Sunday, March 29, 2015

Crisp


Julie Blackmon
Julie BlackmonJulie Blackmon
Yesterday, I spent almost an entire shift scrolling down Anthropologie’s sale section, swooning over velvet curtains and bohemian blouses. I was not actively engaging with my clients, I was not writing my notes for billing, I was not researching affordable housing, and I most certainly was not having any clinically significant interactions. And I didn't feel a god damn thing.
So this is what burnout looks like: dread, hopelessness, and automated empathy. Everything feels like a chore. Time before work is soured by the looming countdown to clock-in.  How else would I ever find out that I am not meant to be a Social Worker unless I actually chipped away at it, for a full year.
It’s literally sucking the life-force out of me. I used to think and now I just plan. I used to be present and now I just show up. I am doing everyone a disservice around me by staying in a job I feel numb to. I would rather slave away in food service than work for a program I don’t respect.
I live in a house of three 20-something ladies. All with solid degrees, no drug addictions, show-up type ladies. And we all hate our jobs. How has this come to be? My generation feels the pressure to get a job, get the paycheck, and the the ‘things.’ Or the pressure to pay off student-loans or even cover the bar tabs stacked to keep ourselves numb from the harsh face of adulthood.
It is so clear to me how people get trapped in that 9-to-5 grind in a field they are ambivalent towards. We get fooled into realizing a vision of success that doesn't make us particularly happy. We take that job, we work those hours, we weather ourselves into capitalist worker bees too wrenched to taste honey.
Comb by comb, we build hives around our minds--trapped to believe we have no way out. Excuses pour over cracked soil where possibility is left to dry.
So how do we change? How do we muster the courage to say fuck it all? How do we find work that doesn't squeeze the light out of us?
James and I were walking Koba the other day, enjoying blooms and (rare) sunshine, when we began to play the “if you won the lottery” game. Of course, it always goes: “I would travel, and give money to this or that charity, and buy those Frye boots I've been swooning over, and go to Whole Foods and go HAM.” But the bit of substance in the mental experiment is this: what comes after the splurge? How do you fill your days? If money wasn't an issue, what would you be doing?
Here we go: I would build a kickass tiny house and get some property not too far from Portland, maybe Linnton or Hood River. I would be a doggie foster mom. I would do yoga every day. I would knit. I would read. I would make coffee. I would grow succulents. I would take a wood-shop class. I would babysit taft. I would write my heart out.  
Ah-Ha! Then, paralysis. A deluge of “I would’s” strangled by these inculcated ideas-- that we are unable to make a living off of ‘hobbies.’ What the fuck is a hobby anyway? Hobbies are for people who hate their jobs. If you’re passionate about it, pursue it. Become a master of whatever that is and it will not be in vain.
It takes courage to leap out of societal bounds. I am a person who is constantly trying to justify what I am ‘doing,’ as opposed to focusing on who I am ‘being.’
Here’s to pointing our sails to the “would’s” of life…..and to the eternal job hunt (yeesh).  


photography: Julie Blackmon

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Sunday, March 15, 2015

A New Pet-Owner's Manifesto




It started like any other ‘day off’ in Portland, with a hankering for black coffee and smash-browns. We went to our go-to brunch place called ‘Juniors’ in the Southeast and waited in the rain with the other starving, tattooed, Kurt Vonnegut-enthusiasts who don’t wear rain coats. James twirled me, I fake-boxed him, and we moon-walked up and down the sidewalks-- little games only played when minds are hypocaloric and fuzzy.
  Juniors is the quintessential Portland Cafe: very limited seating, ambient-velvet-underground-esque tunes scratching just a titch too loud under old tomato juice cans filled with succulents, and a cornucopia of vegan brunch options. The walls are gilded damask, specials written in chalk, papier-mache’d busts of slap-happy unicorns and cobras with Pharoah crowns observe the eclectic patrons dine, while a cardboard Sasquatch cutout woos passersby.  
Sliding into diner-style booths, we ordered cowboy coffees and scrambles, taking to our standard brunch formation--him with a crossword and me oogling the new animals at the Oregon Humane Society.
Many weeks had passed in which I had been cruising this website in a somewhat manic fashion. At times I found myself checking out the cats up for adoption even though I am severely allergic.
I have a habit of attaching myself to ideas, obsessing over their possibility, and then hastily making them reality. I think of every angle, google every con, and envision all the pros, but in the end I am oftentime blinded by compulsion to get my fix of newness, whatever the cost. While this could be considered a virtue—perseverance, determination, et cetera—my tick breeds with it unencumbered ‘all or nothing’ adventures from which I glean lessons or patch-up qualms.
Then I saw him. ‘Curly’ the 9 month old spaniel mut with a freckled face and wagging tongue.
“Baby, look at this one!”
“Aw, what a cutie.” His reaction tempered by my routine excitement when scrolling puppies. “He looks like a Brittany with that coloring.”
I swooned, staring at the picture again and again, as if some new information would magically appear if I refreshed enough times. I began picking at my cuticles and guzzling coffee--ruminating the possibilities.
“Should we go see him?” James posed without pause, picking up on my elated ado.
“Oh my god….Can we?”
“Let’s go check out puppies!”
I was tempted to scarf down my sourdough toast as fast as humanly possible, but then something within me demanded; ‘be calm, if its meant to be its meant to be.’
Now, we had been through this before, brunching at Juniors and opting to daytrip to the Humane Society “just to look.” We had met with a few puppies and even put a hold on one--a gorgeous brindle italian greyhound who peed immediately upon seeing me.
And it was meant to be. This time, I left the Oregon Humane Society with a 16lb Heinz57 mut from a shelter in Northern California with a ginger face and fluffy white mane whom I named Koba.
Back in December, while I was boarding the plane to Denver I got a voicemail from my Dad explaining, “Keira is in the doggy ER with stomach torsion,” and “we are hoping she’ll make it until you arrive.” My heart fell right through my chest with the thought of losing our family dog--a feisty Japanese Akita with a penchant for sniffing crotches and bolting out the back door.
There’s a fantastic photo I took of Keira during my exploratory photography phase; I must have been 16 or so. It was a quintessential Colorado day--sunny, snowy, with rugged mountains undulating as far as the eye can see. Keira is bounding full-speed down the trail behind our house; she kicks up glittering snow with a giant smile on that speckled monochrome face and with four legs suspended, you can feel her velocity. This is how she will always be preserved in my memory--unbreakably free.
During my stay at home, my sister and I nursed Keira back to health. We fed her a wet diet of brown rice and chicken breast; shoved pills down her throat three times a day; carried her outside to pee; documented her hydration schedule; and lifted her on our hallowed “off-limits” parents bed in their absence for extra comfort.
Of course, Keira is notoriously naughty. She won’t come when called unless she hears meat drop in her food bowl and/or if you speak to her in spanish. She is very aggressive towards other dogs, having sent many to the hospital. She will alert you if a bear is on the deck or a racoon is in the garage with that thundering howl. She will ALWAYS jet if given the chance. But she does come back; she waits by the sliding glass door after riotous jaunts through our neighborhood, terrorizing dogs or begging to be let in at Grandma’s. She sleeps most of the day and is always over-joyed when you get home. Above all, she’s there, a constant presence in the house--licking the furniture and laying at the foot of our parents bed.
Keira was my greatest companion growing up. We would often take long walks behind our house while I digested that bounding teenage angst. We have an unspeakable bond, telepathic if you will. Being a child reticent to divulge personal information, I would share my struggles with Keira, lay my head down on her sprawling abdomen and nuzzle or cry or simply listen to her heartbeat. The pure unwavering presence animals provide their human counterparts cannot be duplicated.
This morning, I awoke to a wet nose snaking beneath my covers, tiny paws grazing my face, and puppy teeth exploring my palms. Koba’s 9am wakeup call. We snuggle in bed for a moment. With a few belly rubs and ‘down-dogs’, he really wakes up--boisterously demanding all who lay horizontal to rise and greet the day by pouncing on faces and limbs or gnawing on covers. I wrap myself in a blanket and walk him outside to make him ‘hurry-up.’
We take a moment to breathe in the morning. To simply notice the cherry tree pushing out blossoms, steam rising off the grass, wispy clouds clearing for a tangerine dawn or a light rain kissing your cheeks, matting your eyelashes.
This puppy forces me to be present to these sacred, quotidian moments that mark our existence. I have spent so many days outside of myself--planning for the future, stressing about the past, always in a hurry to move forward--the progressive American autopilot. But when I wake up to this creature whose elation could never be squandered, it is difficult not to catch his enthusiasm.

After finishing, Koba prances over the dewy grass and sits at attention in front of me--ready to run or eat or annoy Bear (my roomie’s Dachshund). I leash him up and we set out in the Portland streets. Walking for walking’s sake was never an activity I would partake in before I had Koba.  In my mind, it had no point--the exercise wasn’t strenuous enough, I had no destination--there were so many other ‘productive’ things I could fill my time with.
I never noticed the gnarled root base of the maple tree on my corner--how it’s warts and grooves and scratches elucidate a Tolkien-esque story of synergy no amount of transcendental meditation could decipher. Or the many moods of a Pacific Northwest winter: fog so thick you can’t see 10 feet in front of you or the calming pitter-patter of relentless drizzle on rooftops and chain-link fences.
Dogs are irrevocable ‘beings-in-the-world’ (to borrow from Heidegger). A reminder of why we are on this planet--to live joyously, and with love. This little pooch fucking LOVES me, unconditionally. And I feel that every day.
He is also a huge responsibility. And that role requires me to arrange my days such that both of our needs get fulfilled. And they aren’t so different--eat, play, shit, sleep. Life gets pretty simple on dog island, minus the whole ‘i still have a full-time job’ reality. But on my off-time, it is full-force puppy-heaven. And its pretty fantastic--hikes, dog-park, tug-of-war, and tricks for days. Koba has reinforced my values in life--that relationships are worth it; working less hours is worth it; experiences are worth it; home is worth it. Also, I always have an excuse to stay in now (an introverts dream).
To have a living being express unremitting ardor throughout the seasons of your temperament and to bear witness to all of your truths with unconditional bug-eyed loyalty--this relationship cannot be reciprocated in the human experience and I feel so grateful to have found this little boy.  

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Gentrification




Being a newcomer to this NW gem of a city, it is fascinating to hear about how Portland has transformed even in the past few decades. I live in North Portland, near Killingsworth. Just 10 years ago, drive-by shootings, robberies, and gang-related activity was rampant along this street. The number 4 bus, which I ride home from work, was the most dangerous bus to ride in Portland, with regular stabbings, fights breaking out, etc. Now, the number 4 passes through the 'Historic Mississippi District' which today draws wanderlusting yogis, overall-wearing fashionistas, and not-so-underground-indie bands alike, but was once a terribly shady part of town.

Gentrification is the process of urban revitalization that leads to the mass displacement of poorer residents and ethnic minorities. Portland is one of the fastest gentrifying cities in the United States. And it's population is expected to double in the next 10-15 years, or so I hear from fellow Portlandians.

There only relics to the once diverse communities of North and Northeast Portland are corner stores and mom&pop ethnic restaurants. Soon they will be drowned out by coffee roasters and vintage furniture stores--succulent nurseries and ballet barre studios. This interactive map published by Oregon Live shows displacement patterns, pushing low-income and minority residents to the depths of the East Side, all the way to Gresham.

What does this mean for a young city known for its individuality? Can we keep Portland weird if EVERYONE from Cesar Chavez Blvd in rides fixies, hungover on microbrews, to their nonprofit job, in flannel and danner boots and tattoos? There is a certain monotony that accompanies gentrification. And this SNL skit brings to light a contentious issue with on-point candor.




Sunday, March 1, 2015

The Impossible



Simply a beautiful video of Laruga Glaser doing the Advanced (3rd) series of Ashtanga. It's clear this video was shot in India, probably near Mysore (the birthplace of Ashtanga), due to the sign written in Kannada in the background. I find it inspiring.