Category: Uncategorized

  • It’s Like Rain on Your Wedding Day….

    Oh, wait, that’s not ironic.

    Especially if you can’t get married.

    Once again, I am so enraged by the state of California and the entire political process here. I had just spent 4 days in Milwaukee celebrating a friend’s great wedding only to come home to learn the CA Supreme Court upheld Prop. 8, which banned gay couples from marrying–even though 18,000 same-sex couples got married before it passed. So now, we have some gay couples legally married and the rest of us are not…? And since when do civil rights get put to a vote?

    I am tired of fighting this process. I am tired of being angry. I am tired of bigotry. I am tired of supposed “Christian” groups demanding that other groups follow their philosophy of morality (which is often a lie). I am also, more specifically, tired of the state of California. I am tired of how it passes laws. I am tired of its short-sightedness. It has barely been progressive in the last 10 years. It is now an also-ran: a joke in the making.

    I need to rethink why I live here beyond the climate and access to great food.

  • L.A,/CA Playlist(s)

    Since I am about to board a plane to spend five days in Wisconsin, I am taking a little of CA with me. I’d actually thought of compiling songs about Los Angeles and California for some time. I actually had many more than this, but I will save them for another installment.

    Tell me about others I should have and include! x-m

    Songs About LA and CA Playlist:

    Freeway — Aimee Mann
    Trouble In Shangri-La — Stevie Nicks
    Clay Feet — Kristin Hersh
    California — Low
    San Bernardino — The Mountain Goats
    The Californian — Heidi Berry
    Take California — Propellerheads
    California Love — 2Pac featuring Dr. Dre
    Hollywood — Madonna
    California — Joni Mitchell
    It Never Rains In Southern California — Albert Hammond
    I Remember California — R.E.M.
    Golden Ocean — 50 Foot Wave
    Still In Hollywood — Concrete Blonde
    California Dreamin’ — The Mamas and the Papas
    California –Amy Correia
    Hollywood People — Judy Henske
    In California — Neko Case

  • You Mean I Have to Write Something?

    Months ago, Barbie very graciously asked me to write a speech for her wedding.

    Me being me, I humbly agreed and then twirled ideas around in my head almost like how someone would wind hair around their finger. I was gonna write this… no, that! Perfect! No, wait, what if I did this!? Even better! And so on, and so on, and so on.

    Of course, now it’s mid-May, Mercury is in retrograde, and I am still piecing together fragments of sentences–which are now like broken or split ends that have snapped off due to overaggressive twirling.

    Note to self: Do not twirl ideas anymore.

    It’s not that I am afraid I’ll have nothing to say. Everyone who knows me, knows that the only time I have nothing to say is when I am incredibly angry. It’s just that there’s this jumble of words in my head and it kinda feels like I have to push a wasps’ nest through my fingers to get them out.

    OK, fine, I kind of lied: The real issue is responsibility. People have to listen to me talk about Barbie and Chad for five minutes. They have to not yawn. Or hear cliches. Or listen to me do a walk down memory lane. Or wonder how I know some mythical Barbie and Chad they don’t know. And–what matters most to me–it has to do both Barbie and Chad justice. This is their wedding, after all. The last thing I want them remembering when they are on the dance floor is that I gave some awkward speech about… say…. “trust,” complete with an over-the-top performance art moment of me grasping my hands together, as if in desperation to connect with the audience. (For the record: I would never give a speech about trust. Or forgiveness. Or constancy.)

    The ironic part of all of this is that I love the puzzle of it. How do these ideas connect or bond? How do they break apart? What doesn’t belong here? Is this funny? Does this even make sense? There’s a structure and a flow to the creative process that keeps me in awe. Even when I know the basic premise I am writing about (which I do in this case, thank you!), there are still so many directions it can travel.

    With that twirling of ideas done, I can concentrate on making sure what I say matters to them–that it resonates beyond a simple declaration of sharing their happiness. I may not successfully avoid all of the cliches, but I am feeling more confident that what I have brewing on the page will not cause any awkward reflections on the dance floor. And if it does? Well, that’s why there’s alcohol.

  • Self-Discography #10: “I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got” by Sinéad O’Connor

    I am driving the freeways in, out, and around Portland at 1 a.m. on a blissfully warm night in the spring of 1990. My hand is balanced on the window, cigarette burning like a beacon, me mentally willing it to attract someone, anyone who feels as utterly fucked up as I do at the moment.

    I head north on the I-5 almost until I hit the Columbia River, exit and re-enter the freeway to head south, cross over the Fremont bridge, zoom past downtown and loop over the Willamette River, north again to I-84 to head east, out of the city. I will smoke more, and glance at the burning paper and tobacco, and I will let the tape of Sinéad O’Connor’s “I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got” flip over in the Ford Maverick’s car stereo–the music slightly distorted by hiss and static caused by a faulty speaker.

    I am not even sure how I am staying in the lanes at 65 miles an hour. I feel like I want to take my hands off the wheel and let the car explode off the asphalt, sail past the railings of a high bridge, explode into flames. But I can’t will myself to do it. I can only sing along to what I am hearing and mentally plan my escape to California for the summer to live with my sister and her friends–a move, I tell myself, that will at least temporarily end feeling as I do now.

    Nothing Compares 2 U

    It was a moment made possible by an event some three months prior. I’d gotten home late from work at the movie theater and was in the basement watching “120 minutes” on MTV when the station premiered the video for “Nothing Compares 2 U.” So ubiquitous now, nearly 20 years later, it’s hard to recall the gut punch of watching Sinéad O’Connor’s face in extreme close up as she transformed a mediocre Prince song into a flat-out lovelorn dirge. What’s not difficult to remember, however, is the mental connection I made at that moment to the song and the album, which I bought two weeks later.

    It was March of 1990 and I was 16 years old. I was in a relationship with a girl who was undoubtedly one of my best friends and should have only been a friend. I knew what I wanted more than anything was to have a boyfriend instead, and hated myself for the lie I was perpetuating. I was stuck living at home, fighting with my mother. And I felt trapped in an endless cycle of being afraid to hurt anyone, while willingly hating myself for all that I seemed unable to say, let alone do. My father had only been dead for four years. I was barely past the stage of being suicidal. I had, in many ways, changed my life more completely than I thought was possible for my age.

    And in sweeps a nearly bald young woman who may very well have a nervous breakdown on camera in front of me, simultaneously vulnerable and steely–angry, maybe a tad angsty, and, yeah, sad: the one thing I was terribly afraid to admit that I was.

    Feel So Different

    Putting the tape on for the first time after I bought it, however, I was a bit taken aback by the overall tone of the album. “Nothing Compares 2 U” had been nothing in comparison to some of these other songs. And for maybe the first time, I had the thrill of recognition … the distinct feeling that there was a reason I was hearing these songs now.

    “I started off with many friends. We spent a long time talking. I thought they meant every word they said. Like everyone else, they were stalling. And now they seem so different.”

    Delivered in the middle of “Feel So Different,” these words formed the jumping off point for me. Shedding my upbringing by going to school across town, having to consciously shed everything I’d learned in order to become different–to escape.

    “I should have hatred for you, but I do not have any. And I have always loved you. Oh, you have taught me plenty. The whole time, I’d never seen all you had spread before me. The whole time, I’d never seen all I need was inside me. Now I feel so different.”

    Only five minutes into this album and I heard only words about leaving my childhood behind and acknowledging that the death of a parent had irrevocably changed me–made me something that I felt was somehow more purposeful, more acutely aware of the world around me than so many others my age.

    I Am Stretched on Your Grave

    If that wasn’t enough, then the simple words “I am stretched on your grave” would drive it home. But drive it home in an audacious manner–a James Brown beat married to an Irish poem, topped by a Gaelic fiddle swirling into the night. I would join Susan later in the year at The City nightclub, upstairs in the so-called “goth section” to perform a mock Irish jig to the outro of this song. If anything, though, it told me of what would be possible if I stopped listening to what people told me I should do. It also made it OK again to cry about this death that I still felt. I could turn it into some kind of modern noir. Really, it was grieving. But grieving could have its own audacity that I had not known was possible.

    The Emperor’s New Clothes

    I could never know what it must have been like to be 22 years old with a baby to deal with while the world started to know who I was. But I knew the feeling of being unable to grasp exactly what I wanted while, at the same time, being convinced that there had to be a way to get through this on my own terms.

    “How could I possibly know what I want when I was only 21? There’s millions of people to offer advice and say how I should be. But they are twisted and they will never be any influence on me.”

    “I will live by my own policies. I will sleep with a clear conscience, I will sleep in peace. Maybe it sounds mean, but I really don’t think so.”

    When can I finally say, “I am gay”? When will I know how to sleep through the night? When will I no longer feel like I am not doing enough? I want the clarity to say, “This is how it is. This is who I am.” But it’s funny how having almost no money of your own, an alcoholic mother, a dead father, and a year of high school left will make you keep your mouth closed, even when you dream of opening it every day.

    You Cause as Much Sorrow

    “I’m full of good intentions, like I never was before. It’s too late for prevention, but I don’t think it’s too late for the cure.”

    This is the song I listened to so much during my late-night drives. The escapades that killed half my gas tank and made me run out of cigarettes, driving me home to have to face the mausoleum quality of my bedroom. Which left me too alone again with my thoughts. I hated what the song tried to impart to me–namely the entwined feeling of hating my father for dying and leaving me alone in this empty house with my mother, while also realizing that if it hadn’t happened, maybe I would not be be turning into the person I was becoming:

    “I never said I was tough. That was everyone else. So you’re a fool to attack me, for the image that you built yourself. It just sounds more vicious than I actually mean. I really am soft–yes, tender and sweet. … Why must you always be around? Why can’t you just leave me be? You’ve done nothing so far but destroy my life. You cause as much sorrow dead as you did when you were alive.”

    This chorus would inevitably make me cry in my car. But I was never really sure if I was simply feeling sorry for myself or trying to make sense of too many things at once. And I am still not sure now. If I listen to it on the right night while driving the looping Los Angeles freeway system, it still brings tears to my eyes and I have to blast the song, roll down all the windows and scream it into the wind, letting it rob the words of any strength beyond this metal cocoon.

    The Last Day of Our Acquaintance

    Is this the end of a love relationship, a friendship, or is it simply the exodus of my sister and brother from the house we grew up in?

    And how do I tell a girl who has been so amazing to me, who’s been intimately aware of all the fucked up shit in my life and helped me wade through it, that there’s something not right? How dare I do that to someone like her? It was all I could think. I was sometimes the protagonist in this song, and sometimes the object about whom it was written. The duality cut deeply. “I know you don’t love me anymore. You used to hold my hand when the plane took off. Two years ago there just seemed so much more. And I don’t know what happened to our love.”

    And yet, I did know.

    Just like I had to admit that I was angry at a dead man for leaving me behind, I had to admit that I knew that the warmth of friendship and love I felt for this person had absolutely nothing to do with carnal desire and it was neither of our faults for the fact that I had no way of expressing it until now.

    I would move to California in a matter of weeks and kiss my first boyfriend and understand the exquisite burn of stubble against my face. I would know that I had to figure out how to come to terms with this and how to talk about myself to others.
    Right now, however, all I had was the feeling of loss, and the feeling that I was the bad guy, even though I didn’t want to be.

    I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got

    I didn’t know it was possible to even utter these words.

    And on the album, this song sounds like one big exhale… a breath and prayer released simultaneously. I rarely listened to it all the way through. But when I did, I saw myself on the road, still. It would be dark. I would be on the highway, driving fast enough to catch the coolness of the breeze in the summer darkness. I would be leaving all of this uncertainty, heartbreak, and anger behind. I would be sure of what I was doing.

    Of course, it wouldn’t exactly be true. But, a year later, I would, indeed, drive the highways across the country, leaving Portland–and one spent cassette of this album–behind me. I would still drive with a cigarette between my fingers like a glowing beacon of sorts. I would not be sure of what I was doing next. There would be deliberateness about it, though. I would feel like I had no choice; it would be purpose unto itself.

    That was all that mattered.

  • Questions You Find You Are Asking Yourself on April 9th

    Now that the Los Angeles Times has written about Glass Beach, how can I go there?

    Wait, how can I not go there?

    And what is it I like so much about sea glass, anyway?

    Now that everyone else is growing a beard, should I just shave mine off?

    Why can’t I find that Lisa Germano album on vinyl anywhere?

    I’m not going to have waves of wrinkled skin on my back when I’m old, am I?

    Am I!?

    What’s with this inability to get back to work on the book, let alone this blog?

    Do I need another snack?

    Should I go get more water?

    Does the full moon really have any effect on me?

    Should I be thankful so many musicians I like aren’t popular, even if it means they can barely feed themselves?

    When will the lambs stop screaming?

    Have you ever watched animals make love, Frank?

    When can I have a yard to grow vegetables in?

    Do I rent the house in July or save for the trip in September?

    When can I have a drink?

  • The “Which Punctuation Mark Are You?” Quiz

    Did you like the use of punctuation marks in the title of this post?

    If so, you are the perfect candidate for this test.

    Ignore those lame Facebook “Which Painting Are You?” and “Where Should You Live?” quizzes. This quiz is the one that will tell you more about yourself than you ever imagined.

    All you need to do is answer these seven simple questions, send me your responses (or post them in the comments section, and,as time permits, I will tell you what punctuation mark you are and why it matters. (All responses done on a time-available basis; I ain’t gettin’ paid, you know.)

    But enough chit-chat, let’s begin:

    1. When people say “like” all the time, it:

    a) Doesn’t bother you that often
    b) Drives you crazy
    c) Makes you realize that this is now just part of how we speak
    d) Is not something you have ever noticed

    2. You are assigned the task of writing a paragraph that includes small bits of information about many different things. You:

    a) Create a list of all of the things that need to be included as a “cheat.”
    b) Make it into two or three paragraphs, because you know there is no way you can get the point across in one.
    c) Write it in two different ways and give it to the person who assigned it to see which one she/he prefers.
    d) Question the person who assigned it as to whether this is the smartest way to convey all of this information.

    3. You believe that social gatherings at your house should consist of:

    a) Close friends only
    b) Friends and family
    c) The more the merrier
    d) You are not that big on entertaining

    4. You are a big believer in:

    a) Keeping things short and sweet
    b) Passionately expressing yourself
    c) Never ending a sentence with a preposition
    d) Quietly doing what needs to be done

    5. Your opinion on learning a foreign language is:

    a) Everyone should learn one
    b) You don’t really see the need
    c) Learn as many as you can and as early as you can
    d) That you’ll learn one eventually, when you have more time

    6. You prefer to read:

    a) Newspapers
    b) Magazines
    c) Gossip Web sites
    d) Books

    7. The sentence “Joe likes to chew gum, ride his bike, collect stamps, and, especially, peanut butter, banana, and honey sandwiches” is:

    a) A tad awkward but could easily be made more clear
    b) A jumbled mess
    c) Perfect
    d) Better off as four different sentences

  • And Now for a Special Announcement About This Morning

    I thought about really explaining this more in detail, but, you know, when this much happens before you even manage to make it to work, then you know the day’s tone is set.

    Below are excerpts from a quick chat with Chrissy after the adventures:

    Mikel
    I have had the craziest f’ing morning

    Christina
    what happened?
    do tell

    Mikel
    dentist appt. The novocaine shot in my upper lip made my left eye cry uncontrollably… then I left my coffee mug on my car and drove off, so coffee went everywhere on my car, prompting me to get a car wash, at which point I was surrounded by INSANE people, including a 70-year-old woman in a pencil skirt and bondage heels with stringy, dyed black hair that was kind of in a bun who was hobbling around the gas station snack shop.

    Christina
    are you kidding?

    Mikel
    no

    Christina
    you couldn’t be

    Mikel
    There’s MORE
    but I’ll spare you

    Christina
    my favorite part is that it made your left eye cry
    DON’T SPARE ME
    I live for this shit

    Mikel
    Um…OK, the other people at the car wash were a publicist woman for some film studio who was yelling at a co-worker on speaker phone and who had way to many collagen injections. She kept coming over near me to look at the free mags on the rack I was near-you know, like “Apartment Living”-all while yelling…until I finally said loudly “AM I IN YOUR WAY?” and she ignored me and walked away.
    THEN…

    Christina
    HA

    Mikel
    A guy with custom-made shoes kept trying to sit near me. Why were they custom made you ask…? Well, that’s because his left foot was HUGE and DEFORMED like the Elephant Man’s, so the shoes matched, but one was 3 times larger. AND he was busy arranging all the birthday cards he’d just bought inside the snack shop.

    It’s not even 11 am yet. What, pray tell, is next?

  • Self-Discography #9: “Sky Motel” by Kristin Hersh

    I moved west with no real plan. Oh, sure, it may have seemed like it to untrained observers, but August 1998 was perhaps the one month of my life where I freely gave myself up to the unknown.

    I’d left New York with Nicole in a rented Penske truck, leaving behind me a dirty city crammed with my low-paying jobs that barely afforded me a living, beautiful Brooklyn street scenes, and a dissolved relationship I mourned because it seemed so unfair that it had come into my life at the wrong time.

    Before I’d left New York, I’d had a consultation with an astrologer, with whom I’d worked on a book that would be published by my old employer. She was delightful, honest, and funny–and not at all crazy-sounding, which seemed a nice bonus at the time. She read my chart for me, setting the stage, she said, for the transformative things that would come in the next year of my life. At the time I thought it was amusing and I took the predictions and stuffed them in a box, threw that box in the Penske truck, and sped far far away from the East Coast….

    …and nine months later opened the box when suddenly everything seemed to be going far too well.

    At the time I chalked it up to simple things like living in the California sunshine, to quitting smoking, and having my own apartment–not to mention meeting a man whom I suspiciously liked for all the right reasons. But suddenly I had to reconsider whether planetary alignment had anything to do with it.

    At this moment came this album by an artist whose work I’d loved for years already. It was, as Kristin Hersh said at the time, her “desert album.” She’d moved to the high desert of Southern California after the dissolution of her band Throwing Muses. And from some of her time there, this idiosyncratic collection was born. And with the luck of timing, it had been recorded the month I moved west. And released in June 1999, the month I had to reconsider whether astrology played any role in my feeling wonderful for the first time in far too long.

    It may have been Hersh’s desert album, but “Sky Motel” was also my “I Heart California” moment–bright and shiny, poppy yet off-kilter, simultaneously challenging and defiant. Here were a collection of songs that not only created an atmosphere around me, but also seemed to burrow directly into my brain, highlighting the contradictions inherent in the choices I’d made and my fascination with this beautiful train wreck of a place in which I now found myself living:

    “I never bitched at anyone. I never asked for my heart back. I’m loving everybody. And hating everyone I see.”
    The album’s opening song, “Echo,” includes these lyrics. I wanted the first half to be true. I used to wish that I was stoic. And here I was, about to give my heart away to a man after swearing I wouldn’t. The contradiction of the second part mirrored how I felt about the people here at first–a motley crew of some of the most intelligent individuals I’d ever met, mixed with some of the most intensely vain and neurotic. I couldn’t help but love and hate equally. But the love for strangers was a new sensation.

    “10,000 miles of moonscape don’t keep anybody away, after all.”
    You can move as far away as you like, but the problems are still going to crawl up out of the ground to get you. Right? Or is it that all the people you think you left behind still know how to find you in this alien landscape? Oh. Both.

    “I would love a better drug. You lucky jerk.”
    I found myself staring at an attractive man at a party in June. Too smart for his own good, sharp witted, well-dressed, seemingly 100% together. Why the hell was he interested in me. I couldn’t make myself feel better….yet. I kind of hated how great I found him. I didn’t know he’d actually stick around because he saw I was a lucky jerk, too.

    “This strange old sunshine beats me senseless, but it’s supposed to be keeping me healthy…it’s a lie. You’re a strange old thing that keeps me senseless, but you’re supposed to be keeping me company.”
    Living in New York felt, often, like living in the dark and fighting with Mother Nature. Suddenly freed from that contact, I found myself thinking, “Does it ever rain here? If it doesn’t, how can anyone feel anything authentically?” But then… maybe… “If it doesn’t rain, you never have to hide yourself away inside. You never have to miss out on anything.”

    “You have to look close to see what this disease has done to me.”
    There was something about my move that made me felt like a fugitive. No one here had to know anything about the last year of my life. No one had to know that I’d mangled my foot, that I’d consumed hideous Chinese herbs in an attempt to clear up some “skin condition” clearly brought on by stress. I had no heart-shredding breakup behind me. I didn’t have to explain a phone call from my mother on a rainy spring day telling me my 20-year-old stepsister was dead. I could be anything I wanted to be. My history could be what I wanted. It was a necessary play acting for just a little while, just until I could finally stand on my own two feet again.

    “Faithful to the finish, I’m grateful to be in this with you. A fucker of lifeline. A mother of a lifetime with you.”
    I’d wanted to shake off any number of relationships in my lifetime. But now here I was, fiercely protective of what I had in front of me. A developing relationship with a man that felt, maybe for the first time ever, like one that mattered. Re-establishing my strong friendship with my sister, which survived me sleeping on her floor for four months. Enjoying the time spent with my old friends in a place that seemed to encourage it. This song builds to a cathartic release at this moment with these lyrics–screamed/sung assured clarity. I could never have said it better myself.

    “Tonight your secret’s safe with me. Tomorrow we wake up in L.A. Such a lovely dream. What a lovely place.”
    Driving back into L.A. from a day spent in the Valley with my friend Owen, gliding and zigzagging through Laurel Canyon, a hot breeze blowing from no specific direction, the golden lights of the city unfurling below us as we speed down Crescent Heights. It’s a place where you simply dream, isn’t it? You can make yourself into anything, but it’s still some version of you. I think I’m gonna like it here.

  • Mexico Hangover

    Back in January, newly arrived back to the so-called real world after vacation, I thought about completing an epic blog post with over 50 different photos from Mexico, but you know what? No.

    I posted a slew of photos instead on my Flickr page. And now I find myself looking at that page every other day. I’ve had a pretty rough re-entry to day-to-day life, work, and the like.

    As I have gotten older, I have fewer problems completely disconnecting when I go on vacation. It’s a function of having a sane job. It’s also a function of the fact that I finally feel OK in saying, “I deserve this.” I saved my money to make this trip happen and I wanted nothing to interfere with my time away. Maybe it’s a tad dogmatic, but it also makes me enjoy myself that much more. Ryan and I made reservations months ago, so to finally land in Mexico felt like the reward for 6 months of hard work.

    Needless to say, I loved nearly every day we were in Mexico. Tulum, in particular, was wonderful because it’s a real town where locals actually mix with tourists–where hotels are cabanas on the beach and where the food was pretty amazing. Playa del Carmen was more touristy, Isla Mujeres more urban feeling than I anticipated. Plus, Ryan was deathly ill the last 36 hours we were there. By the time we managed to get across the water to Cancun, made it to the airport, and flew home, we were both wasted in vastly different ways.

    There’s something about pretending your day-to-day life doesn’t exist. Especially when you escape it near some of the most beautiful beaches and historic ruins in the world. You romanticize your existence in this foreign place. You want anything that was unfinished or unclear when you left to be finished and clear. Which makes returning to “reality” a harsh slap. For the better part of two weeks, I resented being home in L.A.
    Getting sick after coming back didn’t help.

    And for the first week or so, I gave myself the room to mourn something as seemingly innocuous as the end of a vacation. Now, however, I see from looking at a picture of my feet framed with palm trees and an insanely azure ocean, the point is not necessarily to forget your day-to-day life, but become aware of how to transform it.

    It doesn’t necessarily mean that I don’t sigh heavily looking at a shot like this:

    But I do understand myself a little better now. And I hadn’t really thought that was possible.

  • First Impression

    First full day in Tulum, Mexico: January 18, 2009.
    Pretty much says it all. But more to come soon.