Good Evening, Friends of Life.

Last Saturday I skated in my first contest. I felt very ambivalent about skating it, which is to say I felt terrified and curious. I actively avoid competition (besides a good, abusive dose of competition with MYSELF) in most realms, including my adult swim team. I never go to meets or other bro-downs in which those super-alpha swim beasts toss their shoulders into the drink to win medals. It’s too nerve-wracking and I am a simple beast who thrives in the absence of pressure, not with its embarrassment (do you get it I mean I don’t thrive under pressure. Good one!). When I stopped at the entrance to the park the lady working the contest implored me to enter, despite my being a relatively new skater (just shy of three years) and somewhat elderly (39 years old). She reminded me that the more people who entered the contest, the more important women’s skate events would appear to the city/people with money. ENOUGH SAID. I am desperate to see skating further proliferate the world of gals in sports.

I entered both the mini-bowl competition and the skull bowl competition. I knew I would not skate the skull. I hadn’t dropped into that bowl in over a year, and last time was at the end of a long skate day and I beefed in the deep end about ten times, effectively rearranging my bones and perhaps leading to this relentless fatigue. I know I can skate it, but I don’t want to reacquaint myself in front of a giant audience and the pressure of competition. Horrible.

I entered the park and saw my deeply great friends Patty and Ray. We rode the mini-bowls. I focused on the amoeba because most people wouldn’t skate that and it’s the most fun bowl to me. I didn’t think there was any way I could be great in the contest; this isn’t false humility, I just don’t have the skills or tricks. While warming up I hit a sweet frontside double axle grind. I was very excited, especially because the grinds I hit are almost always backside. Doors open in a woman’s life.

I ran into a guy I often see at the park. He is nice.

Him: You skating in the contest?
Me: Yeah, I’m gonna slaughter some 8-year-olds in the mini-bowl.
Him: You’re funny.

I love that approach of observation rather than participation in humor. It feels so wonderfully flat. Most people want to jump on-board and power-josh the night away. Not this guy. He wanted to leave me alone on my little joke island to laugh at my own farts. As with many things, I don’t relate to it at all, but I appreciate it in others.

A couple hours and tacos later, we gathered for photos in the first mini-bowl. There were a couple lines of us. A couple people made cracks about getting manicures and pedicures later. That bummed me out. I wanted to just gather and be skaters, not make fun of the fact that we were female skaters. It’s frustrating that the female-ness needs to be highlighted so vigorously. I get why that’s necessary, but I feel like by the time we’re at the contest and everyone who is going to come is there and everyone who is going to compete is there, let’s let it be what it is: a contest. The world won’t let us just be seen as skaters (yet), so when we create our own environment (this competition), let’s enjoy our power to define it as a skate contest, the end.

Then the contest began. First was the mini-bowl competition, and first up were the under-18 girls. It was a pink explosion, which was a bummer bomb for me. Hot pink shirts, hot pink helmets, hot pink grip tape, hot pink decks. WHY. You know that I carry no truck with pink in and of itself. But it barfs me out that skateboarding for little girls means aligning the sport with dolls and flowers. I know a lot of little girls (AND WOMEN) love to nest in pink everything. But when it crops up as a group, particularly a group aligned with a skate brand called Silly Girl (a dismissive label if there ever was one), I think it blows. I just can’t get excited about skating as a wholesome sport, or as something with too much structure and hand-holding. I loathe seeing parents in a skatepark who are taking up a lot of space and being entitled about their kid’s learning process. If parents are going to participate in a child’s encounter with skateboarding, I think they should learn how people use a skatepark and learn to operate cooperatively with the people already there. More ideally, I think kids should get into the park and the parents should sit on a bench outside while they learn (unless their parents also skate, in which case all these rigid rules are null and void in reverence for the great institution of Skate Families). Things should not be easy for kids or anyone all the time. Whatever happened to BUILDING CHARACTER?

So anyway. Just my opinion. I’m sure you guys are all happy and agree to it. One of the girls eschewed the pink and accented with purple. I appreciated that. Also she was an incredible skater. Naturally I don’t remember anyone’s name. Although there was a super cute 8-year-old named Bryce who was KILLING IT in the mini-bowls, festooned in pink, including a couple hot pink stripes under her eyes. She had a fabulous scowl that made it all okay. Cranky girls of the world, I salute you. I salute every non-user-friendly moment you can muster. Every time you don’t know how to look like a dumb model in a picture, every time you’re not ready with a super sweet comment and every time you decide not to take care of the world, my helmet is off to you. A little less nurturing, a little more Fuck You. The general vibe of men’s skating is super playful, irreverent, gross, corporeal, and deeply devoted to the sport. I want to see more of that in girls and women. I don’t know if it will ever happen in a sport that so greatly risks bodily harm. But I dream of the day when lady jackasses will rise.

So the girls skated and then the over-18 division started. I was first. I skated conservatively. But I DID IT. That was a miracle. I somehow created a physical and mental state that blocked out most of the pressure. What little I felt translated into not hitting my grinds like I should have. I didn’t hit any frontside and only hit one backside. I wish I had done more but still, I can’t believe I participated at all. My friend Patty hit all the bowls and threw in a backside rock and some sweet frontside grinds. I don’t remember what else because what the hell is anything called? We each took two runs, and in my second run I jumped in the middle bowl too. No tricks there, just carving around. Oh well. I found out later I placed 7th out of 10 and Patty placed 3rd. It was truly thrilling. Although one of those people in the ten was this woman who seemed like maybe she had been on a skateboard twice in life and was maybe more of a ham than a skater. Her bravado was delightful and unnerving.

After the mini-bowl competition there was a big break in which a couple bands played. One was a sort of punk band called Medusa. It seemed like a band that would be on a TV show. Then a young lady with a name sang three songs. They were very tender and emotional. It made me extremely uncomfortable. I couldn’t help but think how such a thing would never happen at a contest that wasn’t all-female. It was music suitable for an intimate setting. Outside at a skatepark truly blew my mind. I wish this person and any decent human the best. Maybe I even wish the best for the world’s shitheads because then maybe they will feel better and be less of a shithead. Am I being nurturing? Forget it.

The skull bowl competition started and I felt nervous about getting pressure to compete. Then I felt completely and hugely inspired watching everyone skate. I didn’t ride it myself, and they let me off easy enough. Blackheart was one of the judges, and he heckled and hassled like a true skater. I’m very glad I went and proud that I participated. I was the oldest person in the contest!!

There We Were

Good Afternoon, Citizens of the World!

What did you do for the month of December? I ate meals and also traveled, plus pet my cats and occasionally showered. Perhaps most notably, I went to Baja for Christmas. Baja! Well it conjures images of brosephs in bro-dozers looking for a bro-down! Is that all it is when you are American in that part of Baja? Just automatic transformation into a dick at the border? Certainly not! A dick is a dick anywhere and wonderful skateboarders are wonderful everywhere. So I hope I have disabused you of your stereotypes and let you in on a great way to think.

The Grey Ghost Rides




Bob, Jen and I packed up the magical grey ghost (Bob and Jen’s VW camper van no-Beethoven) on Monday, December 19th. It took quite a bit of time to get out of town so we hit the Bay Bridge at 1:30 in the afternoon, headed for Manteca where Victor and his son Taj were waiting to meet up with us. What do you do in Manteca? You have a generic experience of bouncing between fast food chains and car parts chains. You feel like there is no you because it is so damn hard to know what is inside you anyway and then the external cues are so ubiquitous it’s no help. There you are. A person.

We rolled through a series of cul-de-sacs in Manteca with beige houses and offensively boring landscaping. We were nowhere and somewhere. The streets were all named after Swiss things like Alps. There was no aesthetic tie-in. If the whole area had been Swiss chalets, A-frames with mountain goats and  a chocolate river, I would have totally approved. But it seems like every time I seek out a chocolate river, the world gives me a big NO in the face. How rude.

Packing up

We met up with Victor and Taj. We transferred their surfboards to the top of the van. We stowed their boon of Cup-o-Noodles in a cabinet. We took on more beer. We pointed the van toward Long Beach and hit the road, knowing we wouldn’t get to town with enough sun to skate. We bought coffee at a popular chain with a woman on the cup. The woman is half fish and has luxurious hair.

That night we stayed with an old skater friend of Bob’s from Virginia Beach, and his girlfriend. The girlfriend could have been in an Irish Spring commercial as she strongly looked to be of that ethnic background. Lots of freckles and blondish reddish hair and thin lips. I am stereotyping. People come in all sorts of surprising packages/cakes. They were both extremely lovely and best of all they had a black cat who looked exactly like my black cat. I was immediately filled with passion upon seeing this animal. I had already started to miss my cats about two minutes after leaving the house. Do you know what it is to love? I do.

The next morning we had leisurely coffee and oatmeal. We made our way to Channel Street to skate before we met up with Ray and Patty and hit a backyarder. I LOVED Channel Street. We rolled up into the parking lot under the highway where the usual panoply of broken glass, homeless people and skaters were hanging out. There were several bowls in a row built by the hands of skateboarders. The greater area has railroad tracks, the highway, and a shipping port not too far off. It is a working class neighborhood. What I hear is that the skaters started building the place, the city wanted to tear it down, but a bunch of parents got involved and now the city works with the proletariat to keep the park viable. There were a bunch of kids skating. Everyone was very nice. There was a lot of flow to the handmade transition. I felt a rumbling interior joy.

Dropping in at Channel Street

Dropping in at Channel Street

After Channel Street we headed south to a backyarder owned by a friend of our friend Ray. We decided to drive along the coast to see all the beautiful Starbucks along the way. We stopped for Mexican food. Perhaps an interesting choice showing great enthusiasm for the form, considering we were heading for Mexico where ostensibly we would have an embarrassment of Mexican food. Nothing like laying a meat base to welcome the coming storm.

To be continued!

Oregon Skate Trip Day 3

Good evening and my apologies for the delay. I had hoped to get all four entries up on consecutive days but in the spirit of the sentiment found on bumper stickers and in framed colorful drawings you can buy at the farmer’s market, life happened! It happened while I was making other plans and I made the god laugh. I have logged some emotional blunders and some really remarkable moments, most whilst in communication with my cats. Not true! I meant while hanging around naked with my friends. Oh boy I guess I just don’t know what I meant when I said “remarkable moments.”

ANYWAY. We woke up our third day and hit the road after eating some delicious eggs and having our first two cups of coffee. We started down the Oregon coast and were immediately so overpowered and delighted by the beauty of the green, fog and water. I hung my face out one of the windows in the sliding door of the van and let the wind punch me in the face for miles while we wended through tall trees, little towns and seafood shanties. My cheeks blew around like discarded plastic bags caught on some rebar in an empty lot. Thank you!! I sat back and we slid the van door open while we drove. I hadn’t done such a thing since Sister Spit rolled through Manhattan on a hot summer day with no A/C in 1997. We hurtled down Highway 1 and watched the damp fly by and hoped the Lincoln City park would be dry.

It was! At least at first. We rolled up and the first thing I saw was some lady shredding the pool. She had a long, dark brown braid and tight jeans. Everyone in the van leaped out and started investigating the place with great enthusiasm. There are many levels and areas and qualities of concrete. I skated the big bowl under the shelter until it started raining at a 45 degree angle and then when I got into the deep of the bowl I slid out and banged my tailbone. Which was fine, really. We got back in the van.

Our quest for sun and concrete landed us at Newport, where there is a sorta rough old park that has many bowls connected to each other and then a big piece of that square metal stuff used to frame buildings propped up on the side so you can board slide it for the rest of your life. It’s very long. There were two kids there, about 10 and 12 years old, who could not have been more bored by our existence. One of them had a board in the shape of a coffin, but a pinner, not some giant Creature board. When Bob or Yong-Ki or whomever it was asked the kid about his board it was like asking if he would please eat a pile of melting fish oil capsules. Regardless, they were really cute. We didn’t stay too long.

Next we went to Waldport, which was a beautiful park tucked in a grove of tall trees dropping needles everywhere. It is a sweet park. Lots of flow, a fun bowl, and it feels like you’re in a movie where horses are the main mode of transportation and your sword has a name. I skated this a little bit but was having a fatigue brought on by being a human with feelings. When will it END.

The last park of the day was Florence. It is large and in charge. I took one run which was super fun and then could not replicate it. I kept body slamming and getting frustrated. There were pasty kids on bikes and an inter-gender couple laying together on top of some part of the park. I felt full of rage at some parts of my life (hard to figure out how to be more generic than that), full of sadness, and I felt frustrated by not having more skills in the realm of skating. I spazzed out hard, threw my board, just completely made an ass of myself in a public setting. I wanted to break something and be set free by the finality of destruction. I wanted feeling to come back into my body. It was hard and intensely embarrassing. It is hard to be around people when I would normally choose to melt down alone in my room, over-think something then watch a movie and reflect on the superior quality of my relationship with my cats. Also I would make a truckload of popcorn and get nice and sick on it.

We went out for Thai food then found a campground. There was BEER happening. We rolled into our spot in the dark and quiet, then piled out of the van and set up tents. Then stood around and talked and made weird things up including figuring out what our skate spirit animals are. I will say that I am a narwhal. Goes well with GNAR-WALL. Though I wasn’t thinking of that when I chose it. At some point a gentleman appeared on a bluff above us and asked us to quiet down. Everyone immediately capitulated and apologized and started cleaning up. It seemed like the guy was so surprised that we weren’t jerks that he hesitated after we agreed to quiet down then asked, “Are you going fishing tomorrow?” We were not. There were a bunch of raccoons rooting through the garbage.

The mornings were all cool but not painful. When we woke I made scrambled eggs and bacon for our crew and Bob made coffee. All right in the van! Can you imagine! I walked down to the lake which was about a hundred yards away. I walked out on a dock then stood and looked at the dark green water, the towering trees and light blue sky. Two fisherman futzed around nearby, getting ready to put their boat in the water. I pleaded internally to stop feeling anything at all, or at least stop feeling cruddy. The best solution I’ve found to feeling bad (besides skateboarding) is to witness something beautiful or important that is bigger than me. People who truly suffer, giant trees, bodies of water. Animals. I looked for a good feeling. It took some time but I found it.

Oregon Road Trip cont.

So anyhoo, after Junior’s we headed to Gabriel skatepark in Portland. No that’s not true! First we went to the Brooklyn Street spot. That was ABSURDLY FUN. It is a small spot at the end of a street and under a footbridge. The tranny is low sort of pool-ish coping…I think. Maybe I would not make a good police officer because I was there and looked around and I don’t remember. If ever I witness a crime I will just say it was some jerk teenager with an axe to grind. But anyway, there were two young Russian men there skating and taking photos. Check out the place:

The sweet little street spot I could have skated for many more hours.I guess the coping is more like noping, and it’s the tight bowl at the top that has pool coping. But anyway. It took me a while to warm up and get the place but once I did, it was pure pleasure. The Russian boys were thrilled to be in Oregon where there are so many skateparks. They said they grew up skating street because that’s all there was, though they said slowly some parks are being built. They will have a lot of ammo with which to taunt their soft and useless children whose arms will be forever slim sticks with which to poke at the air where the hologram of their keyboard exists. Bacon skateboards is next door and the distribution house for several skate brands. There was a “Keep Skateboarding Gay” board I didn’t see but heard about later. I am hoping to have it sent to me. It is sorta lame in light of the fact that there is so much homophobia in skateboarding, and it’s hard to know with what spirit the board was made. Maybe it was made by wonderful, loving and evolved humans who want to be provocative because they see how terrible it is to have so much homophobia anywhere, much less skating. I will purpose this board with positivity and won’t that be a major victory. Maybe after that I’ll buy vitamins at a discount.

We left Brooklyn Street for Gabriel skatepark. Oh my WORD! It was extremely enjoyable. I don’t have any photos. I had been there once before, earlier in my development as a skateboarding older woman. Today I hit some solid frontside grinds, which was super exciting. We all had fun. Then we noticed a fantastic skater who I called The Frenchman, or Senor Baguette. He was probably about 29 years old, looked a lot like Jesus (the guy in Christianity), had a navy blue horizontally striped boatneck shirt on with navy blue pants, braided leather belt, Chuck Taylor’s and a flat old-school board with a short nose. He was KILLING IT. He led a line for Bob to follow and, unlike most people, gave Bob a good time. We had lunch sitting around the van and it started to rain.

We drove to Burnside. A pilgrimage. We got out of the van and there was a lady sitting in the back of a red Ford Escort station wagon eating a sandwich. Bless her for that alone. But then really slap her around with your blessing stick when you realize she was eating while sitting next to the car engine she was rebuilding. She showed Bob what she was doing. I didn’t understand it so I tuned out in that really wonderful way I am capable of, which might make you think I’m in some sort of sky lobby doing crosswords while waiting for Joni Mitchell to float by playing guitar in a dinghy. Bob and Scott skated while Victor, Yong-Ki and I watched from a hillside. The Escort lady finished her food and was skating and was completely amazing. She had many different lines and had great style. Very easy and responsive.

We bought beer and drove to Tigard skatepark. Which is giant and rough. Like Myrtle Creek, it seemed as though the designers thought you may just be blazing through in a speedboat built for land. We took a few runs. Then it really started dumping rain so we had to leave. We headed East for the coast and Seaside skatepark. When we arrived there was about an hour or less of daylight so we skated vigorously. I think I use that word a lot. I loved this park. It had many different bowls, each with its own challenge. I was trying to drop in from many different locations. Sometimes if I’m not dropping in a lot I start getting scared of it, which is ridiculous and maddening. So I had to break it. As it got dark I kept trying to hit a very tight pocket but bailed over and over. Finally I got it while everyone watched from the sidelines, drinking a beer and completely cheering me on. My friends are unbelievably supportive of my skating and for this I have infinite gratitude.

We drove down the coast a bit to find a place to camp and then went out for Mexican food at a bar. We were a little doubtful that such a thing could be good up in Oregon, but it was delicious. I don’t remember what town we were in but the place was called Dos Rocas. When we entered the bar it was completely like the small town thing you see in movies in which the entire room, formerly boisterous, goes silent. We walked to a table and then a lady who grew up in Albany or something like that, Pinole, whatever, came over to chat with us. She had short curly brown hair and a hot pink giant t-shirt and was suitably drunk. She talked to Bob about campsites then went back to sit with her friend. Every now and then she would say things like, “Hey Bob, let’s go to North Beach!” and it was a way of saying she knows the Bay Area. Pretty cute. We ate a ton of food then went to bed.

Again, I must continue later for I am so tired!!

What a Trip

Hello and welcome home. To me. Because I was not home and now I am!

Last Tuesday night I packed up in a VW van with four gentleman friends to go on a skate trip of Oregon. I’ve been on tour several times so in general I can handle being in a van close-quarters style with many people, though in the past it’s been in a hen house mostly- or all-female situation. Is everyone eating too much soy? No, I am just partly gay and in the 90s that meant hanging out in a gender panoply under the umbrella term of “dykes.” CHANGES.

We shoved off around 9:00 on Tuesday night and drove to Shasta where we camped. Anyone who knows me knows I do not camp and it’s just because I like modern conveniences such as bathrooms and cable television. But you also know I am somewhat adaptable. The dudes were kind enough to let me sleep in the van while they availed themselves of the outdoors and serious magic that is Mount Shasta. The van transforms like a…thing that becomes another thing…so that the interior can have a downstairs and upstairs bed. It was insanely comfortable, absolutely no less comfortable than my home bed except for when I peed I opened a sliding metal door and leaned my bunz against the van and did it on the ground. Other than that my lodging very much resembled my home life. Except no gunshots. But do you know what I mean.

In the morning we skated the Mount Shasta skatepark. It was heaven. Nestled in trees, clean air, and boulders left in the skatepark. It integrated so smoothly with the park where it was built. We stayed there for 3-4 hours. Check out Bob after a sweet backside grind over one of the boulders!

Bob backside grind over boulder shoulder holderSo from there we went to Weed. The shops along the highway have all taken the time to make t-shirts, lighters, and various other items which speak to the name of the town as also the name of a drug. A drug that can lead to writing amazing songs and also songs which capture immature descriptions of adult situations. Or maybe it’s not the drug it’s life. I don’t know. Who is the mother who is the daughter. I DON’T KNOW.

There were a couple kids at Weed who were straight out of Paradise Lost the documentary except not dead or in jail. They were nice. One kid had a board the other had an injury. The park was old but really fun, it was easy to try new lines every time I got in the whatever, flow bowl I guess you would call it.  We rode for a while then got back on the road with most people in the van drinking a SNICKERS-themed coffee drink from a drive-in coffee hut. Five dollars for the high of your life.

We drove to Myrtle Creek skatepark which was HUGE. They are not interested in new people getting into skateboarding, they just want people with no fear hormones and great athleticism (i.e. 14-year-old boys) to blow their face off airing over the giant tunnels in this place. Either that or they think skaters are twelve feet tall with size 35 feet and this park is then just regular or a little small for them. We met this kid who was probably about fifteen years old and he was shredding the joint to pieces on a super beat-up board wearing a sorta deeply crappy necklace employing rasta colors. It looked like he ripped the collars out of many t-shirts and tied them together and said NECKLACE! At some point a lady who looked like she was wearing her Ford Aerostar as pants rolled up and handed him something. He came back over and tried to give us those Jesus chapbooks which I refused. He totally didn’t care. The lady, whom I assumed was his mom, watched the whole time. And by the way, I’ll say again, this kid was an incredible skater. I don’t tend to think of religious people as being good at sports but we all know that’s bullshit because aren’t all football players total Jesus time all the time? And they’re total jocks. So the mom left in her van. We went over to have a beer in our van and a few minutes later this grizzled-looking older dude with a car that looked somewhere between a steam punk burning man vehicle and a cardboard collector rolled up and claimed the skater kid. I assume that whatever big, angry personality was being toted around in that truck would drive any woman who felt her destiny was to live in terror of her husband to become devoutly afraid of God.

That night we hauled our tired bods up to Portland and stayed with my friend Tara. I was happy to shower the next day. It was the first and last time on that trip. We went to New Cascadia for gluten-free treats but so much of their stuff has milk and butter in it oh my god I’m boring myself who cares. We went to Junior’s for breakfast. It was vigorously okay.

Our crew with Tara in front of Junior's!

Our crew with Tara in front of Junior's!

I don’t know why my chin is tilted up but it raises questions about having a square jaw and the aging process overall.

I have to do this in installments because there is too much to say. Thank you for reading! More to come!

Back on Wheels

Some of the three of you who read this know that I just had surgery on my inner beauty. I mean interior monologue. I had an ovary removed and both Fallopian tubes. The joke at the end of Diving for Pearls, “…and now I’m barren!” is now both truth and fiction. It is my reality with a wig on. I don’t need to create yet another honk-shoe extemporaneous mothering boob-a-logue regarding my feelings about having kids. I think it would be awesome if motherhood was given about one percent of the air time it’s getting now. If it were balanced out by enthusiastically disseminated tales of women living vibrant lives in career and otherwise, I could stand it a little more. But it’s feeling like throwback time on the La Leche Information Superhighway. I want to hear about women with political power. I want to hear about women artists. I want to hear about women traveling across continents with sweat and sunburns and medical supplies. I want to hear about women raising cats alone in a yurt. I want to hear any and every tale of women in all corners of the world giving a righteous FUCK YOU to unreasonable power structures. I want all manner of other news too but I want A LOT MORE (not even childless, but just non-motherhood-focused) WOMAN.

Last Thursday I was granted permission to exercise again, with caution. It was two weeks past my surgery. I made plans with my friends Bob and Yong-Ki to drive to the North Bay to skate. We jumped into Bob’s VW van with Dixie the Dog and hit McInnis skatepark. Do you know it? If you are looking to blow a giant wad of money for a great reason but still get it wrong, McInnis is your inspiration. It should be incredible but has an inexcusable lack of pool coping. That bitchily said, it’s still possible to have a lot of fun in a weirdly designed mini-bowl with your insides asunder and giant kneepads.

Dixie keeps her cool under the van.

Dixie keeps her cool under the van.

Then we went to Novato. The skatepark there is one of my favorites. The hips are perfectly placed, the flow area is fun, and there are fun places to drop in and practice whatever weird stuff is grabbing you.

Then we picked up the chiminea Bob bought off of craigslist in Petaluma. I napped right next to the smelly stovepipe that mounts on the top. Dixie stood over me with her paws making a cage around my head. Bob and Yong-Ki talked about art and skateboarding. If I had looked I’m sure the landscape flashing by was beautiful except for the gas stations. I took a bunch of ibuprofen and felt a couple points in my abdomen ache. It was hot outside and for that I was grateful. I miss hot summers. I miss warm nights.

Divas Weekend Exit Interview

T: Good evening divas. We are at the conclusion of Divas Weekend II. We’ve seen and done so much. What springs to mind for our highlights reel?

M: I think some of the diva meals we made, divas cooking together

P: Diva dining

M: Even though we went out for dinner tonight I think the real highlights are our meals together.

P: I’m inspired to start recording the meals I make. I need to make a blog with three-ingredient recipes.

M: The polenta breakfasts

P: I was exposed to some new things like that coconut creamer, Tara. And those fancy tomatoes.

T: Is your attention split, Michelle? (Michelle is on her texting machine)

M: You asked me while I was still responding to her! I just have to finish and then I’ll put this down. I’m a very good multi-tasker.

T: That’s completely fair.

P: another highlight is the Portuguese Parade. We were right in it.

M: Like divas we can’t stand on the sidelines

P: We were actually walking in the path of the parade

M: What I liked about that parade is that you know when I see parades it’s always in San Francisco like at Carnaval or Pride, there’s a lot of drunk people and persnickety people throwing attitude with their territory. Today was very humble. It was so cool it made me realize I don’t know anything about ethnic Portuguese culture. It made me realize there is a region with outfits and food that I could learn about.

P: Our show was a highlight. We had a nice crowd, the space was great. I thought we would be in the gallery…

M: That was a great room. We met diva friends, we met Ricky Tucker. We saw Eileen (Myles), got to walk around with her

P: The Pied Bar. No one there.

M: The Pied Bar was not a highlight for me. Maybe smoking outside with Ricky was but even the wide-eyed 12-year-old bartender wasn’t enough

P: He totally fagged out when he started talking about Lady Gaga

M: It was exciting hearing about gay marriage being legalized in NYC. That bar though was not fit for a diva. It takes more than a disco ball. A highlight though was going to Spiritus before the Pied with Eileen Myles, we got milkshakes and pizza. That was a highlight.

P: I like how you got all caffeinated before the show

M: Always. Do you want my personality or not?

P: Filming our movie!

M: The real Housewives of Provincetown.

P: The “Got To Be Real Housewives”

T: Yeah!

M: I like that we got to hold the bocce balls to make the intro to the show, I felt like the goddess was speaking through me. Also because I’m such a vain person and I liked that looking as fucked up and stupid as possible was the point, I spend so much time not looking fucked up that it was enjoyable.

T: What about where we went after the Pied?

M: The Wave? I learned that when you are exhausted and have to be in a bar the thing to do is dance. It sounds counter-intuitive but when you dance you’re raising your energy

P: And it was a perfect snapshot of time, thirty minutes, it wasn’t too much.

M: You get there and you walk right onto the dance floor. I’ve arrived! But after too many fucking J-Lo videos we were forced to leave. In the words of Ricky Tucker, “What assholes go to a J-Lo concert?” Or Tara maybe that was you talking about that band from the earlier video who you said all looked like assholes.

T: You said they looked like people we would see in the Mission and hate. So real. Remember the bachelorette party at The Wave?

M: I was immediately judgmental because I really hate this weird man-woman bachelorette thing where men go experience their sexuality in this weird last-minute desperate way and then women go to gay bars and don’t relate to their sexuality at all. The guys do it and the girls are like babies. Totally infantilizing. They pretend, they go dirty dance around fags. It’s so weird to me. They bring their weird neutered sexuality into a gay bar. They should go to a biker bar and get groped. When I looked at them they looked so innocent and young and cute and then I thought why the hell do I care what they’re doing?

T: We had another bachelorette party experience tonight on Commercial Street.

M: It was a big bachelorette party. They were all wearing jellybean-colored wigs.

T: You were eating jellybeans.

M: Let’s not forget that last night’s bachelorette party was blowing up condoms like balloons in the street and tied one to a fire hydrant.

P: Then you tried taking it off didn’t you?

M: No I didn’t.

T: We also had a more somber event this evening at the beach. A funeral for a bird named Dood.

M: We were dark divas

P: Dood was a diva. Dood’s send off. When I was thinking about it a minute ago it felt like he was put in a pyramid.

M: You sealed him in his pyramid for eternity.

P: We said, “Good night, Dood!”

M: Let us not forget the slightly less ornate but still noteworthy burial of Sick Sale Finch who died before he got a name.

P: I had him for six days and the return policy is only for three days.

T: They are not taking any chances there, are they.

M: Highlight: the fucking sun came out. We saw blue sky. It was warm.

T: That was wonderful. Though I wish it was hotter.

P: The polenta was a highlight.

M: That was a highlight for you? Aw.

P: Who makes polenta on vacation? Polenta with goat gouda, poached eggs, faux sausages, English muffins, gluten-free bagels and fruit and coffee. Diva breakfast.

M: Poaching an egg successfully really makes you feel like a diva.

P: Sleeping late is really a diva thing to do

M: It was very “I don’t get out of bed for less than ten thousand dollars a day.” Very Linda Evangelista. It felt so good to wake up, know you should get up and go back to sleep. Total diva move. And along those lines, I had to come back after shopping today, eat half a pound of cheese then take a diva nap. I work hard, then I sleep hard.

P: Understood.

T: Any thoughts as diva weekend draws to a close?

M: Divas can’t control whether or not it rains on their beach vacation. But they can control their attitudes. Divas always have a good time, rain or shine.

P: I second that emphatically.

Heading Out on Divas Weekend

The Beginning of Divas Weekend

Interview with Resident Divas Peter Pizzi and Michelle Tea

T: Good afternoon Divas, great to see everyone. We’re on our way to Provincetown to start another amazing chapter of our Diva Lives. Do you have any opening comments?

P: Wait a second I want you guys to notice that we are about to be approved for the Diva Lane.

(There is a cop supervising people entering the carpool lane)

P: We’ve been accepted. (Continuing with previous train of thought) I can only say that this didn’t happen soon enough.

M: Yeah. There’s been a real need for divas weekend, there has been a sense of frustration at the lack of outlets to express diva and to commune with other divas

P: It makes sense that we’re going to a diva hub.

M: It (coming into diva-hood) calls for that sense of protection. I’m also ready to pop in a diva mix, by the way. Will that interrupt your interview?

T: If it’s low enough to hear I think it could really add to the conversation.

M: Look I have a CD and I don’t know if it’s Man Diva or Club Diva.

P: Can we guess? Are there men on Club Diva?

M: No, I discriminated on gender. (Music comes on) It’s Screamin’ Jay Hawkins. Is he a diva?

P: He’s a diva.

M: Basically with all the diva music there were so many options I had to make two CD’s to feel satisfied. I wanted them to have different themes so that’s why I have a man diva and woman diva mix.

P: VH1 did a man diva concert with Lenny Kravitz and George Michael. There were some questions on there. It was a mainstream diva thing.

M: I think a lot of goth men are divas.

P: We’re the leaders of the diva lane. Except for cops. But they work for us. Now we have to merge in with the common folks.

M: The common folks are going to hate us.

P: Why are they blocking the road from us?

M: Maybe they’re planning a party for us, maybe they’re inflating balloons. Controversial song coming on. Sufjan Stephens.

T: I don’t think so. Too much of a hippie.

M: Can a hippie be a diva? I give you Stevie Nicks.

T: But is she really a hippie?

P: Did she ever wear tie-dye in her life? Probably. Maybe in San Francisco.

T: Are there any philosophical tenets we hold dear as divas?

M: I would say grandiosity by any means necessary. I think another sort of diva catchphrase/diva mantra is: all is fair in love and war.

T: That does feel just necessary to facilitate the culture we’re interested in. Peter?

P: I have a few things but nothing that is really standing out. I am thinking of this episode of Oprah that I saw, she was talking to these ladies who were over 40 and looking to get married.

M: You’re more likely to get struck by lightening. Beth Pickens says that’s not true though.

T: Seriously.

M: That was a big thing

P: Oprah did a show for those ladies who want to get married over 40. She suggested: whenever you leave your house, look your best. Even for the supermarket. Always look your best because men are always on the hunt.

M: When I lived in Hollywood I worked in a bookstore in a very trendy area and you would see Christina Ricci sipping a cappuccino. One day I went to work I had rolled out of bed, maybe had the cocktail flu, was working behind the counter and who walked in but Matt Dillon. I looked messy and I was wearing mannish clothing. I had no access to my feminine wiles. Matt Dillon laid his hands upon me. He fondled my arms to get a better look at my tattoos. BECAUSE I looked so messy and because I was a diva I was aware that I had no access to my feminine powers so I was unable to wittily banter with Matt Dillon. I had no game I had no life I had no magic. I was wearing a men’s shirt with an anti-materialistic message on it, I was a wreck. From then on I said, “This is very serious, you live in Hollywood.” Every morning I would get dressed and I would say, “Are you ready to meet Matt Dillon?”

P: That’s a mantra, “Are you ready to meet Matt Dillon?” Because the story you could be sharing right now is that you had sex with Matt Dillon at the bookstore where you worked.

M: I think the mantra this weekend could be “Am I ready to meet John Waters?” It’s a diva support group. We need to call each other out on our diva shit and be sure we’re upholding a standard. This is Jay-Z. Diva?

P&T: ABSOLUTELY.

P: Another diva philosophy is living like a millionaire whether or not you have a million dollars.

M: Grandiosity by any means necessary. Justin Bieber?

P&T: NO.

T: He hasn’t earned it.

P: Yep.

T: Divas feel they have PAID THEIR DUES and they get to be divas because they earned it. Okay would you two like to review some of the activities we have planned for Divas Weekend?

M: Yeah

P: Bingo

M: Bingo! Somebody at Bingo has to win, why not a diva?

P: How wonderful would it be if one of us wins the 500 dollar pot? Let’s make a plan that if one of it wins it we spend it on all of us together?

M&T: Yes!

M: Rocco? A diva?

P&T: Of course.

T: Other activities?

P: Well shopping of course. The late-night stroll to Maritime Specialties to get a schnazzy and unique outfit at a great price.

M: In the words of Beth Ditto, it will be very dimestore diamond. Peter Murphy, diva? The song is Crowds, a very diva song.

P&T: Total diva.

P: Oh a massage.

M: I would like to get my whole body exfoliated. I have a lot of dead skin and I need to slough it off. Divas they give out a lot of energy and they take in a lot of energy.

P: They take up space, basically.

M: You always have to be clearing out the past and letting in the future. In Northampton I’m getting my bubble cleaned by my witch.

T: I too have a meeting with a witch in Northampton though specifically in regards to my home situation. Anything further to report about Provincetown activities in general?

P: Bicycling. Nighttime bicycling with lights. Divas use lights on their bikes. I might get Michelle to buy a bike light.

M: Divas are pro-safety. Divas are very spiritual. Divas understand that there are powers greater than the diva and that they are benevolent and they want to help the diva. Divas are connected to the spirit and the goddess. Divas…

P: Mother nature. One of the most well-known divas.

M: Aphrodite! Diva. So we’re gonna do a ritual, use some of our diva magic to help ourselves and help one another. It’s important for divas to remain spiritually healthy because they’re very powerful and if they don’t safeguard their goodness they can go bad. Look at Millificent, Cruella deVille and Ursula from The Little Mermaid. Karl Lagerfeld.

P: Darth Vader. Look what happened to him. Dark side. John Galliano: dark diva.

M: We’re more like Stevie Nicks, white light diva. Not negative diva. We may venture to the dark side to get our hands dirty every now and then. Divas are free to be flexible, they don’t need to be good all the time. But most of the time they are good. Now this is a real diva speaking of real diva issues: Morrissey. “Now I know how Joan of Arc felt?” Please. What is a more diva sentiment? The weather is being a diva right now, threatening to have a thunderstorm. Per request of a diva, now we do have a man diva.

P: Prince.

T: Any other thoughts or offerings as we officially embark on Divas Weekend?

M: Are you asking us? I think you already asked us that.

T: I guess it was my initial question! Hmmm.

M: Mariah! Diva?

P: Begrudgingly, yes. What do you think of that, Tara?

T: Agreed. Divas, here is my final question: Do you guys anticipate feeling different at the end of this weekend?

M: I do anticipate feeling relaxed, and therefore able to access a higher level of liberation.

P: Of zest. Accessing a zestful life. I will feel ready to embrace the summer.

T: I know this is terrible but I already anticipate being sad it’s over! Come on have a better attitude of gratitude that it happened at all and that I can carry the goodness with me! Just coming clean. I’m a woman who has endured quite a beating recently.

M: You are! (Referring to the music) It’s the Gossip. Schooling people: a very diva thing to do.

20th High School Reunion

Southwest High Reunion interview with Anina Bacon

T: Nix, first of all, set the scene. Where are we conducting this interview?

A: We are conducting this interview on a moody rainy mid-morning outside the Perkins restaurant and bakery amongst a crowd of people who are all waiting to enjoy the fine delicacies of said Perkins.

T: Do we rule the world right now? It seems like everywhere we go there is music from the 80s and that can only be comforting to us, a very specific slice of the world’s age spectrum.

A: It’s like Green Bay was waiting for us.

T: People our age must own all the businesses, even a dumb Perkins franchise. I bet the teen children of this owner have huge dumb cars.

A: I’m mourning the loss of all the greasy spoons.

T: It’s stunning how hard it was to find a breakfast place. We found all manner of liquor barn…

A: Look that Cub Foods is closed too. I feel like the main businesses, the booming businesses are bars and healthcare facilities. I bet there are a few cigarette depots too. Lots of people with mobility problems.

T: The man (sirens next to us). We placed a bet or two before we got to the….

A: Reunion. Not so much a bet against each other but choices made in confidence. You made the very wise choice of betting there would be a raspberry vinaigrette but it didn’t show up. I chose to believe there would be Chicken Kiev, and though the chicken we received was thin and seared, it was still raw inside. The red skin potatoes mashed with garlic were lovely as was the vegetable medley. We also predicted iceberg lettuce.

T: I predicted baby greens. See they’re moving through the list (names being called over the loudspeaker while we wait)

A: I bet those waitresses really know how to move the tables through.

T: What were your first impressions of the reunion?

A: The first thing I said to myself was, “Holy crap, I’m going to be really bad at this.” Meaning remembering people’s names. I could do a reverse aging process in my head and I could shrink people’s heads and add hair and remember. Maybe some guys had thinning hair and a bit of a belly but I think for the most part people look great. Lot of good skin, we commented on that a lot. Seemed like there was a lot of genuine conversation, people were happy to see each other, I didn’t sense a lot of falseness in the air, people weren’t trying to impress each other. People are doing wonderful things with their lives. Oh can we talk about the champagne fountain?

T: I never really got a load of it. Someone retrieved a glass of supposed champagne for me and it tasted like Strawberry Hill or whatever a sweet shitty wine is. Plus I expected a SHOW from that fountain, I wanted it to be bigger than me both physically and emotionally.

A: I would like to comment that a glass of wine, though a piece of crap, was $3.50. Who sells a glass of wine for that price anymore? The Ramada Inn in Green Bay, that’s who.

T: My Absolut and soda was $3.50. I was stunned.

A: Was Adrienne Hilt our class president? Who was our class president?

T: I don’t know. I have no memory of that. I know student government existed but that’s it.

A: What was most surprising to you, Tara Jepsen?

T: I think that I really enjoyed it. I didn’t realize that I would be so genuinely happy to see every person there. I just didn’t realize I would feel that way.

A: I agree. I experienced the same thing. It really reminded me of how much fun we had.

T: What do you remember that was fun?

A: I think just hanging out at other people’s houses.

T: What would we do there?

A: I feel like we drove around and listened to music a lot. I think hanging out without adults at that point in our lives. I remember laughing a lot, joking, I guess just being teenagers.

T: I think there was a lot of beer and weed in there.

A: We had a lot of good music in our lives. Going to shows was awesome.

T: We saw a ton of bands. Rich is still booking bands but in Minneapolis. Do you remember what any of your favorite shows were?

A: That’s a hard one. I loved seeing local bands. I thought that was very cool like at talent shows or battle of the bands, shows at school somehow. What were their names? Like Green or something. They liked to play REM covers of course. Greg Steffke had a good band, Covent Garden. Driving to Alpine Valley to see shows with you. Um I remember seeing Fugazi and going crazy.

T: We saw them a million times.

A: Big Drill Car. I want to say we saw Sonic Youth but I think that’s my imagination. We never saw Shudder to Think, that was a tragedy.

T: Totally.

A: Poor Ravi cat, he’s going to eat late today.

At this point our name was called over the outdoor loudspeaker and we were ushered into Perkins for breakfast.

Now we are in Anina’s Honda driving in a downpour back to my mom’s. We’re listening to Fever Ray because I’m so addicted to that album I can’t believe it.

T: Any concluding thoughts regarding our trip to Green Bay?

A: It was very comforting and nostalgic. A comforting nostalgia. I’m very glad we went. It was lovely to see so many wonderful people. I felt like I had a lot of really good chats. Heart stuff. And I’m you know not very surprised that everyone was so lovely.

T: I feel the same way.

A: It wasn’t a shocker that people were so great. I feel like there was a balance of people who spread out around the country. There were people from Florida, Oregon, California, Michigan, Colorado, from the metropolis of Milwaukee…are we really slowing down because we’re merging lanes? I drive rush hour to Chicago and this shit doesn’t happen. Maybe in one spot. How long have you been doing interviews with people?

T: This last round has been since February.

A: What do you do with your interviews?

T: I put them on my blog. I like to go back and read them sometimes because people say really interesting stuff.

A: I haven’t said anything interesting. I think I’ve used the same adjective over and over.

T: You’ll be surprised when you read it. It’s more interesting than you think.

Anina at Perkins under siege

Anina at Perkins under siege

Also at Perkins, though the cats are nice to me.

Also at Perkins, though the cats are nice to me.

A 41-second look around the room at the reunion

Sunday, April 17th

Good evening. I know I am behind in adding more interviews with those who choose to keep our relationship sexless. I have been riding the ladybug of my interior landscape so it has not sounded good to conduct interviews (which really says something considering I LOVE interviews), though I suspect this will be rectified in the near future.

Last Sunday I went on a skate trip with two gentlemen, one my age (Jomby) and the other a few years older (Bram). I met them in the Bayview at our first destination, The Dish, possibly California’s oldest skatepark. It is what it sounds like: round. Not too deep, gradual decline, rough concrete, and a pill bug-shaped hump in the middle. I guess I could just say it’s shaped like a tylenol. Jomby brought his 12-year-old son Cieran and his friend, Madison. They are very pasty young white dudes  with one pair of glasses between them. We piled in Jomby’s VW van, adult males in the front, adolescent males in the back, and me in the jump seat facing backwards. I had one mug of coffee which feels precarious anytime. It would have to be one of those unwieldy tureens from 7-11 to not give me scarcity issues but then there would be other issues like it getting cold and can I taste plastic.

We decided to head East. First stop, Moraga skatepark. The adolescents played those little things that they hold in their hands and have games in them and there is a stylus too. Cieran was very performative about everything that was happening in the game, a lot of WHOA and HOLY COW. It would appear that Jomby’s four kids are on a very tight leash in the realm of their conduct. For whatever reason, they completely toe the line, at least for now. Although I heard that Cieran was being teased at school and after much harassing he finally lost it and yelled FUCK YOU!! at the kids tormenting him. From me: kudos. From his family: great consternation regarding his language.

We had an amazing session at Moraga. It is not an amazing skatepark. But we were full of energy. There is a small bowl in the middle of the park shaped like a rectangular pool that someone kicked in the side. Or like if someone shoved spongebob squarepants. So there is a hip and also a little waterfall at one end. We adults all found a billion lines in the bowl and some kid came who got Bram (I don’t know how long I’m going to be able to keep it up with these stupid names) going, trying to air out of the bowl over a ledge and onto a bank. It was hilarious and fun. The two kids pushed around the perimeter and took it all in. They are newer skaters so finding their balance is still a project.

We drove to Pleasant Hill next. The skatepark is placed in a hard-to-reach spot, is horribly designed and the concrete is shit. It’s covered in graffiti and has one bowl shaped like a number 8 in the middle. That said, we had a lot of fun rolling around the flow bowl, connecting long lines across banks, mini-twinkies and the bowl in the middle. We left after an hour or so. At the end of the quarter-mile driveway that leads from the park to the parking lot, Madison hit a crack and flew off his board, landing on the gravel palms-down. He cried out in a high-pitched whine and started crying very hard. I felt for him. Skating is so much more brutal than anything a bookish kid with a video game thing, fantasy novel and sketchbook in the van usually does. It’s a tough adjustment to accept that kind of pain as normal, but it happens eventually. Or so I’m told.

The kids started complaining about being STARVING which was entirely fair because it was 2:00 or something. Just the day before this I took a bunch of kids to San Jose to skate a contest and basically never fed them then wondered why they were damp, dark and brooding by the time we were driving home at 5:00 (we had been there since 9:00). I took them to 7-11 because it was close to the freeway entrance. Any fears I have about being too mothering are mitigated by this experience. I am exactly the checked-out good-time Zeppelin-obsessed teen dream boozer I want to be.

We went to a taco joint in a strip mall in Pleasant Hill. Give me ONE REASON why this paragraph should be any longer.

Our last skate destination was Brentwood. It is a fenced in park that requires full pads, and has a pad nanny to be sure that happens. I don’t mind too much, but for a career skate genius like Bram it’s annoying. We had to gird our refried beans to get in here and skate, aided by large coffees from that coffee chain monster with the lady on the cup. I know Kirk Read would have my head, but out in the towns with nothing but huh-yooj strip malls, it is my preferred choice. We hit the bowls and chatted with some fourteen-year-old kid who was very confident in his skills and possibly is an only child. After about forty-five minutes I noticed the adolescents were bickering, with Cieran earnestly trying to give Madison advice about skating and Madison annoyed with him for doing so. They spent half their time sitting on a bench in the park and quickly started complaining that we were wearing them out. It reminded me of that moment in the movie Greenberg when Ben Stiller says to the kids he’s hanging out with who are in their early twenties and therefore half his age (I UNDERSTAND, good sir.), “I’m glad I grew up when I did cos your parents were too perfect at parenting- all that baby Mozart and Dan Zane songs; you’re just so sincere and interested in things! There’s a confidence in you guys that’s horrifying. You’re all ADD and carpal tunnel. You wouldn’t know Agoraphobia if it bit you in the ass…” Looking at these kids I just felt like they had gone soft. Like their existence in this anxiety-motivated, electronics-shaped world of ectomorphs-rising made them unable to keep up with people over three times their age. There’s no reason we should be skating circles around them. But they are a sedentary people built for cogitating and while I love that they read a lot of books I think their characters are lacking. They have full personalities and complexity and will surely live rich and varied lives, but they are not tomorrow’s stevedores. I rue the recession of robustness.

Madison fell again and we left. There was an ice cream truck outside so they all got ice cream and piled in the van. We started driving then realized it was time for beer, so we found a BevMo, where they actually have gluten-free beer. We cracked a few open and drove home under gorgeous clouds and big sky. We watched a BART train climb up a stretch of the 580 and talked about photography. The kids slept.