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August 31 The Big DriveI just finished a drive from St. Paul to Seattle. 2.5 days, 1800 miles, lots of fun, 1 perspective shift. I have a new position at the same company, but now it makes more sense for me to work out of our headquarters in Seattle, so here I am. Technically, I could have flown. It would have taken about 6-7 hours total, and would have put me here in time to enjoy a beautiful august weekend. The company is paying for relocation, so whether I drove or had my car shipped was totally up to me and made no financial difference. So why did I drive? It was a rather an easy decision to make, even though I put on a show of going back and forth about it for a couple weeks. Really though, I knew I wanted to drive the first time I thought of it, but it’s only in doing it, that I understood why. The fact that I hadn’t ever been in Montana, Wyoming, or Idaho was something I thought should change. I’m also planning to sell my car shortly, now that I don’t need it to get to work or the gym, so I thought it would be good to enjoy it while I have it. But the real reason turned out to be perspective. I needed to MOVE, not just pop over to Seattle like I’ve done at least a dozen times before. I wanted to feel the very sobering reality that I was leaving my home state indefinitely for the first time. I wanted to feel the weight of leaving behind friends and family. Not that I’m a masochist, understand; it just seemed like flying here would be like cheating somehow. The fact is that Seattle IS 1600 miles from St Paul (the extra 200 miles I drove was for a very worthwhile detour to Yellowstone national park), and one tends to underestimate the enormity of that distance when they routinely cover the round trip twice a week and sometimes 10 times in a single month. The incredible speed at which you travel while 30k feet above the earth should evoke its own kind of awe, but for someone who didn’t grow up taking road trips, I suspected these distances were somewhat lost on me. I was right. For example, yesterday I spent over 11 hours driving; saw the sunrise and the sunset from the car, and stopped only occasionally to stretch my legs and remind my senses that the world isn’t perpetually speeding by at 80 mph. When I started the day I was in Montana and I ended it in….wait for it….Montana! And still a good 150 miles from the western border! Granted, I spent some of the day taking a detour a bit south which took me through a corner of Wyoming, but generally I was heading west the whole day. I averaged 60 miles an hour according to my car’s computer, and filled my tank a couple times. That’s distance! And here’s the most important thing about it: every mile along the way, every mountain pass or 10 mile straight-away that begs you to see if you can get your car past 130mph, I was aware (at least subconsciously) that it brought me further away from my old home and closer to my new one. That limbo time, during which I thought of myself as a homeless wanderer (I should have learned kung-fu first) was therapy for the mind. Or at least I hope it was, because it didn’t do much for my back. I will take possession of my new apartment tomorrow, and in so doing, complete a journey. Moving to a new city is not a breakthrough for mankind, I realize, but this is a journey that has been a long time coming for me, and I feel it is (if you’ll permit the cliché) a beginning as much as an end. Only one reader of this will remember directly, but I once stood on a dock in Greece telling someone, who was at the time a relative stranger, about how I wanted my life to be bigger. It was something I hadn’t thought of in those terms before that moment, but it was very true. So what better path to a bigger life than a big city, some big sky, and a big drive? February 23 Seattle and SkiingI've been working in Seattle for the past few months, basically since I got back from New Zealand actually. It's been great to work out of the company headquarters for a while, and I'm getting a chance to work on some really cool tech (although I'm not actually allowed to say what yet). I grabbed a corporate apartment here and have spent only two weekends at home in 2008 so far, so I've definitely had a chance to get to know the city. Let's just say it's an unquestionable upgrade weatherwise from MN winters. :)
The last two weekends have been the most dramatic examples of this. Not only do I get to enjoy 50's and sun in February, but if you drive for two hours there are two totally decent mountains waiting for you. Last weekend I hit Steven's pass, and I just got back from Crystal Mountain a few hours ago. These aren't quite Colorado or Utah quality, but they get the job done admirably, and the views certainly don't disappoint. There's nothing like skiing to the edge and seeing the glory of something as huge as Mt Rainier spread out before you.
October 08 Travel UpdateSince the last time I posted here I've spent a month in India (August; for work) and I'm in the middle of a month in New Zealand and Australia! Big things, and I have really not had much of an urge to blog about them for whatever reason, but I've been uploading lots of pics and so I highly recommend, if you really care about what I'm up to, subscribing to my flickr feed. (www.flickr.com/photos/seraph).
I didn't upload much for India pics until I got back, but I've been pretty good with getting one cameraphone pic up everyday from NZ. Unfortunately, that will have come to an end today as I jumped in the spa with my new Nokia n73 in my pocket! So that's a bummer, although I didn't lose much since I didn't even buy the phone (won it right before I left the US in a raffle :) SO, I will have to start just uploading whenever I can get a net connection. The phone charges were starting to add up anyway.
April 25 Beverly Warns PhotographyI just remembered something I wanted to mention about my recent Hawaiian trip; while on the big island, I made my first significant art purchase ever. I picked up a limited print of Beverly Warns' "Cliffs of Kalapana". I should say that the reason I've never bought any art before is not because I've never seen stuff I like, but just because I've never found something I could not live without. I always have a conversation with myself about how (especially with photography) I can find things just as good or better on Flickr for free, and there is no need to spend good money on a permanent print of something when I am constantly amazed at what I can paint across my computer screen any time I please.
Well Beverly's infrared shots of Hawaii so completely blew me away that I could not leave without at least ONE of them. The difficulty was actually choosing with one! It's not just that they are well executed, but it's the fact that the technique reveals details and beauty that you wouldn't even get if you were standing there in person. It's stunning work and I'm grateful to have found it. September 30 The Home StretchSo this trip is getting near the end. I'll be off the boat tomorrow and will be partying hard in Mykonos that night. I really thought I'd be posting more updates over the course of the week but I just haven't had good net access and I decided that paying to upload pictures on my phone was probably not a good allocation of funds.
This has been AMAZING so far though. I've spent a lot of time on the water, and a lot of time on scooters. The views beyong the ports on these islands are staggeringly beautiful. Pictures galor will follow on flickr.
Later.
May 22 Let's Play Catch-UpWell I’ve allowed too much time to pass between posts and it became this daunting thing I didn’t want to deal with. So I’m going to make this short and get things up to date. I’m done working in Milwaukee. I now work at this non-descript building in the Twin Cities area. This means I’m no longer flying out of town each week. So far I consider this a good thing. I also moved out of my parents’ house and into a friend’s. I’m renting the upstairs. I’ve dedicated the room to my favorite person, me. There’s a computer and an amazing sound system. And a mattress. That’s about it. I'm still playing with the acoustic treatments.
Oh, and I also went to Vegas for a weekend in April that I totally meant to blog about. Nothing much to tell though, it was fun. Here’s me hanging out at the Venetian with drink in hand. I had a lot of those. I also went to Pittsburgh
to visit friends for a weekend. They moved the same weekend I did, in fact. I
caught this shot there. I consider it to be the coolest graffiti ever. Alright, now I can sleep peacefully. February 18 Weekend in San Antonio
As part of my internal struggle to reconcile my desire for warm weather and the inexplicable fact that I still live in MN, I decided to spend a few days in Texas this month. These weekends things are pretty easy to plan because my options are pretty limited, so there aren't a whole lot of hard choices to make. :) The process is basically this: 1. Search Marriott website for warm locations at which I can spend my rewards points. 2. Find a flight that costs about the same as my normal flight home. 3. Pack more clothes that week.
The trip was very satisfying. I took in the riverwalk, the Alamo, and a symphony at The Majestic theatre. I keep my schedule pretty light. The point was just to soak up some time in the sun. Believe me, when you live in MN, just the feeling of walking outside without a coat in February is fucking amazing. I think it averaged about 80F while I was there. I actually sat by the pool and got hot enough that I felt like swimming. Then when I got out of the water I wasn't cold! ahh....just thinking about it now brings back fond memories. (btw, it was -6F when I landed in Minneapolis yesterday. sigh)
Here's the thing though, it's not even about the location or what I do while I'm there. Just the fact that it's a new place, it's warm and sunny, and I'm by myself, is enough. I set my own agenda for the day, and deviate from it at my leisure. For example, I found an interesting book I wanted to read, so I bought it and spent time reading it in the park instead of hitting the Texas museum of art like I had planned. I got all the way to the front door and decided I just didn't feel like going inside for a couple hours. THAT is why I do these things alone! All I need is my ipod and my camera. This time I had my jasjar as well, so I could catch up on blogs along the way. :)
The ipod, btw, is key. When it comes to a soundtrack for weekends like this, I tend to lean heavily on my ambient and trance playlists. Sometimes I'll throw in some acoustic guitar\folk rock stuff, or some enya, but honestly I think Eno is great for long walks in a new place. I like to divorce myself from the bustle of the people and just contemplate the environment. I want the music to enhance my experience, not define it. Ambient, and Brian Eno's stuff especially, is all about blending into the background. It just slightly influences the tone of your day. One moment I'm hearing a tour guide explain about how people like to get married next to the river for the 150th time that day, and the next I have my headphones on and start noticing the wide-eyed faces of the kids on that boat, or the interesting way the sidewalk has worn over the years. I'm not thinking about the music at all, though it's there, I'm just more deeply aware of the sights and smells around me.
I guess that gets closer to the point. I rarely go to a place to hear it, I go to see and smell it. That's what I can't get through my home theater or music system at home.
I had one moment that made the weekend worth while by itself. I stopped for a light lunch at a hotel by the river. I served myself some amazing waldorf salad from the buffet. The sun was intense and the ice tea was freezing. The cool breeze off the river was refreshing and I sat and read from this philosophy book I had picked up. I've always meant to read more philosophy, and watching Match Point recently renewed that desire, but I find it's not until you pull yoruself out of your normal routine that you feel like getting to those long-term goals. The ipod was playing some perfect combination of uplifting vocal house At some point, sitting there in perfect comfort, with no particular responsibility at that moment, I just felt happy. I held onto that moment for quite a while. It's the kind of thing that just puts a smile on your face. I felt ridiculously lucky and grateful.
Selected photos from the trip are here. Any suggestions for my next weekend? December 05 Powder CountryIt's December again, and I find myself on another ski trip. I really thought I would do a tropical vacation this year, but Vail was so much fun last year that I ended up booking a trip to Park City, Utah. Why did I choose this particular spot? Simple, Marriott has a resort here and I have a ton of points. :) I'm uploading pics to this Flickr set. They speak for themselves. ![]() December 12 I'm HomeWell sort of. I mean, considering I live out of a hotel half the week these days, home is a relative term. I'm back in my Milwaukee home. The vail weekend was amazing. I mean, you plan these things, and you never know what you're going to get. For us, it was a fresh 11" of powder the night we arrived, and 40 degree sunny skies the second day. So basically, it was perfect. We drove through quite a storm on Thursday night. I, having lost a round of paper-rock-scissors at the company holiday party, had rented the car and was driving. I'm plenty comfortable with winter driving conditions, having spent my life in Minnesota, but mountains are a bit new to me. We made it just fine though. The traction control on the rental only kicked in once. :) Friday was our first day on the mountain. Most of the group qualify as "beginners", and all were snowboarding except me and one other. This was my first time skiing in the mountains, and I honestly didn't know well how my Minnesota experience would serve me. Amazingly, I felt pretty good. By the end of the day I was ok doing any blue, and tried one black diamond. Saturday was a skiers dream. We got a fresh dusting of snow over night. The sun came out in the morning, and it was warm and calm all day. They opened up the back of the mountain for the first time of the season, which basically means you could go on a bunch of runs that no one had touched yet this season. The back bowls are pretty much all black diamonds, but with the powder, I found I could ski about half of them with only a slight fear of death. I ended up spending most of Saturday touring around the mountain by myself, just because everyone was really at different skill levels. Skiing alone was fine though, it gets you on the lift faster, and you can do a lot more runs over the course of a day. Vail has great cell phone coverage, so it's no problem to meet up for lunch and/or drinks. So I've uploaded some pictures to a photo album here. I don't know that I'm a big fan of that format, but I'll give it a try. At least it's easy. So enjoy them. I may upload more later.
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