Friday, October 31, 2008

When wind atacks!

"CHEYENNE -- Strong winds tore through southeastern Wyoming today, prompting the National Weather Service to post a high-wind advisory ..."

If you plan to get your finger ripped open anytime soon, may I recommend Cheyenne Regional Medical Center for all of your post finger-ripping needs?

Thursday morning, Audrey's pinky finger became the latest victim of a rash of premature car door slammings perpetrated by butterflies in China, well-known instigators of wind in Wyoming.

Upon realizing her pinky had been caught in the passenger side door of her 2003 Toyota Prius, Audrey instinctively recoiled in horror, ripping the tip of her finger open and exposing the bone.

Pacing back and forth muttering cuss words to herself, Audrey insisted a bandaid would be sufficient.

The worry wart I am, I called 911 and asked where the hosiptal was in Cheyenne. The operator gave me specific, succinct directions. Three blocks later we were in the emergency room. Three stitches later we were back on the loose.




All fixed up, we cruised the local restaurant scene and found among the meat museums, of all things, a fresh juice cafe where we treated ourselves to some wheatgrass and a couple of smoothies.




Eli was thrilled to get back on the road...


Wyoming - one more payment and its mine!

Wyoming is where men go to kill things without regret. Its more Texas than Texas.

Pulling into Cheyenne, the state capital, we sensed a subtle echo in the architecture...




When Audrey called in the reservation for our hotel in Cheyenne, the desk clerk asked, "Just visiting?" Audrey responded, "No, Ma'am. We're moving."

The clerk shrieked, "Yah! We just moved here, for my husbands work!"

"What does your husband do?" Audrey asked.

"He hunts!"

"Oh. Well we're moving to San Francisco," Audrey told her.

"Oh," the lady said, deflated.

I don't know who felt more sorry for who. And I don't know how to feel about folks who see the pointless slaughter of beautiful, wild animals as a means of employment. I can barely tolerate people who see it as a sport.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

"O" Street

Back in Indianapolis I used to debate and fret over every public art piece procured by the city. Public art reflects the soul of a place, and I often felt that my sense of myself was in disconnect with the art chosen to fill the public spaces.


What sayeth the Cornhusker soul? Joy, rendered in bronze.

Smile! Dance! Put a bucket on your head!

Everyone we met in Nebraska's capital city was outgoing, friendly and helpful, almost absurdly so. The air clean. The downtown streets wide and lined with trees. Don't forget Meghan, a stranger at the bar at Tico's, who tapped my shoulder, nodded to Audrey and said, "You know she's beautiful." I said, "I know. Thank you for reminding me."

Safe, relaxed. Audrey and I had a few drinks, even took a walk down "O" street...

The Land of TVs


Lincoln, Nebraska. Suburban Extended Stay Hotel.

One room, two televisions.

No more arguing with the pets about what to watch!

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Fields of Opportunity


Between Des Moines, Iowa, and Omaha, Nebraska, there are thousands of modern windmills towering over the farmland, generating clean electricity for Iowans.

Beneath many of the windmills are cows contentedly munching on this and that, perhaps oblivious to the social and political significance of the giant, spinning, white machines, or, if Gary Larson was right, perhaps not.

The enormity of the windmills is astounding at first. It is surprising to see something so contemporary, so massive, coexisting in the same visual space with something as ancient as agriculture.

Who are these Iowans who straddle the ages? Why do they simultaneously allow a chain of gas stations to be constructed along their highways called "Kum & Go?" There are more questions than answers out here, happilly.

Yesterday we left our Indiana home.


Destination: San Francisco, California. Route: Highway 80. One Prius packed with one man, one woman, one golden retreiver/collie mix, one maine coon cat, one Juiceman, Jr., two Macs and whatever clothes would fill in in the crevices. Every boot was stuffed with socks. Every sock was stuffed with dreams.

This morning we awoke in room 113 at the EconoLodge, West Liberty, Iowa. There was, as they say in Indiana, "frost on the pumpkin."

"We're getting out just in time," Audrey said.

I walked Elijah through the field across the parking lot. He fertilized the frozen corn and did his part to make the barbed wire rustier.

When we arrived last night all we could talk about was pizza. But nothing much happens in a commercial venture kind of way in Iowa past 10 pm. Our one option was twenty miles away in Iowa City. I went for it. God protects a man on a mission. I made it back in time to savor hours of motel living. Blue carpet, poofy chairs, baseboard heat, HBO, bathroom fan with a built in heater, ice machine.

Every road trip from my youth culminated in a visit to the hotel pool with my dad and a visit to the ice machine with my mom. Mom would get a diet coke, a bucket of ice, return to the room and smoke a Parliament Lights 100 over a cold diet coke in a plastic cup.

I imitated the bucket of ice part last night just to hear the sound of crystalized water chunks bouncing on top of each other in a plastic bucket. My heart leapt with every tap of every cube and as I carried it back to Room 113, where Audrey, Elijah and Pico waited, I felt proud, and young again.





Sunday, October 26, 2008

The Settlers

The expectation of our Midwestern families, and our peers who have sadly also been raised by their Midwestern families, is that we will never deviate from the predictable path of school, career, heterosexual partnering, procreation, retirement and death. Any suggestion that an alternate path may be possible is met with the usual scrunched faces and anecdotes about Uncle or Aunt So-And-So who tried something like that once, and of course inevitably, spectacularly failed.

It is a distinctly Midwestern way to socialize, constantly discouraging wild ideas, dismissing monotony as “just part of life.”

But despair is real and it leads to all kind of suicide, from the immediate kind, to the more elaborate, drawn out kind we call “settling down.”

I have known seemingly intelligent people who have intentionally ended their lives with guns and drugs. Why would that seem like an acceptable alternative in the mind of someone with all the wonders of this generation at their fingertips? They were outsiders, that’s all. And they were tired of disappointing everyone. So they did the only thing that would make sense to the ones they were leaving behind. Because people here treat death as the only reason we are here in the first place. It is natural, inevitable, even welcome at times, as opposed to life, which they treat as simply something to get through with a smile on our face so we can die.

To complain is looked down on. Grandpa didn’t complain when he had to work on the railroad fourteen hours a day during the depression.  Mom didn’t complain when she had cancer. What gives us the right to complain about the pollution or lack of intellectually stimulating career opportunities in this city? There’s plenty of work to be done. Just pick something and get busy. They’ll pay you whatever they can and you’ll suit your lifestyle to your means. That’s what we do here. We live within our means and we work. And we don’t complain.

When pioneers were on their way to the West Coast in search of fortune and adventure, many of them dropped off the procession and simply settled along the way. They got to Ohio and said, “Why go any further? This looks perfectly fine.” When Ohio filled up they spilled over into Indiana and said, “Well this seems perfectly fine, too. Why risk everything to go farther?” And so on. It is a lie to say the Midwest was settled by pioneers. California, Oregon and Washington State were settled by pioneers. They went as far as they could possibly go and then had to stop because there was an ocean staring back at them. I’ll bet some of them even tried to walk out into the sea just to see what was out there. A true pioneer would rather die searching than stop being amazed.

The Midwest was settled by Settlers. They settled for this. It was good enough. They could live here, so they did. Every Midwestern boy or girl in the hundreds of years since who ever indicated a propensity for wondering what else might be out there to be experienced besides whatever happened to be going on in his or her hometown has been treated with the same blank expressions and insulted gafaws and disgusted shakes of the head. Their moms have “worried themselves sick” and their dads have quietly opined at the table about the “sensible thing to do.”

Some of those boys and girls have simply gotten up and left. They knew what I know. We are all going to die one day. Dying is no different here than in Hawaii. But living is.

Other, more timid boys and girls have sat down at the table with dad and listened to his folklore. They have felt the tug of their worried mother’s heart and stayed for just enough cups of Sanka to finally sympathize. Those boys and girls unfortunately see both sides of the story. They are friends to no one. They are only keepers of other people’s attitudes and explainers of the different options we supposedly have.

Others still have just killed themselves with drugs or guns or whatever else was available. They endured as much as they could of the prejudice of Midwestern Settlers then finally, when they couldn’t take being an outsider any longer, lacking the courage to simply walk away, they ended it the old fashioned way. And as painful as it was for their so-called loved ones to experience such a loss, it was at least acknowledged at the viewing, over finger sandwiches and tiny cups of instant coffee, as something that “happens sometimes.” A regular occurrence, and therefore acceptable to the group. Suicide is easier for them to understand than moving to California, and less disappointing.