfax and Oakwood – she was sleeping in the lot and when kindly asked to move couldn’t do so.  The reason?  She said she was so tired that she couldn’t get up but when the paramedics came they discovered that her legs were gangrened and would need to be amputated.  If Out of The Closet hadn’t looked after her, I imagine some asshole in a hurry would have run over her. 

You’ve seen the elderly trying to cross Beverly Blvd or Third Street, trying to get to Farmer’s Market or Whole Foods or Canters. After all the things the elderly have lived through, and knowing that their only means of transportation is often the DASH or their wheelchairs or their own two feet (plus walking cane..), it is an insult to them that the traffic lights are not timed to their advantage in their own neighborhood.  I consider myself pretty hardy and I can barely get across the street before the lights change.  Granted, I usually have a 30 lb toddler in my arms…

Come to think of it, my toddler’s not really safe in my neighborhood.  Neither are the beloved dogs and cats who reside between Fairfax and La Brea.  We live on the same street that many people use as the short cut to get from The Grove to Melrose.  Yes, we have stop signs, but no one pays any attention to those.  We know this because about every two days, we either witness a collision or at least HEAR IT outside of our window.  The sounds of these crashes are jarring and can be heard from blocks away.  My daughter always asks what’s happening and when we look out the window, we usually see the same neighbors rushing over to the accident to volunteer as witnesses.  We have asked the city repeatedly to put speed bumps on our streets and to make our corner a four way stop.  They haven’t done a thing for Stanley Ave.  Except add a street sign to the corner of Stanley and Beverly calling it “The Grove Drive”.  Thanks.

Most of the time people race through our neighborhood like it’s the Autobahn.  And usually we get to yell at these people, “better hurry.  you don’t want to be late to get to the stop sign.”  My neighbor is really witty about these things.  When he sees an SUV driver honking to get around someone who committed the crime of moving into a new building or having a tow truck come out, he likes to scream “Go around the block!  Everything is not all about you!”

On my way to work a few years ago, I was broadsided by an “actress” in her father’s Volvo – she hit me so hard that the car spun completely around and lucky for me, the passenger’s side (sans passenger) was smashed.  Of course I was driving a new car.  Mistake.  And of course, she was completely at fault.  Why?  She was talking on her cell phone, really pissed about being late for yoga class.  When I got out of the car I told her “I had the right of way.  You know that, right?”  She sighed and said, “Yeah…  Now I gotta call my dad.  Shit.  I am SO LATE for yoga class.”  I loved that part.  Especially as I sat there waiting for someone to pick me up and studied what was left of my CD collection, strewn all over the street from the impact.  She wanted me to feel bad about her day being ruined.  What a surprise.  The best part were the people who came to eyeball the goings-on. 

With me (the Asian girl wearing glasses) in the street and my car spun 180, it appeared that I was at fault.  So I was not surprised when people ran straight to the actress in the Volvo first, to make sure she was okay.  I hate to be the one to say this, but it needs to be said (come closer so I can whisper this to you): the people who ran up had already made the assumption that the Asian girl was at fault. 

Don’t say you don’t know what I’m talking about…  You who are of ethnic origin know DAMN WELL what I’m talking about.  Assumptions. 

Anyway, you can probably imagine that the people who treat our humble thoroughfare like it’s the Autobahn don’t give a damn about pedestrians.  Dodging drivers-who-nearly-clip-pedestrians-in-the-crosswalk-while-making-left-turns is just a regular part of every day.  Like taking vitamins. 

The insouciance of most drivers in my neighborhood is what kills me.  Absolutely slays me.  People really enjoy parking in spots that are clearly marked “tenant only”.  And I really enjoy having these people towed out of my spot.  Especially when it’s something like a Lexus SUV and I can have it towed at 3:00 AM.  A little bit of schadenfraude never hurt anyone.  And I only do it when it’s necessary.  Like taking vitamins. 

Suffice to say that cars are not bad really.  Not as bad as the people who drive them. 

Especially in my neighborhood. 

Basically, driving cars is a lot like casting spells – there is always an inherent danger in them, but the greater harm lies with each driver.

That’s all I have to say about that. 

And one more thing.  I wish we had more trains in LA.  Trains are so fucking cool (below) and the ones we have now only go four places.

Cool vs Crap? The summertime sailing songs…

This is extremely silly but last night I decided that I could use three summertime “sailing” songs to perfectly illustrate the difference between “crap” music and “good” music. 

This, naturally, is dangerous water to tread (pun totally intended) when you propose to judge something as emotionally subjective as music.  But just hear me out (cliche also intended).  These three songs will lend themselves perfectly to my attempts at “crap vs cool” distinction.

The three songs under scrutiny are: SAILING by Christopher Cross, COOL CHANGE by The Little River Band and SOUTHERN CROSS by Crosby, Stills and Nash. 

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Freedom of Speech: Stand Up and Complain

Oscar the Grouch’s famous “stand up and complain” song from FOLLOW THAT BIRD.  Kinda says it all…

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