National Poetry Month

In honor of National Poetry Month, my second favorite poem.


Butterfly House, Pacific Science Center, October 2014
I will not die an unlived life
I will not live in fear
of falling or catching fire.
I choose to inhabit my days,
to allow my living to open me,
to make me less afraid,
more accessible,
to loosen my heart
until it becomes a wing,
a torch, a promise.
I choose to risk my significance;
to live so that which came to me as seed
goes to the next as blossom
and that which came to me as blossom,
goes on as fruit.
–Dawna Markova

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QEPD / R.I.P.

Hoy fallece Gabriel García Márquez a los 87 años en su casa de Ciudad de México.

Que en paz descanse, Maestro.


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First weekend salsa

That’s the food, not the dance.

When the Professor and I met, we were living in different towns about an hour and a half drive apart. The fact that we had mutual friends resulted in us ending up at the same queer-related focus group, where we met briefly. Emails ensued, and before long we were exchanging seven a day. This was before texting, instant messaging, affordable cellphones or unlimited long distance, so seven emails a day was a LOT of contact, especially considering that we both had full time jobs and I didn’t have a computer at home back then.

Then came the five-hour phone call. We spoke from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. one night a couple weeks after first meeting. We just couldn’t stand it any more, and I made plans to spend a weekend over at her place. There was a small mountain range between our two towns. In years to come, we would say that I drove over the mountains and never really came back. We had known each other 16 days. (Though in all fairness, it took me another 5+ weeks to move in.) She says half jokingly that part of the reason she fell in love with me was that I made this recipe during my visit. Since then, we have always called it First Weekend Salsa.

First Weekend Salsa

2 cans green chile tomatoes
1 green pepper, diced
1 bunch green onions, chopped up
1 can black beans, drained and rinsed
1 c. frozen corn
1 T. cumin (reduce if you’re not a cumin fanatic like me)
1 t. chile powder–regular or chipotle

Mix all and let sit for awhile to allow flavors to blend.
Because of the corn and black beans, a big bowl of this with tortilla chips is essentially a meal. Enjoy a little bit of it, or a lot!

Grant CochraneImage courtesy Grant Cochrane / freedigitalphotos.net

 

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Vladimir’s party

Our Washington State Department of Transportation has great communication skills. Every week, they send lighthearted, humorous email updates that include useful information about construction, sporting events, and other happenings that might cause traffic problems in the near future. The messages also contain bonus info about transportation system history and trivia. One wouldn’t think that info on traffic conditions would be all that compelling, but they make it fun. WSDOT¹ offers emails that cover 200 different topics and regions. I subscribe to three, and I read every single message.

One of this week’s messages had a “random transportation fact” linked to a WSDOT blog post about a fallout shelter that resides somewhere under an I-5 bridge. I presume the writer was deliberately vague about the location lest fallout fans flock to it, but there was a photo of the entrance (below). It’s really worth going to the post if you’d like to see additional photos of the interior, the exit tunnel, and posted instructions showing how to use the power and water systems.
The bomb shelter photos took me back to childhood. Like almost every American born anywhere in the vicinity of the baby boom years, I grew up terrified of nuclear annihilation. I’ll barely touch on here the “what were they thinking” rant—the absurd idea of being safe in a shelter with a finite food supply and nothing but centuries worth of radioactive devastation outside.² On the other hand, these days I know there’s nothing for me to worry about. I live close enough to some great targets to take comfort in the fact that, should the Russkies decide to go for the brass ring—presumably to make up for the one that didn’t open—I’ll be charred crispy before I even know what happened.

So are we headed that way again? In the direction of having to try to figure out how to save our own asses at the advent of WW3rd-and-Last?

Perhaps I’ll have everyone over to my house for a big party. I’ll do it up big, remodeling and fancying up the whole place in preparation. We’ll have a great time. People will play games in the back yard while I watch from the balcony. Shortly after everyone goes home, I’ll commit a heinous home invasion crime nearby. Hey folks, I hope everyone will remember me for that great party I threw, instead of the home invasion! It’s ok, it was my home anyway! I live there now! It’ll give me a place to hang out while I consider moving in with Idaho, B.C., and Oregon (for starters, but probably not in that order).

Thanks, WSDOT, for this great story. Nuclear war is a bummer.

***
¹ Say WISS-dot!
² See this modern-day take on the bomb shelter, brought on by among other things, the Mayan calendar panic.

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The is that wasn’t. The was that isn’t.

Over the weekend, I watched a Netflix movie called Mr. Nobody (2009). I liked it a lot. So much so that I may end up watching it again sometime (a rare occurrence for me). I’ve always been fascinated by the concept of alternative realities. I think often about how the past has formed the present, and about what might have been. Not wistful-sigh-what-might-have-been, but literal prediction of the alternative future of that other past, where something different happened or where another choice was made. What if I had taken that job in Alamogordo? Would we still live in New Mexico? Would we still be in the same little house? Would my trips to the dermatologist be even more frequent than they are now?

In Mr. Nobody, the main character is a 118 y.o. man on his deathbed, remembering his life. He remembers not only the life he has actually had—and if you can tell which of the many it is, you’re quicker on the uptake than I am—but also the other lives he didn’t have, the ones he would have had—had he married the other girl, had the leaf not fallen just there on the road, had the rain not washed away the ink of the number he was supposed to call, had the Brazilian not boiled an egg. But it all leads back to the first bifurcation, a time when he is standing on the platform at a train station. He is 9. His parents have split up, and he has to decide whether to get on the train and follow his mom, or stay behind and live with his dad. Soon enough, that train has left the station.

As I thought about this idea, I decided to go back to a Borges story that I’d read in college and never forgotten. I didn’t recall the story in detail, but I remembered the title and the topic. “The Garden of Forking Paths“¹ a selection from his collection of short stories of the same name, published in 1941. (Click title, or Spanish below, for full text, about 10 pp.) Like much of Borges, the story is a lot brainier than it is fun or entertaining. The garden actually refers to a book that functions something like Mr. Nobody. It’s described this way: “In all fictional works, each time a man is confronted with several alternatives, he chooses one and eliminates the others; in the fiction of Ts’ui Pên, he chooses—simultaneously—all of them. He creates, in this way, diverse futures, diverse times, which themselves also proliferate and fork.”²

When I look back, I see the forks. There are three particularly salient ones that determined the course of my life. They were at ages 15, 19, and 29. In 1978—I decide to take Spanish instead of something else when I’m forbidden to try out for show choir because the outfits are too skimpy, thereby freeing up a class period. 1982—my dad asks me if I have any reason to think my girlfriend is a lesbian. Instead of saying yes, I run screaming into the closet, not to come fully out into the light for another 17 years. I break up with her over the phone and never see her again. 1993—I get job offers from UW-Green Bay and the Univ. of Puerto Rico nearly simultaneously. I choose the island.

I imagine my life if I’d come out at 19. If I’d never spoken Spanish (what on earth would that look like?). Living in Green Bay, or wherever that would have led me. Frost was sorry he could not travel both. Me, not so much. I like where I am now; I don’t find myself wishing for alternative realities. Just wondering.

Tell us–where was your fork in the road?

 

¹El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan

²En todas las ficciones, cada vez que un hombre se enfrenta con diversas alternativas, opta por una y elimina las otras; en la del casi inextricable Ts’ui Pên, opta —simultáneamente— por todas. Crea, así, diversos porvenires, diversos tiempos, que también proliferan y se bifurcan.

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