Friday, July 16, 2010
Thursday, July 15, 2010
home safe... and sound?
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
ready to be home
Yesterday for my birthday Hannah bought me candy at every gas station and store in yellowstone ( we drove around the entire park) and let me listen to GLEE non-stop the entire time. There were multiple repeats of "total eclipse of the heart" and I sang along at the top of my lungs each time.
Yellowstone is huge, and dare I say it, over-rated. it's beautiful, but as hannah says, feels more like disneyland or the san diego zoo. there are cars and people everywhere all the time. If someone sees a bear, deer, elk, moose or bison they feel the need to pull over, park, climb out and take pictures for 20 minutes. Causing huge back-ups etc. I mean yes the mother bear with her two cubs is adorable but geesh, do you really need to stop for a deer? yes, i believe i am getting slightly grumpy and ready to be home. i did love all the souvenir shops in the park and couldn't resist a few bracelets and a youth wolf tee-shirt among other things. We left yellowstone this morning and drove through the incredible grand tetons. I would have loved to have driven through yellowstone and camped here but oh well. We pitched our tent about 10 miles out of Jackson at Altherton Creek and the campsite is, perfect. right on the lake and we have the run of it to ourselves.
Now we're in Jackson which is amazing, but a little too touristy for my tastes. no great thrift stores yet! we don't have any exciting plans, just swimming tonight and maybe being crazy and driving the whole way home tomorrow? if not, we'll camp in nevada.
-A
yellowstone
this is the air freshner i bought at the gas station in butte montana while i waited for my sleeping bag to dry at the laundromat next door. i LOVE it.
Wyoming the better lover
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
She's as cute as her muffin... that she won't eat
july 13th
Sunday, July 11, 2010
If you weren't so pretty...and other 24-hour adventures
what hasn't gone wrong
Friday, July 9, 2010
wish i had earphones.
Thursday, July 8, 2010
when in idaho...
lay in the sun and nap!
we got here. somehow. finally. even though I can’t tell my right from my left (luckily i've got this freckle on my right hand...that i can't always see...), we (I…) almost lost the directions, and it took 300 miles…
after a very wonderful yesterday spent watching Spanish men glide across grass (truly more graceful than dancers) with abigail, ben, jon, and becky in a lovely bar (bill’s off broadway) with strategically placed t.v. screens, we had dinner with my uncle charlie, aunt debbie, and cousin henry, which involved delicious (!!!) salmon, harold and the purple crayon, and an impromptu baseball game in their green, beautifully lit backyard.
now we're here, in beautiful couer d'alene, already forgetting what it means to live in the city, surrounded only by grass and trees and water.
today we swam in the lake – the quiet cold lake – so blue and lovely. afterward we layed on the floor of a what was once a house, ab read capote and I read poetic theory. I’m reading the necessary angel by wallace stevens, which is a celebration of the imagination (a very necessary angel).
I love poetry. I love all words (well…maybe not “puss.” hmm...or “ripe”…), love to surround myself in them, wish I could live in them sometimes (this is why abigail and I are friends). dangerous and impossible thoughts, especially on a day like today, laying on top of the ruins of house overlooking the water, somehow pastoral, entirely profound, and... wordless.
love you! hannah
almost forgot!
driving, getting lost, more driving
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
300 pounds later...
a day in bremerton
adventures in seattle
It is absolutely beautiful in seattle this week, it's actually supposed to be 95 degrees tomorrow! We spent the night with Hannah's cousin Katie, and I am in love with her house! Full of hand made pillows, decopaged art and a super cute rug by one of my favorite designers.... it doesn't hurt that the bed in her guest room is like sleeping on a cloud. This early morning finds us sitting in a sweet shop called "bakery" sipping a latte and chai. The plan is to go watch the world cup with my brothers, (maybe) go to discovery park, it's reportedly green and gorgeous ( i'm pushing for a jaunt into kent where there's a bookstore/thrfit store combo that sells clothes at a dollar a pound). For the evening meal we will be dinning with Hannah's aunt and uncle and their son Henry, whom live in Bellevue and then we will probably go out for a drink with Katie. There's a really fetching bar called Zig Zag near Capitol Hill. It's the scene of my first cocktail ever and I'd love to go back.
Well today has been pretty calm so far, it is only 9:30 am, but let me catch you up to speed on yesterdays adventures.
As we confidently strolled into the building I said was the ferry station I felt my stomach plummet, this was not the right building. A gangly, bearded man locking up his bike outside informed us we were at least a half mile away from the station. crap. It was already 9:45 and we wanted to be on the 10:00 ferry. Flash forward to us pounding up the carpeted ramp, bee-lining to the ticket booth, hastily purchasing our tickets and racing onto the ferry that they so graciously were holding for us (we made it on board by 10:02). never a dull moment. every single time I have started walking towards a destination it has been the wrong way. I'm just so confident that Hannah never thinks to question me... hopefully that will change.
The ferry ride was so delightful, armed with coffee (mine had 13+ half-n-half packets in it) and breakfast we walked the length of the boat and sat on some benches with a window to the water. I live in Bremerton for a few months almost two years ago so we disembarked, and walked to a favorite thrift store of mine... you'll notice from the pictures that I stopped at Snoop Dog's Pound for a hotdog. We walked to Cornerstone Coffee, where I used to work, and alternately read poetry and journal. This is what I saw out the window.
"There's two men standing on the corner of fifth st. They have been there for at least 30 minutes. What are they doing, surveying? There are a few orange signs scattered nearby. They could be the oldest of friends or strangers caught up in a coincidental appreciation of some rare fascination."
-A
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
poetry & coffee with god & abigail
On EarthResurrection of the little apple tree outsidemy window, leaf-light of latein the Aprilcalled her eyes, forgetforget -but how does one goabout dying?Who on earthis going to teach me -The worldis filled with peoplewho have never died
Monday, July 5, 2010
Sunshine in Seattle
Yesterday we woke up in Portland and stopped at a hole-in-the-wall shop and got two cups of the "holler mountain blend". We headed over to Imago Dei church and after a wrong turns found the parking lot The sanctuary is relatively small with a balcony above, the seating alternating sections of red and blue cushioned pews and a modern feeling stained glass window portraying (who else) Jesus. The way the congregation tithes is called "change for a dollar". A 20's something man walked on stage and held the microphone and started talking about a young boy, Billy Moore. He had boarded a bus last week after saying goodbye to his mother who was being taking off life support at the local hospital. As he stepped off the bus he got in to a vocal altercation and as the speaker put it "he choose to fight with his feet by walking away, rather than his words". His reward for taking the higher road was a bullet in the back that claimed his life and gave his sister a double funeral. The speaker was just a guy who worked at the hospital were Billy's mom had spent her last days, he was just a member of the congregation who saw a need. It was inherent in his talking that Imago Dei doesn't always have a specific idea for the tithe, rather they let the holy spirit push the plan into their laps each week, one of the many things I loved about this community. The speaker made the point that God can show up when he wants, but our willingness is helpful.
The text was Matthew 5:13-14; and Rick reminded us to hear it in the context of the beatitudes. Here are some notes I wrote during the sermon; " There is no podium, he holds no bible or notes. It feels more intimate, more like teaching than preaching. They have no missions team because the body IS IT... salt is a preservative, we are to preserve the world and live out a memory. The memory that this is God's world. Problem: when the church trys to hold the shaker, usually the dump on to much and run the flavor. Then they sit there and say 'why does no one like the flavor!? We're just being persecuted right now...' God shakes out just enough salt, in simple ways." He also touched on the two extreme ways christianity can manifest itself in todays culture; syncretism and sectarianism. Being too apart of the world, and too far removed. He gently reminded his listeners and friends that surrounding yourself only with christian persons and activities is sin, it's not right. It's just as bad as putting your light under a basket, it's like shining your spotlight into a room with no windows. Rick started and ended his message by pointing out that verse 13 says "you ARE". The best thing we can do, is be ourselves, not try to do anything better or be someone different. I so often feel a pressure from the "church" or christians in general to do better, be better, be doing something different in a better way. It was so refreshing and true to be reminded that the best way to showcase Jesus is to simply be who he made me.
Imago Dei was refreshing in it's lack of performance quality, there was no mingle! From what I could tell from the website and bulletin, this is a church that values community and living out the truth in simple ways and I really loved the service. It doesn't hurt that one of my favorite authors, Donald Miller, goes here too!
After church we hit the road and headed to Seattle where we had a delicious homeade lunch with my older brother Ben and his girlfriend Lydia. Then we headed over to a friend's house and played in a cash poker game with eight of (my brothers and my) our friends. Let's just say for the buy-in being $5 dollars, I made myself enough to pay for a couple of nights in Yellowstone :) Who knew I had such skill? After the game some other friends joined the party and we made and consumed a delicious taco bar. Then, because it was the fourth of July, my brothers (Ben and Jon) Hannah, me and few other boys headed to the apartment building roof to set off fireworks, while our friends watched from below. It was a blast, literally and I even got to set off a roman candle!
Last night we stayed with Jon in his great studio apartment on capitol hill. We slept in today and got coffee at Vita and walked to Elliot Bay Books, the best bookstore in Seattle. I got a few postcards, "The Living" by Annie Dillard and a book by Madeline L'engle ('m on a quest to own them all). We walked down towards Pike Place Market and stopped at a sunny cafe called Specialty's. We're just about to take off and go to the Egyptian theater to see "micmas" (by the director of Amelie). Later tonight the plan is to stop by the Living Room where Jon bartends!
So far Seattle and the trip in general have been excellent and so much fun.
-A