Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Boneyard


Years ago, I married a friend of mine from college because he was unbelievably handsome and we (as a collective group of friends) loved him fiercely. He was wild but deep, beautiful yet soulful. When we got together, it first registered as a shock to the rest of the group. I was expected to marry my longtime boyfriend of 6+ years, and that was the problem. He was a fairly good fit for my teenage self, but he was not made for a woman like me. He does not make things. He is not an artist.

As is often the case with women like me, suitors come out of the shadows and into the wake of my last relationship to present their claims for my affection. After I ended my college relationship, my friend declared himself to our circle, making his intentions clear and well-known before attempting to secure my hand. It was all very romantic and brave, which temporarily won me over, though not for long. My friend always suffered from the vagaries of addiction, but because of the depth of his talents and charm, he could reasonably patch them over for a time to present a vision of life that could be worth living.

He and I could be free and creative and I grew up around people with severe problems. Perhaps I could make this manageable? These are the trade-offs women from Generation X must make: do I choose an attractive man with promise or do I just marry the fiscally viable man who is crushingly boring, repressed and miserable, yet reliable? I took a chance and rolled the dice, but not without a lot soul searching. I consulted with other friends who grew up with alcoholic family. One of my girlfriends assured me that I could never be secure, given his emotional state.
Did I realize how much work I was getting into with this deal? He would always be a dependent. Well, I was used to that. I supported the burdens that my family brought down upon my head regularly. But, what did I get out of it? Alcoholics dip, dive, revive, then plateau: lather, rinse, repeat. Is this what I wanted for a lifetime?

No, of course not. But you try finding an emotionally healthy and intellectually gifted artist of incredible physical beauty. Know of any off hand? No? Neither do I. I had no support growing up, and I already survived a few near-death experiences at my parents' hands during the brief time I was in their care. How bad could this really be? I didn't really know, and he had that working in his favor. I'd been providing for myself from a very young age for so long, how different could this be? The clock was ticking. A decision had to be made.


We married, and all of it was not of my choosing, forming a compromised version of a someone else's wedding that I had never really dreamed about, thought about, or contemplated, so it was like some horrid out-of-body experience. Would you think of Barbie dreams with my kind of my brain and my kind of life? Given the strength my mind has for details, the lack of clarity I have about those past events points to the absurdity of that actuality. It remains one of the worst experiences of my life. Again, that didn't even register much. I have always suffered at the hands of others. This was no different. Women took the occasion to demean my looks to my face out of envy: standard. My father tried using his money with his fake power ploys by withholding funds in another pathetically ineffectual attempt to control events: standard. Our crowd maxed out the open bar tab by afternoon, way before the window closed: also standard.

It was horrible, but when has my happiness been tended to by others outside of myself? Never. This was yet another life event to be endured and moved past. So. After my wedding weekend, I was back at work Monday morning, providing and caring for myself just like I always have. Not much had changed. We planned an Italian trip in September for our honeymoon, a gift from his parents, because the weather would be wonderful and the cities less congested with tourists. Years later when I had to divorce him, I would mirror our matrimonial beginning with an similar ending: I left over a weekend and I was back at work (fully functioning and productive) on Monday morning, same as always. Not much changed.

We made the standard tour of the three top Italian cities: Rome, Florence, and Venice. At the time I worked for an Italian-American woman who told me about an old monastery that was way off the beaten path. Perfect. Not only was it hard to find, it was morbid, so there would be less of the pale, plaid-shorted ugly American crowd. Excellent. She told me the routine, like something out of a Seinfeld skit: you go up to a window, you hand over the fee to a monk under a vow of silence, so I shouldn't expect a response. Well heck, color me prepared. I flourish depsite neglect, so bring it. I prefer self-guided journeys anyway.

The monk would then point out the way out to you, leading you through a dark winding underground catacomb created entirely from the bones of the dead monks and their parishioners. Hundreds of years prior, the monastery had to move to smaller quarters and that meant the contents of the graveyard came with it. The brothers, in an act of devotion, dug them up and spent many years filling the new small crypt in creative ways. As Catholics, we honor the dead through the preservation of human remains. It symbolizes our recognition of the importance of human consciousness above all others on our miracle of a planet. 

We believe we are blessed with abilities far beyond any other life form on the planet because we have been chosen from the animal kingdom to evolve into an advanced intelligence that allows us to eventually merge back into the God consciousness from which the building blocks of all life sprang from, the biggest bang of all time. The strictest interpretations of that recognition come in the form of The Rapture myth: at the end of the world, the remains of our physical selves reanimate with life through the Holy Spirit (which is a ghost), allowing us to ascend bodily into heaven like our Savior Jesus Christ, so that we may sit at the right hand of The Father, Our Creator. It's a place where we can finally fulfill our destinies as advanced beings by escaping the chains of mortal life, bouncing through the cosmos as pure energy filled with infinite knowledge, freed from the cares of the body and its physical confines.

Isn't that great?! Catholics have the best fables, as passionate and dramatic as life itself. They are very old, as ancient as mankind, derived from the pagan traditions of worship that existed prior. The extremity of the mythic aspect to this fable comes with art to match. What better reminder of the temporal quality of life on this planet than a daily reminder of death? It's morbid, but given the typical American diet of self-denial combined with an utter lack of self-awareness, it's refreshing to see such truths revelead. Here is the truth at last, writ universal so that even a child can understand it: we are all born, we all die. Confront it, and motherfucking deal. We are not pansies about death, and our intense rituals are designed to attest to that fact. 

From a young age, our burial ceremonies prop up our dead bodies for public viewing for the sake of mourning, perusal, contemplation, and grief. The underlying message is always the same: we are temporary. Life is short, brutal, and brief, so what are you doing today? What the fuck are you waiting for exactly?! You may not be here tomorrow for God's sake, so fucking do something. It's harsh but real, because we hit upon another one of life's great motivators and catalysts for change: fear about death and dying. Here is a dead body. Look at it. And it's true, here it is. Truths are revealed to you like no other process. This dead body is not my grandmother. The life that animated her is not present. This body is a mere shell of the electrical currents that ran through her, animated her, and made her special, and now it is not present any more. She is no longer here. She will never be here again. This is permanent. This is final. She is gone. Forever. I was eight at the time. 

Since we do not pretend that death does not exist and life is fair, it requires a certain sense of maturity and decorum to contemplate these concepts well. Man, I was psyched! As we walked the narrow streets to the monastery, I was on Cloud fucking Nine. Oh boy, oh boy, here we go. I was a bit bummed to see some fat, pale Americans in poorly fitted clothing entering the gates ahead of us, but since I could see they were made of poor stuff, their reactions would simply add to my afternoon's entertainment.

Sure enough, it was rough stuff and I loved all of it. A monk in a long black cloak with a small black skullcap on the back of his bald pate waited at the top of the stairs. Tours are timed, so he was expecting us. He turned on his heels, went through a wooden door, and shortly afterwards opened a small, previously gated window that had an opening for money in the worn wooden trough beneath it. He pointed at a sign for the lira amount, and pointed at the trough. You give me money. Easy to pantomime. Money is a universal language! I was over the moon. After everyone in the group in the courtyard paid the small fee, we stood around waiting. The window closed, and he again appeared at the end of a corridor, motioning us to follow him with his hand, which I eagerly did. As he waited, he put his chin down and folded his hands into the arms of his robe, glowering silently at us.

My new husband lacked the vigor for my adventures and it began to show rather quickly. He had never been overseas and he does not use languages well. He revealed himself to be of rather generic suburban American tastes. Ho hum. C'est la vie. But I was here, I may not ever be here again, and I was making the most of this time, regardless of obstacles and despite the obstructions, like I always do. With his lack of imagination about the events and his rather poor temperament, I pushed my way through Italy because I had read about these famous artworks all my life. I would not miss out on any opportunities as they presented themselves to me and if he couldn't keep up, oh well. He looked a little pale and shaky as the trip progressed.

The crypts were dark and dank and musty. Ah, heavy with atmosphere! For those of you expecting superficial Halloween thrills, you will be disappointed when I tell you that rather than horror, I found this kind of ministering to the members of the abbey beautiful and moving. Such devotion to something many people would cast off, desperate to separate themselves, like it was a disease that's catching, such is the delusional quality of our society and popular culture. Have you ever touched human remains? Yeah, that's how intimate you have to get with a human body to make a lamp that's comprised entirely of finger bones. Think about what you learn as as you make such a thing. Nothing ordinary, that's for sure.

As I expected, the average tourists started complaining about the closeness of the quarters. One pale, sun-burned man in a floppy sun hat said in English to his wife, "Yeah, I don't feel so good either. Let's get out of here" but you can't actually leave or do what you want, like a Disney ride. Oh. I'm over-joyed! Forced to confront reality, watching them cave. It so much like my life that I relish the opportunity to see it in real life and in a real setting. It's the same dynamics I talk and write about made present, acted out for me in real life. Do you know how rare that is to see the concepts you know actualize themselves in reality? Fully present for all to see, here in this confined environment manifesting themselves right in front of me with witnesses. Wondrous.

Because, dear readers, here is the truth about a visit to this abbey. There is only one small narrow tight path that winds through the bones and it can only fit one person at a time. You cannot back up. You cannot turn around. You cannot leave. You must follow the path through it until the end, because you have no choice. For the time period that you are there in the crypt, you feel like you are buried alive. The suffocating dank closes in on you and every surface your eyes look at is covered in human bone: dead children dancing around clocks; empty, hollow eye sockets peering at you through the dimy lit gloom, from every angle and at every side. Even for someone of my fiber, the musty air gave me a little headache. It was that thick and close.  It. Was. Awesome.

As we breached the light, blinking and breathing in the air of day, I turned around to get another good look at the monk who had served as our guide. I will not return in this form, in this life, ever. I wanted to drink in every last detail of it. He strode across the cobblestone courtyard hurriedly to another part of the abbey, looking busy and productive as men of the cloth who tend to a big parish typically are. Just as before he seemed like a darkly silent Gothic character, now he appeared like a brisk man of vigor. WOW!!! What a great show! He looked pointedly at me as he strode quickly past the small tourist crowd, stretching the hem of his habit with his long stride. He gave me a brief little smile that animated the spark of bright blue eyes that stood out in direct contrast to the brightness of his white goatee and his lightly tanned Mediterranean skin. I immediately smiled back.

Happy Halloween. 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Maria_della_Concezione_dei_Cappuccini


Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Baby Eggplant



I was next to the iceberg lettuce in the grocery store when an older gentleman asked me to help him select one. English is not his first language, so at first I thought he wanted to know what they were. I've seen baffled tourists congregate around our shelves before, confronting American produce for the first time along with the scary realization that we are more than is typically presented on t.v. for mass consumption. We are more than hamburgers and swimsuit models, so much more. When faced with the actuality of our harvest abundance, a visitor is forced to confront the reality of who we are, and that begins with our diet. What is this? I can relate. Have you ever tried to select a fresh dragonfruit in Chinatown or the best foul-smelling durian?! That's what it feels like.



With typical machismo, he waved away my chatter about water content and the generic quality of iceberg as a variety. "Wheeh one?" he brusquely pointed towards the pile. Ah, a man who does not like being a stranger in a strange land. Not my type of traveller. Being a great trekker requires a sense of humor and the willingness to accept that you are not in control. You have to have a strong sense of self. He must be used to a certain type of woman not native to these parts. I laughed him off and quickly selected a perfect shrink-wrapped head for him, which he quickly tossed in his cart and rolled away. 
 
Hmm. Poor guy, I thought to myself. Looking for a Latina wife to do house chores for him. Well, well, well. Welcome to reality.

My mother famously said to me years ago, "Marie, you will never be a housewife", and she was so right about that. I do not flatter a man's ego to make him feel better about himself. As good as I am in the home and at the stove, I do not work specifically for a man. I work for you, all of you, for the world at large—that's the role of an artist and a writer. I'm used to men with self-esteem and innately large talents of their own. This ain't no housewife school, homey. This exchange happened in seconds, and it didn't mean much to me other than yet another one of those great New York encounters that we are fortunate to have every day of our lives. 
 
As I dickered over the lettuce pile, I was thinking lightening fast to myself "Do I need this? Is it in season? Are these local? Probably not. It's packaged by a large food chain brand. Could be from anywhere. What else do I have in my fridge?" 

I had noticed a small pile of iridescent produce. Ohhhh. Baby eggplants! I originally tried to sell the man on these babies when I noticed him hovering at my elbow, too timid or macho to say "Excuse me" which is one of the first language phrases one learns in another country. I chattered happily to myself about their size and color. What a beauty pile! Now I returned my attentions to them. They were on sale and in season and local. Good. Meets all my criteria. Into the basket they go.

 Back at home, I began looking up recipes for stuffed eggplant because they were the perfect size for that kind of cooking. I don't use eggplant much because the recipe I know and like is Eggplant Parmesan, which requires a salting, sweating, and rinsing process to the peeled eggplant prior to even cooking and assembling the dish. It is so labor-intensive, I very rarely do it. It's one of those things I like to order out. But, here I was and I already had chopped meat, onions, and tomatoes, which form the basis for many Italian-American dishes. I found one that had a Greek spin to it that matched my fridge contents with some changes.

I obviously didn't use chopped lamb, but the chopped beef was an easy subsitution. Mediterranean cooking is my favorite form of cooking: olive oil, onions, olives, fresh cheese, fresh herbs, fresh bread...these are the dishes my ancestors ate for millennium, and it is the reason longevity exists on the Italian side of my family. It also accounts for our resilience and the tough, thick, oily nature of our skin that ages so well. My grandmother has perfectly smooth cheeks at 97, with a robust mind to match the extreme nature of her physical beauty.

I noticed when I was in Rome years ago that almost every women I saw of age walking the narrow, ancient, cobblestone streets was a beauty in her own right. I still believe to this day that Italian women are the most beautiful women in the world, though I freely admit my bias in relation to my beloved grandmother. She is charm incarnate, a woman of supreme intellect and grace. Her voice is heavenly, she sings and speaks beautifully, and she was a consummate traveller in her day. Her and my late grandfather have set foot on every continent (or very close to it) after his retirement from Con Edison, and she makes every one around her feel better, like a warm, healing pool from the best bath you've ever had. Her warmth envelops you, surrounds you, pulls you in close and keeps you there, warming you to the core.


I always say that as one of her seven grandchildren, I am more than blessed to have 1/7 of her beauty and I know it. Dear readers, if you've ever heard her voice, you would know it instantly, too. She is beauty incarnate, and it is everything about her; not just the quality and durability of her looks, which is vast and deep, but it is her. This is learned from being around her and these are some of the things I think about when I make dishes I think she would like or remind me of her. To be a woman of that kind and quality is something we should all strive towards.

Once I designed a cover about good living and longevity that broke down all of the longest living cultures by diet, culture, and lifestyle. A chapter is naturally devoted to Mediterranean people, and in particular, an Italian lady in her 90s who lives by the sea. Every day she climbs a steep set of stairs carved into the cliff to shop in town, there and back, up and down, breathing in the healthy sea air and pulling it into her lungs and she carries the groceries home on her back in a mesh bag.

She makes her own cheese, and she uses olive oil for all her cooking. These are the foods that speak to me of home and hearth. I know I feel at my best when I eat the foods that happily are my favorite, though I am the first to acknowledge that pasta instantly adds about 2 lbs on me overnight. When I was little my grandmother told me her food stories, about her mother making pasta cut into strips that were floured and laid down on the bed over a sheet for drying. One morning she woke up to discover a cute little bunny rabbit in the bathtub that she instantly adopted as a pet, only to be horrified by rabbit stew for dinner.

She disavowed her roots as a young girl along with the ancient Bari farm dishes of her mother and father's town near Abruzzi. She had been badly teased and bullied as a girl for having pierced ears which marked her for life as Italian, and to this day she will not speak her dialect to me, nor use her original name. Like so many immigrants, assimilation was mandatory and the past was to be shed quickly, like the tattered peasant garb one came off the boat wearing. Now that it is "hip" to be ethnic, to sell one's history like a cooking show on t.v., I have to laugh bitterly to myself when I think about my grandparents' pain as new Americans.

How ironic it is, and somewhat cruel, to live in a time so desperate for authenticity that real stories are sold with the same or less currency than a mentally ill group of women who get drunk and compete for a fake bachelor's "hand" on a cheaply produced reality show. What the fuck? I am glad she is out of time now, because none of the more dip shit aspects of popular culture would make any sense to her, though I do miss the acerbic, observant tongue that her and my grandfather used in speaking to each other. I miss their shared common sense in my family, and I feel lonely without their point of view. With them around, at least I knew someone in my family "got" me.



These are some of the thoughts that drift through my head as I work in the kitchen, something I can do because the making of food has become second nature to me. When craft acquires a sense of ease, it allows the maker to use other portions of their brain than just those devoted to hand-eye coordination. It allows you to disappear into the making, and savor these connections we have to our culture through our food. I cannot imagine myself without these stories because I wouldn't be me without them.

That is why it is so important to pass these traditions onto our children, by doing these activities with them while we talk about who we are. It was the ballast formed early in me that allows me to wander somewhat recklessly and bravely through this world. I know who I am, and no one can change that. These are the seeds that need to be planted in our children from the youngest age possible. I can't wait to see the beauty and strength of my next generation. Can you?

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Hear a Beluga Whale "Talk" by cdellamore

Hear a Beluga Whale "Talk" by cdellamore

The Anchor House



Park Slope has a bevy of creative types with eccentric houses. The Pink House is infamous and currently under attack by the neighborhood watch for its blatant nonconformity. To the owner I say "fuck 'em". Do what you want with your property! I love your house, and so do many Slopers. As long as I've lived here, I still see new things that are old every day, and old things that are new to me. It is such a blessing to be around evidence of grand lives lived grandly everywhere one looks. 

I've seen much of America and the deserts of culture that are so many strip mall wastelands or hastily built cul-de-sacs filled with the same stuccoed McMansions, already crumbling after a few years on their shaky foundations. I've lived out west in places with completely abandoned, deserted suburbs because the housing construction bubble burst overnight to the ruination of many. Builders foreclosed without ever finishing these developments. It's strange and unsettling to see such newness already being eaten away by the elements, like a movie or t.v. set about the end of the world. 

All that time, money, and energy invested into cracking foundations that are slowly sinking into the swampy land that someone finally discovered made for a poor investment. It left me with a lifetime appreciation for great architecture like those in my town. I know it when I see it, I know the history involved, the life lived in our homes, and I know the sadness attached to buildings that never realized such purpose.

My partner for those western years worked as a master electrician, and he often told me the sad stories of the false American Dream—huge houses empty of furniture under foreclosure, with a fancy BMW car in the garage that stood mute as he cut the lines of their power for nonpayment, a set piece artificially designed to give the appearance of wealth by the inhabitants hopped up on meds as their phony dreams crumbled around them while they desperately propped up mythic ideas of themselves and their supposed prosperity at cocktail parties. All for show. What a fucking waste.

Luckily for me, I have an actual history, as it has been my pleasure to write about for you, my dear readers, here on this site. As the local branch of the Brooklyn Public Library underwent much needed refreshing after a hundred or so years, I took the spring and summertime to walk to the main branch, savoring the different walks and the character each one had. One day I would go through Prospect Park, another day down a block that seemed old and new at the same time, and always I was grateful.

One day I found a house I never saw before, that spoke to me from the past in a deep and profound way. I was walking back from the Central Library down a block that looked like classic Park Slope, a row of typically scenic and historic brownstone Brooklyn. In the distance I saw a large shape I couldn't quite make out and it was large at that, too. What is that?! Plunked down in someones' front garden was a huge, old anchor and not just any anchor but that of a sea captain, and not just any sea captain, but Le Capitaine.

Every male ancestor up to my father has been a seaman of sorts, either military or trade. The opening vignette for the movie version of The Perfect Storm shows just such a seaport town with a plague that gives homage to men lost at sea, and sure enough a Doucette is listed on it. The maritime province Nova Scotia has cemeteries filled with the names of our ancestors, and one tiny town named Doucetteville. Long after The Expulsion and the systemic degradation of The Acadians throughout our time here in The New World, I learned well from my father the symbols of our ancestors and those who bear our line. Such are the signs we look for in times when it is less fortunate to be who we are.

Everywhere on this house the inhabitant wanted to tell the story of who he was to someone who walked past and could decipher the signs. There's a fleur-de-lis and here is a trident! The first time I walked past it I knew it was a special place, but with neighbors miling about and workmen on the block, and my own crushing deadlines, I did not have time to take a good look. For the rest of the summer, I made a game of choosing a different block to walk past on my way home from the library until one day there it was, a few weeks before my local branch would be back in operation and my long walks to the main library would be over. Like everything that flows in my life, I found it again just when I needed to. An older man walked slowly past me with a cane and as a tourist asked him for directions, I waited my turn to engage him in conversation in the lingua franca of New York to assure him that I was no mere gawker.

He grew up a couple of blocks away and this was indeed the house of a captain. We talked about the wonderful artisans of our neighborhood who craft such details, not for the sake of showing off, though their talents are incredible, but to tell the story of who they are to anyone walking past in the future who can read them. What a worthy life these craftsmen lead, painstakingly making such works for us to behold in the future, like the time capsules they are. The man asked me if I was a Bourbon (a Québécois who considers themselves purely French, i.e. a "white" person whose ancestors never went "native") which bespoke of his knowledge about the area and the people who inhabit it. I said more slowly than I felt, "No. I..I'm...Acadian." The words felt so strange coming out of my mouth! I realized that here in front of this house was the first time I had ever said to a stranger those very words and through the special magic of this place built by a common ancestor, I felt emboldened to do so.

As so often happens to me, the time between now and then stretches, blurs, and thins. I felt very close to this man. It's an incredible gift from a French Canadian sea captain long dead, knowing that we are the rare and the few, knowing that few people would feel the import of such architectual details beyond the symbolic and the decorative. It was at once hidden and in plain site and I knew the man who had supervised such a construction had to be an educated genius, too. The anchor is huge, and the rest of the building stands in marked contrast to those around it which, though they are beautiful and subtly individual, make much less of a statement about their former owners than this house of Le Capitaine. Everywhere are touches of whimsy, humor, and pride. The tridents formed into the ironwork, the fleur de lis standing guard proudly above the front door, the small conch tucked neatly into the anchors' support.


It was done with such love and confidence and charm and wit! I felt less alone as people on the sidewalk streamed by me or around me, looking at my pictures over my shoulder or walking straight towards me, in that peculiar way that passes for confrontational to people who are not native to this area, in a show of false confidence, but for me here was a symbol of my person-hood in the form of a house. People search all their lives for the cure to their restlessness, but when I moved home from Colorado, I made a vow to myself and my family that I would no longer leave. I would plant myself here and grow roots that connected me back to the tree that already grew. And now here it is for you to see, too.


May you find what you are searching for, and some of the peace that I have found. May all your journeys and footsteps lead you back home. Blessings to you.


Thursday, October 18, 2012

Walkabouts

Mural, 5th Avenue
Brooklyn Tile Supply
Sinker and his walking partner

In every culture the hero embarks upon a mythic quest, undergoing many tests of strengths and feats of ingenuity, from Point A to Point B. Though he may fail here and there, or even at the end ultimately, arriving at the destination with his self intact is the actual prize. Having learned the lessons from his travails in the form of experiences is the real riches, in lieu of securing that pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, or the treasure chest filled with pirate booty.


Mural, 5th Avenue
Baltic and 5th

I've always walked to clear my head, or to enjoy nature, or simply to get from here to there. Walking does it for me more than any other form of movement. It is the original human way to travel, and we are designed to make such arduous journeys. Whenever I design a walk for myself, whatever happens to me between starting out and arriving is the ultimate goal.
  


church spire
Muslim Barbie

I call them "adventures", and to me it's not really critical whether I have them in my hometown, or that I navigate the harder terrain of a far-off country with a foreign language, or that I finally reach the top of that mountain. The destination is important, but the journey is where all the best prizes are. You do that 20 times over, and you get it. You do it 2,000 times, and it enriches you that much faster.


Atlantic Avenue antique shop
Building map

For this walk, I set out for this years' homegrown literary festival, The Brooklyn Book Fair. We have an inordinate amount of actual literary types (and their equivalent wannabes), thanks to an artistic population with more geniuses per capita than any other American town, which makes for really great happenings. Most of us discovered this Brooklyn out of economic necessity, and we stay because we get it. We get this town. We are this town, and we helped make it what it is. Needless, there is so much to see that it is a treasure trove of experiences.

Atlantic Avenue boutique
French slave ship
Obama eats pizza
Performance space

I love the instantaneous quality of Instagram (as its' name implies), but not enough people are stepping up and discovering the work for themselves, so I thought I'd lay it out here, in one place for you to see, in the form of my journey to the book fair and back. I see new things all the time, and rediscover what is new among the old so that it never gets old. By happy coincidence, Fall is made for walking—no heavy sweats with hot, fetid-smelling, humid air hanging about. Let's go!

There's so much to see.

biker/hipster bar
community garden
The 5 dollar special

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Bargain Apple Turnovers


My broke ass has been shopping on the cheap ever since I can remember. Hunting through a store for the best deal is something I learned at my grandparents' knees. A Great Depression isn't something one is apt to forget, and I learned those lessons well from their stories about how far a dollar can stretch if one is savvy enough to do it well.

It almost goes without saying that we love food in this town. We have an incredible abundance practically on our doorsteps, prepared by the finest cooks the world has to offer. But that doesn't mean I pay through the nose for it. Oh, I love going out occasionally to savor the slowness of an osso bucco that's been simmering on a back burner for days, made by someone else because I don't have time to prep a meal like that, but I learned how to find food and cook it a long time ago, whether times are lean or fat.

And so I do. When my local store had their brand name biscuits on sale, I bought them in bulk. After my autumn apple adventures began (as detailed here: http://mariedoucette.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-doctor-is-in.html ), I hit that bag hard. Combining apples with pastry for dessert or breakfast is as easy as pie. Buy that tin of biscuits, you know the ones you carefully pop open along the line on the cardboard tube that's been vacuum-sealed like a friggin' MacGyver bomb that explodes scarily and randomly on contact with the edge of the spoon? Yeah, those.

Fill them with a mixture of apples cooked with butter, brown sugar and cinnamon, like the topping we've already covered here on this blog (see link above). Got it? Good. Fold 'em over and crimp them, poke some air holes on the tops so they don't explode like said MacGyver bomb, melt some butter and baste the tops to get golden brown tops. Part of the charm of homemade tarts like these is that they don't look perfect and choosing them based on their shapes is part of the fun. "I'll eat the fucked up looking one first and save the best-looking one for last!" That's how I do it, savoring the sweetness.

When I'm not in training for the sport of MMA, I revert back to my more typical feast or famine mode, like the beastie I am. I can go hours without thinking about food when I'm working on my art, stopping to eat only when my appetite is triggered by someone else's cooking smells, like those from an open window of the apartment next door or the wafting aromas as I climb the stairs past a neighbor's apartment, as it so often happens in the tight city quarters that comprise our communal living style. Or I'll go so long as to actually hear my stomach angrily rumble—then I have to stop working and feed.

We've touched on my Italian-American heritage here on this blog before, as it breaks down mathematically into one very simple easy equation: food=love. I do not understand the sicknesses behind eating disorders, though I do get that it is comprised of certain key factors like a feeling of helplessness that needs to assuaged by a sense of control, but as empathetic as I am, I do not turn away from succulent abundances when I am starving. I do not understand the human creature who cannot or will not eat my grandmother's recipes for meatballs and sauce and macaroni. To this human computer, it does not compute.

So it is with an utter lack of shame that I can relate to all of you now, that on a certain day captured here in photos, somewhere between the hours of 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., I ate an entire batch of apple turnovers that I made, siting down to my repast in white karate pants and black plastic dojo sandals, eating them pleasurably one by one. I ate them all, dear readers. I ate them all. 
 

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Raging Against Machines



In Tech Land, we have a concept called "Intuitive", which means that the user should be able to figure out how to accomplish computer actions through reason and deduction. It's also called an "Ideal", but of course reality is quite another state of being.

This morning I wanted to put some photos onto my iPhone from my home computers' desktop. For most Mac actions, our tools, devices, and interfaces employ a sophisticated, tight type of coding called "Drag and Drop". You see where you would like your items to be, you click on the item (either individually or as folders), and you drag them there.

It mimics the same type of hand and eye coordination humans have developed through evolution. Now that PC usage (which stands for "personal computing") has spread to the masses through lower end devices like Dells and cheap overseas laptops, you get what you pay for: less zeros and ones, the codified language that mitigates every action you take on a computer.

That's why cheap computers and software are more prone to hacking. Believe me, I am no acolyte to either camp nor paid endorser: I'm simply an artist who uses the system and tools designed for my type of work, which makes me a Mac user. And I know the difference between the types of devices. They are coming closer together every day, but sometimes I still fall right into the gap that separates the masses from the expert.

So, when I went to drag some photos from my desktop to my iPhone and I could not perform such a simple action, I knew "fuckery" was involved. I launched iTunes, explored all the sub menus, and I still could not intuit the action. That means my creative thinking stops, I stop what I am doing, and I now have to problem-solve like an IT support person, only without the Indian accent and time zone delays.

For an expert, heavy user like myself, non-intuitive actions signify two things: 1) that these tools have been watered down for the masses, and 2) that PC thinking is required, none of which I encounter daily. You see, the more intensive the coding, the higher the concentration of zeros and ones, the more complicated the interfaces and tools are, which means when stuff shits the bed, the tougher a problem it is to solve. The tighter the coding, the more time and money was invested in research and development.

As a Mac user, I don't mind servicing easy tech problems because I use those portions of my brain frequently, but you do not. I then do what any lay person does—I "googled" a query looking for a solution. This is a relatively easy problem to for me solve, and find the answer I did, in the form of a simple instructional video produced and narrated by a techie. As a publishing pro, I have the crushing weight of deadlines on me constantly while looking at a clock, frequently with people standing by my shoulder breathing their hot breath on the back of my neck. Sound scary? The last non-creative I involved in my work flow had trouble sleeping and experienced heart palpitations. Welcome to our world.

To my sheer delight, I found a PC user online who hit the same roadblock, producing a stream of invectives against Apple computing that made my heart sing. Of course, he's wrong—its actually the dumbness of involving a larger group of less educated people into what was once a rare type of computing that is now a coding and way of computing between devices that's outsourced overseas and slapped together to the keep up with demand of mass production, but I loved the spirit of his angst.

"Why can't I just do this now when I want to?" It's so childish, so basic to human nature that it always snaps reality into perspective for me. For those of you who think we will become enslaved to machines like some crazily paranoid SciFi novel, be rest assured: it's still as dumb as your fucking neighbor and co-worker, you just have to dig a little deeper to find it.

Now I have those photos back on my iPhone where they belong (I took snap shots of the sign that shows the working hours for my local branch of the Brooklyn Public Library) and now I have the Power of Grayskull back in my hands, plus this gem of a screen shot to share. Enjoy and revel in the awesome pleasure of raging against stupid machines.