Maybe it was the meds. Maybe I’m just hopeless.

I woke up inspired today.

It was a huge improvement from yesterday’s wakeup in searing pain because my wisdom teeth suddenly decided to speak up about some key issues they have serious feelings about.
It seems my two lower wisdom teeth have had it up to here with feeling like second-class teeth to the rest of my lower jaw.
I’m not sure exactly what their demands are, but I have a feeling it involves emancipation from what they consider a toxic and negative social environment in my mouth.
I was 100% sympathetic to their plight so I called in sick to my last day of work (not a flake! swear!) and spent the day from dentist to hospital to pharmacy. Examining, x-raying, appointment setting, medicating, and kissing any money we have goodbye.

This of course means I didn’t hop in the car with my ladies and head to the coast as planned, but instead cried about the UNFAIR and the PAAAAAIN, took a lot of drugs and wandered around my house in a fog.
Perhaps this is actually roughly equivalent to a boozy weekend vacation.

Anyway, now that I’m drugged up (THANK YOU JESUS FOR CODEINE) and more or less a zombified version of normal I woke up inspired to make some interesting soft foods that I could perhaps work into regular rotation.

Internet, this is my attempt at roasted potatoes with basil, ginger, and sweet chili sauce. It was going to be delicious.

Is it too embarrassing to admit that I never left the kitchen while this happened? That I checked on them constantly and yet somehow burnt everything to a crisp?

Damn those wisdom teeth and their demands for liberation. They’re OBVIOUSLY at fault for this one.

taking what I can get.

I’ve been unreasonably grumpy lately.
Rather than build a wall of excuses as to why it’s permissable to act like a douche, I’ve decided instead to focus on the myriad ways today ruled.

1. Tomorrow is my last shift at the bookshop and although I’ll miss the endless sass battles between management and staff, I am elated to leave behind the robotically repetitive scripts one falls into whilst cashiering.
Would you like a bag with that? One moment while I print your receipt. Blarg.
These customers have nothing to offer converationally. Bartending I heard endless interesting stories and watched dramas unfold.
This job, I mostly hear jovial ouch! reactions to the cost of text books.
Yes, you law students have to spend a pretty impressive amount on text books, but I don’t have much sympathy as you’ll likely come out a LAWYER in the end. Suck it up toots. I’m 31 and work in a bookshop, I’m not going to be the best source for professional sympathy.

2. After I finish with my last day at the bookshop tomorrow, I’m getting picked up by two girlfriends and embarking on a weekend holiday to the Gold Coast. For you non-Australian readers, the Gold Coast is to Australia what Los Angeles or perhaps Miami is to the US. Full of big-boobed bottle blondes and surfer dudes. It’s renowned for being culturally superficial and Schoolies Week, the Australian equivalent of spring break (WOOOOO!) is held there. Me and the ladies are planning on drinking lots of wine, talking trash and swimming in the pool at our hotel. Lofty goals, I know.

3. Despite having eaten a giant lunch today, it mysteriously wore off at 4:45 and I spent the time between that point and my 6:40 homecoming in SHUT UP I’M FUCKING STARVING mode, my personality nosediving right alongside my bloodsugar.
Thankfully, this all turned around with my arrival home and discovery that the fridge was stocked with an unlikely but delicious combination of foods.
A spinach, feta, and currant salad left over from last night’s dinner, a cold beer, and a pack of mi goreng, which is essentially super tasty Indonesian ramen.
Internet, you can get all foodie if you want, but THAT was a beautiful meal.

4. I found an ironing board on the sidewalk. I am, perhaps, unreasonably excited about this particular item. I’ve been trying to convince the mister that the purchase of an ironing board is a necessary expenditure in our meager budget. Much like many men, he’s never ironed a thing in his life and as such has not been very agreeable on the topic of ironing board funds allocation. My discovery of a sidewalk ironing board means all we have to pay for is a new cover and I can press things!
WHAT? I have a lot of wovens!

Have a good weekend kids, I plan to.

and then, the tides turned.



First off, I was totally completely wrong about the Autumn thing.
HOO BOY was I wrong.

It is still very much hot-ass beastly humid summer here in Brisbane, with all the frizzy hair and sweaty eyelids that go with it.
When you grow up in a climate famous for rain, you totally romanticize warm climates with their sunny skies and, well why go past sunny skies?
It’s all just bragging after that really.
Growing up in Seattle I remember making an effort to never complain about the heat of summer, don’t take it for granted, savor it as best you can because during those nine months of grey that stretch from October all the way until June? You’re gonna rue the day you stayed inside to watch TV in July that one time when you were 6.

Anyway, still summer. Yes. I had a point.

I think I’ve been wanting a season change not just for a release from the life of eternal sweat-stache but also because a season is about four months and I know that the first four or five months after a move are the hardest part. The dreaded transition.

When the mister moved to the US, it took about four and a half months for us to figure out the basics. Who’s got what job, what bank accounts pay what bills, what shelves or chairs will make everyone feel like they have a hand and place in their home, enough knowledge of the neighborhood map that one person doesn’t feel totally reliant on the other and so on.
I knew in my mind that we were going to face this difficult period again. I knew that we were going to have many of the same arguments with the “Think of my position!” flipped around from him to me, but wow, living it sure is different from knowing it.

I’ve been getting desperate for a season change because yes, it’s brutally hot and that’s not very awesome, but also because omfg I’m so tired of being a beginner that has to ask my husband to explain everything from where that place is to what that guys means by that. Being a beginner totally sucks.

Our life back in New York was made easier on nearly every level by the fact that I earned a VERY healthy level of income for the amount of time I worked.
My work wasn’t easy and it ATE MY SOUL and rendered me useless during most of my off time, but I only had to work about 25-30 hours a week to earn it.
We had enough to never worry about paying for flights, for our wedding planned in a week, for the deposit on a rental or whatever really.
We weren’t rich by any stretch. I’ve guess I’ve just always been flat fucking broke so to go four or five years with enough money to buy any expensive cheese I want whenever I want, well, you get soft. When you have multi-thousands of dollars in savings and no real big expenses, you forget.

So we had this pretty substantial savings built up.
I knew that the move would bring an end to my position of significant cashflow, but I was excited!
I get to have a life! Overseas! I’m gonna be an expat! Look at me all glamorous and worldly!
I can go back to working in the arts because I don’t need to worry about health insurance in universal-health-care-having-Australia! HIGH FIVES ALL AROUND!

So we got here, got an apartment, bought some furniture and went out for lots of incredible Thai food. I was confident about getting a job and getting by and settling in.

But a month or so later when I ramped up the job-hunting efforts, nobody called. A couple emails here and there but nothing panned out.

I’ve never had a problem finding a job. Never. I’ve had more than one period in my life where I’ve had 3 or more jobs concurrently. I’ve learned to scale it back to avoid burnout, but for real, I’m one of those suckers that just likes a project.

By the holidays when it was clear I wasn’t even landing seasonal retail sales work, reality set in, our bank balanced loomed a lot lower than it has in recent history and the blow to my confidence was complete.

The last two months have seen a lot of moaning about homesickness on this website. Hindsight now shows me that although yeah, I really miss New York, most of what I’ve been feeling isn’t about that city or missing it.
It’s about having the basics. Rent paid. Food in the fridge. More than anything, the harmony and comfort of your relationship when everything is pretty much fine.
It’s not that I miss things back in Brooklyn, it’s that I miss having a relatively stress-free home life.

The mister and I still aren’t totally broke. We’re not quite at each other’s throats.
But the pressure. The pressure that we’re living a life unsustainable, that I MUST land a job or we’re going to be looking at a life of toil for him and serious brokenness for the both of us, well, that pressure is good enough.

A month ago I realized that my phone number has been incorrect on my resume this entire time. I hadn’t noticed because I hadn’t memorized it yet.
I can assure you that the magnitude of the meltdown I had that day blew fallout as far as northern New South Wales. Perhaps some of the South Pacific islands even felt ripples. It was that bad.

Suffice it to say, I did my best to backtrack on positions I had recently applied with and wonders that be, got a call the next day and was working four days later.

All this leads me to today. I’ve been working at in a local University bookshop as a start-of-term temporary employee. I’m currently on my third week of a four-week assignment.
Everyone knows the one of the biggest pains in the ass of getting a new job is getting on the goddamn pay schedule. It’s nearly impossible to get that magical timing where you start working and actually get paid something! anything! on the next payperiod. In my experience it takes two, sometimes three pay periods to actually get any freaking money flowing.

I’m not looking for a career in bookshop minding, but I’ve really been enjoying the job while I have it. The people there are all really great, the work environment is really organized and efficient, I get to chat all day and even the broke-ass students don’t seem that stressed out over their threefourfive hundred dollar textbooks.

Tonight as I was leaving another excellent day of work, the boss of the bookshop informed me and a coworker that due to university bureaucracy we wouldn’t receive even the start of our pay until a week after the entire assignment ENDS.
Oh wow, awesome. And stressful. Because now it matters. Now there isn’t enough savings to live on and yes the Mister is making money, but he gets paid in big chunks and another one isn’t due for probably around a month.

So yes, in short, YIKES.

As I walked off campus ignoring the stunning sunset and swirling of thousands of bats leaving their garden homes for the evening sky, I sent a frantic text message to my husband telling him of our impending brokeassity.

I reached the intersection and waited for the crosswalk signal to change and checked my email on my phone.
Inside was an offer. A position that I didn’t even apply for. I woman I met months ago, a friend of the Mister. A cool lady I’ve been trying to figure out how to make into my friend. She’s got a job for me, one I’m very excited about.

So I face a week or two of meetings. The hammering out of details. Figuring out schedules and all that. The Mister and I can limp along until the pay thing works itself out and that’s ok for once. Because now I’m back to that point of feeling that this year will be full opportunities and excitement.

It may not be Autumn yet, but it seems that the season is changing regardless.

Did I just hear a click?

Because I may be wrong, but I’m pretty sure I just heard a click.
A soft subtle one that came in through the window on a breeze with a cool thread running through it.

This time last year it was winter in my life. February in New York City. A totally brutal month as the novelty of winter clothing and snow and staying home is gone and everyone wants it to just damn end so we can get on with our lives.
The seasons that followed unsurprisingly were spring, summer and autumn. But then we got on an airplane and suddenly it was summer again.

Now though?
I could easily be mistaken having no frame of reference for this part of the world, but as of today, I think it just might be autumn.

please, make it stop

I believe in karma.
I don’t mean I’m a buddhist or that I have any sort of academic, philosophical, or theological background in the subject, I simply believe that people get what they deserve. It’s kind of a non-denominational spiritual justice really.

I’ve been told that I’m an “old soul” because my karma tends to be REALLY quick. For example, I once absentmindedly walked out of a newstand with a magazine under my arm, realized a block later that I stole it and promptly dropped the damn thing in a puddle.

I have endless stories that parallel that one.
It’s almost a joke in my life that if I screw up, something will fall from the sky and straight onto my head moments later. Because I suffer from a ridiculous quickness of karma, I’ve found myself questioning what I did anytime something absurdly unfortunate happens. Usually, I can identify something I said, did, didn’t do or whatever that will give further weight to ‘My life is a slapstick comedy for the powers that be’ theory.

This time? This time I have no idea what I did or said or who I pissed off.

Internet, the last 24 hours of my life has been held an impressive array of disgusting insects invading my personal space.

It all started last night. The Mister and I were both feeling a little crappy so we went to bed early.
As usual, despite being totally wiped out I couldn’t fall asleep.
I went for my usual method of dealing with insomnia which essentially entails pretending to be asleep and hoping sleep will happen. As is completely normal it wasn’t working.
I peeked an eye open just as a huge cockroach walked past my nose and over the rise of my pillow.
I spazzed out and jerked upright but managed not to scream bloody murder.
I knew the Mister was desperate for sleep and I try to be considerate of sleep needs since I’m pretty desperate for the stuff myself.
I considered turning on lights to seek the beast out, but I knew that really, it’s pointless. It’s midsummer in the tropics. We sleep with our windows open because it’s really hot. The roaches here? They ALL fly.
The occasional bug is a part of life and waking up my grumbly partner just as he’s fallen asleep to swat at a bug that will only fly out the window in four seconds wasn’t reason enough to risk the argument potential.

I decided to wait his dastardly grossness out from the comfort of the living room while complaining to twitter.
The moment I hit send on my bit of breaking bug-on-pillow-OMFG news, a hand-sized moth flew in the window and straight into my hair.
It was at this point that I decided I was never sleeping again.

Actually, that’s not true. I had to go back to bed, I was expected to get up early to pick up a car the Mister and I were borrowing the next day.
My darling husband doesn’t drive so facing a situation where I would be expected to operate a manual transmission with my left hand whilst driving the car on the opposite side of the road with added sleep deprivation? yeah, no thanks.
Also, all sorts of bugs were getting really excited about hanging out with me in the only lit room in the house and I decided I’d rather just sit in the dark and convince myself that roach already flew out the window, or into the kitchen or somewhere more interesting to roaches than MY FUCKING PILLOW.

Ok this is enough bug story right? Nobody wants to hear bug stories because bugs are gross and nothing sucks more than having to imagine a three-inch cockroach on your pillow.
So how about 300 jumbo-sized larvae all over your kitchen, hallway, and living room floor instead?

BECAUSE GUESS WHAT WE FOUND WHEN WE WOKE UP???

Holy shit internet, do you have any idea how awesome it is when you wake up, think “gee, the floor sure is dirty, I’m gonna sweep it before I even make coffee or, I dunno, put on shoes” sweep half the floor and realize wait. We’re not slobs leaving crumbs all over the floor, those are GIANT MAGGOTS.

NIGHTMARES! NIGHTMARES! NIGHTMARES!

Thankfully, our mango-stealing landlord was hanging around and I hysterically flagged him away from his trash can arranging chores to have him DO SOMETHING about the atrocity that is our apartment, that, by the way I’m happy to move out of, like RIGHT FUCKING NOW.

He came in and declared the slinking vileness (these suckers could really haul ass!) as butterfly larvae due to their large size and relatively small numbers, went to the corner shop and brought us back a jumbo spray bottle of Raid.

Now internet, I’m a vegetarian. I was vegan for over a decade.
I eat largely organic and do most of my household cleaning with baking soda, vinegar and elbow grease.
When I buy a six-pack of rootbeer, I don’t just clip the bird-strangler, I shred the thing into tons of little splintery bits.
I grew up reading Ranger Rick and hugging trees and feeding birds in the winter.

But this morning, when I saw my landlord hand my husband a jumbo bottle of harsh toxic chemicals I was OVER-FUCKING-JOYED.
The Mister gave the house a thorough once-over with deadly poisons that will undoubtedly shorten my lifespan and affect the fertility of our grandchildren but at that moment? Whatever.

We dealt with the wreckage and hightailed it outta the city for a day trip.

Obviously, I need to make some amends. Somewhere along the way, I snapped at someone and they gave me an insect hex.
Further proof (like you need more): look who JUST came loudly stumbling in the door to hang out with my husband’s old adidas slides?


(Internet, Mantis. Mantis, Internet.)

So seriously dudes, I’m WIDE OPEN to suggestions. Do I dose up with more poison? Apologize to the universe for some bug-related sin I didn’t know I committed?
The only thing I can think of that I screwed up on recently was leaving our laundry on the line during a torrential downpour, but I don’t see how that would affect the world of insects.

When will this karmic debt be fully repaid? How many more bugs must fly in my hair? PLEASE MAKE IT STOP.

bit by bit

Better. It’s getting better.

Today I read a blog post written by an Australian recently moved to NYC.
She’s obviously having a difficult time. Stuggling with money, struggling with work, and scraping by in a city and culture so similar to her own yet so totally foreign in very subtle and surprising ways.

Oh yes, I know that story.

Reading her words, I felt for her.
I left her a comment with some suggestions from my experience, and hopefully she finds something in them.
But it’s not just about tips on how to find a decent job or what metrocard to buy, it’s about being new and feeling frustrated that everyone ELSE has it figured out and is making it work, why can’t I?
I felt for her because I’m living it too.
It was only this week that I figured out which mass-transit card to buy here.

I’m working now and it’s caused an enormous difference in my outlook.
I’m not sure if that’s due to my lessened availability of time with which to fret, or simply the comfort of a routine, but it’s working and I don’t really care why. Things are getting better for me and I’ll take it no questions asked.

The summer is peaking, exploding with color and life.
I’ve really only made one friend so far but she’s totally awesome and I’m lucky to know her.
I will never experience today again so for now, screw my train ticket. I don’t care that I bought the less-than-best option, because I figured it out, the world is alive in acid-bright color and things are getting better.

passionfruit is a real fruit you guys

Feel free to laugh at me, but until recently I didn’t know that passion fruit was an actual fruit and not just a flavor.
Basically I always thought it was an invented fancy name for generic red.
This candy has PASSION! It must be valuable and exotic!

Turns out, whoops! it’s a real fruit! An incredibly delicious fruit that I will only consume in smoothie form because it’s edible guts resemble snot both in texture and color.

I found the one above growing on the fence next to our driveway.
My mind is blown that I live in a place where various tropical fruits grow as weeds in my yard.

Also, just as I wrote that last sentence, a huge flock of Sulphur-Crested Cockatoos flew by just to drive the point home.
Because, you know, the palm trees, mangoes, sunlight, and sweltering february didn’t get the job done.

Boundaries and buoys

Some time ago, I made the decision to not share any bad news or talk about difficult topics on this website.

I don’t want to worry my family when I’m so far away.
I don’t want to come off as unprofessional or emotional to potential employers who decide to type my name into a search engine.
I don’t want to share so much of myself because what if some weirdo reads all these details of my life and decides to stalk me?

I’ve experienced a range of privacy invasion in my life before. Drawing up boundaries is incredibly important, so I thought I was making it easy on myself when I declared only fluff and chatter for the website.

Rereading entires, I realized yesterday that I’ve been crossing that self-imposed line and touching on some issues that have serious weight in my life.

And you know what? The world hasn’t exploded.

My mother is a regular commenter here and judging by her responses and our skype chats, she worries about me no more or less than she has for the last 30-odd years.
Potential employers are still calling and scheduling interviews. I get the feeling many of the types of jobs I’m going for aren’t the sort of organizations that would even think to google an applicant, but even if they did, what will they see?

I tried it myself for the first time recently. I was nervous to do it. I know that sounds silly, but google name search results are shelved directly next to credit report scores, back taxes owed, and dental maintenance needs. Aka, things I REALLY don’t want to think about.

I ponied up the courage and did it. I looked and was surprised at what that potential employer would see.
This website came first, next I saw my memberships to various social networking websites, photos of me taken at gallery openings, tons of quotes given to street press on various arts and music organizations I used to be involved with, photos nabbed from my flickr account and a Seattle Times article from 1998 that reports on one of my earliest projects and quotes me about third wave feminism with all the passion and ideological fury of adolescence.

At first all that information was a bit shocking. Perhaps I am sharing too much?
Analyzed from a different direction though, my google search results returned this:
I use the social web.
I go to art openings and concerts.
I have a history of involvement in non-profit organizations.
I have a history of volunteering.
My photos are decent enough to steal.
I am articulate enough to be quoted.
I organized a 200-person young feminist convention when I was 19 years old.

These are all things I can be proud of, or at least stand behind. I mean, I’m not PROUD of my facebook profile, but yeah I have one, I’ll cop to it.
The convention I completely forgot I put together? The 31-year-old me is pretty amazed that the 19-year-old me pulled that off.
It was totally a blast too.

Lastly and most notably my Internet footprint reveals that I maintain this website.

I’m in the midst of a difficult transition right now. I very recently got married, moved around the world, and am trying to figure out a whole host things on my mind.
Other than my relationship with the Mister, I’m very far from any sense of home, routine, comfort or security.
Sometimes this process of transition is exhilarating but much of the time it totally sucks.
I do know the magnitude of suck will decrease with time, but in the mean time, I deal with it as best I can.

Maintaining this website has been a buoy for me. Something to keep me busy as I struggle with idle time, a connection to friends and family far away, and a line to new connections, new friends, new projects.

If a potential employer reads this and decides that I’m not the right fit for their job, well that’s fine. Because I wouldn’t have been the right fit even if this website didn’t exist. The self I present here is an honest one.
While it’s true that I don’t tell everything, the parts I do share are genuine and if someone doesn’t like the tone of my writing, they aren’t going to like the matching one that happens every time I speak.

I’ve read many instances of bloggers raving about the amazing people they’ve met via their websites, I always figured that access to this network of awesome people wouldn’t happen until you have a boatload of readers.
Since I don’t make any traffic-growing efforts, I would be cut off from that network. Thankfully I was wrong.
Thank you readers and friends for coming here, for commenting the most on the posts that are the opposite of fluff and chatter, for sending me emails and tweets and passenger pigeons with messages.
Where I’m at right now, your efforts, however minimal they seem to you, are momentous to me and I cannot thank you enough.

In conclusion, the weirdo stalkers are a risk I’m willing to take. Drawing boundaries on what I’m willing to share isn’t a black-and-white thing. As an optimistic extrovert and former complainer, it’s particularly difficult for me to figure out what to do with crappy news and anxiety.
So I’m not going to figure it out. I’m not going to analyze it and write a list or five.
I’m just going to let it be. If I want to talk about something, I’ll trust myself to write it in a way I feel ok with.

The rewards are too great to throw away. Thank you, again.

On starting over.

At only 31, I’ve already had a huge number of totally divergent careers paths. I’ve worked in support of the arts, fixed cars, poured drinks, written copy, sold things, designed logos, planned events and managed innumerable employees and facilities.
I’m that person that’s always hungry, never satisfied. Too often I’ve allowed my job to take over my life in pursuit of total competence as well as the imaginary A+ and validation that I’ll gain if I can just be that one completely indispensable employee and colleague.
I know now that the unhealthy and obsessive part of this stems primarily from insecurity over not having a post-secondary education.
Somewhere along the line I told myself that if I work my ass off and become invaluable, than that will negate the feelings of failure that I have about not attending university.
I’ve succeeded a couple times in obtaining that indispensability, but it’s always come at a great cost to myself and never seems to follow through on it’s end of the deal; that A+ that I now know doesn’t really exist.

I made some poor decisions as a rebellious angst-filled teen that barred my potential entry to university via high school, not that I was at all interested.
University was for suck ups and rich kids.
University was advanced fingernail chewing and remedial basket weaving.
University isn’t everything; lots of people have awesome lives without it you know.
University was a colossal waste of time and money that my family simply didn’t have.
I already knew how to think, thank you very much. I didn’t need some $50,000 philosophy lesson that wouldn’t even get me a job.

I know, I KNOW. I cringe at my glaringly naïve declarations now as well. Hindsight also shows me that many of those pronouncements were not my actual opinions at all, but ideas that I was taught. Armour provided by various adults who didn’t think I could possibly amount to anything (10th grade English teacher, I’m looking at you) to protect me from the feelings of inadequacy to come.

At 20 years old, I started to realize that performing with my band in dingy Olympia basements wasn’t going to cut it in terms of a life path. My friends and roommates were all attending Evergreen State College and paying for rent and bass amps with scholarships and student loan money.
I paid mine with wages from my telemarketing job.

I shrunk in shame when asked what my major was and finally decided to attend a vocational certificate program at my local community college. You know, the kind of college that actually gets you a decent paying, health-care providing, blue-collar job.

Less than a year after finishing an Automotive Repair training program, the point of no return came in the acquisition of a crushingly large medical debt.

At the time, I had a new job in an auto parts store. Because I was still a probationary employee, I was not yet covered under the company health insurance plan. The $7.00 I earned per hour found me unable to pay even a quarter of the minimum required for my hospital bills after the costs of my very basic life expenses.
Somehow, my income was declared high enough to be disqualified for charity care and my debt went into delinquency.
I figured that as long as I could convince potential landlords that my bad credit was not due to financial negligence, I’d be ok.
It took me a little while to realize that with a massive delinquent debt my creditworthiness was ruined and the option of obtaining a student loan to attend University disappeared. This, of course, came right as I started to realize that I wanted more than a future selling piston rings and engine degreaser.

So I hopped from job to job searching for a boss who would tell me what to do with my life. I found many happy to give me direction, but none who offered fulfillment. Surprise!

I found one of those bosses when I got a job in the production and assembly of beautiful hand-made artist portfolios. I loved the product and that it was work in the arts. I loved that the building was beautiful with exposed brick and big windows. It was airy and clean and close to my home.
The owner taught me to use quark and I spent personal time on library computers looking up tutorials so that I could impress him with my quick mastery of a clunky program.
The company was a small one, and because I spent much of my time dealing directly with the owner I was able to work hard, kiss ass, and over the course of a year go from hired assembler to production facility manager and graphic design assistant.
As often happens in work-up-from-the-bottom situations with insecure people afraid to speak out, my job title and responsibilities changed, but my pay didn’t. I was “laid off” from that job two weeks after refusing to make a 5-year commitment to a job that paid less than 25k a year.

I tell you all this history, not to make public excuses, but to attempt a sort of personal catharsis. I’ve had some bad luck in life, true, but many of the crappy situations I was dealt were made much, MUCH worse with my own subsequent mishandling.

Over a decade later, my debts are nearly paid off, my credit score grows less embarrassing every couple of months and most importantly, my attitude is changed. I’ve learned to recognize and value my skills, my willingness to learn, and to appreciate my quest for the A+ for what it is; a fucking awesome work ethic.
I’ve wanted to attend school for a long time and now, I finally have the means to do so. I even know what I’d like to study. But one of the many things my experiences have taught me through all this is that everything comes at a cost.
What would be the cost of my going back to school?

The Mister and I are newlyweds. We have no plans on having children in the immediate, but it is something that has been discussed as a possibility for the future.
If I started school a year from now, I would be 36 or 37 at graduation, 34 if I did a short program.

Does this mean I have to choose between learning the skills for a fulfilling career and the option of parenthood?

Is it too late to start over?

steps

I got a job today.
It’s nothing too thrilling, just a short-term position at a local university bookstore, but it’s something and I’m relieved. Perhaps I can exhale now. Perhaps I can let myself just be here, for however long that is.

The Mister and I have been tossing around some loose plans for what we hope to happen over the next two years. Nothing is etched in stone, but there will likely be a reunion with our tiny fifth floor apartment in Brooklyn as well as time spent on the west coast of the US. Topping this mental timeline off is the clearing of our dotted-around-the-world storage units and setting up a home in a city new to both of us.

Nothing is confirmed, but I find security in some sort of plan, however loose it may be.

It’s so strange to think of having a real home that isn’t Seattle, the city of my youth, or New York, the city of my adulthood. Brisbane is where we live, but it’s not our home.
Just after we arrived in Brisbane, we moved into our little apartment and the Mister caught me daydreaming. “Live in Brisbane for a year and see then what you really think about staying”.
Two months later, I see his point.
Despite the mangoes and the frangipani, the evenings sitting in the backyard grass, despite the beautiful outdoor pool where I float on my back and the sky is blue forever, despite all these things that I love, this isn’t our city. This isn’t our home.

I’ve been going though a bit of a rough spot lately. Homesick for New York and heartsick for the friends and family left behind. I have no regrets about coming here. It’s a given that I will wholeheartedly do whatever is necessary to support my husband in the persual of his career but there is no comparison to friends that have known and loved you for years or the city that has literally everything.

I don’t want to go back in time, I’m simply trying to find my way forward on a very new road. Step one: get a job.

Step two: I have no idea.

leather + alfalfa

We all have a list of scents that bring us back not to a place, but to a time.

One of the flashback-inducing aromas from my history is the combination of oiled leather and dried alfalfa: the tack shop.

I spent a lot of time in tack shops as a child. Actually, it’s not just the tack shop, it’s also the arena, the stable, the fairgrounds, the feed stores and the livestock auction with the zillion-miles-per-hour auctioneer and the dizzily steep terraced seating.

The thing is, my mom is horsey.
My mother has always been a girly girl. She loves floral patterns, trashy romance novels, decorating cakes, baby clothes shopping, torch singers, Victorian-era anything, and most of all, horses.

It was a funny twist of fate that brought her a daughter who is so much like her in appearance and opinionation, but so vastly different in taste.
I wanted nothing to do with my mom’s girly things.
I liked punk rock and abstract art and the bustle of big cities. I was absolutely, utterly uninterested in dolls, ruffles, and most of all, horses.

I will say that despite my lack of interest, I was a decent sport.
I tried my best to please my mother and got on a horse that bucked me across an arena. Thankfully, I managed to hang on by a thread and avoid death by trampling.
After that, she accepted our different interests with grace and didn’t push it. I was still required to come along to whatever event or shop she was going to, but she understood and accepted that I was probably going to spend the afternoon drawing on scraps of paper, chatting with people about imaginary nonsense or rating the shops by how much I liked the colors of the of bright nylon leads and patterned wool saddle blankets.

I’ve been missing my family a lot these days and spending a bit more time than usual reflecting on old memories. A couple of days ago, I walked into a shoe shop and the smell of the leather brought me right back to being eight years old in the tack shop, keeping busy picking the best saddle blanket in the joint.

Recalled through the lens of adulthood and new interests, I realized that saddle blankets are absolutely beautiful objects often made of 100% wool and they’re more than thick enough to use as rugs.
It doesn’t hurt that the cost of a saddle blanket is dirt-cheap next to comparably sized wool rugs.

Saddle blankets come in two approximate sizes: normal is about 30” square and double is 30” x 60″. I’m partial to the double size blankets for rug use.

Here are some good ones I found online that would look AMAZING against a painted white or polished wood floor.


Free Spirit Saddles and Tack eBay shop


Tack Wholesale


Show-N-Style


Tack Market

Thanks mom for the memories and the unintended décor lead. I miss you.

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Feeling a little nostalgic.

This is mostly for me.

I cleaned out the bookmarks on my laptop tonight and after deleting a zillion NYC-centric websites of businesses I intended to patronize, spots to see, classes, events, maps and who knows what else, I got a little nostalgic for back when I had a job and more than 2 friends in the city I lived in.

This isn’t some glamorous New York City that you see in the movies, this was simply my daily life.












I know that eventually I’ll feel more rooted here in Australia and I won’t think backwards more than I think forward, but I’m not quite there yet.

I miss New York.

31 for 31

A couple weeks ago, I grappled with the arbitrariness of January 1st as the start of the New Year and declared that MY year starts on MY birthday. I’m also too good to have resolutions, I have goals, I have plans, I am an advanced elegant creature who eats cheesecake and never gains an ounce and always has perfectly silky hair.

So anyway, my deepest apologies for sounding like a sanctimonious twit way back two weeks ago. We all go through phases. You know, you really shouldn’t be so judgmental.
Anyway, my birthday is tomorrow so in celebration of the 31st year of Shilo, I’ve taken time out of my precious life of unemployment to share my list of 31 plans for the next year.

Yeah, yeah, I know. The year you turn 31 is actually your 32nd year. Back off pickypants, this is my list and I’m doing it my way.

Ok! Here goes!

1. Take lessons and become a stronger swimmer

2. Grow herbs that taste as good as the ones at the market

3. Make a duvet cover based on Elsworth Kelly’s “Colors for a large wall”

4. Go to a wine tasting

5. Go snorkeling at the Great Barrier Reef.

6. Fly a kite

7. Make 10 music mixes to give as gifts to family and friends

8. Send 20 postcards

9. Build myself the ultimate swimsuit

10. Bake a pie from scratch (including the crust)

11. See a kangaroo in the wild

12. Use blurb (or something similar) to make a book

13. Climb one of the peaks in the Glasshouse Mountain range

14. Take a basic photography lesson

15. Go on a trip with a friend

16. Pick and eat some sort of food from the wild

17. Celebrate my first wedding anniversary in style

18. Spend an afternoon walking around taking photos by myself

19. Produce a zine for the first time in a decade

20. Develop the capacity to jog a long block without getting even slightly winded

21. Take photos with a large bunch of balloons

22. Double my personal dinner menu

23. Write a short fictional story

24. Tour a brewery

25. Ride in a hot-air balloon

26. Sell something on Etsy

27. Spend a day riding waterslides

28. Visit an observatory

29. Master the folding of origami cranes

30. Have a picnic

31. Make a short film using our flip video camera

This list will ensure that I do more than get bogged down in the routine of errands, work and all those other mundane life details. Too many years have slipped away going to work or making sandwiches. I mean, I’ve eaten some DAMN GOOD sandwiches in my time, but you know how it goes. It’s easy to get caught up and not take time to do fun stuff.
Especially when you’re a boring creature of habit and lover-of-routine like me.

If it does not succeed in ensuring that I am capable of having fun, well then if nothing else it will stand as a testament to my utter lameness and make me feel guilty for eternity or at least a couple weeks.

Boom! That’s it! What’s on your list?

On Brisbane

It’s been just over two months now. It’s time to talk about life in Brisbane.

Months ago, when I wrote my reflections on New York and leaving it, I intended to also publish my thoughts about moving to Brisbane. I’m glad I didn’t. I want to say that my expectations for Brisbane were wrong, but that’s a simplification and doesn’t do the city justice.

As I assume y’all know, I’m A’murrricun. My husband is ‘Strayan.
We moved to Australia and specifically, to Brisbane for a number of reasons. Immigration hurdles, a fantastic career opportunity for him, weather and allergy issues, access to affordable/FREE healthcare, a desire to change the pace of our lives for a moment all mixed with myriad other issues and led us to where we stand.

We’ve had many people Australian and American alike ask, Why Brisbane?
For those of you not familiar with the cultural geography of Australia, Brisbane is largely regarded as not a city but a big country town. In many ways, calling it that is a gross insult. Brisbane is home to millions, has an impressive and beautiful inner-city skyline, mass transit, and a world class Contemporary Art institution. The Queensland Performing Arts Center is currently hosting a production I read rave reviews for in New York just a couple months ago.
In some ways though, the reputation is earned. There isn’t much in terms of non-state sponsored culture here, my guess, because the infrastructure doesn’t exist. There IS mass transit, but it’s very expensive, has an incredibly complex and confusing fare/zone system, and is pretty much completely aimed at shuttling commuters from the deep burbs into the city core and not at all for moving city dwellers between it’s own neighborhoods. Rent is expensive (Brisbane monthly rent savings over NYC:$14) and there aren’t a lot of the types of businesses that attract creative culture.
The city itself appears to me as pretty progressive, healthy, and economically robust, but many of the nearby small towns and suburbs are plagued with severe poverty, drug use and racism.

To get back to answering the question, our choice of Brisbane boiled down to a job.
The Mister was offered the opportunity to work on a year-long project that culminates in an amazing event. It’s something he’s incredibly excited to work on and it brings together two of his seemingly disparate passions.
There was no way we would say no to this project if that meant a year in Brisbane, Detroit, or even Timbuktu. It’s that important.

Life here is and yet isn’t what I expected. Nobody knows what living in a new city is going to be like, and many random factors contribute to your level of contentedness in a place.
The Mister and I chose our home and neighborhood here in Brisbane with our Williamsburg, Brooklyn lifestyle in mind. We wanted good coffee, friendly neighborhood bars, sidewalk cafes, and green grocers. We wanted well-stocked newsstands and a place to buy really fresh seafood. We wanted to be close enough to everything that our lack of a vehicle wouldn’t feel like a deprivation.
We got all of those things, but rapidly discovered that many of our Brooklyn requirements were unnecessary in Brisbane. Life here is different, and our so are our needs.

The existence we’ve put together here has given us many unexpected rewards. I can’t say that I’m having any problem adjusting to the weather. Shorts and flipflops in January is a welcome departure from the black slush with mixed garbage reality of New York winter.
I suppose it’s no surprise to most that food in Queensland is incredible. Our proximity to farmland and the sea is reflected nightly in our dinners, 90% of which we cook at home.
The air here is clean and smells like frangipani and mangoes. We wake up to the sound of the ravens arguing and mynas singing instead of the impatient honking of traffic-snarled drivers on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway.
I’ve started using the library again and I make the bed every day not because I’m forcing myself to do it, but because I just do.
Although we’re technically poorer here than we ever were living in New York, we are richer in so many ways.

These days, I don’t know where home is.
I can see that Brisbane, despite it’s beauty is not it. A tiny three bedroom apartment is waiting for our arrival back in New York, but perhaps the west coast of the US with it’s proximity to my family would be better.
Maybe it’s foolish to leave a country with universal medicine and an easy way of life, perhaps Sydney or Melbourne would fill our needs.
It could be that our future is somewhere else completely. Europe is an option as I had the foresight to pick a man with EU citizenship, but both of us having tasted the difficulty of adjusting to another English-speaking culture have no veil of illusion about the glamour of living in Germany or France. It could be awesome, but it would definitely be difficult as we’re both monolingual.

This story is not fully written. We’ve only been here a short time, and I know that my view will change greatly when I find employment and make a couple more friends.
Those things take time but luckily, I have patience.

Project 365

Project 365 is an internet meme where you’re supposed to take a photo every day for a year and post it to your blog. The point is to document your year and become a better photographer in the process.
Sounds great to me on both counts.
I know I’ll fail at the posting part. I’m certain to be traveling at times and not have internet access – and not just because traveling is tiring, but because I can literally spend an entire day in the air. Brisbane to NYC is 22 hours without layovers. I’ll do my best to post in a timely manner, but you guys might have to cut me some slack here and there.

I’m a couple days late from the traditional starting point, but I’m in. Let’s do this thing.

This is a fruit I found growing on a hedge sitting on our back deck rail. I still cannot believe how incredibly green the grass gets immediately after it rains.

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on the utter importance of a well appointed de-winging station.

Today on a walk to the hardware store with my sweetheart I had a fit of excitement over my ability to properly identify an incredibly common and totally cute local bird. This new skill is thanks only to the Christmas gift I received from The Mister this year: The Illustrated Field Guide to the Birds of Australia.

It sounds dorky, but it’s what I asked for. My deepest apologies if I’ve completely blown my cool kid Williamsburg Brooklyn bartender international expat status by revealing my interest in bird watching, but there it is. I’m interested in birds. Oh, and my last name is Byrd. Go ahead and laugh, I’ll give you a minute.

Anyway, upon our arrival back home, I immediately pounced on my bird book to look up more information on the Black and White Fantail or, as he’s known on the streets, Willie Wagtail. My thoughts are that since I can now identify him by sight, I may as well take things up a notch and learn more about ole’ Willie’s way of life.


yes, I actually AM the ambassador of cute

Internet, I know it sounds like geektron2000 reading material, but this book is full of awesome stuff. A prime example is that Mr. Wagtail’s nest is “a shallow grey cup of fine grass, bark shreds and rootlets” (ROOTLETS?! That’s a real word? Eeeeee!) and get THIS: “the nest is felted with spider’s webs”
Holy cute explosion batman.

Seriously Internet, it’s felted.
What? Would YOU be ok just relaxing on a sofa made of fine grass, bark shreds and rootlets? No way man. You need some padding. Felted spider’s webs are obviously the way to go for today’s nests.

Further reading revealed that my new BFF William is also an avid and brutal hunter:
“Takes insects in twisting flight seemingly disturbing them by jerky sweeps of tail and sudden wing flaring. Large butterflies are transferred to feet for carriage to de-winging stations.”

In addition to having perfectly decorated nests, these birds also set up de-goddamn-winging stations for their massive butterfly kills. BAD ASS.


Poofy little tough guy

Mango stealer

Yesterday my landlord arrived carrying some sort of archaic metal giant-plunger looking contraption. He then set up a patio chair in the grass and proceeded to sit and direct while his ancient wife hoisted the plunger thing into the foliage of my mango tree over and over to pick any fruits ripe enough to eat.

I know the international law of fruit trees is anything that hangs over a property line or fence is fair game. The trunk and bulk of this particular Mango tree is on the neighboring property, but it’s an enormous tree so the amount in our backyard is still very substantial.

Now technically, yes, he gained ownership of the mangos in our yard when he bought the property, but as a renter, I feel I have some usage rights and my own kind of claim to them as well.
True, it’s a mainly spiritual claim as I’m the mangoes primary emotional support.
But, Internet, seriously. Friendship has a real value. Just wait until you’re getting attacked by crows and see what you think about nobody coming to help you.


See? I’m an awesome friend.

Ownership and usage aside it seems very unsportsmanlike to do the following:

1. Use a tool to take the mangos from the top. Fine if you’re a farmer, but when you’re an 80 year old retired carpentry inspector you can afford to donate a couple to the bats in the name of natural harmony. Call it ecological retribution or maybe just call it being NICE.

2. Bossing your equally ancient wife “Those over there!” “You’re doing it wrong” “You missed the gold one!” loud enough for me to hear from the living room while she’s working her ass off.

3. Premeditating your laziness by bringing a folding chair from home. My landlord is no invalid folks, so stay off the “maybe he has a condition” train. He’ll come over and haul garbage cans and hedge trimmers around for HOURS. Usually it’s the hours before my alarm goes off but regardless, I’ve seen him do all sorts of stuff. He’s fine.

4. Who needs that many mangoes? These fruits are HUGE. Like the size of my hand huge. A single mango will supply both The Mister and I with enough natural sugar and deliciousness for an entire day. What in the hell is he going to do with twenty?


Poor, barely ripening mango, your time is limited. I cannot protect you from the dastardly landlord

New what?

While the world around me celebrated the New Year! New Decade! I seem to have stood by with a blank look.
This was the first New Years Eve in a very long time that I did not spend working.
Bartenders refer to it as amateur night, and if like me, you work in an establishment where your bread and butter is regulars, it could also be an enormous amount of work for a relatively meager financial reward.
I’m no longer a member of the service industry though and as such I was able to spend my New Years at home with my husband doing pretty much nothing.

As I read the blog entries, text messages and emails of friends and family, I’ve realized that other people actually feel something on New Years. And wow. I don’t. How embarrassing.
My feelings for the holiday aren’t grinchy. I don’t dislike it on any level. It’s just kinda, oh, there.
It inspires me with excitement equal to what I feel on flag day.
Do other people feel magic and hope?
Really?

The only thing we celebrated that night was our long-awaited reconnection to the internet. THAT was exciting.

I love holidays. Thanksgiving and Birthdays are HUGE to me. Halloween is a giant fun party, and Valentine’s may be over-marketed, but the heart is still in the right place.
I think that my problem with New Years is that I simply don’t acknowledge it as the beginning of my year.
When I reflect on my personal history, I never say I finished college in 2001 or met my husband in 2007. I finished college when I was 22 and I was 27 when I met the man I refer to as Mister.

My birthday is in January, so my personal point of year change is admittedly pretty close to the Roman calendar version but regardless those two weeks between the 1st of January and the 17th still remain a bit of a no-zone for me.

As I mentioned a couple days ago, I don’t make resolutions. Birthday goal/plan lists yes, but resolutions no.
I’ve been working on my goal list for the upcoming year and high on it is exploring Australia.
We have no clue how long/if we’ll be living here beyond the next 12 months so just in case this is it, I want to see some things.

Specifically, these things:


photo via mrdehoot’s flickr

The Glasshouse Mountains.

A flat plain punctuated by the cores of volcanos extinct 27 million years. “Discovered” by Captian Cook in 1770, Aboriginal people considered them a family (with the tallest peak as the mother) that’s suffered from some serious discord.
Mt. Beerwa, the previously mentioned mother mountain is 556 meters/1,824 feet tall and takes approximately 4 hours to climb up and back down.
I’ve done a fair bit of hiking in my life, but no actual climbing. According to the internet, it’s mostly a hike with a short, easy climb section that requires no special gear.
The mountains are located about an hour’s drive north of where we currently live, and I’m excited to give them a go.


photo via msdstefan’s flickr

Sydney Opera House.

I know. I KNOW.
Maybe it’s cheesy, but it’s also a beautiful and iconic.
The mister tells me that when it was built people loathed it. Now? well, now to say there is some pride in the most famous architecturally edgy building in the world is putting it a BIT lightly.
I hear that the opera house is actually functionally pretty crappy. You know, for Opera purposes. I don’t care and want to see it anyway.


photo via shastadaisy’s flickr

Opium poppy fields in Tasmania.

Don’t worry, this opium is farmed for pharmaceutical purposes so is not likely to be patrolled with automatic weapons like I presume most poppy fields are in the world.
I actually had no idea that this was something I wanted to see until I started searching for photos of Tasmania. Even though I’ve never taken an opiate in my life and have really no interest in doing so, I think a poppy field is definitely worth seeing. Really though, I just want to see the rumored wonderfulness that is regular non-drug-related Tasmania.
Such as this:


photo via shastadaisy’s flickr

Seriously dudes, that is some beautiful right there.


photo via jasoncward’s flickr

A kangaroo in the wild.

Some friends of mine traveled to Australia a couple years back for a bike messenger event and saw loads of kangaroos from the car. I’ve lived here for months and I’ve only seen the roadkill versions.
I’ve never seen anything more impressive than a moose in real life (and even that was in yellowstone where you have to be blind to NOT see a moose) so it’s time I saw something good. I’m way behind on seeing my fair share of animals.

What do you think of this new year beeswax?

Do you measure your years by the calendar? By your age? Pivotal events? lunar cycles?
.

I’m back!

I bet you didn’t really know I was gone did you?

As of a couple hours ago, we’ve finally gotten ye olde dorknet installed in our new home and have a reliable and quick connection for the first time since we left NYC.
The timing is fantastic because I was on the verge of throwing my iPhone at a wall or having a very public meltdown in the city library over the dialup-era data transfer speeds.

In addition to being over the goddamn MOON about having the ability to skype my family and troll eBay for bikes, I’m really feeling great about the quickly coming New Year!

I’ve never been the resolution type, but I’ve got some goals for the year. Exploring Australia further, lots of sewing and web projects, pushing the boundaries of my admittedly limited cooking knowledge and a couple of other things I’m keeping in the bag for the time being.

Do you have any resolutions or plans for the upcoming year?

Summer storm

We had a massive rainstorm today right in the middle of the afternoon.
I had big ideas of walking around job hunting today, but the torrential downpour made for a change of plans which included having my husband trim my hair, eating falafel and taking photos of all the plants dripping from the quick but strong shower.


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