Friday, April 8, 2011

it's not you, it's me, edmonton.

my sense of timing is awful. yesterday the presentation flew by. right now i'm writing this because i'm avoiding confronting writing a late and major paper. i started elementary school a year later than most students. i took a year off university. and now i'm taking a year longer than the usual amount of four years. i've passed by collisions that must have happened only seconds ahead of me.

so here's my belated letter to edmonton. coming a little too late maybe. i should have done this ages ago.


it's not you, it's me, edmonton. it's time we both came to terms with the way this relationship is going. we've just become comfortable with each other. you're not afraid to fart around me and i stopped wearing make up around you. we've let each other go. you're comfortable. i'm comfortable. we no longer challenge each other. 

i know all your secrets and dirty bits, all your shames and loves. i know all about that weird tick you get during the spring when suddenly a lot of snow falls. some of your lovable flaws have grown on me, others have started to infuriate me. for example, can we please stop talking about the weather? i know, i know, it's your thing. but spare at least this one person from the relentless and FASCINATING observations that yes, it's warms, and yes, it's cold, and yes, that sure was one heck of a downpour. but i do still love your summer nighttime blush when you show your true colors and the way you don't judge me when i do stupid things, like get trashed and sleep around. but that's part of that "comfortable" thing i mentioned before. sometimes i want you to question me and hold me responsible.

sometimes, when i get away from you and i'm alone or with some other city, i wonder if maybe i just like these things about you because i've gotten used to them and it's nice to have someplace to return to. i sometimes really crave the risk of that chicago guy, or the unabashed flirting of that rome guy, or that exotic phnom penh guy. i know, it must make you jealous to hear this and i bet you wonder why i would bother with some of them. but i'm still young. and excited. but in some ways i think i'm more mature than you.

i don't want us to part on bad terms but these are my honest thoughts (i figured you would ask). you're still such a boy. you have potential and a bright future and i love your energy but i need someone who's a little more mature if i'm going to get into a serious relationship.

we've had a lot of fun and i'll never forget the good times we had. even the bad ones. and especially the ones we thought were bad until we realized they were the best.

but i have to move on because i've changed. or maybe i stayed the same. i'm not sure, but i know it's time.

i'm going to move in with my ex-boyfriend for a bit until i decide what to do next and where i should establish myself. don't worry, we're not resuming our relationship. his sandy hair and blue eyes are not enough to woo me back, he was pretty violent and unpredictable. don't get jealous. it's only for a bit and only for convenience. i know you'll worry and i know you'll miss me. we'll stay in touch because, well, my parents really like you and so do my friends (even though i know you think they say mean things behind your back). maybe we'll even get back together but i don't want to give you false hope or lead you on anymore.

i really wish you all the best, edmonton. 

Friday, April 1, 2011

everything is different but nothing has changed

much like the eerie feeling of coming back into your home after a long trip everything looks different. once, coming back in the middle of the night after two weeks when i was not expected, i walked into my room and made a mental note to tell my mom not to clean it again. but my room was untouched. the lines in the hardwood seemed exaggerated and every object looked like it was oriented by a right angle. right angles are civilized human inventions.

i guess it's the things you think you know best that reveal themselves as the least recognized.

the five elements that i have recognized even though i was already aware of them, without wanting to sound too kitschy, are the four uncivilized elements: water, fire, earth, and air. stick around til the end to see if i make any fifth element allusions by saying the fifth is love.

water. edmonton's water. we have so much water. the river, the snow, the ice, the moody rains, the many aquifers deep underground the periphery of the city.

earth. sand and clay and gravel that we'll never be rid of no matter how much we clean and brush and sweep.

fire. the sun, whose depressions haunts our half-years.

and the air. the big sky. the open sky. the pregnant sky. the blue, the grey, the white, the pink, the orange sky. sky sky sky sky sky. our magpie dominated sky, relics of our dinosaur past. our menopausal sky. the sky whose small changes we watch like the attentive, slightly neurotic, husband of a critical yet silent wife.

this is clearly different from the elements we've been discussing in terms of mythic power. the power of these objects to convey and remind us of our experience is what makes them important, but they're only emblems, totems, rooted in their physicality. all of it is passing and transient and no object travels with you once you die. or, more specifically, we're transient. much more so than the books i scar with barcodes at work. 1875. 1852. 1829 was the oldest so far.

memory. is the fifth element. ok, so it's close to love. love is rooted in memory. i know, i know, this is about as dangerously cheesy as cheetos, but run with it for a second.

memory is important to every city. why do rome and paris have to have the monopoly on this idea? without our memory, without our experiences, the city would be empty concrete and plywood shells without the memories we've given them. why do so many people come back? and why do so many find it hard to leave? because the memories we have of edmonton are personal. they haven't had time to become globally collective. we have a vested interest in the privacy of these memories. they're not about revolutions or bloodbaths or kings or celebrities, they're about the time my friend fell and dragged her boyfriend down who in turn brought down someone else with him on the ice in front of the garneau pub. they're about the many times me and my best friend drove around in the "love wagon" blasting our friend's recording of disturbed gibberish and pretend picking up pedestrians. they're about the time i got high sitting in a car seat on top of a mud hill with something like a boyfriend. watching the silent thunder of an approaching storm. they're about the time we got so angry about the rain on the ferris wheel at k-days that we reached a moment of exhilaration, said "fuck this!", and started jumping in the puddles once we got off--marking one of our fondest memories. one carny shouted at us, with a smile, "ARE YOU CRAZY?!" "YES!" we shouted back. they're about the first snow fall that you watch under the morbid glow of the orange lights.

trevor anderson said that he and his friend promised to never show edmonton in the summer. even if he did, no one would ever believe him. our summers, our memories, our loves, they're too personal for the rest of the world to fully understand. we share chuckles and glances, a secret code, that the world outside our winter gates won't fully comprehend.

what else is there to say about edmonton? it's already been said by another edmontonian. 

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

potty mouth

i have to apologize for cussing, cursing, swearing (whatever your preference is) in class and on here. i'm not quite so boorish, i think, or angry. maybe i'm angry.

however, i think it's because i feel comfortable in this class that my crass street talk comes out. "did she just say 'crass street talk'?" yes, she did.

my most humble and sincere apologies.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

the tourist

my best friend is 99.99% sure she is moving to new york in a couple of months. the king of cities. the quintessential city. the city we all imagine when we think anything is city-like.

sometimes i think the way she walks through the city is different than the way i walk through the city. we don't see each other very often but when we do i feel like i step out of the act i put on with almost everyone else i know (with the exception of a handful of high school friends). her day looks nothing like my day. on our daily commutes we may cross the same roads, even visit the same locations, board the same train or bus, sit in the same seat, and never know it. her tour of the city is patterned, so is mine. if we were to exchange, we would be tourists.

when i told my sister about my friend moving away she said, "good. edmonton's too small for them." i felt about the same. as all of my friends slowly become adults (because i don't know what that is still) and move away (go home, explore, or visit) i realize that we all walk through the city differently because we're all tourists. perhaps it is idyllic, but they have these beautiful dreams with big settings. whether we achieve them or not edmonton IS too small for us.

edmonton is the cafe at the airport. it's a waiting city for those who dream big. can edmonton be personified with something more iconic or human? sure. but i think personifying edmonton as the 20-something dreamer seems just about right. for a long wait you find a table or a seat that is comfortable. you accessorize it with things that mean something to you, like the familiar worn-in coat you put over your chair. you eventually start to talk to people who are in the same position as you, waiting for their next flight. you start to enjoy their company and really start to listen to them. soon, too soon, your flight is called. though you've come to enjoy your stay more than you thought you would and you look back at the people you shared it with, promising to stay in touch, you board the plane with the returning excitement of your final destination.

sometime in the future as you enter the corporate cafe on the block of your new home city, a faint sensation of nostalgia creeps over you. you vaguely remember the people you spent your waiting time with and realize, with satisfaction, that you made the right choice. those people were bound by their own tours, not the cities or destinations to which their path brought them. intersecting settings are coincidental and you can try a bit to alter these paths but you cannot alter the path life's tourists are fastened to.

OR, as radiohead would say:
sometimes i get overcharged
that's when you see sparks
you ask me where the hell i'm going
at a thousand feet per second
hey man, slow down, slow down
idiot, slow down, slow down

Friday, March 18, 2011

nature?! in the city?! whaaaaaaaaaat?!

this city's nature is huge and overwhelming. over the winter it blankets everything and over the summer it opens up the sky to reveal blues and pinks and peach and purple. this city is bipolar. man, it's biwinning. this is where the rabbits come in.

i have a special place in my heart for rabbits. i hear rabbit stew is delicious. 

don't worry. jokes.

i do honestly love rabbits. they're so plentiful and resilient. we feed one (them?) during the winter. there is a window underneath the highly raised deck. my mom plucks out the window net and sometimes leaves cabbage or old hard bread outside the window (rabbits love bread). s/he(s) (because we don't know if there's several or just the one) munches away while we watch underneath the relatively snowless ground. sometimes we leave peanuts on the fence between us and the neighbors for the local squirrels. my dad's favorite birds are sparrows so he stuck a huge four by four in the ground and we put up two birdhouses, more to come. we're frequented by sparrows year round, finches in the summer, and the occasional erratic jumping of the warbler. throughout the summer we are ever vigilant for humming birds that are attracted to my mom's virus-like plants that don't stop growing and don't die until she believes it's time. then they wilt as if by command. in the fall i will hear a coyote start howling until he's joined in with the rest of his pack. or are they foxes? or are they wolves? we watch for tornadoes in the heart of summer and measure the height of the sun based on the height of the trees around the neighborhood. on calm still days i sometimes stare up at the cerulean sky and wonder if the things i see are just eye wiggles.

there's something kind of magical about the lives that make up what you think is a quiet suburban neighborhood. 

and the rabbits. well. who hasn't slowed down to let a rabbit cross the road with the eerie, perhaps even uncanny, attitude of a human pedestrian. only to find out that it's a garbage bag. 

Friday, March 11, 2011

coffee talk simulation

it's been a while since i've spent some time with my sis. we often get coffee together (or used to until school  started this year) and as the caffeine enters the blood stream we become philosophers and poets and rebels bouncing ideas off of each other about art, about ideas, about life, about the future. then we go home and continue doing the things we said we had to change to be more complete individuals. this city just isn't good enough for us to be amazing.

last night i called home so someone would pick me up from the bus station. she told me she was going shopping and if i wanted to come. hungry and tired and wired, of course i said yes because we would have to have coffee. i didn't know how long we'd be but who cared, i was down for whatever.

she's going to buenos aries tomorrow where fruit is just ripening in the fall. am i jealous? certainly. but i realized as we were talking about living elsewhere (common topic) and travelling that we're tethered here. we're tethered because we haven't fully accepted edmonton. like after any tragedy where you have to come to peace with the situation to be able to move on. regarded as a necessary difficult time that developed you as a person.

ok.

done.

because of this class i've started to like edmonton. the winter especially. why fight against something which is fact, why endlessly struggle, why not adapt? "be like the water," says bruce lee. frozen water maybe. be like the snow. fall gently on the whitest of the highest of the city's towers. enter the crevices of the alleys, each back lawn, and graze the balconies of apartments. be carried along the lrt and bus routes by the exchange of students and businessmen. then melt into rivulets, into streams, into the rapids gushing into the river. then pelt the city with spasms of rain and hail in the summer. in the fall, cry. "autumn's here / it's time to cry now" sings hawksley workman.

i think i have learned how to walk and see a city. starting in edmonton of course. my perspective is changing and as i've still decided to go elsewhere after graduating i think that i will only be ready to leave if i feel like i've understood edmonton and seen it from its many monochromatic grey angles.

*

pretty hard (or easier?) to continue writing warm fuzzy things about edmonton after watching an hour of reports about the earthquake and tsunami in japan. edmonton, rejoice, for you are situated on a 668m elevated plateau!

Friday, March 4, 2011

openlessness

i kind of see living in edmonton as a commuter sleeping on the bus. i thought about this while crossing the river on my daily commute to the university. the girl sitting next to me was lulling in and out of sleep and i was convinced i would have to wake her up by the time we got to campus. however, she had raised her head before we approached with enough time to put on her gloves, hood, and mentally prepare for the cold.

we edmontonians constantly hope to find something uniquely characteristic about the city--something to be proud of other than our festivals and secret hot summers. we travel through the city attempting to slip into a blissfully complete experience of being within the city like within a dream. we want to have a complete story, a certain narrative without any confusion. we are so afraid, so very afraid, of recognizing the city as it is, accepting it as imperfect, and accepting our own confusion about it. perhaps it is that confusion we should embrace. maybe our inability to define it characterizes edmonton. we don't fully engage with the city because we can keep it at a distance in hopes of fixing it or leaving it. embracing it would mean we would be giving into it as it is. (maybe it's more of a broken and imperfect marriage rather than a bus drive.)

just the way the sleepy commuter never truly falls asleep, snoozing with some part of them resisting the dream, we never embrace edmonton because we are not strong enough to be vulnerable to the sentimentality of imperfection. our search to define it is fruitless, it just is.

*

a bit of a different vibe than usual. i also wanted to discuss how all those stories about edmonton seem like they have something about the dead, ghosts, haunts, etc. i am one of those superstitious atheistic weirdos who thinks you can feel ghosts of the dead in cities the same way you breathe polluted air. i noticed this in dieppe, france and vukovar, croatia. i visited these cities with very little background knowledge about them and before my parents told me about their histories i noticed some kind of hesitation, timelessness, paranoia in the cities. physical memories. invisible landmarks. a jelly-like silence--a silence so thick you can feel it. i attribute this to the restless dead which will eventually dissolve with people's forgotten memories. sure there are memorials or shelled out buildings but it radiates out so that you feel it before you see it. maybe off-topic though?

Saturday, February 26, 2011

well with everyone posting even though we weren't directly instructed to...

i had a lovely chat about edmonton and city and space and flexible cities and well, the entire contents of this course without so much discussing the course, with le parents over coffee. really awfully strong coffee. fantastic coffee though! it dawned on me in that moment that i might even like edmonton. what? no! never! was it the coffee?!

it is growing on me. the way a growth grows on you. the kind of growth that you don't regard as that scary until it keeps growing and you realize it might be questionable. but you learn to live with it and you look at that growth almost fondly. jane fondly.

the point is is that cynicism is bad for you. or at least me. i considered cynicism a fantastic trait until i started hearing people i admire discuss it negatively and i had to recognize that it is indeed cynicism which is causing me to regard this city so negatively. by walking it and engaging it i am not only more comfortable with the city itself but my own skin, my body, the way i move through the city, winter, and accessibility to certain city areas. most importantly, by being forced (though i hesitate to use this word) to take part in the city i find it more accessible during winter and certain areas are no longer marked as "bleh" in my mind because a sort of curiosity is starting to push the cynicism out.

now before engaging with other cities i think it would be useful and AWESOME to use edmonton as a type of training ground. too often i have entered a city and failed to actually engage it because i didn't know where to start. even though i had walked through a city i didn't know what exactly to look for or exactly how to walk it.

plus parkour. parkour in edmonton. AND THEN EVERYWHERE. think about it. how awesome would that be?

instead of "GO FORTH CHILDREN AND WALK THE CITIES OF THIS GRAND EARTH" it would be more like "GO FORTH BADASSES AND PARKOUR THE SHIT OUTTA THIS PLACE!" though i dunno how grammatically correct it is to use parkour as a verb. hrm.

(you've no idea how many times i had to go back and delete swears. i apologize for my potty mouth.)

(i wrote while listening to a friend's suggestion of an album that "revolves around a single riff" by a band that "started out as a black sabbath worshiping doom band". if that helps to explain why there's absolutely no coherence here. it is one song and it is literally an hour and three minutes long. it's surprisingly good. F'REAL!)

Sunday, February 20, 2011

fuckin' henry rollins

distracting me from my daily obligations. because let's just be honest right here and stress the fact that the man is awesome and is a far better "DON'T DO IT" motivational speaker than any counselor on campus. speaking from personal experience too. hur hur hur. bet that makes things awkward.

do i move with the city?

absolutely.

yes.

oh-hooooo yes.

i am bound by the roads, the transit, the very walk of the people. hub mall is a perfect example of this in which you are chastised for moving against the current. it's such a large city that if you don't fall in line you end up mud-splattered on the end of some highway. edmonton is not a walking city so you use the parts of it meant for walking or driving the way they ought to be used.

this can be depressing but...well, not so awful.

take a look at the high level bridge. there is reason and coherence in moving southward while you're in a car. sometimes i've seen expensive motorcycles or luxury cars cross it. i've even heard them honk at me as i've walked in the opposite direction. but despite their flagrant difference they move in the same direction, the same speed, the same style as the ghetto beater car.

there's something about following this current that allows for easy accessibility to the parts of the city. you become one of the locals, a part of the city by joining its rivers. and what are roads other than concrete, asphalt rivers?

moving against the current of the city can be retroactively progressive yet it can cause problems if you want to truly know the city and accept it for what it is as it is. to know the city you must be part of its flow.

Monday, February 14, 2011

as i'm doing these blog evaluations

i started thinking about how much people hate the mall. not people in our class specifically, but i will hear this from a lot of edmontonians. i mean they hate the mall. or at least they say they do for various reasons none of which i'm going to suggest are just signifiers of a certain militant anti-consumerist image that has to be upheld. by god, why would i do that? hur hur hur hur, NEVER!

hate is a strong word. it starts with the sound of you clearing the phlegm, the evil, from your throat and it ends with the snapping down of your teeth. like a deep throating experience gone terribly terribly wrong. (oh yes, i went there. don't even!) this has nothing to do with anything really. nothing about our assignment or a comment on anyone's writing and it's not driven by drugs or alcohol (though i'm not sure i don't regret that last part).

but jesus christ people, when it's -33 and i need me some cheap new duds, and need to spend my day somewhere where i can shop, watch a movie, get tanked, hang out late at night when it gets dark, it's really not that bad.

RANT RANT RANT.

Friday, February 11, 2011

the greatest of apologies for posting later than 5pm (and if it says 4:something, then yes, sure, I POSTED ON TIME)

i just got off work after a fairly hectic week--first week of work, a paper, a presentation, and trying to catch up from the week before due to having to finish a paper from last semester. plus my feet are killing me cause i've been crawling up and down the bookshelves in hooker heels. yup. mia's been a busy bee.

i never quite expected 380 to be as fun as it is. i kept telling samantha i might drop it because i realized i didn't need it but thanks to her sweet persuasion and a lovely prof (really, i'm not trying to kiss butt) and a slew of interesting reading material i decided to stay for this class. i'm glad i did. it is really helping open up my perspectives on edmonton and its people.

i thought this class would be all about discussing the scenery or talking about the wonderful array of historic monuments we have (which aren't many and which aren't that interesting). i thought it would be about as bland and boring but inoffensive as a hotel painting.

but it's not.

i really thought i knew everything there was to know about edmonton and that which i didn't know i thought i knew well enough to not be interested. however, this city seems to hide some very fascinating people. that is to say, the city does a very good job of showcasing them but my lack of interest and apathy create the fog which blinds me to them. apathy is not substanceless, it is not a recognition and conscious decision to not take part. it's a conscious decision before the recognition can occur and thus it never does.

this class forces me to confront my apathy and holds me responsible. if i'm bored by this city it's because i'm not doing it right.

Friday, February 4, 2011

the year of the rabbit

yesterday was the first day of the year of the rabbit. somehow i feel like this ties in well with the idea of "minorities". why? rabbits are tiny but sometimes they fight back because they're DYNAMITE! (i really just wanted an excuse to post this.)

it can be terribly alienating being a minority. i can't exactly speak from any experience except that i was singled out for my accent and funny last name for a lot of the years i spent in school. so i understand the compulsion to try and blend in with the majority and be "normal", but there is also this inability to turn your back on things that are essentially yours and that define you. no, i can't say i can identify with anyone who is a visible minority but there are moments that can allow you a glimpse into that world of being "the odd one out".

there are places in edmonton that you can go to to get that sensation. whether it be gay bars (which are fantastic on new years' eves), a bubble tea place known in the chinese community for the best bubble tea EVER, or going to a bollywood film on the south side. i know there are places in edmonton "owned" my various communities. actually think of any place that isn't dominated by at least one group, whether majority or minority. someone is always the odd one out. i think it's great and necessary to give that sensation a try. just like traveling, you gotta get out of the city and out of your comfort zone to know more about your city and more about yourself.

how's that for romantic views on multiculturalism?

Friday, January 28, 2011

oh maps

i have a certain affection for maps. they certainly are exclusive and certainly can be very badly done. but i like direction. i like figuring out where you are in context to another place. i like seeing strangely named streets or pathways. (i never noticed that they have such strange walking path names in whistler. "donkey punch" was one of them. yup.) i love planning out how you can get from one location to another on this concrete river that can connect you from edmonton to vancouver to toronto to texas to san diego to TIJUANA!

and that connotation of the map to the road trip. the drive. the walk. down a road that you think you kinda know just because you saw it on a map.

my favorite city map was the biomap or the "emotion map" because it focuses in on the city as a living breathing experience and not just a collection of geometrical and not-so-geometrical patterns. it also shows how those streets are where the magic happens. a romanticized concept, absolutely. this map does not show the inside of houses or apartments. but it doesn't fail to provide an idea of vibrancy of the street. in the public concrete stream of people so many things happen that we are unaware we are recognizing. this map reasserts those experiences not as good or bad but as lively qualities of cities.

after seeing these maps, i've no bloody idea what i'm going to do. oh jeez.

Friday, January 21, 2011

because sometimes you gotta focus on the positive

it's easy to impulsively relate what my sense of edmonton is if someone asks me but when i have to write it down a more thorough process of thought shows how little i actually think about my usual responses. i say what i'm kind of expected to say, "it's cold", "it sucks", "i want to get the hell out of here", etc.

in a way i see edmonton as an island or a fortress. during the winter months brave souls leave through finite gateways to see their loved ones in different places. they have to cross the perilous snow to reach civilization and then kiss the ground on which they stand before their inevitable return. but in the summer, with clear wide highways and such accessible fields, for three or four months we hold a party. it is a celebration of the freedom we have gained, perhaps achieved, and definitely deserve.

for me, edmonton is characterized by seasonal hyperbole. it's what i have to cling to so as to not feel isolated and sad. the skies, the storms, the fond drunk memories, the lazy summer jobs. all of it seems bigger and more important in the summer. i may frequent the same places (mostly focused on the university, on whyte, on west ed, and various trashy pubs) but there is nothing quite like stepping outside without putting on a coat and knowing that the real true night will last only three hours.