Thursday, December 2, 2021

Surf camp!

In March, Yuki mentioned something about going to a surf camp with her husband Colin and asked if I would be interested in joining them. YES. A few weeks later we were registered for a week long surf and yoga retreat in Costa Rica over Thanksgiving week. Perfection.

Then this summer happened. Sigh. There's so much I haven't written, but the quick summary is that everything turned out okay. But, it's funny how life can take something lovely and filter it through a lens that completely changes it from lovely to a deeply felt blessing. 

This retreat was a great adventure wrapped in a deeply felt blessing. 

Here are the things: 

  • Yuki and Colin - great friends to travel with
  • Tiny plane ride from SJO to Tambor - beautiful (the second first time around) :) 
  • Hotel Tropico Latino was right on Playa Santa Teresa - gorgeous 
  • Sunsets 
  • Howling monkeys in the mornings
  • SURFING
  • Learning so much 
  • Great instructors and company all around
  • Bioluminescence tour with the stop at the beautiful private island 
  • Zip lining upside down! 
  • Shopping in the tiny town
  • So much food at every meal
  • Little surprises throughout the week (shirts, coconuts, awards)
  • Being in the warm ocean
  • Battling the waves 
  • A nice deck with a hammock to hang out on in the afternoons
  • Kundalini yoga 
  • Morning yoga 
  • The best massage 
  • Little local eateries 
I'm covered in bug bites and bruises, my body is exhausted, there's zinc in my fingernails, and when I close my eyes I can still feel the ocean moving all around me -- my toes digging into the sand, bracing for the next wave, looking for the moment to jump on the board and start paddling, catching a wave... 

I'm so grateful for my health, strength, means, and for the opportunity to go on this soul filling adventure. 🏄

Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Sunset

I stood at the edge of the water until the sun vanished from sight and all that was left was that metallic glimmer on the waves as the tide rolled in. Gorgeous. Like I had been drawn to the city for that moment and nothing else. 

Sunday, September 26, 2021

Make a wish

I keep trying to write this post but I'm starting to realize that it's not something to post; it's something I need to feel my way through... but, in the spirit of documenting an important moment in my life, I'll leave this here. 

Monday, July 19, 2021

Time

Hard news has a way of reshaping reality. 

In the past couple of months, I've been managing a close friend's serious illness, a parent's failing health, and an old friend's sudden passing... and, in the midst of the ongoing pandemic it all magnifies, making sure I take stock, and making unnecessary conflict or hardship so evident while still being strangely hard to personally manage. 

I was talking to someone the other day who was mad about what appeared to be a misunderstanding. She was actually hurt and scared it was just showing up as mad. I asked her if that's how she wanted to feel. She said, "that's how I've felt for many years...", and I stopped her and gently said, "that's not the question that I asked.". I followed with, "I think given recent circumstances it's clear that we don't know how much time we have; maybe it's worth it to tell him that you're hurt and scared." 

Have you seen the movie Raya and the Last Dragon? It points to our human tendency to blame and take and makes a somewhat clumsy case for us to trust and connect instead. Clumsy because the approach is sweet and naive and fails terribly a few times -- but, in the end, it's the only way forward. Almost like, no matter how callow it may seem, you have to just keep doing it until it works. And then it works. 

It was Mark Twain that said, “Dance like nobody's watching; love like you've never been hurt. Sing like nobody's listening; live like it's heaven on earth.”

Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Shows

It's been a very long time since I've documented the shows... but it's been a very long time since I've seen many shows. To be fair, the most recent ones have been more "outdoor experiences/exhibits". Also, apparently I saw a lot in the last half of 2019. 

May 20, 2019 - June 7th, 2021

Tempting Fate - Ross's show - a thoughtful, physically impressive feat
Faux Canada - Alejandro's band - they were great, and a fun night with Kelly 
GBS party - H.E.R. concert - AWESOME 
The Skirball w/ Pam in LA - great exhibits! 
The Marciano w/ Tony in LA - more great exhibits! 
The View Upstairs - great show, fights looked good
Port Stories - fun site specific work from my friends 
Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever - great guitars :) 
Sons of Moody - Bao's band - great show! 
Circus Center instructors/Sean's show - delightful stories and incredible physical feats 
Once - absolutely magical 
Kiss My Aztec - I remember the colors... I think I really liked it? 
Jake Shimabukuro - always a great show
The Art Boutiki - can't remember the names of the bands, but it was a fun night
Rodrigo & Gabriela - AMAZING! 
Lord Huron & Shakey Graves - super fun show
Brian Mur4ami's one man show - delightful 
Magik magik - Maria's show at the Battery - awesome, so creative
Don't You Die On Me - fights turned out well
Generationals & Pure Bathing Culture - interesting sound, I liked it
Wicked - so freaking good every time 
Bon Iver & Sharon Van Etten - so great, loved the technology
Mumford & Sons - pyrotechnics!! 
Pop Up Magazine - Maria's show - better produced than that last one, but less diverse
Top Girls - I can't remember if I liked this show 
Thought Leaders / Facet - noise rock concert with my favorite noise rockers 
Oh Sees - moshy fun
Moulin Rouge - beautiful, fun
Hadestown - I found it a bit uncomfortable at first, but it got there and I loved it 
UCB - hilarious 
Stacy's birthday - mag.i.cal !!
Legally Blond - Casey's show - so very wonderful 
Art Battle Champions - trash panda! 
Thom Yorke (of Radiohead) - lots of jumping around :) 
Paco de Lucia - YES 
Hamilton - officially on the fanwagon because this cast knocked it out of the park !
Sara Bareilles - beautiful 
Testmatch - thought provoking 
Elevada - charming 
Cirque: Amaluna - always a treat 
Sofar Sounds - good music, poor experience 
SFIHHDF - still the best show in town :) 
Tales of Despereaux - lovely 
Bourbon Therapy - Maria's band she doesn't like - hilarious 
California Honeydrops - energized 
KML: Snowed In - Casey's show - brilliant 
JD McPherson - charisma! 
Nosaj Thing - awesome 
Catalina Ferry Cruise Party - NYE silly fun
The Broad - infinity, finally 
Head Over Heels - great show, fights were okay... 
Bobcat Goldthwait - can't remember... 
Ty Segall Trio - alright 
Napa Lighted Art Festival - wonderfully fun night 
Elbow - can't remember 
SF Ballet: Cinderella - beautiful ! 
Upright Citizens Brigade - fun! 
Matt's band - always great energy! 
Circus 2020 show: Gisele - vday, dark, aerial 
The End of You - gray space exhibit, interesting 
The Last Ship - well performed, Sting, last show I saw before the shutdown.... 
Collabor8 - my show/online - so happy to accomplish this with talented friends during the pandemic 
Entwined - outdoor light exhibit in GGP, beautiful 
VanGogh exhibit - soul filling 
The Last Five Years online - impressively performed and executed
Tuneyards online - so creative
John Doe outdoor concert - refreshing 
Bruce Munro: Light at Sensorio (the photo above!) - SPECTACULAR! 

Sunday, May 16, 2021

Fool to Force... er Fourth.

I bought a condo! I now live in the Golden Gate District of Oakland (or North Oakland, right on the border of Emeryville and Berkeley). I'm not sure why it's called the Golden Gate District, but I can kind of barely see the Golden Gate Bridge from my bedroom window when it's really clear and I know what I'm looking for. :) You can see the GGB clearly from the rooftop deck, however. 

Yeah, I have a rooftop deck ! 

It's weird being back in a more urban part of Oakland after having lived in the hilly oasis of Piedmont Ave for so long. I'm actually back in the first zipcode I lived in Oakland where the criminal ran through my house, but much more north where things have gentrified quite a bit, for better or for worse. 

Offer accepted on April Fool's Day. Closed on May the 4th... :) 

This is a photo of the overcast view from my new home office window, with a view of the Bay Bridge. 

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

Here


After 11 years in this apartment, and 20 years in this neighborhood, I'm moving. 

I'm not moving far, just across town into a newer building -- but, I'm struggling to leave here. 

The first time I visited Piedmont Avenue I knew it was exactly where I wanted to be. It seemed impossible to move into the perfectly charming neighborhood when I could barely afford to live in the ghetto.... but then, the dot-com boom crashed, and it was suddenly possible. My friend, Matt, and I moved into a sweet little two bedroom apartment near the ave with a view of palm trees and the tip of the Bay Bridge, and I remember standing with him on our little balcony and feeling like I had finally found the California I was looking for. 

I lived in that apartment for 7.5 years. Matt moved out to live with his girlfriend around year 5, and Josh (my boyfriend at the time) moved in during year 6. Eventually, Josh wanted us to move into a new space together, so we left my little apartment for a bigger place in the neighborhood -- and, soon after that, we broke up...  

Fortunately for me we were in a recession at the time, so I managed to find a one bedroom apartment I could afford on my own, still in the neighborhood -- and, that's how I ended up here. 

Here is an old building, with a ceiling that leaks (and, that has literally fallen in), with mold, and an old stove with a burner that I have to hit every time I want to make an omelette... the washer and dryer for the floor is constantly broken, the elevator is never up to code, and the hallways are dirty and are sometimes only partially lit. Here is where the people in the penthouse have maybe filmed porn and have definitely released dogs to run around on the roof, and where the music pleasantly trickles down now that we're in a jazz ensemble phase. Here is where I covered a wall with playbills, mended my most devastating broken hearts, got a job at Google, started facing my fears, created an underground show and started working as a producer...  I met and befriended my sweet neighbors, fell in love with the treelined streets, spent many weekends walking to Piedmont Ave/the Rose Garden/the lake, and many afternoons watching the squirrels run along the power lines or jump from the rooftop into the tree outside my balcony... Here is a place that I have loved entirely... This building, with all of its flaws and silly antics. This neighborhood that I soaked up completely, in every way that I thought I could... 

Sometimes you don't know how in love you are until it's time to move on. 

Farewell, El Dorado... 💛

Friday, April 9, 2021

Circles

It's strange to have lived in a pandemic for over a year. We've moved into circles measured 6ft apart and masks have become a part of our wardrobes. 

Monday, February 1, 2021

Flower serenade

I started 2020 hoping to complete 6 personal projects for the year. I successfully completed 2 of those projects - the flower serenade and Collabor8 - though it was almost 3 (the house concert pilot was booked and ticketed, but we were shutdown by the pandemic). ...although, I guess you could say this and the post about Collabor8 is kind of 4 (documenting learnings), but this is coming in 2021... 😜 Anyway...

Goal: To challenge myself with creative projects in 2020 that are inspiring and that give back to the community. To do this every other month. To bring kindness and goodness into the world. To remind people of the magic that exists all around us.

FINAL IDEA for proeject one: Maria will sing and play the guitar and I will follow her and pass out roses while we walk around the lake.

Notes, observations, and learnings: 
  • Maria asked what my goal was for the day
    • It was to bring a positive moment into the lives of 96 people in the hopes that they might then bring a positive moment to 96 more
      • I bought 96 roses for $80
  • Set up was more involved than we anticipated, and getting to the moment of execution was scarier than we thought it would be
    • We both found ourselves pretty nervous and full of excitement and dread before we managed to get to the lake 😁😬
  • Buying a cart to haul the roses was key, thanks Maria!
  • Two buckets were necessary
  • People wanted to follow us and document
    • We decided to not do that to keep the exchange purely about the exchange
      • This was a good decision
  • People were hesitant to take the roses from us at first because they thought we were selling them
    • Telling people "it's free" worked, but it also created an energy of taking vs receiving
      • If I did it again, I would start with, "may I give you a free rose?" in the hopes that it would be more graciously received
  • Once people saw other people with roses they were more likely to take one without needing an explanation
  • I didn't discriminate, I offered a rose to everyone we passed
  • Men were more likely to take a rose than women at first
  • We consistently had great reactions from kids
  • Most people thanked me or said something kind as they took a rose
  • All roses were individually handed out
  • Maria singing was a perfect touch
    • She got a nice compliment on her voice
    • Made for less talking during the exchange
    • Kept us moving
    • Was an anchor for me, very comforting.
    • Very much added to the moment, like a serenade - why we now call this the flower serenade 💖
  • One woman stopped us to say that seeing all of the people with roses around the lake made her day, and that she thought we particularly made the day of an elderly couple she'd passed
  • A couple more people commented on how cool it was to see everyone walking around with roses.
    • I hadn't considered a collective impact, this was special to discover
  • One guy said “Oh, you're just doing it for love!”
  • Someone said that seeing so many people with roses around the lake was magical
    • Hearing the word "magical" felt like mission accomplished 🙌
  • A few people thanked us at the end for the effort/result and one woman made a point to tell us, "You did a good job."
  • We were asked by a small group of women if we were doing this for the woman's March
    • We said we were not
    • When we passed them again later, they told us that they loved us
  • There was a lingering desire to give people roses when they were gone
  • Post show blues set in quickly, maybe because the roses were gone in about 30-40 minutes 
It was extremely impactful to make eye contact and exchange a smile with so many strangers. It made me feel very connected to the community, and like everyone I saw in the hours following were suddenly familiar.

Sunday, January 17, 2021

2020

"I feel like the city's going to swallow me up and I'll be left floundering around in my emotions and my thoughts and I'll slowly watch everything just melt away into the madness of the whir of the traffic and the voices and footsteps and my heart will race until I can't catch my breath and then?  What?  I'll die?  Find what I'm looking for finally?  I'll stop.  Maybe everything will stop." 

I wrote that in 2010 (my prose was stronger then), but it seems to encompass how I was feeling at the beginning of 2020. 

My life was full. I was booked with travel, fancy meetings, fight choreography gigs, working out, keeping up with too many people, and it seemed like I had tickets to everything.

I had also created 6 personal projects for myself to "change the world" (or at least the world around me) by completing one community based project every other month. Totally doable, right? 

I quickly discovered that I didn't understand the prep-work-overlap-insanity I had created for myself in order to accomplish my personal projects in the midst of everything else I was barely able to manage. You may remember the post I wrote at the beginning of the year about the anxiety I was feeling and how I thought I was going to die? 

"...and my heart will race until I can't catch my breath and then?  What?"

On March 16th, the shelter in place order hit California. I was sent home from work with the understanding that we would be working from home for the next few weeks which immediately turned into the next few months. My calendar was wiped clean of travel, social events, everything.  

"Maybe everything will stop." 

Well, almost everything. I had just started dating this guy who was already frustrated with my lack of time for him because of my crazy schedule. With shelter in place shutting everything down, and my friends committing to staying home, he soon became my schedule. He would show up in the evenings and we would go on walks and cook and watch movies. Sometimes we'd tell each other stories and play games, or stand on our heads at 2 o'clock in the morning. Everything started to feel really slow, and our time together felt simple and magical in the midst of the world going sideways. 

"I'll stop."

There was a moment during the summer when I was sitting on a porch in Stockton. The sunlight seemed to dance across the grass and an occasional bird or butterfly would flutter into view, playing in the heat, while the tress swayed so slightly. I sat there for a long time and just watched the yard. It seemed like something I hadn't done since I was a kid -- absorb my surroundings with nothing else to think about or do but notice the light and the heat and allow myself to be fully embraced in the moment. 

...

🌼