Archive | June, 2007

The Fifth of July

22 Jun

When I was a little kid, we were too poor to afford fireworks. I suppose I can’t blame my pyrotechnic poverty just on being poor, but more on the fact that my mother didn’t think any part of the welfare check should be spent on frivolity. If we got fireworks, we didn’t get clothes, or we didn’t get food. Sure, it was a practical choice, but as a kid, you just want to rip into the hundred dollar “Independence Day” box of fireworks.

Our fireworkslessness meant that in the days leading up to the Fourth of July every year, we’d visit our more affluent friends and watch them light fireworks. Back then this annual ritual led me to conclude that socio-economic status could be identified by the characteristics of your fireworks.

If you had no color, just sound, you weren’t poor, but you weren’t living in a mansion. You lived in an apartment and shared a bedroom with a couple of siblings. The same went for fireworks with no sound, and just smoke.

If you had fireworks that were colorful, but just rolled around on the ground, you lived in one of the houses in a duplex.

If your fireworks shot color into the air, and did so while crackling, at least one of your parents had a full-time job and probably owned a house with a yard and a driveway (or at least they’d found a way to live in one).

In my family, we didn’t have any fireworks before and up to the Fourth of July. We didn’t get to light something and have sound, or color. Maybe, if we got lucky, someone handed us a sparkler. In the bad years, they handed us the punk used to light the fireworks. Yep, there’s the poor kid, the one with the smoldering ember.

Occasionally, when the sounds of Fourth of July were so muddled that you couldn’t tell the fireworks from the gunshots fired into the air, we pretended to be fireworks. I mean, if you’re a nine-year-old and you scream from a low tone to a very high one, you sound kind of like a Piccolo Pete. And besides, by nightfall, no one even knows what’s going on in neighboring yards, driveways, or streets. Everyone is just staring into the sky, looking for something to make the darkness light. That means there is no risk of being seen joining the cacophony of Independence Day sound, while in your pajamas, from just inside your apartment’s living room window.

I watched from the shadows every year until the Fifth of July. That was the day when my cousin Reggie would come over and my mom, and my sister, and my Tía Rosalba, and my other cousins, and I would go to the local park. Salt Lake Park was the one where the big neighborhood fireworks were set off, and the official, city-sanctioned Fourth of July safe zone for amateur fireworks displays.

We never went to the show on the Fourth of July. My mom was scared that going to the park after dark would make us victims of violent crime, and my Tía Rosalba was a Jehovah’s Witness. Her family didn’t celebrate the Fourth of July.

But, on the Fifth of July, Reggie, Virginia, and I made sure to take a magnifying glass to the park. Our families would stake out a spot next to a tree, drag over a picnic bench, pull out aluminum foil-wrapped burritos, and play dominoes.

Virginia, Reggie, and I headed straight for the previous night’s launching pad.

We crawled around every inch of that soccer-field sized patch of grass, looking for unused fireworks. Although not plentiful, and not colorful, little by little, we’d find some fireworks.

At first, we’d find little black charcoal disks. While we weren’t allowed to buy fireworks, and we weren’t allowed to play with matches, we did know what unused fireworks looked like, and how to start a fire without matches, so out came the magnifying glass.

We figured out the sun’s angle, and the length of time needed to create a flame, and voilà, black plumes of ash came up from the earth and “snakes” came to life.

My sister, Virginia, tore holes in the knees of her jeans and Reggie got dirt in his eyes, before we found another unused firecracker.

Lighting our fireworks became easier with each successive find. We’d get sound, and some smoke, and then we’d laugh hysterically and roll around in laughter on the charred firecracker paper and ashes left from the night before.

Although there were never more than about ten unused fireworks for us to light every year, we had gotten the chance to shoot off some fireworks after all. On the Fifth of July we had not been denied the simple pleasure of creating marvels of sound and sight.

We all knew that our scavenging hadn’t made us children of homeowners this year, but it was understood that ingenuity would get us there some year, maybe next year.

© Laura Genao 2007

Paris Je T’aime

21 Jun

I spent my high school years making sure I spoke and wrote Spanish correctly.  That meant that although I was a native speaker, I spent two years in native speakers’ Spanish classes and then another in an AP Spanish class.  In college, I spent another two years reading Spanish literature (yeah, that means El Cid in the original Spanish).

When I finally thought to learn another language, my best friend convinced me to try German.  After two semesters I still got to the final not knowing what the questions were asking. 

While I’m glad I learned my Spanish, this week I really wish I knew French.  It sure would be nice to speak it this time around when I’m there.  I am doing the compact disk version of French lessons, but I’ve realized I’m a visual learner, so I wish I could just sit in class and see the lessons on a board.  No time for that, the trip is near.  And, so far, all I can do is ask directions to Rue St. Michel.  Yippee!! (I guess).

Afternoon Decisions

18 Jun

Hostess Apple Pie or ACT II Microwave popcorn.  (Both)

Chocolate Bar or Sun Chips. (Neither today)

Flaming Hot Cheetos or Hot Chocolate.  (Flaming Hots)

Decisions, decisions on a Monday afternoon.

What’s your vending machine offer for afternoon snacking?
Vending

Father(less) Day

17 Jun

I grew up without a father, but I do have a general, favorite Father’s Day memory.

Every year, my church had a children’s choir made up of the 12-18 year olds.  Of the 15 or so kids, only five or so had relationships with their fathers. 

To this day, I find amusing that no one else saw the humor in having a children’s choir primarily made up of children who had no idea what it was like to have a dad around. 

Someone once tried to convince me that there was nothing wrong with this circumstance, because the fatherless could just direct their paternal rejoicing at God.  Yeah, Father’s Day is about God.  Nice try.

OCD Dumping

16 Jun

A sign that there is too much home improvement programming on television is the tasteful arrangement of these dumped leather couches (and matress) in an outdoor spot overlooking El Sereno.
OCD Dumping

Su Terreno

14 Jun

My mom doesn’t own a car, or a home, or anything of real value, but she has a burial plot.  She scrimped and saved and bought it a few months after her heart attack a few years ago.

I find her pride in the purchase of this burial plot odd.  I guess she’s glad that we won’t be burdened with deciding on where she’ll be buried when she dies.  Or perhaps she’s just happy to know where her body will be laid to rest (near a tree on a grassy hill). 

Whatever the reason for her pride in being able to buy the burial plot, it creeps me out when she asks me to take her there to visit.  It’s a cemetery, not a park, and I’ll wait until I absolutely have to to see that place.

Fertility Outbreak

13 Jun

Another fact of my college reunion is that the baby stroller is now a necessary fashion accessory (evidence below).  Hope someone was mischievous and threw the whole balance of the universe off by taking the wrong one.

Stroller

Tengo hambre

12 Jun

And all I really want for breakfast is this:

20070607_0007

High definition vanilla ice cream (don’t ask, I didn’t taste a difference) with heath bar mix in, hot fudge sauce, fresh whipped cream, and a cherry (no nuts).

El Baby

12 Jun

I guess I’d just never focussed on the international symbol for baby changing station.  It made me laugh while making my way through Logan Airport this weekend.
20070607_0005

Reencuentro

11 Jun

Some observations from this weekend’s 15th college reunion, based on an entirely random sample determined by who I sat with, spoke to, or happened to be standing next to in line for food:

  • The person with the best, current professional title was one of my freshman year roommates.  She is officially known as Victoria’s Secret’s Vice President–Very Sexy. 
  • The classmate with the children entitled to claim the most passports was a former hockey player that lived with us one summer.   He is Canadian.  His wife is Swedish.  The kids were born in Italy.  And somehow he explained how they could also have American and Swiss passports. 
  • I only recognized three other Latinos at the reunion.  There weren’t that many of us in the class, but there were more than four, and I did know more than three.  Any thoughts on whether we have a responsibility to continue to be involved in the life of our college as a way of ensuring that educational equity issues continue to get addressed? 
  • The best way to “do” a college reunion is to make sure two or three of your friends are absolutely attending, stake out a table and use that as home base.  It gives you a safe place to come back to when you no longer recognize a soul and a place for people to find you when you’re wandering around a cavernous outdoor tent party.  Then use your cell phone to browbeat locals into showing up.
  • Most people are settled into their careers, and yes, most of those I went to school with became doctors, lawyers, and investment bankers, but not all.  Of my six-person rooming group.  Two became medical doctors, two became lawyers, one got a PhD and is now an academic advisor at a college, and the other leads a non-governmental agency that helps fund research into women’s reproductive issues.
  • Folks are starting to see their roles in the next generation of political life in this country (for some, it waited until after kids, after buying a house, after establishing a professional identity).  I spoke to one woman who’s set her sights on a city council seat and another who asked to help raise money for if I should ever decide to run for office.
  • You can turn an old jail into fancy hotel living space if it’s right on the water and next to the train line.

More later.

En El Pasado

7 Jun

My 15th college reunion is finally here.  So excited to see those I keep in touch with regularly and those I only see at the reunion every five years.  Preliminary email shows folks fairly happy. 

I loved college and those I met there.  It gave me (and continues to open up) opportunities I never imagined.  Here’s me then.  I’ll update with pictures of us now, later.

Cambridge in June

Planning My Escape

6 Jun

It is a beautiful day.

I am indoors.

I wish I was not.

I want to jump and swim and raft.

Like this:
Escaping

Sign of the Apocalypse

5 Jun

At a Pollo Loco around 9:15 p.m.:

Me:  I’ll have a two piece combo.

Pollo Representative:  Um, we’re out.

Me:  Of what?

Pollo Representative:  Chicken.

Me:  Really? Pollo Loco is out of chicken?

Pollo Representative:  Yes.

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