Saturday, June 25, 2011

moving week

Ahoy,

I've never really had to move so much as find places to store my stuff. My many years of going to school away from home has resulted in flights that must include free bags. Other than taking my things back and forth from home to school, moving for me has always meant moving my stuff into storage so I can go home and making sure I am under the 50 pound weight limit.

But we're moving apartments this week. So that means make a big mess, transport the big mess, and sort through and reorganize the big mess. This should be fun. A has a lot of clothing.

materialistically piled,
JT

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

back in the bay

Ahoy,

I've always regarded this place as school. So it's strange to return and look at it through a different lens. It's strange to not have to be in class or taking the bus up to the lab for work (which were so overly extravagant - my only regret is not continuing to work with LBL if only just for bus privileges). For however much I griped about being here, I've found an affection or nostalgia for the people, places, and things I encountered during those 3 years. I'll admit there have been things I've missed about the bay. Yogurt Park, for example, which is actually soft serve ice cream marketed as frozen yogurt. Swing dancing on Sproul Plaza was always something I looked forward to when I was a student. 

What's especially strange is looking at everything from a moving automobile. I had always walked, biked, or bused my way around. It's amazing how different your perspective can be from an automobile over that of walking. Regardless, mobility was never a concern when I lived here. I believe that's one of the best advantages this part of California has over its southern counterpart. The streets are narrower. Things are closer together. People are actually on the sidewalks and it doesn't take eons for the walk light to switch on. No cars required. We had a bus pass that was good for the county bus system. That was probably one of the smarter investments they required us to pay with our tuition.

languidly calamitous,
JT

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

planes, trains, and automobiles

Ahoy,

So I'm pretty sure it took nearly 3 hours to get from the airport back to A's apartment by public transit. I landed a little after noon.

1. FlyAway from LAX to Van Nuys.

Van Nuys does not mean the Metro Orange line stop for Van Nuys. It just means in-Van Nuys-and-still-incredibly-far-away-from-everything-else. Why would I expect otherwise? So I ask the lady at the ticket counter for how I should get to the Metro Orange line stop. She does not seem to know what I'm talking about. She must be one of those Angelenos that-doesn't-know-public-transportation-exists-in-her-city. She mentions that she thinks there's a bus stop outside that may or may not go-somewhere-I-want-to-go-in-a-timely-or-untimely-manner. I move on to ask the police officers if they know how I should get to where I want to go. One guy says there's a bus stop across the street outside the bar that goes-straight-down-the-street-and-probably-to-where-I-want-to-go. Another fellow intercepts and describes the bus as unreliable-and-who-knows-how-long-the-bus-will-take. The group of officers have a huddle to discuss the best way to get to where I want to go. After much ado about nothing, they concur with the first guy and so I cross the street to wait for the bus outside the bar. It is just about 1300 hours at this point. The sidewalks are melty and treeless. And I'm pretty sure this was when I got gum on my shoe. 

2. Metro 237-Woodley

The bus arrived, to my amazement, in a timely manner. Rode straight down Woodley Avenue to the Woodley Metro Orange line stop. This was easy and quick.

3. Metro Orange Line

Rode from Woodley to Sepulveda. This was easy too. And then I had to wait for the Metro bus to get back to the apartment. I'm pretty sure I waited nearly an hour here. I've waited here for this bus in this direction before. Last time, I got impatient and rode the I'm-too-impatient-to-wait-for-the-bus-that-takes-forever-so-I'm-just-going-to-walk-to-Target-now. But I had luggage this time, so I waited. My dad called and I told him yes-I-am-back-at-the-apartment-and-am-now-preparing-food-to-eat-no-it-is-not-noisy-where-I-am.

4. Metro 234

Finally! Rode straight down Sepulveda to my final destination. And the tricky thing was I didn't have keys. So I was banking on arriving at in-a-timely-manner-so-I-could-catch-someone-still-there-to-open-the-door-for-me-or-else-I-would-have-to-break-in. Lucky for me, A's roommate goes out the door at late-to-never-hours-unless-he-needs-food-or-to-walk-the-dog-because-he-doesn't-seem-to-be-doing-much-else-productive.

I arrived just after 1500 hours. Quite the journey.

solely sticky,
JT

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Sunday, June 5, 2011

into thin air

Ahoy,


This week we were on the other side of the mountain from last week. Except, it was a lot easier to get to. Instead of driving up a really windy, bumpy dirt road where people had been getting their cars stuck, there was a tram that rode you straight to the top. How extravagant! What a pampered life rock climbers lead... The top popped you out into a ski-resort type lodge. Apparently people come up here for prom. There were loads of varieties of dress and footwear. I think it's funny when people go somewhere that is meant for hiking in their finest heels. How are they supposed to explore?











swirlingly dazzled,
JT

Friday, June 3, 2011

greetings & salutations

Ahoy,

Central Park in my backyard is definitely one of the perks of living in NYC I miss. The closest large park is Balboa Park, which is about half a mile away. Being close to a park is great but it's no Central Park. There are not nearly enough trees and not nearly enough shade. The road to get to the park is like running alongside a freeway. After having been able to run for 6 miles straight through Central Park without stopping for the past few months, I was definitely not used to having to stop for traffic at crosswalks. As far as distance goes, there is plenty, but goodness! it was so boring! There is a golf course, so it was lots of lawn, not much variation in the landscape to my right, and traffic to my left. I don't like running when it's hot and boring. Actually, I don't like running ever, but hot and boring enhances the not liking.

The weirdest thing to me was that people kept saying 'hi' or asking how I was doing. Not even people that were just walking, people running too. I saw maybe 20 to 30 people on the trail and most of them said something. In Central Park, I see hundreds of people and not once have I ever said anything or anyone ever said anything to me (sincerely, that is, but that's a whole 'nother story). I've been told to live in NYC, but leave before I get hard. I think this is just indicative of how much human interaction people in each city get. LA and NY are the biggest cities in the States, but it's amazing how different they are. LA breeds its population to sit in cars all day. It's possible to get in and out of your house without ever encountering another soul. But in NY, the streets and subways are filled with people that have invaded each others' personal space. Of course people in LA have the capacity to greet other people, they haven't been bombarded by them all day, every day already. I had heard about this social phenomenon before in movies and classes, but it's interesting to be able to experience and observe it.

deadeningly amused,
JT