Note: NOT HELPFUL ADVICE. |
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
72 Hours
Thursday, March 28, 2013
My Idiot Brother
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3 days in a truck, and no one was murdered |

Let me explain Jeff to the best of my ability. He is an eternal child with an ephemeral sense of responsibility. Sometimes it's the most annoying trait you can imagine. However, most of the time it's a wonderful thing. Jeff lives for the moment, it's his thing. He just lives for what he wants to live for, and he never gives two shits about trying to conform to some societal norm that wouldn't bring him any happiness. Here is a man, who at nearly 42, lives on a boat with a couple other guys, rides a bike wherever he goes, and makes new friends every day. He is never stuck in an office against his will, he never feels tied down to any one location for a length of time. He lives for the moment, and he enjoys life. I desperately wish I could do that sometimes, but I really like being mostly able to pay my bills and having a nice place to live. Jeff just doesn't care about that. I think that surviving Lymphoma had something to do with that. He just appreciates each breath.
When Jeff came to San Francisco, we had spent a minimal amount of time together. Over the coming months we got to know each other well. We learned a lot about each other, and he taught me about his passion, bicycles. From day one, he had me hooked. I never thought my fat ass would get on a bike and enjoy it. Jeff made it something fun for me, and I fell in love with bikes. We would peruse Craigslist and eBay together and look for vintage components and other parts, discussing our dream bikes, and dreaming about someday opening a bike shop together. Jeff gave me something to look forward to each day, he got me excited about something. I started riding my bike to work, and going for leisurely rides along the Embarcadero, up to Golden Gate Bridge. Even now that I'm back in Oklahoma, I've entered my first bike race. This is all thanks to Jeff. He gave me a reason to get back into something healthy, and something we could share.


Jeff relies on his bike not only as transportation, but as his livelihood. He needs it to do his job. One day, Jeff and I were sitting in the coffee shop and he disappeared for a minute to find a random stranger to bum a cigarette off of. I thought it would be funny to ride off with his bike, and see what exactly he might do in discovering it's absence. I didn't think this through very well. I forgot to take into account that his bike's gear system doesn't work quite the same way mine does. Where my geared bike's pedals spin freely, his single speed fixed gears move as the wheels do. I didn't make it ten feet before I crash landed his bike with all the force of my fat ass landing right on his handlebars. If this were my bike, there would have been screaming and cursing. Not Jeff. He asked if I was okay, helped me up, then he assessed his bike. I bent his handlebars, still no reaction, just a deep drag on his cigarette and a shrug of the shoulders. It was simply a new puzzle to solve. Just a quick ride to the bike shop where I ordered him a new set of bars, and he borrowed a temporary set from his friends at the shop, never a harsh word about my stupidity. That's what I love the most about him. He is kind-hearted, full of childlike curiosity, quick to forgive, and smarter than your average bear.
My brother was the man in my life for the last year, he was the person I could always count on, and he's the person I want to be like when I grow up. So in all the shit that happened in the last year the most positive thing to come out of my year in California is the relationship I was able to foster with that big dummy. There's something strange and stupendous about finding your long lost siblings. There's something even more amazing in fostering a meaningful relationship with them. I love my brother, and I miss him each and every day. May each and every one of you find something so lovely as sibling rivalry.
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Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Defeated? I think not.

Oakland is unique. It has a lot going for it. There's First Fridays, Art Murmer, the Farmer's Market every Friday, year round, and there's also the gorgeous Lake Merrit and the many other hiking trails in the East Bay. However, when it's not exactly what you wanted, you can't help but feel like it's the poor man's San Francisco. For one, while smoking pot is a pretty common outdoor activity in San Francisco, Oakland has a permanent haze over it. Second, hipsters, EVERYWHERE. Jesus, if I had to look at one more douche bag in a plaid shirt with suspenders and a bow-tie riding around on a tandem bicycle without a partner, I was going to go start picking people off with a bee bee gun. "Suspenders!?" thwomp. "Bowtie?! thwomp. "Old timey hat or trucker hat?!" thwomp. It was too much some days. The occasional, hipster isn't a bad thing. I have a couple of hipster friends, but so many of them are just trying so desperately to be cool, relevant, etc.
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This guy probably drinks PBR, hangs out at Awaken Cafe in Oakland, and writes with a typewriter that he brings to the coffee shop with him. He probably also rides a fixie and/or a tandem bicycle. |
In my short time home, I've come to the realization what made me leave in the first place was the support of people who encouraged me to follow my dream. There are, of course, the naysayers, those who think I'm irresponsible, etc. But seriously, fuck them. Life is a journey, and whatever makes you happy might take some time. A good friend said to me a few days ago, "Sometimes we don't know what the right choice is until we make the wrong one." Granted, I think that in that moment, coming home was the right choice for me, but it isn't necessarily right in the long term.
So, the short of it... I'm happy to be in Oklahoma City. There are some wonderful people here that I love dearly, and I've missed them so much. I'm glad to be here for a short time, but I will be returning to San Francisco to continue my dream. It might be a month, it might be six, who knows? I'm using this time to get my shit together, find the right job, save some money, and spend some time with friends. I'm filling my tank, so to speak. So no hate Oklahoma, you are my roots. I'm not leaving because I don't want to be here, I'm leaving because being away from there reminds me how much I wanted to be there in the first place.
Sunday, December 30, 2012
2012... What a jerk
My now former roommate is a great guy, and he really made my early months in SF bearable. In spite of how much better my life was in the evenings by watching endless episodes of Weeds, I nearly returned to


Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Routines and Things
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
The Irony of a Broken Dream
Its ironic that from the most heartbreaking moment of of my life, the beginning of something greater was born. It's crazy how things change. Six months ago I would have said I would be planning a late summer wedding. I would have said we would live in Oklahoma and grow old here with our brood of adopted offspring. I would have been very wrong, and very naive. It was only five months ago that he left (most days it feels like 5 years). Some would say I went off the deep end. I would say I simply opened the flood gates of all I was holding back in the name of love. I'm about to live my dream, a dream that would never have been possible if I were tied to the most cautious and unadventurous of men.

Originally, when I made the overwhelming decision to make this move, I had planned to have the house sold by mid April and whether or not I had a job I'd be leaving in early May. Things never work according to plan. The house isn't sold and I already have a job. I leave April 16, and I'm nowhere near ready. I've found a fantastic place to live in a great location in San Francisco, just a few blocks from the ocean and Golden Gate Park. More importantly, I've found a great job that I'm super excited to dive into. It's a new area of expertise for me, but it will utilize the entirety of my skill set. I can't wait to see what happens. I'm stupefied at how fast this is happening. In just seven days days I'll be heading West toward my life's dream. It hardly feels real.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
I Left My Heart in San Francisco
On May 3rd, 2003, I came to Oklahoma City with barely anything at all. If all goes well, I’ll be leaving almost 9 years to the day after I arrived in OKC. For those of you who don’t know, I’m about to embark on the greatest adventure of my life. I’ve always said that if I could live anywhere, I would live in San Francisco. So… I’m selling everything and moving to San Francisco. More on that later… In my last post, I said of 2012: “I hope that there will be an uptick in the intensity with which I live my life.” In all my years, the one thing I’ve never done is chase a dream, I spent a lot of time pining for the day that my dreams would come true. If you’ve known me for any length of time you’re probably thinking I’ve gone off the deep end. I want, simply, to enjoy my life. It’s time for me to do the opposite of sane, safe, and stable. My emotions vary from scared shitless to sadness. I’m scared that I’ll end up not finding a good job and having to live in the tenderloin, carrying pepper spray with me everywhere. I’m scared that I’ll get mugged, or have my phone stolen right out of my hands, I’m sad that I’m leaving behind a great job, my kitty cats, my handsome little Chuck Chuck, and some AMAZING people, some of whom I’m just getting to know. However, in spite of all of that, I’m excited. For once in my life I’m doing something not out of consideration for others, but for myself. I honestly believe that it’s what’s best for me.
Isn't it beautiful? Hills! Actual hills!
But, why San Francisco? If you’ve never been there, it may seem nuts. Most people seem to think it’s full of bums, transvestites, and it has constant earthquakes. That’s not entirely true. It does have those things, but the earthquakes aren’t constant, the bums are mostly confined to the sketchy parts of town, and the transvestites, well I don’t see where the drawback is. As a woman with abnormally GIANT feet, I’m super excited at the prospect of making friends with whom I might be able to share fabulous shoes. San Francisco is the second most densely populated city in the US (17,000+/sq. mile). Coming from Oklahoma City, one of the most spread out cities in America (density of less than 1,000/sq. mile), that’s going to be quite a change. I’m going from living in a modestly sized 2 bedroom house with a big yard that I have all to myself into either a rented room or a one room studio where I’ll have to fight for parking and listen to my neighbors have sex. If the city chews me up and spits me out, Oklahoma will always be here. I feel that, if nothing else, this adventure will grow me in ways I just can’t possibly fathom right now. I just long for a change in scenery, and that tight feeling in my chest that lets me know that I’m alive. I can’t wait to see where this leads me. I need an adventure, and more importantly, I need to leave behind the stagnancy I’ve found myself in.
The thing I’m most excited about is being closer to my Sister and her big dumb husband (I love you Tim!), my Mom and my niece and nephew who will be just a short 2 ½ hour drive away. The bonus to all of that is that THE Emma is just a few miles North of San Francisco in San Rafael. She’s a wonderful British transplant whom I met through NewBeetle.org. She’s been a wonderful encouragement and I’m so glad she’ll be nearby. I just hope she realizes how much I may rely on her in the beginning. Like, for example, when I can’t pay my rent after I haven’t found a job and I get arrested for prostitution trying to make ends meet. I just know that dear sweet Emma will be there to bail me out.
Looking back over the last few months since Ryan left, I’ve had a tremendous change in my ideals. Having experienced a loss that I honestly, very naively thought I would never have to experience, I realized something about myself. Having been faced with the failure of a relationship I had hoped would last a lifetime, I came to a difficult realization; I’m not entirely sure that marriage and family are what I want. For the first time in my life I’m okay with that. I’m not in a hurry to meet someone new, I don’t care if I ever do at this point. I know that will change. but for now, I’m perfectly content. That's a feeling I’ve never truly known, only something I feigned.
I’m hoping to leave May 5th, pending the sale of my house. As I’ve been doing my early preparations, I’ve discovered just how much crap one can accumulate in 9 years time. I’ve found boxes of stuff I haven’t touched in 2 years or more, clothes I haven’t worn in nearly as long, and bills dating back 5 years. It’s ridiculous. I’m excited to continue my love affair with this amazing city with a clean slate. No baggage, not so much “stuff”, just me, my dog, my car, and a dream in my heart. I hope I have a super sassy gay roommate.