Archive | March, 2007

Mi Familia–or why family conversations are the best!

28 Mar

Me:  Hey, how are you? 

Her: Fine, why?

Me:  Because mom say she’s been thinking about you and she has a feeling you’re in the hospital.

Her: I am, in Admitting.  Do me a favor?  In the future, don’t tell me when she says stuff like that.  She always does stuff like that–thinking about people and hospitalization–right before they die.

Me:  But you’re ok?

Her:  Yeah, doctor says I’m perfect.  Tell her to stop doing that, it creeps me out.

Me: Ok, and you’re not perfect.

© Laura Genao 2007

Desert In My Backyard

26 Mar

Gray and gloomy mornings gave way to beautiful, mid-70 degree afternoons all weekend.  That meant, NYT crossword puzzle by the pool, throwing the football around at the Rose Bowl, and a nice walk around the neighborhood.

For those who think they couldn’t ever live in California because it doesn’t have a spring, look at how things are blooming.  Oh, and the creatures that are reminders that it is a desert out here (see if you can find the lizard).
Desert In My Backyard

© Laura Genao 2007

La Profesora

23 Mar

I recently participated in an enrichment program for high school students.  The point of the program was to teach teenagers a little about what lawyers do and to answer their questions about college. 

We got some thank you letters back from one class of kids recently and I was touched by some of the things they said.  A good number of them called me out for kudos.  Some thought I was funny.  Some liked that I taught them about the importance of word choice in written communication.  One of them said something like “its nice to know that someone from a background like ours can go on and become a lawyer.” 

I was thinking about their words today and about the importance of teachers in my own life.  It made me think about my Abuelita Nena. 

She was a “profesora rural” in northern Mexico.  That meant she was responsible for teaching in an one-room adobe school house.  During the day, she taught the kids that were too little to help on the farm.  At night, she taught the adult farmers.  She taught everything–astronomy, history, math, calligraphy, singing, reading, art, etc.  My mom kept her lesson books.  In handwriting more perfect than anything I’ve ever seen were lesson plans, drawings, thoughts on her students, and the lyrics of the songs she sang with her students.  When I review those school books, I imagine her writing them out by the light of a lantern.        

Teaching then, as now, didn’t provide much in the way of riches.  My abuelita lived in a simple adobe house for her whole life and never knew what it was like to live in a house with running water.  Nevertheless, she was proud that she had had the opportunity to contribute as ”la profesora.”  I was proud of her too and glad that some of her skill is in my blood.

Abuelitaprofesora

© Laura Genao 2007

Issues

22 Mar

Issues

I don’t know what this guy’s are, but being embarrassed by his car is clearly one of them.

© Laura Genao 2007

Los Güeritos

21 Mar

güerito
I saw this today. I can’t decide if it’s a happy or sad thing. Happy because it means I never have to suffer through a bland rubber-chicken dinner again. Now I’ll have güeritos in my back pocket, literally. Sad because it means that the chiles have been separated from the giant vat they used to call home.

© Laura Genao 2007

Disneyfication of the War on Crime

18 Mar

I’ve seen a lot of automobile anti-theft devices.  There’s the kill switch, the steering wheel lock, the alarm, and the too-junky-to-steal look.  At an IHOP in Bell Gardens, I saw the latest in anti-thievery.  Disney IS everywhere.

El Mousey de Bell Gardens


© Laura Genao 2007

Smog Sighting

16 Mar

When I was a kid, on warm summer days, the school would tell us we couldn’t play sockball or tag during recess or lunch because of “Smog Alerts.”  I didn’t live close enough to the hills or the ocean to see the smog, so I didn’t quite understand what they were talking about. 

I was on my way to an Oingo Boingo concert in the early 80s when the car I was in went around a bend in the freeway and all of a sudden we saw a giant orange dome of smog hanging over the valley basin we were headed into.  I was 14-years-old and that was the first time I saw dirty air.  I saw it later every time I came home to L.A. from my east coast college. 

I flew to and from San Francisco today and flashed back to all those smog sightings while looking out the airplane window.  At least today you could see the Hollywood sign.  Some days, there is no sign that hills surround one side of the city.

Hollywood

© Laura Genao 2007

Just Another Day On The 10

16 Mar

I’ve always loved the special relationship people in California have to freeways.  My friends from elsewhere still laugh when I use “the” in front of a freeway number instead of “I-” or “Route.” Plus, around here, everyone has a story about traffic.  Not all of us, however, have stories that involve standing on a freeway (unless you were on the 10 today).  This is one man’s tale (as e-mailed to me from the freeway that was shut down in both directions for something like six hours today):

It’s 11 a.m. right now and I’m standing in the middle of the freeway, and this hot lady also standing in the middle of the freeway comes up to me and says she recognizes me from somewhere but can’t place it.  Turns out I went to high school with her husband.  Good we solved that problem. 

And then we watched an extremely frustrated van driver try to get onto the other interchange by going down an embankment and got stuck.  Outstanding.

I saw one lady yelling in her car, and I doubt by the looks of her it was a hands-free cell phone.  Possible hook-up for [name deleted to protect the innocent].

And everyone is running out of gas in the middle of the fwy, also outstanding.  I’ll keep you posted at my next report at 2 p.m.

© Laura Genao 2007

Rose Bowl Sunset

14 Mar

Thoughts on walking around the Rose Bowl at dusk:

  • Other walkers do not find it amusing when I twirl, twirl, twirl in response to the draft created by a group of 150 racing bicyclists.  My walking partner, however . . . ;
  • No matter how buff and athletic a mom gets, she is no match for a princess-outfitted, three-year-old daughter who yells “Freeze, Freeze, Freeze” and insists that mom stop in the middle of her run every few yards;
  • Some women have HUGE calves; and
  • People (and that’s not just girls!) run funnily.  The arm flailing, foot kicking out, completely hunched over folks running by us prompted my walking partner to come up with an ad for our chiropractor.  In her best “Vitameatavegamin” voice she pitched, “Do you run funny? Do people laugh when you walk by? Are you unpopular? If so, we can help.  Call Drs. Christine and Adrian at 626-441-4888.  They’ll fix you right up (really).”

The Taxman Cometh

13 Mar

It’s never a good thing when the accountant can’t tell which end of the dollar sign is up.

Trust Him, Really


© Laura Genao 2007

Morning Workout

12 Mar

Partial list of this morning’s inspirers and their tunes:

  • Santiago–Ozomatli
  • 21 Things I Want In A Lover–Alanis Morissette
  • Where The Streets Have No Name–U2
  • En Los 70–Bacilos
  • Solsbury Hill–Peter Gabriel
  • The Walk–The Cure
  • Walking on Broken Glass–Annie Lennox
  • Van Nuys–Los Abandoned
  • Supermodel–Jill Sobule

The Baseball Bat is in Peril

9 Mar

Sports IllustratedIn case you wondered, global warming will affect every aspect of your life.  The latest evidence of how is on the cover of Sports Illustrated.  The article titled “Going, Going Green” discusses how global warming will:

  1. Eventually put parts of South Florida underwater;
  2. Affect temperature and the speed at which things like baseballs can fly through the air;
  3. Encourage golf courses to use fewer pesticides;
  4. Encourage the spread of beetles that eat timber used to make baseball bats;
  5. Melt the snow at famous ski resorts; and
  6. Make sports venues become more energy efficient.

Since part of my job will require me to be looking at global warming and greenhouse gas issues, I’m pretty excited to have my issue covered in the latest issue of one of my favorite magazines.    Wonder if I’ll ever get the chance to argue for the saving of the baseball bat as we know it.

Fear of a glass ceiling?

9 Mar

Helicoptero

This is the daytime view out my office window.  If you look closely in the upper center, you’ll see a landing helicopter.  This helicopter lands on the roof one level up from me  three or four times a day.  Does it scare me?  Not normally, but I’ve started to have a recurring nightmare about the blades coming through the ceiling, through the fourth floor, and forcing me to jump out the window onto the ground 30 feet below.  Maybe I watched too much “Alias” in a previous lifetime.

© Laura Genao 2007

Irene Doesn’t Live Here Anymore

7 Mar

sleepylsWhen I was in the first grade, Mrs. Wolf made us each draw outlines around the letters making up our names.  I always thought it was interesting that each of my names, Laura and Irene and Genao, led to an outline that looked like an L that had falled onto its back.  Since the letter L was the first letter of my first name, I sensed a theme and took to wanting the letter L on all of my shirts.  Laverne from ”Laverne & Shirley” had Ls on all her shirts, so I thought all of those blessed with the letter L as the kickoff to their name had them.

But, because my family could barely afford shirts, much less letters on shirts, my fascination with the letter L quickly gave way to an obsession with my last name.  Although my father had left my family when I was young, his last name remained.  It was different, so it was cool.  

I didn’t know any other Genaos, except for my sister.  No one else knew any Genaos either.  This gave an air of otherness to my last name.  It also meant that I didn’t quite know how to say the last name in English–and neither did anyone else.  Most of my teachers couldn’t even spell my last name.  I mean, 90% of my elementary school report cards are for Laura Genoa.  ”Gosh, these teachers sure do seem obsessed with Italy,” I often thought. 

But, of the three names with which I entered the world, Irene is the one with which I’ve always had the strangest relationship.  

I have been told that I was middlenamed Irene because it was the name of a doll my mom had when she was young.  I’ve never wanted to be a doll and I couldn’t believe that my mom had ever loved a doll named “Irene.”  She couldn’t love an “Irene,” I thought, “because she only says the name when yelling at me in anger.”

“¡Laura Irene lava los trastes!” 

“¡Laura Irene lavate esa greña!”

“¡Laura Irene te voy a dar con la chancla!” 

When you only hear your name associated with threats of bodily harm for failing to do chores or engage in regular hair shampooing, you learn to ignore that name. 

And so, the name Irene disappeared from my usage for several years.  I didn’t put it on any forms.  I didn’t put it on my driver’s license.  I even tried to encourage the relocation of neighbors who’d heard my mother calling to that bad, bad girl “Laura Irene.” 

But, as with many secrets people hope to bury, Irene periodically attempted a comeback.  When I was in college, someone on the school paper tried to put it into my byline for the story on the “Mealtime Messiah” a.k.a the new head of the dining hall.  The editor thought a middle name, or even a middle initial, gave an air of severity to any story.  Clearly, he was not reading the text of my piece on how roast beef au jus was getting an overhaul.

Then, when I became a lawyer, when I became a real-life professional with my own office and my own phone, someone added the middle initial to my pleadings.  And they kept doing it citing an unwritten policy that seemed to decree “have a middle name, put it on documents.”  Again, the explanation had something to do with gravitas–or the idea that there should be a solemnity or dignity to manner.  Again I argued that if my writing were merely read, there would be no need for a middle name.  Again, my pleas went unheeded.  

Correction, again my pleas go unheeded.  Today as I electronically signed a document for submission to the court in which I currently practice, the computer automatically inserted “Laura I. Genao.”  I wanted to scream in horror and hide from my past and my mother’s strict demands for obedience from Irene. 

But, passive-agressiveness being what it is, I took a purple pen and signed a hard copy of the document—without a middle name or initial or indication that anyone by a name other than Laura Genao had ever existed.

© Laura Genao 2007

32 Flavors

6 Mar

I remembered how much I love Alana Davis’ version of this song while running on the treadmill today.  My favorite line:

And I’m beyond your peripheral vision
So you might want to turn your head
‘Cause someday you’re going to get hungry
And eat all of the words that you just said.

Heavenly Intervention

4 Mar

As if overnight, the Angels have arrived.  They have appeared on many a billboard in the area of Huntington Drive and Monterey Road.  Does this mean that during this season of Lent we should all be more angelic?  Does it mean that the area is in need of heavenly assistance going into Tuesday’s election?  Or, is it just a sign that things are going well for area residents?  After all, one of the new Angels signs did appear on a billboard that had recently housed an  ad for Forest Lawn cemetery.  That ad showed two elderly people and asked the rest of us to think about, and plan for, the future.   

Angels Forest Lawn

© Laura Genao 2007

Parents Overheard

2 Mar

The kids at my high school used to throw the intestines from animals dissected during first period Biology into the pool at second period Swimming.  I guess kids today do different things for kicks.  I overheard one parent lamenting that her daughter might have hurt her chances to get into a good college because she was caught walking on her school’s roof.

It seems she’s part of this Roof Walkers group.  Here I thought she was at school studying late with her friends–not walking on the roof there.  Now she admits it was dumb, but really, walking on the roof?

© Laura Genao 2007

Fertility Breaks Out

1 Mar

Perhaps it’s my age.  Perhaps it’s the circle in which I run.  I don’t know, but the fact that four of the people most responsible for the formation of MY current self are pregnant and due in July or August is a little freaky.  I’m going to be Tía Laura, four times over. Going to have to break out those interesting baby gifts.

© Laura Genao 2007

Nube de Destrucción

1 Mar

Anyone catch the completely cool cloud over the Westside on Wednesday afternoon?  Very Independence Day-ish.

Cloud of Doom (With Pole and Palm Tree)

© Laura Genao 2007

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