Saturday, October 13, 2018

Oooooo sexy!

I’ve been back on Bumble for less than 24hrs and already I want to get off! There has to be a better solution to finding someone I want to climb mountains with, eat Scooby snacks with, have great conversations with, ride bikes at the Burn with...and so much more. This evening I started the usual (boring) texting with someone I swiped right on. (I find the whole premise of swiping right disgusting...but I'm at a loss as to what else I can do‽) So anyway, I started texting and here's how things proceeded...













Now don't get me wrong! I'm happy to be called all kinds of pet names once we've met and we're both into each other. I'm cool with "babe, sunshine, nibble" (yep, I've been called that one!) "sweetie, ma'am" (though this one sometimes makes me feel old...) "sugar, sexy, boo..." and the list goes on. I am honestly not at all fussy about pet names! I'm not someone that finds terms of endearment offensive. When I see the look in someone's eyes, that tells me this name they've chosen for me means that I mean something to them...that they like me...then they could call me "snarkelpuss" and I'd be thrilled! But when you've never met me and we've only exchanged 10 fragments of a sentence, don't, just don't, say "Oooooo sexy" at me!

Thank you and goodnight!

ps - Also, I should not be something you get up to just cause you're bored!


Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Jr. High All Over Again

*WARNING! Long post* 

I remember Jr. High, maybe not like it was yesterday (because it certainly wasn't!)...but I remember it well. I remember going into 7th grade as an uncomplicated, somewhat oblivious kid who liked to climb trees, make art, run around bare foot and, given the opportunity, hop into any body of water no matter how cold it was. My classmates were rather different that I was. 

I was lucky enough to be a part of a class that made dedicated, seasoned teachers want to retire. The girls were 13 going on 21 and the boys, well the boys were boys...but if you played a classical instrument, weren't into New Kids on the Block and were more into art and being a tomboy, than into makeup and gossip, you were labeled as totally lame. In 8th grade I became less oblivious and realized that my class was a toxic environment, petty, cliquey and not a place where I felt I fit. Lucky enoughI said, to be a part of this class, because it taught me a few very good lessons.

One, I am not someone who thrives in a cliquey environment and staying in one will, in the end, make me very unhappy. Two, you can always do something else/remove yourself from a situation. Three, true friends will stick by you even if you walk away from the friend group they are a part of (because let's be honest, toxic cliques are more of a social group dynamic rather than toxic individuals).

So why the trip down memory lane, after all it was longer ago than I care to admit... I guess it's because currently, I'm dealing with the same bullshit in my professional life, but unlike my Jr. High classmates, who had their age, hormones, etc. as an excuse, this entity, this professional clique, has no excuse. So I am, yet again, faced with a decision and need to choose a direction for myself, professionally speaking...

For the past five years I've quietly put my heart and soul into my work for a festival. This year is the first year I won't be back. This was not my choice, and to be honest, I'm heartbroken. I tried my best...but I guess (ironically) my best just wasn't good enough...it would have been nice to get some constructive criticism (as a painter I'm very familiar with this method of learning). In most cases I'm not just a hat rack or a pretty face. Growth comes from seeing or being shown what your shortcomings are and having a supportive environment so that you can take steps to improve, to grow, to flourish with this knowledge. 

Not only is the loss of this collaborative artistic endeavor painful, but it also hurts that this job was integral to the flow of my personal artistic life. It afforded me the time to paint, while also being able to (mostly) pay my bills...I will miss that freedom of being able to create in the space of time surrounding this work. I will miss the visual and sonic inspiration this event gave my artistic practice. I will also miss leading a team. One of the most rewarding (if not the most rewarding) jobs I've ever had, was leading this team and many of you made the experience such a pleasure. I still look forward to working with you again, elsewhere in the future.

I'm choosing not to dwell on the hurt or confusion of this, because it does not make any sense. Any failings or short comings I had could have been easily solved with a constructive, open, honest and genuine conversation. Having reached out for months to try and set up this meeting and been completely ignored, I am at a loss as to what else I could have done. I am an intelligent enough person to be able to listen, learn and grow...but not being given that chance makes me feel like I am being seen as disposable. 

...and I am not disposable

As one of my favorite sayings goes, "you may be the juiciest, ripest peach in the world but there's always gonna be someone who doesn't like peaches." The small, hurt person in me wants to lash out, to shout angry truths, to expose unprofessionalisms, to elucidate rampant nepotism/cronyism, but the person I try to be (and somewhat fail to be, by including that last sentence) knows it's not worth it...that in doing that (as pleasant as it might feel) I would become a person I could not respect. I refuse to stoop to that level. As Michelle Obama said. "When they go low, we go high." That is my goal, anyway. So instead I will say this...

I'm sorry to all of you I reached out to, back in January about being on the team this year! I think it would have been an amazing team with you all on it! I had so many exciting ideas - new furniture to build, creative, warm and inviting new lighting schemes to design, not to mention resurrecting Oscar the Couch (and maybe adding a Burt and Ernie). I'm truly heartbroken that we won't be working to make some festival magic together.

My hope, in the face of this, is that I was a good coworker to those of you who did work along side me these past five years. I hope that I gave you a chance to grow and flourish as a fellow human being, colleague and friend. I hope that I made you feel seen and appreciated, and not overlooked. I hope that you enjoyed those moments as much as I did. I look back with love at all the amazing moments I've had with you! From the bottom of my heart, thank you. I hope we have more opportunities elsewhere to create and grow artistically together in the future.

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Bookends


The hills outside San Jose are dotted with a particular tree in full bloom. Their color is that of a forsythia bush, but they are tall, the blooms a yellow puffball the size of a grapefruit or large navel orange. The color bursts out from a sea of lush green as they dip and wave in the breeze. It must be spring, now, here in this timidly familiar place.

Pylons criss-cross the verdant surroundings as we approach the city...moved forward in a luminous pink bus. I've given Costa Rica two months of my life now, slowly inching up the list of other geographical contenders for my attention. The slender bodies of the bamboo that frame the highway are yellow too, but softer. Broken up by their leafy tops, they do not smack in the eye like the "Costa Rican forsythia" does.

Our pink bus plunges down the hill into the suburbs of San Jose. My two bags (one holding all my art) and I will soon be expelled from this rosy air-conditioned cocoon into the bustle of the city for my last forty-eight hours here...ramping up to the level of home, LA.

Reflective, as one might be on, say, New Years Eve, I circle around this thought...I do not believe in transformational festivals, an irony not lost on me, since I spend the better part of the year bringing these festivals to fruition...but there it is. For me, life is transformational. Life, that is so much bigger in scope than a tiny sliver of time in the jungle, or in the dessert, or the mountains...but in this particular instance the festival has served as bookends to my year. Highlighting my transformation in the year that was wedged in-between.

"What a difference a year makes!" This common phrase is spot on for this last year. My experience of this festival, as well as my changed response to the city of San Jose have served well in highlighting this shift. Confusion, heartache and loneliness have faded away, like darkness with the approaching dawn. This year I am "me" again! Happy and interested in life all around me. Invested in my art and hopeful again that I will find an adventure partner that shares my passion for life rather than kills it...what a difference a year makes...

While you, my dear (few) readers, may find your festivals to be transformational (and I'm happy for you if they are, as I LOVE creating that magic)...I will be happy if my life continues to be a source of learning and transformation.