Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Sometimes, life takes a little while to sink in.

My husband has been back to working each day, in an office, outside our home, for over a year and a half. It sucks.

See, when we relocated to glorious Santa Barbara five years ago, we both worked from home. We were office mates, lunch buddies, and spent every day together. For three years. It was AWESOME.

But I was worried I wouldn't meet new people, or make any friends, so I joined Meetup.com, and went out to be social most evenings. Now my schedule generally follows that initial pattern. Most evenings I have extra-curriculars...and I hate it. I have turned Me into a flake, because I schedule and then don't go to things. I make excuses about being tired, needing to stay home and cook dinner, or blame it on the dog (who clearly needs a walk with BOTH me and my husband).

But that's not the real story. Thanks to my dreaming mind, I finally understand that I'm extremely resentful of my own tendency to schedule being away from home most evenings.

Like most married people who work, evenings are now the prime hubby-time. We have to talk, laugh, play games, and get things done during evenings and weekends. And if I'm not home, I get no time with him. And I feel disconnected and sad.

So if I have a New Year's Resolution, it is to drag my husband out with me every night.

Psych! No, that's not it. It is actually to try to find balance between home-social and world-social.

As an extrovert, I get plenty of "alone time" (WTF is that?!?) all day as I work alone. But my husband still needs his alone-time on evenings and weekends, and sometimes we disagree about how much he needs. Well. Sometimes how much he needs feels personal, though it isn't. Working on that too, always and forever. 

So I have to maintain some level of world-social, because that translates to his alone-time. And, of course, I don't want to blow off all of the cool friends I have made, give up the exciting groups I'm in, and miss out on the joyful adventures I have become accustomed to.

What's the answer? 
It's going to blow your mind.
Meal Planning.
Seriously. Yup.

Wait, what does the fact that I don't like anything about cooking have to do with this?

Not liking cooking, I suck at it. Prep, doing, clean up, every part of cooking is awful...except the eating. 

Going out in the evenings often involves yummy dinners out. But eating out contributes to less healthy food, portion challenges, and weight gain. As does being sad and eating emotions.

So sitting down each week to plan meals and inform the grocery-shopper (hubby) what is needed, is also a perfect time to plan how many nights will be in versus out.  Deciding who cooks what when, also informs whether ins and outs, social and solo, activity and rest are in balance. 

So there it is: my case for how and why meal planning is the 2016 resolution that will help me put my social calendar back in balance.

Wish me luck!

Saturday, December 19, 2015

The Bare Bones of Gift Giving

Pics of the housewarming gifts for my ortho surgeon friend, gamer buddy, neighbor and proud new home owner.



I have been a lot sad as thoughtful gifts have been coming my way recently. 

I feel like I haven't been doing my normal, seeing-the-perfect-thing and buying it, all the year 'round; which has been my practice in the past. 

I realize the reason is threefold: 

One, I'm grieving. Sad and tired still, as six months have disappeared in a blur since my father's death.

Two, my strolling and shopping has been greatly reduced by my lack of tolerance for crowds of people and strangers, courtesy of the sads.

Three, when I have bought or created things, they have been for me, as an attempt at escapism (to forget for awhile), or consolation (to make myself feel better).

So for all my wonderful, amazing friends out there who haven't received cards or gifts or letters or trinkets this year: I am here. I still love you. 

Soon I will be back to finding gifts like these: fun, funny, perfectly (in)appropriate little things that remind me of you; how much I love you, miss you and carry you in my heart at all times.


Sunday, October 18, 2015

Post-Event Depression

After my Dad's Memorial Dinner, I think I had a bad case of Post-Event Depression. I don't know if that's a thing, or if I made it up, but here's the idea:

Most people have heard about post-partum depression. I summarize it, unscientifically, and with no firsthand experience, like this:

A mother's body works so hard to create a baby, her mind works so hard to comprehend the work her body is doing, and her heart works so hard to grow big enough to unconditionally love a wholly defenseless human being, that once the kidlet is born, body, mind, and heart are utterly exhausted.

It doesn't happen to all women at the same level, and I hear that lots of hormones kick in, and help with preventing a total exhausted collapse...but some woman get really sad to be - comparatively quickly - separated from this really big, all-encompassing task of making a new human.

Or alternative theory: When hormones kicked in with the high of "I have a New Baby!" coming down off the euphoria wasn't far behind.

All of this makes perfect, logical sense to me. Which is why I believe in post-event depression too.

Anytime you pour your energy, heart, mind, and body, into an event, when it is done, there's a re-adjustment period. And that time can be hard.

When this is job-related, there's usually parallel activity, and/or yet another job to do up ahead, and perhaps that forestalls some of the letdown that the event is over.

Without something to turn to, or a way to return to 'normal;' Without a way to cleanse both the stress and elation reactions out of our bodies after a big event...there's bound to be some hormonal, emotional, mental kickback.

So if you've been working on a big event, be aware of this in advance. Plan for it if you can. Figure out how you can best reflect, celebrate and relish your amazing event...and then mourn, say goodbye, and return yourself to the present.

I find the re-setting really hard to do. Anyone else? Anyone have specific "re-set" suggestions?

Friday, October 16, 2015

Adventures in Dog Sitting

I'm pet sitting for a few days, and I decided to bring Dog 2 (names changed to protect the innocent) to my house for part of each day. This meant that I didn't have to make as many trips downtown while pet sitting. Besides, I live next door to the dog park! Perfect!

I may be reversing that decision. There's poison oak there. That means 2 dogs to wash instead of one. And, it turns out, Olieo is not ok with me paying attention to - aka washing - another dog. He butted in while I was washing Dog 2, getting himself (and me) all wet and muddy again. 

He nervously tries to follow Dog 2 all around the house, running back and forth to find me, as if to say, "HES STILL HERE!!!!!" It seriously interrupts my work to have him trying to get my attention all the time.

Dog 2 was not ok at the park, off-leash. He wandered off while I was throwing the stick for Olieo, and I "lost" him for a good -lifetime long- 10 minutes. Found him down a side path, being social with another owner, but he has lost his off-leash privilege. 

Dog 2 has the sweetest face, everyone takes him for a puppy. And he runs up to other dogs and dog owners, but then often starts barking at them. The, "Oh what a cute puppy! He's so adorable!" quickly turns into, "Geesh, control your dog, Lady..." Which I actually can't do. 

I always try to be the best caretaker to whomever I'm responsible for at the moment, but OMG is this a challenge!!! 

And I am going to sit here for a quiet, no-animal moment, and just be SO GRATEFUL for Olieo. For my brother's initial training, for my father's continued love and discipline of him, and for me having the presence of mind to explore, and find my boundaries.

I am NOT a dog person, and just having one amazing dog hasn't changed that. Dogs are stressful. Pets are stressful, and a big responsibility. Some are much less stressful...which is what makes me a cat person. I should stick to sitting and petting my kitty BFFFs...

EDITED: on the other hand, Dog 2 may be solar powered. He sat happily in the sunshine most of the afternoon. I am happy that he seems content at our home, and at ease with me.



Tuesday, August 04, 2015

How I See Myself

I've seen a lot of those interesting matrices of images go around FB, the one with a single topic from multiple perspectives. They always have a set of images that are contrasting and funny, "what my parents see," "what my friends see," "what I see."

I was giving that meme some thought today as I stood at the train station, because I finally have all of my watches back in working order, thanks to my awesome husband. And in this case, my watches, like so many of my clothes, are an external projection of my internal emotional or mental state.

It occurred to me, as it often does, to ponder the disconnect between how I see myself, and how the world sees me, which is the point - and the poignancy -of those memes.

So in that spirit, here is how I think most of the world sees me:



And here is how I see myself:


Saturday, July 18, 2015

July 18: Voice Acting Day 1, San Francisco, CA

A lot of my FB friends have expressed interest in hearing about the voice acting classes I'm taking through Voice One in San Francisco.



Today was the first day of my first class. I will be taking 8 or more classes in the next three weeks, during their summer intensive. Classes are 6 or 4 hours a day. The 4 hour classes have an option to take more than one per day.

In advance of the class, I had purchased the textbook written by the school's owner, Elaine Clark. I bought it on kindle so that I could pre-read and prep for the class, and then bought the in-person book today.

I was nervous about the class. I was nervous to get up and read, even though reading aloud has been my favorite thing in all the world to do since I learned how. As a kid, any chance I got to read, to any other little kids, to my little brother, to ANYONE WHO WOULD LISTEN, I took it.

So why would I worry about treading aloud? Why would I have to work to control my breathing, my shaking, and the - let's name it: stage fright - that I have NEVER had before in my whole life?

Dancing.

By The Book, as a class, is about dancing while you read. Except not the polka, the twist, or the cha-cha. Not even choreographed ballet. Those are dances with repetitions.

No, this is the HARD kind of dancing, the dancing where you listen to the music and then you improvise. Where you know individual techniques, that make up a dance, but you have to make your own pattern. Layer your own moves...That's right folks, The Vocal One School of Audio Acting is Improvisational Bellydance.

At which, I could never get the hang.
Ask my teachers.
Because I can listen to music, and I can move, but my mind goes BLANK on what to do next....how to layer, what looks good, what FEELS good. The physical moves never became ingrained enough, combined with the knowledge of the music by live musicians, combined with transitions. I couldn't hack it.

And although today was easier than that, it was HARD. It was more like dance moves, silly ones, than reading.

In our exercises this afternoon, the group played a game that anyone who has gone to camp, or done the name-game ice-breaker is familiar with: Everyone sits in a circle. The first person says, "I'm Yvette and I love Yogurt."

The next person says, "She is Yvette, and she likes Yogurt. I'm Jill and I like to Jam on my guitar."

Person three is responsible for, "Yvette, likes Yogurt. Jill Jams on her guitar, and I'm Cynthia, with a Sinful Smile."

And around the circle goes.

Now in the camp version, to be fair, usually a counselor starts AND ends the game. The person who has it easiest, also has the hardest time, the most to remember.

In class today, the person who went first did NOT also have to go last.
And instead of the memory game being about a name and an alliteration, it was about the text:

First person, go faster here
Next, slower there
You, Do some eyebrow acting
shift the weight of your feet
point to those places
smile here, not there
imagine an angry parent in front of you
display the product
breathe here and here
throw that line away
hold up three fingers
open the door

So the exercise was reading copy. Fast. Then slow in bits. Then with a wave, a wiggle, a thumb behind you, a wand in your right hand, a pat on the head for imaginary kid on your left...

It was...alarmingly different from ANYTHING I've ever done before.
I watched, and watched, and took notes.
At that point I was ecstatic that I had pre-read the book. Every little bit helped.
I thought I would jump up and read someplace in the middle, when the list of things to remember wasn't long. But as things got more and more complex, people were FAST to get out of their seats, and I was busy making notes and trying to come up with copy notations....until eventually, I was the last.

And I did. I felt stage fright. I had a hard time standing up from my front row, corner seat. Putting my book on the lectern, and propping it open was nerve wracking. I decided in addition to warming up my body (as the instructor had told us to), I would do a silent speed-through read and practice micro versions of the hand gestures.

This put the stage fright at bay. Words are my friends. They were there for me on the page. They always have been, and they always will be.

Imagine me, standing in front of the group, but NEVER taking my eyes off of the book. Man, was that weird. I mean, I'm a trainer. My thing is to look at the group and connect. But no, this reading was not for them, and they were not there. I needed every. bit. of. focus.
To read, do the actions, and get through the five sentences.
My right hand shook during part of the reading, but I made it through.

Afterward, the direction I received was to "hold it in." Because: LOUD YVETTE IS TOO LOUD
If I learn nothing from this class except when NOT TO PROJECT, it will have been worth every. single. penny. When I learn other things, even better.

I will say...because I know that anyone who goes and reads this blog is rooting for me - hard - with pom-poms and megaphone in hand...I received several compliments from my fellow students.

"What a great voice you have," said one woman in the bathroom.
"You're so good at this," someone caught me in the hall.
"You looked so relaxed up there," from the guy behind me, "I was impressed."
"You've clearly been doing this awhile, haven't you?"

Nope. The same six hours as you, my friend.

Oh, AND, 41 years of practicing reading out loud, and upside down (for kids books), and training in front of a class for almost 20 years.

So it is all new. And it is damn hard.
But it is at the same time comforting. And it is my zone.
And more than anything else, I was learning!
It was a wonderful first day.


Saturday, May 23, 2015

Day 12 Part 2 Place 27: Coleridge's House and Threatening Architecture




"The night was full of summer smells from the cottage garden and the occasional whiff of sea air which came in on the light breezes that were entertaining themselves on the coast of the Bristol Channel.

...[Richard] got up and looked over the hedge at the small farm cottage basking in the moonlight behind them. About an hour earlier Dirk had walked boldly up to the front door and rapped on it. When the door had opened, somewhat reluctantly, and a slightly dazed face had looked out, Dirk had doffed his absurd hat and said in a loud voice, “Mr Samuel Coleridge? “I was just passing by, on my way from Porlock, you understand, and I was wondering if I might trouble you to vouchsafe me an interview? It’s just for a little parish broadsheet I edit. Won’t take much of your time, I promise, I know you must be busy, famous poet like you, but I do so admire your work, and . . .” The rest was lost, because by that time Dirk had effected his entry and closed the door behind him."




Coleridge Cottage, as a setting, is not a huge part of Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, but it sounded like a fun place to visit. My accommodations in Cambridge turned out to be less then accommodating, so I decided to leave a day early and head for Somerset.

Although I had a blip of trouble getting there, it was worth it. The train from London to Taunton was easy. The connection to Bridgewater was easy. Unfortunately, the lug (and by this point I really started to understand why it is called 'lug-gage') to the Bridgewater bus station was not so easy. Bridgewater is not scenic. It is, as near as I can tell, like Sunnyvale, CA that way: lovely name, but mostly suburban sprawl. I had to ask for help and change direction three times, but unlike what I would have met in Sunnyvale, the British people I spoke to were very nice about it.

Upon arrival at the bus stop, a tiny, ancient lady asked where I was headed. I told her, and she thought we would be taking the same bus. I hung back a bit to let all the other passengers on before double checking with the bus driver. Just in front of me, the ancient lady said to the driver, "Now, you need to help this nice American lady get to Nether Stowey."

Whether because the bus driver was himself very kind, or because he had been directed to do so by the ancient lady, he dug a bus route out of a clear plastic bin on his bus dashboard. He explained that his bus did not go all the way to Nether Stowey.  He showed me the stop on the schedule, and with a slow shake of his head, shared the sad fact that a bus which would go into the little village would not be along for at least two hours.

This was all going on at just past 3 o'clock, and I had hoped to get to the cottage and have a look around before they closed for the day. 

"Where can I get a cab, do you know?"
"There's a taxi stand right around the corner," said a helpful businessman, who clearly wanted me to leave his bus driver alone so he could get on with getting him home.

There was more lugging of luggage, and here's what the taxi stand, Bridgewater, and my room in Nether Stowey looked like:


It took 20 nervous minutes for a cab to come. When it arrived, it was another 30 minute drive through hedgerows, past fields, in a direction that looked to me like there would never be a town...ever again. 

Luckily, Nether Stowey materialized around a bend, and I arrived at my B&B, merely called The Old House. Manor, the owner, was absolutely understanding when I interrupted his welcome tour to ask how late the Coleridge Cottage was open, and how far it was. He sent me running the 100 meters up the lane in plenty of time to have a peek before the cottage closed for the day.




The cottage in Coleridge's day was what I now know is termed a 'two up two down.' This table with reproduction writing samples of Coleridge's work was in a front parlor room.

Each restored room has its own docent and all of them were quite keen to talk, as I was clearly the only visitor that evening. In fact they fought over me a bit, making sure each got to fully inform me of all the goodies in THEIR room, before herding me along. They were extremely conscientious and emphasized that I must get on with seeing every room and the garden.



The first docent told me about the reconstruction of the home, and Coleridge's romantic notion of being a self sufficient farmer after being a debt ridden journalist. She talked about Coleridge's friends and patrons, in particular Mr. Poole. Even though my introduction to The Old House had been brief, I recalled that my suite was the Coleridge suite, and that the home was owned by Mr. Poole.

I shared this information with Docent #1, a lithe older lady in a smart tweed suit and golden silk neck scarf. She was quite excited. "This young lady is staying in the house that belonged to Mr. Poole," she said as she delivered me to Docent #2. 

"How exciting!" Docent #2 exclaimed, actually clasping his soft, aged hands in front of his chest and curving his trim white mustache up in a huge smile. "How lucky you are! We've never been in that house, have we, Dear?" Docent #2 then went on to explain about fires, laudanum, and all the famous poetry conceived in the very room in which we were standing.

On to docent #3, bewigged and be-breeched, who explained how very irritated Coleridge's spouse was about having to play a farmers wife, after being raised as a gentlewoman. I especially enjoyed the "reconstruction" of the kitchen, and as everyone pointed out, though everything was as historically accurate as they could make it, nothing was antique, so everything was real and touchable. Even the little mice. 




I asked all about the wig, fabric, and cut of clothes on Docent #3, and he excitedly shared all about the real-life villager that his wardrobe, wig and overall "look" was based on. He had studied the available portraits, and knew all about the man's life. It was totally geekadorable.

There was a simple, reconstructed bedchamber, and two upper rooms (added during a Victorian rebuild) that housed museum style displays.




After I wandered through these, I went out to the garden. 




Coleridge purportedly went through the fence to Poole's (first) house whenever he needed to get away from his wife and kids.



It is still a generous little garden. The docents were especially proud of their brand new new ducks, geese, and pigs.





When did chicken wire sculptures become a thing? They were really well done! I want some!

After a thorough ramble around the garden and yard, I decided to go back into the house and invite the docents to my suite at Poole's house. They had shared their enthusiasm with me and I wanted to return the favor. Besides, I might end up with nice people to have a drink, or dinner with.

The couple, docents #1 and #2, happily accepted. While docent #3 was very clearly disappointed to be told by his wife, the clerk in the gift shop, that they had to be getting home.

The three of us headed down the lane towards the B&B. Just as we were approaching an intersection in the cobblestone main street, the docents veered up and to the right. 

"No it's this way," I said, pointing in the other direction. 
"Oh dear," said docent #2 with a droop in his shoulders, "Then it must not have been Tom Poole's house. We know which house that one is - it backs up against the Coleridge Cottage."
"According to my innkeeper, it is the house Poole bought later, in order to get away from the smells of the tanneries."
"Oh! Yes?! Well, that makes sense!"
"Sorry that it isn't the house you thought, but if you still want to come and take a look I am happy to share it with you."
"Yes, let's look anyway, Dear," encouraged Docent #1, taking her husband's arm.

All together we traipsed in the back entry, up the servants stairs, and into my Coleridge Suite. While it wasn't the house they were hoping to see, both docents oooohhhed and aahhhhed. They enjoyed all of the historical documentation Manor and his wife had collected into a binder for the guests, plus the portrait of Coleridge, and the lovely room in general.


They went home to their supper instead of joining me at The Albatross for a pint, but even the brief visit was so much fun. I felt lucky that I had access to share a bit of the town and Coleridge history that they had never seen before. I went back up the road to the albatross for a very fine venison steak dinner and a tasting of several wonderful local ciders.

Everyone in London told me that if I liked cider, I needed to get out in the country and try 'scrumpy' ciders, in Somerset. Luckily for me, that's where I was! So I tried two, and had a nice buzz through the evening of cozily eating and reading and dictating before the hearth of the Albatross. 

The real winner was this cider that was the same color as the red fox on the bar mat:



Actual yellow-cheddar-cheese-colored, cloudy cider was a first for me, as was cider served warm. It was pure appleiciousness, with a pretty high alcohol content. It wasn't very bubbly at all, and it was definitely more savory than sweet. What I liked about it was that it was not bitter at all - I can't handle things that are bitter, which is why I take milk in my tea. I could taste the apple, and I could taste that it was alcoholic, but there were no other flavor distractions: it was a single, pure, mellow, flavor experience.

And, just to be quite clear: My venison steak (at the recommendation of the barkeep) was incredible:


Everywhere I went, the British chefs were doing incredible things by mashing together carrots and other vegetables. Let's face it, unlike my foodie friends and gastro-whatnotters, I like British cuisine, especially when it is simple and fresh. I'm a meat-and-potatoes, pub-grub kinda girl.

Nether Stowey is a beautiful little town with picturesque row houses, narrow cobble streets and almost nonexistent sidewalks. Oh, the joys of being able to stumble home! Damn, large distances and cars are a drag! As I walked, literally a few hundred yards from my little B&B, I had my second experience with being a solo, woman traveller: dark alleyways. Between buildings, I walked past narrow, completely dark passageways. At the first one, I automatically snapped my head left to look down into it. Into the complete darkness. That was a moment of heart-stopping fear, because I saw nothing...the street, the buildings disappeared into complete black just a foot away.

Lighting on the street was minimal, mostly coming from people's front windows. Many front parlors were lit up as residents sat watching TV or relaxing for the evening. The alternating bright windows, and the sudden darkness a few steps into the space between buildings shocked me. My mind instantly understood, in an entirely new way, wanting to have a weapon. 

Anyone in an alley would be completely hidden; They would hear a person walking, but their victim could have no clue they were there. Images of Victorian cutpurses and footpads, and the ease with which someone could be nabbed, dragged only a few feet away, beaten and robbed filled my mind. 

I took my hands out of my pockets, and moved out into the street. I told myself I was probably being overcautious. Small town, no one had warned against me walking at night, I would be just FINE...but I felt safer with more distance between me and those narrow black gaps. The footing was better in the street than on the uneven and much narrower sidewalk anyway. I saw no one between the pub and my suite. I arrived home safely, made myself tea and biscuits, and did a little writing. Even though it was a scary realization of what COULD happen, I appreciated the entirely new perspective on places without streetlights every 100 feet. Places unknown to a stranger. Places with architecture that threatened after sundown. 








Saturday, April 11, 2015

A Hummingbird Bath and The Way I Want to Die

"You are old father William," the young man said, "and your hair has become very white.
 And yet you incessantly stand on your head, do you think at your age it is right?"

 "In my youth," father William replied to his son, "I feared it might injure the brain. But now that I'm perfectly sure I have none, why I do it again and again."

Leaving Douglas Adams for a little bit of Lewis Carrol, this poem popped into my head as I was driving yesterday. And it went round and round and round and round and round in there.

I know my father has regrets about his life. It was very important to him that I go on my 424242 pilgrimage, because he wished that he had seen more of the world. I'm pleased that he was able to travel vicariously through me. (Or will have done, once I make sure he can sit at his computer and read my blog.)

The crux of the father William argument is that when you are young you don't know what is important or unimportant. And when you are old it is too late.

I refute this idea (and I have since I was young and knew EVERYTHING).

It is never too late. For example:

I fed some cats and enjoyed watching them eat their breakfast and brush against my legs in gratitude. My father could easily have done this.

I watered some plants. A hummingbird seriously considered taking a bath in the arcing water droplets. The suspense of wondering as he darted all around the sprays, "Would he take a bath? was he trying to get a drink? what is this little bird thinking? what is he doing?" Was delightful. My father could have done this.

I ate simple, sweet food, and enjoyed each bite; the mouth feel, the flavor, the sensation of infantile comfort. My father could easily have done this.

So this is what I will try, try, try to give my father in his time, however much he has:

Every moment is a dramatic and interesting story if you are watching.

When my body fails, I want to continue to have the strength to be the person who looks outward. Who sees. Who wonders. Who thinks.


Tuesday, April 07, 2015

Day 39

I'm packing up to come home to the U.S.

If you haven't followed me on FB, my Dad is ill, and I'm frankly tired of traveling. I know that I could spend the planned 7 days enjoying Vienna and Munich, but my heart isn't in it anymore. I'm done...for now.

So: 
39 days of travel
3 European countries
one 45 +/- 3 lb bag
8 packed items were unworn:

Thickest fleece scarf
Thinnest sleeveless V-neck silk tank
Ballet neckline short sleeved silk undershirt 
Nice wool slacks
Nice polka dot "professional" blouse
LBD
Headlamp
Army belt

I was only cold once when I misjudged the temperature and left my silk long underwear off. At the top of the Alps, I was just fine!



Next time I will replace the unworn items with a pair of flip flops/sandals.

I had PLENTY of underwear and socks; and sink washing, plus three real loads of laundry, got me by.

Feeling pretty great about the packing, and the best part is that I'm going from weather in the 30s to weather in the 80s, and I will be perfectly fine! Convertible pants and layers for the win!

Sunday, April 05, 2015

Day 11 Part 2 Cambridge - Place (horse) 24 & Bonus Tracks Galore!!

NOTE:
I am republishing the last few blog posts for my 42/42/42 trip as I get back into the swing of things (and find errors). I hope you enjoy!


Day 11 was full of real world places that meant a lot to Douglas Adams. Again, courtesy of the incredibly kind David Haddock, here's a blog bonus track: DNA's Cambridge, in real life!

The place he was born:


 

DNA was born in a Victorian workhouse converted to a maternity hospital. Now it is a home for the elderly.

We walked past the address on DNA's birth certificate, where his parents lived until they moved/divorced. The building had brilliant red doors, but some people were standing and talking in THE ONE door we wanted. Instead of being disruptive, I took a picture of a nearby (representativeh beautiful red door and its curving iron staircase, because the records state that DNAs parents were letting (that is British English for 'renting') the basement floor.



We walked past St. John's College, rightfully listed as #42 on the map of places in Cambridge:


Second court (unverified - sent my tour map home), which was the most likely architectural template for Reg's rooms in Dirk Gently.


The picture below shows the flat DNA shared during school, with a mate who was captain of the rowing team (can't re-check that fact, because I sent my copy of the biography home. I was tired of carrying it around). Supposedly this is it, above a hair salon. In his biography, Douglas recalls that it was a big, fancy flat instead of the usual student diggs, that they frequently had parties, and that the piano it came with was utilized extensively.


We walked by the apartment DNA shared when he wrote the Kamakazi skit that first got him noticed by a BBC producer, and where he may (or may not) have seen the name 'Arthur Dent' on his friend's bookshelf:


We went to pubs he drank in...



...And theaters he performed in. Again, I was originally going to go to Cambridge later in my journey, but David let me know that there was a 'smoker' on for the date of Douglas' would-have-been birthday, March 11. That was reason enough for me to rearrange my travel dates and go to Cambridge earlier.

With David's help, I was lucky to see extremely talented young actors performing both Cabin Pressure, and my favorite thing in the all the world, COMEDY! Especially skit/sketch comedy, and especially, random British skit comedy.



Both Cabin Pressure (which I had never heard of before) and the smoker were great fun. All the young people in the smoker were writer-performers, doing exactly what it was that DNA had gone to Cambridge to do. The bits were incredibly solid in writing and timing. There was, sadly, no program, but my favorite skits included 'Police Interrogation Tecniques,' 'Why call it "crazy" golf,' and 'Whatever you do, Don't ask the Porter for the key.' (Please note: there was no program, so I literally made up those titles based on the bits I remember liking a lot.)

Day 11 also included real world places and fun anecdotes from the filming of The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.

The house used as Arthur Dent's house in the film:


The pub...



...and the house across from the pub, owned by Nicki, the wonderful woman who owns (or manages?) the March Hare tearoom and boutique down the road. When we wandered down to the boutique to kill some time, Nicki shared with us a whole host of fun stories. Like the fact that the entire cast had taken shelter from the rain in her home. And that after doing so, on the next day of shooting, Martin Freeman got out of a big black car and waved. She and her kids quickly turned around to look behind and see who he was waving to and then realized, "Me?! It's ME that Martin Freeman is waving to!" She told us which cast members run funny, and that the neighbor who owned 'Arthur Dent's' house had gotten a whole new kitchen for letting them knock down part of his house.




I bought these pretty, pretty, pretties at the March Hare as UK souvenirs:


David and I had a wonderful drive, then we walked the village. Place 24 was a nice little field, just outside Cambridge:

"The horse walked with a patient, uncomplaining gait. It had long grown used to being wherever it was put, but for once it felt it didn’t mind this. Here, it thought, was a pleasant field. Here was grass. Here was a hedge it could look at. There was enough space that it could go for a trot later on if it felt the urge...It also quite liked the notion of spending half an hour walking alternately a little bit to the left and then a little bit to the right, for no apparent reason. It didn’t know whether the time between two and three would be best spent swishing its tail or mulling things over. Of course, it could always do both, if it so wished, and go for its trot a little later. And it had just spotted what looked like a fine piece of hedge for watching things over, and that would easily while away a pleasant preprandial hour or two."


In addition to telling the long suffering horse to avoid standing under the tree, I inspected some fine chickens, and noticed what turned out to be a lytch gate. We learned about the lytch gate because the chickens actually belong to Nicki and she knew the story.

Local town legend has it that the largish house behind hers belonged to a cardinal. His "housekeeper" (nudge, nudge, wink, wink) built a large memorial after his death, including the Lychgate, or church yard entrance. 

It was beautiful, but in some disrepair. Nicki and her family hope to purchase the land and maintain the area someday, but have had no luck so far.



















Friday, March 27, 2015

Please Hold...

...we are experiencing technical difficulties.

All of my blog days and places are drafted and ready, but I'm hitting some technology barriers.

Apps that don't work; very crashy iPads. We apologize for the delay in your regularly scheduled blog, and sincerely hope to push out our backlog of posts soon...

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Day 10 Part 1 Cambridge - Places 22 & 23: St Cedd's and The River Cam



Ten days into the pilgrimage, I left London for Cambridge. DNA was born in Cambridge, returned for college, and left us this Author's note in Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency:

"The physical descriptions of St Cedd’s College in this book, in so far as they are specific at all, owe a little to my memories of St John’s College, Cambridge, although I’ve also borrowed indiscriminately from other colleges as well. 

Sir Isaac Newton was at Trinity College in real life, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge was at Jesus. The point is that St Cedd’s College is a completely fictitious assemblage, and no correspondence is intended between any institutions or characters in this book and any real institutions or people living, dead, or wandering the night in ghostly torment."

I actually spent my first night in Cambridge awake through a night of torment. But not ghostly, more infantile. Well, infant related anyway. There was a baby in the next room. A howling baby that ear plugs could not block out. And the owners liked very much to have an early morning row as they cooked breakfast. Just below my room. At 7am. My Trip Advisor reviews will reflect what I thought of the accommodations. 

I awoke tired and cross, and did not head out until the early afternoon to see the town. As a result of the authors note, I didn't worry too much about nailing down any specific place. I just generally went and had a nice day of exploring. Of course, it turns out that when I do that, I end up in exactly the place that I need to be, Dirk Gently style.

The first college I came across was Jesus. The gates were wide open so I wandered in. And wondered around. And around, and around, and around. Then I followed my own footsteps back out.













It was a nice walk, but a very long one. I had not paid any sort of fee, or been admitted as part of any official tour, so I was very nervous about being caught. I should have learned from this first experience that the colleges keep themselves very carefully separate.

A little ways down the cobblestone streets was St. John's College, which helpfully listed a self guided tour fee. That made me feel much more comfortable, and I set off into the college that DNA attended.






These are the actual doors used to walk into the chapel. The door knobs/handles are fascinating. They look like simple pulls, however, in order to open a door, you have to twist the pull as if it was a knob. The twisting motion lifts an iron bar on the inside...and suddenly you are in an immense medieval chapel. You know, just hanging out in the immense medieval chapel. 



With some dead saint guy's remains.


Because that's how they define "holy" in ye olde England.

I really liked the ceilings and the courts.



Every court has a thick, brilliant green grass patch in it. There are signs everywhere saying do not walk on the grass. Apparently, only Dons can walk on the grass. I saw one do it! (but did not get a picture)

I did get pictures of Second Court and the most likely corner staircase that was the model for Reg's rooms: "Behind the stoutly locked outer door in the corner staircase in the Second Court of St Cedd’s College, where only a millisecond earlier there had been a slight flicker as the inner door departed, there was another slight flicker as the inner door now returned."




The self guided tour is extensive, informative, and peters out between the old and new parts of the college:

"It had been one of those light summery days when the world seems about to burst with pleasure at simply being itself, and Reg had been in an uncharacteristically forthcoming mood as they had walked over the bridge where the River Cam divided the older parts of the college from the newer."


DNA may claim that his memories have been cobbled together to create St. Cedd's, but the fact is that the place described here exists precisely in real life. There are two bridges in St. John's College that go over The River Tam. One is called Cambridge's Bridge of Sighs. The other is just a bridge. The tourists on the self guided tour (me) only get to walk the open one, with no fancy name, but they both divide the older part of the college from the newer part of the college. I'm not complaining. I walked over a beautiful bridge. Just not AS fancy.




On the other side of the bridge is "new college" which includes the world's very first Gothic Revival architecture, and some hideous, modern stone blocks. The kind you would see on a UC campus today.


Technically, BOTH of the buildings in the foreground are "new college" but one is a lot newer...

Having refused to learn my lesson wandering around Jesus college, I followed the tour out one side of St. John's and then let myself in through a gate on the other side. A man was trying to open the gate in order to wheel his elderly mother in a wheelchair out and down the road. Really, I was just lending a hand. I had assumed the giant iron gates were locked, you see. Once I realized that they were open...well, the gardens were so quiet and lovely and tempting. So I went back in and wanted around some more.



This area looked nice. 


So I sat in it.


When it got too cold to sit in one place in the shade, I started to walk in the woods.




The woods surrounded by moats. And gates. And bridges with gates. All locked.





It turned out that the reason I had been able to wander through the gardens as I had was because the gardener was mowing. He left the gates open behind him and close them as he finished. To escape, I had to creep past the caretakers cottage and the enormous, sorted green waste heaps. 

After that, just like at Jesus, I wandered out the way I had come in. This time with warmer, more magical sunset lighting for my pictures.







Video Musings Here: