Category Archives: Real Life

All Roads Lead To Home

We’re back.

@ 7,577 miles, our trip concludes in lay-low downtown San Diego. My car sits beside a rusted parking meter; a block down, the Amtrak train swings by in a hail of claxon horns. So this really is the end of the line.

It’s quite difficult to say just how significant this whole thing was; there were minor snags and maybe aspects that we’d go about differently next time — we left California with a cooler in the back and bags in the trunk, and returned a disheveled mess, carrying this very peculiar sense of hope. A traveler’s high.

3 and a 1/2 weeks on the road. We’ve found out that the two-lane highways have their own brand of siren song. Something about freedom. And learning to trust yourself.

* * *

Jul 02 Welcome home party.

Jul 03 Focus @ Tapas with Willis, Kat.

Jul 04 Independence Day celebrations, BBQ (haha), fireworks.

Boston, New York City

Still alive.

Made it to the big time, coast to coast with 4000+ miles on the trip odometer and the adventure continues! After a brief sojourn in Niagara Falls on the Canadian side (and an unexpected night of buzzed miniature golf), we slipped down to Boston for a couple days, taking up residence at Chandler Inn in South End district. We left the car in a garage and took to the streets, from our homebase up the freedom trail to Bunker Hill, all over Newburry Street and Chinatown, through Boston Commons, and into Cambridge, passing MIT and winding up in Harvard. Shout out to Ted (friend of cousin from OC), the first familiar face I’ve seen on the trip. Thanks for dining with us! Our last day in Boston, we returned to my car to find the battery dead. AAA came by with roadside assistance, their conclusion: somebody (me?) left the light on for 3 days. Since my battery had collapsed earlier in Boulder, Colorado, we decided not to take anymore chances. Forty minutes out of town, I pulled off and replaced the sucker.

So right now we’re in New York City, a drive billed as 3 1/2 hours from Boston but wound up to be 8 due to traffic. Don’t need a car here, having one around is more hassle than its worth. This has got to be the funnest and most action-packed city we’ve been in so far. Met up with some college buddies for lunch, Cindy and Coleman, and explored the subway systems, the water taxi. Hooray to the first decent Chinese food in weeks. The Statue of Liberty is much smaller than I had imagined it to be. Later tonight, we will look into meeting up with aforementioned buddies and also with some other folks for nightlife fun. Partying is serious business here. One of the clubs that’s been on my list is actually opening their doors at 4 AM and pounding it out until noon. Hence, we are back at our hotel, Sofitel, and supposedly busting some ZZZs. David’s snoring away already.

Pizzos.

* * *

Long night. Buddies couldn’t make it. Toast to new friends, Lynn and Lisa, for long conversations, bar hopping, and street wandering until dawn. Club was bunk but everything else was perfect. Just made it back to the hotel, 6:30 AM, sleepy time.

Cleveland, Beyond Chicago

A dozen mosquitoes and one cigarette
Beside a hotel light, we watched the fairies dance,
Disappear

* * *

I’m standing outside, plotting the next step. Sore all over, from sitting in one position too long, from walking all over Chicago, from sleeping on strange mattresses every night. I never knew that a car seat’s microfiber can chafe so bad. We’re at 3000 miles now and it’s funny to think how I had intended to solo this trip, but David has proved to be an excellent travel companion, a great source of conversation to keep the mind active. We’ve crossed huge swathes of land and discovered a thing or two about ourselves. Who would’ve thought.

So last night, we got to a talking about what we’re going to do when we return home in a couple of weeks. I confessed to a mental breakdown; the recent weeks / months / years preceding this trip had been particularly rough, isolating. Hence, the incessant drinking and disappearing acts. It was strange analyzing when that fear crept in, how I had become frightened of living. A person can blame everything but himself.

Long story short, there’s a point where you have to accept responsibility. Something may have happened but your reaction is your own doing just as it is your own triumph. Choices. So. I still don’t know what I will be doing. But there’s a couple weeks left and maybe when I get back, I’ll have a better way of finding out. Here’s to newfound independence and a lighter load. A pleasant night.

* * *

Where we’ve stayed at since last post:

06/11 Denver, Colorado

06/12 Rapid City, South Dakota

06/13 Rochester, Minnesota

06/14 – 06/16 Chicago, Illinois

06/17 Cleveland, Ohio

Route 66

DAY ONE :: 06/09

Left San Diego around 9 AM for a last minute detour to Orange County (see previous entry on ridiculously expensive guides). Our first stop was Williams (originally intended to be Flagstaff), Arizona, conveniently situated along our main road of choice, Route 66, where we have set camp for the night and taken in the local scenery. Great steaks and a staged gunfight. We’ve seen plenty of dirt and ‘interesting rock formations’ (our tag line for the trip so far) and tomorrow, we will head north for an hour to the Grand Canyon.

DAY TWO :: 06/10

In Alburquerque, after 1000 miles logged. We hit the road early, enjoyed a breakfast of cinnamon cereal, partook in the natural wonder that the Colorado River has wrought. Along the way to our current resting hole, we also stopped at a real-life Meteor Crater. It’s big. Right now, we’re pretty beat. Morale is high. Not much partying yet which can wait until we get to the East Coast. A change of plans is sending us to Boulder, Colorado, tomorrow and the day after, Rapid Falls (to Mount Rushmore), South Dakota.

San Diego, Prelude

It occurred to me as I hit the 805 / 5 interchange that I may have forgotten something. And not just anything but something really important.

Shit. The travel guides.

Luckily, I remembered. Unfortunately, by then, I was 60 miles south, arriving at my friend’s apartment, and the day’s activities will have already been in mid-swing. After the party, in several hours time, we will be on our way to Flagstaff, Arizona, the first leg of a month+ long roadtrip across this strange and beautiful country. And then New Mexico. And from there, wherever. Chicago. Boston. New York.

If you’d like a postcard (memory-willing), send your address to fan777 at gmail.com.

* * *

06/07 Hooray to Raveonettes and cover band, Midnight Movies.

05/31 Hooray to Nico Vega and cover band, Coto Normal.

Weekend in Brief 19

May 25 Detroit Bar for house jams with local DJs, Wobs and Nonfiction.

May 26 L.A. revelry in Hermosa Beach @ Il Boccaccio. Slumber party.

May 27 Sunday brunch w/ Grandma and friends, and car-pooling back up the 5 to swank central @ Area.

* * *

Something I have learned about myself is that I am becoming increasingly, alarmingly claustrophobic.

* * *

Just earlier, he had shoved a stumbling drunk out of the club. I had seen him with his flashlight, the walkie-talkie antenna jutting out his jacket: a big, black bouncer looming over a tangled mass of dancing, gyrating bodies.

I am leaning against a transparent wall, eyes half closed, smoking. He is now standing perpendicular to me and raises an eyebrow as if to query my state of intoxication.

“I’m not digging this crowd.”

He leans aside. And then his grin becomes a deep, bellowing laugh. He turns, pats my shoulder, walks back toward the jungled limbs of beautiful, perfect people. Thinking it strange this small black-haired kid might feel out of place in an all Asian club.

* * *

She passes, short brisk steps, I’ve never met her before but in mid stride, she pauses to lift the brim of my cap and smiles. She leans in, sweet perfume, and whispers something in my ear. Then she’s gone.

* * *

“Did that hurt?”

“This?” I point at my brow piercing.

“Yea, ’cause I’m thinking about getting one.”

“It hurt. Real bad. Blood was streaming down all over my face. They couldn’t get it through the first time.”

“Holy shit.”

“But it was worth it.”

Weekend in Brief 17 & 18

Inhale. There’s a message to the whole ordeal, how the mind is convinced that the meaning of life can be a thin, white line. It’s immediate. It’s absolute. It’s never again.

* * *

Apr 20-22 James’ BDay Lunch / Get-Together. Allen’s BDay @ ??? (forgot) in L.A. downtown.

Apr 27-30 S.D. / Morena / Red C / Confidential Room. Wine tasting in Little Italy / Apartment Afterparty.

May 01-06 S.D. / Bar West. Bub’s Dive Bar. Etc. Etc. Etc. Couch surfing.

* * *

What I learned on the rooftop, or peering into the cubist jungle of concrete, waiting for the dreamers to finish playing with boundary definitions on arcs of light, is that I am precariously placed on a ladder, dangling feet over unending space; in the sink far below behind a yellow painting of a window are dozens of glassware stained with liquor and reddish wine, lipstick, tumblers of it and stems on vines, all waiting to be soaked in soapy suds (but that comes later, after this devastating high mellows to a gentle rumble). It is a frightening realization of the city, its growling exhaust collecting into consciousness, collective intent slipping through hairy streets and mucus-lined homes towards some towering sin; I am made to feel indistinct, brown / gray / faded blue; all the while, there is a schism forming in my center, one part swinging about the air and the other tugging towards a zen minimalist interior, the room adorned by clarity, pagan warmth. So you left, and I hung about stuttering in the apartment; my halves heard you colliding against streetlamps, shouting that we are all the same but different cells pumping different hollow thoughts, suddenly I cannot help but overwhelm the ceiling with natural affection, eyes catching on so many hooks until they rest on two bamboo sticks crossed natural like a lounging nude. My stomach is beginning to ache but the last door is shutting and slowly, ever so softly, everything inanimate learns to exhale.

* * *

Met so many different people, I had to become wallpaper, watching with great interest at how words are formed to create spotted and blue-speckled rapport.

Do Not Forget

how you felt on the last day flying back from Paris and, high above the cloud cover, pursuing the sunset into an endless horizon; or even before, the overnight coach along the Riviera and sleepless, staring through diaphanous curtains at glowing raindrops of headlights melting.

is this how you will remember it, months afterwards and dreaming, when all the details have left you and only that yawning veil stays to frighten you, like everything else in your life worth notating yet still unbound, intangible emotions through heavy fog flickering on this binding screen. in fear, memory departs.

the ache in your feet is restless, worn to shape by narrow streets, charting Milan and floating Venice, so many cities and rest stops between them; alas, against all the trees these names and places without grain or picture. is it remembered.

in Paris:

The woman leaning out her window and waving a red scarf is like a bird on a branch singing out a scarlet song. She does not see me framed by these curtains gasping through the panes of my hotel window, inlaid upon the face of a gray building, and risen up into the sky. I cannot decide if I am watching a woman or really an animated postcard.

Her voice carries out to me though, rushing through the traffic below where the valley of buildings converge to narrow rivers paved cold with rain and wet eyes gleaming on metal hulls of swift-moving movement, oiled over like an Impressionist’s dream. Past the pale cars, her voice beckons, a lithe finger.

Quite suddenly, I am in love.

a ten day dream and only these carrion phrases remain, scrawled on the back of a paper receipt in a dimly lit hotel room. quite suddenly indeed, quite suddenly i am sick with longing for actions and events gone to obscurity.

in love with a darkening Continent.

[Original Post Date: 10/30/2004]

Sleepless in Nevada

“We need to go back to the hotel. Now.”

“Now? I still have some code to wrap up.”

“Because… you know…”

“Huh?”

“I didn’t take my medication last night.”

“Yea, you went to sleep at like, 7 PM. So what happens if you don’t take it?”

“The voices tell me to kill.”

* * *

“Are you serious?”

“No, I’m joking. I just get sad.”

With Neverland Gone

I was twelve when I pulled my first all-nighter. Up until then, I went to bed every night and woke at some prescribed time to the morning regimen of teeth-brushing and ritualistic ablutions. A certain number of hours would pass in between the moments when my head touched down on the pillow to when it rose; in the end, no matter how late I slept, those hours were lost, surrendered to the incomprehensible darkness of repose; it was as if they never belonged to me, maybe never even existed. Dawn was merely a binary passage of light.

As with many accidental things, I never intended for it to happen. I enjoyed childhood and passed many languorous afternoons scuttling the streets with similar aged neighbors, coasting down hills on our bikes, or lounging behind a sofa deep inside a book. On occasion, we might procure a kite from nearby markets and sail it into the sky, watching it twist with the vagaries of the atmosphere. Invariably, this joyful contraption would be lost, either to a tree or to jealous gusts that might wrest it from our fingers. But oh, when it was in our hands, we could hear the universe hum!

So the days passed. Exhaustion and night were inextricably linked. I was content enough to succumb. That day however, and it was a Saturday, my mother and her mother expressed a desire to visit a family friend with us, children, in tow. The folks whom we were to see were especially intimate with my grandmother; in fact, they had given my father his first professional job upon graduation in the States. We had to pay our respects as, owing to Chinese tradition, we were in their generosity’s debt. Young as I was, I knew a little something about tradition and respect. Respectfully, I complied.

I remember very little about the day. But I do remember the drive (though I had my eyes closed as I was prone to bouts of car sickness), veering towards some gibbering land on a swathe of foul smelling highway; it passed along as a series of curves, a thrumming lull, and finally, to lurching gaps that conjured an offramp and traffic lights. I also remember a mansion, the view and guest houses beside a pool, tennis courts on the lower level of the yard. Outside of these momentary snapshots, nothing else of significance remained. Then, there was the five-pound bag of golden toffees, candy that made my siblings wrinkle their faces but brought such a sweet effusion of delight to my mouth. So I ate the entire bag, leisurely.

Of course, there was the night. After some length of time, we returned home and there we were, a troupe of slapsticks trudging up the stairs with each of us pushing on the other’s back. Curled on my bed, I watched my brother fall asleep next to me. However, the memory of those toffees remained, and with them, the bits and pieces of caffeine percolated through my veins, warding off the lethian chill. Night fell and I did not fall with it. Perhaps it was the sugar but I had never beheld a more aberrant evening; the wind howled and rapped the windows, pawing to get in. Through a crumpled corner where the blinds had jammed up, a face peered in and watched me watching it.

A face! It was a grotesque face, leering like a devil, but I do not recall reacting with any kind of fear. It may have been a spirit (more likely it was shadowplay of the plum tree flickering outside) but then I was no stranger to spirits either. One night, in the yellowed days of rural Taiwan, when my sister and I were placed in the charge of various grandfolks as our parents struggled in California, a veiled woman appeared at my bedside and beckoned me to rise. I did not. She, sensing my hesitation, opened a closet door and stepped into a brilliant landscape of lush meadows and cherry blossoms. When she turned to me again, I promptly shut my eyes and fell asleep.

Sometimes I wonder what might have befallen had I stepped into that other world, if they would find me with blank eyes and a mouth of foam. Courage requires a deal of purposeful imbecility; I was only capable of blind stupidity. Fortunately, there was no veiled woman this time; instead, a doorway opened in my own head and I saw something even more magnificent: the infinite array of futures lined up before me! I was twelve, the intricacies of the beyond should have never entered a youngster’s mind, least of all mine; but there they were, the woman I was to wed, the children I would rear, and the manifold adventures I might embark on. It was completely, utterly dazzling!

I saw myself destitute and broken, a beacon and strong, dying, alive, in school, and on the streets. It was all there. That whole night, I studied the face in the window and saw every single iteration. Maybe I was meant to choose, then and there, and follow fate to an inevitable conclusion; but they all appealed to me, even tragedy, perhaps even more so because the pleasures and potential were all the greater. Had divinity approached with an offer of greatness and had I spurned it out of indecision? How could I choose? I couldn’t! But that night, I knew a glimmer of what was possible.

An ending came as endings do, the birds began wharbling their strangled cries, loudest in the hour before sunrise and softer as the sun asserted itself. In the second that I turned to ponder the growing definition of ceiling and vision, the face vanished. It was so sudden, I crawled out to the glass pane, pushed aside the blinds, and peered about to determine the source of this figment. Nothing lay beyond, only a purple-inked sky becoming diluted with waking movements. In this manner, I pulled my all-nighter, brushing my teeth, fumbling about the knobs for hot water and soap and bottles of shampoo.

Since then, I have had my share of sleepless nights, learned the proper appellation to these visions and called them for what they were, daydreams. Defused the magic. But the feeling of choice, the wondrous sensation of knowing that life was mine to decide, well, I’ve only felt it twice since. Once was the day prior to leaving home for higher education over half a decade ago. And the other was yesterday, when I submitted my resignation letter to the boss and knew I was holding the kite again.