Only two and a half months after the fact, here’s the exciting story of our recent road trip to Chicago, Toronto, and Detroit.
Year: 2007
The Little Things
Sometimes it’s the little things that make you happy after a long day dealing with family crises, things like discovering that Boomerang is running Wait Till Your Father Gets Home reruns in the middle of the night. Or realizing that the microphone input on your G5 actually accepts a line-level input as well, thus sparing you one of the more time-consuming detours in your vinyl digitizing journey.
Family Crises
After thirteen years on the other end of the country, it’s sometimes strange being so close to home again. There are small and inisgnificant aspects, like the fact that my mom tells me about sales at stores I can actually go to, and that we discuss local news stories on the same channels and in the same newspapers. There’s also the disorientation that comes when I realize that I’m living in the same general area where I spent so much of my early life, but not in the same city; my hometown is thirty miles away, and it still feels like a bit of a road trip to visit it.
The thing that’s hardest to get used to, though, is the fact that family crises have suddenly become much less abstract and much closer to my everyday exisitance. When a close relative is sick or has a problem, I’m expected — not just by my family, but by my own conscience — to be there and offer help when I can. It’s inconvenient and unpleasant, but it has to be done. That’s how families work; I know that if I ever have issues myself or with my own parents, my extended family will help me out as well.
Right now, it’s an uncle who had a stroke last week and clearly can’t take care of himself, but seems determined to do so anyway. It’s an issue that’s going to make my parents’ lives miserable for weeks and months to come. My uncle’s illness and my mom’s new computer have taken up a lot of my time over the past two weeks. But I guess it’s an investment; my turn for help might be next.
It was a lot easier being 3000 miles away, to be sure. All in all, though, I’m still glad to be home. And at least I’m far enough away that I’m not usually the first one called in a crisis.
Heaven Is a Place on Fifth Street
Yer Humble Host at the Kopper Kitchen in downtown Winston-Salem Friday morning.
You can pretty much tell just from the color of the booths that the place is pretty close to my idea of heaven. It’s one of those ancient eateries in a slightly run-down low-rise building on the periphery of downtown. Most of today’s planners and downtown boosters would want to raze the place and replace it with some sort of shiny, overplanned “mixed-use” complex (with loft condos, of course) because that would, by definition, be more “urban”, right?
Yeah. Right.
Randomly Thursday
Random Thursday stuff:
- Why yes, I do find it alittle ironic that the “The Streets of San Francisco”, which was produced by Warner Bros. and aired on ABC, is being released on DVD under the Paramount and CBS labels. But I’m glad it’s happening, anyway.
- I’m very much hoping my new hometown has the good sense to reject those special delusions of grandeur that only a publicly-financed stadium built on the site of a bulldozed, poor, black neighborhood can provide. Is it 1957 again? Has Robert Moses risen from the grave and landed in Winston-Salem? God, I hope not.
- In case you haven’t visited lately, Groceteria now features a new photo journal on the front page. I’ve been pretty good about keeping it up so far.
- Also, someone has a whole new site. He writes about ballparks there too. I’ve limited my remarks to a certain message board where I should probably know better than to try challenging people’s definitions of “urban”.