Archive for driving

I am the Tornado

Posted in real life, Uncategorized with tags , , , , on May 16, 2018 by sethdellinger
So, I think, while I was in my car yesterday, a tornado either went directly over me, or I was right on the edge of it. The experience was so bizarre and out of the ordinary, I’m going to post my recollection of it here while it is still vivid.

I left work half an hour early because my phone was blowing up with notifications that there were going to be negative happenings, atmospherically, by our house. I was hoping to be able to beat it home. Once I got on the highway my folly was obvious–very dark and horizon-filling clouds directly in the way of the road, but still I thought, I might beat it, and if things get rough, I’ll just pull over and let it pass.

Most of the trip home (my afternoon commute is Harrisburg to Boiling Springs via 81) was ominous but harmless–wind blowing the leaves from tress, occasional drops of rain–but once I neared Carlisle the rain and wind started in earnest, nearly blowing me into the other lane of traffic. I got off at the first exit I could (Carlisle Pike) and set about taking the longer but more cautious way home via back roads.

Most of the way into Boiling Springs was very slow-going but not disastrous. Extremely heavy winds and rain–probably top five for ferocity for what I’ve driven in in my lifetime–but still just a really crazy storm. But somewhere around Karns (for those from the area, this is Forge Road) things became otherworldly. Suddenly the wind came so hard you could SEE it. That is the only way I can describe it–it was the only way I perceived it– it seemed to not be the rain that was visible, but the wind itself. Air. My car was no longer blowing laterally across the road but was lifting, dipping at the driver’s side and rising on the passenger’s side. Limbs from trees blew across the road in front of me, detached from their homes, like twigs. What I at first thought were scores of tiny sofas (?!) were overturned trash cans, which had been set out for trash day, hurtling across the road. Luckily, this onslaught lasted only two or three minutes. It let up quickly, and I was close to home. I thought I was in the clear.

Now on Park Drive (slightly past the Duck Pond and aimed toward Mount Holly) I suddenly became engulfed in a pocket of air that seemed to posses a malign intelligence; the way I keep thinking of it was like a swirling white curtain. The rain was not hitting my windshield, as it was coming completely sideways; all the rain pelted my passenger windows. Out my windshield all I could see was the air, moving. The sound inside the car became like a loud hum, somewhere between television static and a plane taking off. I became aware that I was stopped in a line of traffic now, but I only knew this vaguely from the ideas of multiple brake lights in front of me. I could not make out details through the swirling air. Now the car started to lift again, dipping on my side and rising on the passenger side. It’s hard to say how much it did this dipping. It felt like a lot, but I suspect in that situation, a little is a lot. That’s when the hail started.

They were not huge (like you hear on the news, “golf ball” or “lemon sized” hail). They looked like the size of BBs, but the sound they made was dreadful: it sounded like gunshots hitting my car. Part of me was still worried about the monetary aspects of hail damage, even though I was in a swirling netherworld, the fact was that I JUST got my car back from the shop after a whole month. Another part of me was somehow suddenly aware that all of these weather factors together were not good–that in fact I was probably experiencing something very, very dangerous.

You cannot imagine how alarmingly loud it was.

That’s when I noticed I was just a few yards from the Dickinson College Farm. I won’t bother explaining what this is if you don’t know, but what you need to know is, from this spot on the road, it is a large farmhouse very close to the road. With an overhang.

Why none of the cars in front of me thought of this, I don’t know, but I immediately pulled my car into their parking lot and under the overhang. Sweet relief! The driver’s side of my car wasn’t covered and was still being pelted, but removing half of the noise and worry was a great relief. That’s when it got really dreamlike, though: I looked up and saw, standing under the overhang, talking on a cell phone, an old friend of mine. A friend of mine who I haven’t been in contact with for four or five years, but last I knew, he had no connection to Boiling Springs or Dickinson Farm. Seeing him standing there, under that overhang, amidst the boiling air, was no more strange than if he’d popped out of my belly button and asked for a seltzer. I was transfixed. I turned my ignition off and sat there staring at him. Finally he did look at me: he did not recognize me. I can only imagine he was having a strange day, too.

It was then I saw what he must have been on the phone about, and why the traffic had totally stopped: an entire tree was down and blocking all of Park Road.

Things stayed this way for at least five minutes. The air just a cauldron, tiny hail hitting everything like tiny bullets, my old friend just feet away from me in the middle of it all, and him never knowing it, and me never knowing how or why he got there, and eventually having a realization that maybe being under the overhang was more dangerous than being out in the wind. The air was full of flying things: one couldn’t tell what they were, but probably mostly sticks. Even now, after typing all this out, it is not possible to convey the true other-worldiness of it. It was terrifying (mayhaps even traumatizing) but I can’t remember ever having such a sudden experience where I was so thoroughly removed from the standard plane of existence.

Finally it all seemed to stop at once. Old friend went inside the barn and all of us who were stopped at the tree did 8-point turns and took the long way home, to discover power out and a new set of decidedly modern problems.

More Hand Gestures for Driving

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , on July 27, 2017 by sethdellinger

The other day, I was driving and I saw someone use one of the hand signals you are supposed to use to signal a turn if your turn signals aren’t working.  It got me thinking about nonverbal hand signals we can use to other drivers on the road.  There are the turning hand gestures, the “you go first” gesture, and “the bird”, and that’s about it.  It got me thinking how great it would be if we had a longer list of “official” hand gestures we could use to easily communicate to other drivers.  Here is a partial list of what I think would be very useful for us all to learn, although I have no idea what the actual gestures would look like, but we need some that mean these things:

–“I know you waved me to go first, but really, I think you should go first.”

–“I’m only changing lanes really briefly.”

–“I’d prefer you not drive that close to me.”

–“Are you a police officer?”

–“I really like your sunglasses.”

–“I still buy CDs.”

–“Who is your favorite Golden Girl?”  (note: there would need to be hand signals for each Golden Girl, including Stanley.)

–“I wish I could grow a mustache.”

–“I am not personally responsible for this traffic jam.  Would you like to get to the bottom of who is?”

–“I’m really more of a ‘dog person’.”

–“How about this weather?”

–“I can give you some pointers on how to go vegan, if you’d like.”

–“Do you happen to have a bathroom in your car?”

–“Wow! We’re both going super fast!”

–“Stop texting!”

–“Evolution is not a theory.”

–“You know, fellow traveler, driving down this nondescript highway, in a car I am indebted to, toward a job I hate, has me feeling like just a cog in a sinister capitalist machine.  Good day to you!”

–“I just had carpal tunnel surgery.”

–“*HAZARD LIGHTS*”

–“I wouldn’t mind learning the art of topiary gardening.”

These are just a sampling of the standardized hand gestures that I feel could make our lives easier.  Are there any I have left out? Leave your suggestions in the comments!

Days: Fifteen Years Sober

Posted in Memoir with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 19, 2017 by sethdellinger

Prologue

There were chandeliers.  I had rarely been around chandeliers, and even then, never so many, never so shiny.  In fact, nearly everything was shiny—the centerpieces, the candle holders, the forks and knives had glints and sparkles.  Light seemed to reflect and refract from everywhere all at once, off of balloons and from under tables, men’s wingtip shoes had tiny stars in them, large wire-rimmed glasses on women’s faces beamed chandelier light into my eyes.  The whole ballroom was like a universe.

I should have expected to be dazzled at the first wedding I ever attended.  I’d seen depictions of weddings in some movies, sure, but being only eight or nine years old, I didn’t have a lot to go on.  I knew there would be a ceremony, and they’d kiss, and then I heard we threw rice at them, oddly enough.  I must have expected there to be a party afterward, but if I did, I certainly had no idea what to expect from it.  And all this shininess—I hadn’t been prepared for that.

My cousins were there—some that I liked and some that I didn’t, but we all kept playing together, regardless.  That’s what you do with cousins when you’re a kid, after all—you play with them no matter how much you like them.  Once the pomp and trope of the adult rituals during the reception began to wear thin for us (how many times does an eight-year-old think it’s interesting to watch two grown-ups kiss? Just because someone tapped their glass?) we found our way to each other and began exploring.  We found an elevator in the lobby that we rode up and down and up and down, getting off on random floors, running to the ends of the halls.  We made a game where you tried to touch the wall at the end of the hall and get back to the elevator before the doors closed.  It wasn’t easy.  We also devised a contest to see who could, when controlling the floor buttons, go longest without the doors opening to let a stranger onto the elevator.  Again and again we were tempted to press the Emergency Stop button, but we never did.  Eventually, an employee caught onto the fact that some kids were playing fast and loose with their elevator and we got yelled at and told to stop, and, feeling like we’d just been dressed down by a Supreme Court justice, we ran out of the elevator, through the lobby, and back into the ballroom.

We played under vacant tables.  We made forts under there by using spare tablecloths and draping them over the chairs.  We moved the large potted plants out a few feet from the walls and hid behind them until grown-ups gave us weird looks.  We took M&Ms out of our gift baskets and threw them long distances into each other’s mouths.  By and large, nobody was watching us.  The adults were having a grand old time and we were left to play, to run around.  It was a unique environment for us.  Dressed in our little spiffy clothes—suspenders, skirts, ties—we felt like miniature grown-ups, doing our kid things under the shiny lights.

Occasionally, the action in the grown-up world would halt briefly while they did another of their inexplicable rituals—shoving cake at each other, somebody’s dad dancing with somebody else, and on and on.  At one point, everyone stopped what they were doing for the throwing of the bouquet, which did not sound remotely interesting to me, but my cousins ran to the crowd to watch.  I was thirsty and a little tired, so I made my way back to my family’s table to regroup and hydrate.

Nobody was there, as they were off watching something happen to a bouquet.  I pulled myself up to the table, the empty food plates still scattered around, and my mother’s purse hanging on the side of her chair, and more M&Ms in clear mason jars.  I found my Sprite and gulped it down.  It was nice to have a moment alone.  Then my eye fell upon it: the champagne flute.  Full, bubbles creeping up the sides, mysterious presences.  I glanced around and verified I was unwatched.  I took the glass, using both hands to steady it, and brought it to my lips, surprised by the blast of carbon dioxide as the carbonation hit my nose.  I barely tasted anything as I downed the beverage in one quick movement.  I sat back in my chair, looked around myself again to see if I had been observed.  In a moment, the warmth hit my stomach.  A smile crept at my lips.

 

Days of Nothing

 

It had been a hot summer. Summers are always hot, and Pennsylvania summers get that special kind of humidity working for them, but this summer had just been a rainforest ordeal. We spent every day with a thin sheen of sweat on us almost all the time, even indoors, even in the dark in the basement. It was a summer of Sloe Gin Fizzes, chain-smoking Newports, sitting on the front porch.  It was a stoop, really, but we called it a porch, although you entered through the side door, not the front.

I was staying quite suddenly and unexpectedly with two of my friends who were renting a house in the middle of the Pennsylvania countryside. And I mean Countryside. At least a 20-minute drive from where anyone might consider civilization. The view from that front porch was actual and real rolling Pennsylvania Hills, green as Ireland, constantly sun-dappled, you could see the shadows of clouds as they passed overhead, rolling down the hills like boulders. Cows and sheep on the periphery, small tree outcroppings dotting the very tops of the horizons. I make it sound kind of lovely, but in fact, it was a pretty awful time for everybody.

See, if you are from Pennsylvania, it would mean something if I told you this was in Perry County, and really far out in the middle of Perry County. How these friends rented the house, how they found it, I’ll never know. But there I found myself, immediately after giving up on a semester of college, literally walking away from classes that were over three-quarters of the way done, because I couldn’t stop drinking long enough to wake up in the morning, or do homework or even read Mark Twain books. I simply threw in the towel, and after spending a couple weeks tooling around campus aimlessly, I decided to just jump ship entirely, threw what little belongings I had into the back of my 1983 Ford Escort, and drove an hour from my college out into the middle of the rolling god-damned Hills. I did this in order to spend the summer with two people who were likewise as troubled as I was, but in different ways, and we were miserable as hell together. We’d spend entire mornings out in front of the house with a two-by-four, swatting at the huge bumble bees as they flew past us, drinking 20 ounce cans of Busch beer, trying to kill as many of those bees as we could, for no reason other than there was nothing else to do. We’d sit on our plastic lawn chairs on that porch, with our view of the field, secretly hoping that it was manure spreading day, just so that there was something to look at, something to talk about, something to complain about other than the heat and the damn bees.

We spent our nights inside, in the dark basement, lit only by multiple strings of Christmas lights, the smell of must and tobacco smoke, no television, no stereo. Just imbibing and talking, and sometimes in full silence. I spent the whole summer reading one issue of Guitar World magazine, articles I didn’t even understand, once everybody else was asleep, reading these damn guitar articles in the almost total darkness, falling asleep on a dust-covered couch. It was terrible and wonderful.

One morning, as we were sitting on our stoop smoking our cigarettes watching the distant rolling hills as though something might erupt from them, an Amish boy strolled past on the street in front of our yard, walking his ancient bike beside him. He stood and looked at us, as though he were seeing something for the very first time, some true curiosity. Thinking we were some sort of cultural emissaries, we approached him and struck up a conversation. I can’t remember now what was said between us, what inane questions we must have asked in the name of science, but after a 20-minute conversation, he went his way and we went back to the stoop, thinking we had just crossed some cultural divide. I can’t be sure what we said, but I know who I was back then, so I know I was an asshole.

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In my early twenties there was a short time period when I stayed with my mother in a small apartment she was renting in the small Pennsylvania town of Dillsburg. This was during a time when she went on frequent extended trips for her job, so even though it was a place where I wasn’t paying any rent, I would find myself with my own apartment for a couple days at a time, here and there. Living the kind of life I was living then, which is to say, mildly indigent, alone time was a fairly sacrosanct rarity. On these times when she was gone, I would wake up on the couch, still mildly dizzy from my stupor the night before, find some water to drink, and commence sitting there, absorbing cable television, mixing large amounts of Diet Coke with larger amounts of cheap gin, chainsmoking generic menthol light cigarettes until the whole room was suffused with a haze as if it were packing material. Somehow having that apartment to myself, and enough booze and cigarettes and food I hadn’t paid for to last me through a couple days, felt like I had a luxury a room on a cruise liner. I would crank up the air-conditioning, raid her collection of compact discs, listen to Led Zeppelin’s “Gallows Pole” over and over again at an incredibly high volume. One such night, after a lengthy day of solo debauchery, I found myself inexplicably out in the parking lot of the apartment complex, wandering aimlessly, smoking my cigarette with a gin and Coke in a supersize McDonald’s cup. Suddenly and quite unexpectedly I heard from behind me someone yell my name. It took me awhile to realize what I was witnessing, but it was one of my more lengthy roommates from college, suddenly here in this parking lot, 45 minutes from the town we went to school in. At this point, I must have been out of college for about two years and hadn’t heard from him since (this is pre-Facebook and even pre-MySpace). I couldn’t believe my eyes! After getting over both of our initial confusions, I learned that not only did he live in the same apartment complex, but he lived with a man that we were also roommates with. The three of us had shared an apartment for about a year in college, and now they were living together and working in the town of Dillsburg, while I was mooching off my mother in the same apartment complex! It was almost too much to handle. Excited for the reunion, we both walked into their apartment, and sure enough, there was the third roommate, and he was just as shocked as us! We spent about half an hour catching up on what we had done since school, and then sat there in a kind of dazed boredom. We had nothing to talk about. It hadn’t been that long ago we were in college, pulling pranks, making silly movies, running all over the town like young people who would never die, would never have a problem in the world. But now just a few years later here we were, clearly at different crossroads. We sat in silence and watched a movie, and then I left and never went back there again.

*******************************************************************

 

I don’t really remember how it happened, but I know for a fact that once, stone drunk, I found myself walking down the Carlisle Pike in the middle of night, just past the 81 North entrance ramp, headed away from Carlisle. I had just past the entrance ramp when I saw a tractor-trailer pulled over on the side of the road, presumably for the driver to sleep there for the night. None of the lights were on and the engine was off. I thought to myself, ‘I could just roll underneath a truck right there and sleep for the night. I could just lay under there, be sheltered from view and the wind, look up at the underside of that trailer, let this drunkenness and tiredness wash over me, and sleep there for the night.’ And I did roll under that truck, and I looked at the underside of it. I put my hands behind my head and stretched out in the gravel parking lot. I laid there for a little while, I have no idea how long, but even in my drunken stupor, and as low as I was in every aspect of life at that moment, even I knew this was a bad idea. I rolled back out and kept on walking, and I have no idea where I went.

*********************************************************************

 

Time is a sad, dense fog over a sea, and places are lighted buoys.  The people?  I don’t know, maybe they’re boats, or fishes.  The days stretch out like dreams in a desert.

 

Days of Something

 

Just a few months after getting sober, I found myself living back in Pennsylvania, after a short stint in New Jersey.  I had moved in with a friend of mine who had a spare bedroom. I got my old job back, the same job cooking greasy diner food for a company that kept giving me chances.  I would come home everyday and see some of my friends there, hanging around this house I had moved into. Sometimes playing music, or fiddling with the communal telescope, or playing board games.   A few weeks into this living arrangement, I decided that I was going to go out that night by myself.  I ended up going to a movie, “Million Dollar Baby”, and it was a good movie, I thought to myself, ‘Maybe I’ll start watching good movies.’  I walked out of the theater, and it was a late showing, and it was winter, so it was dark and frigid everywhere, and I was the only one in the parking lot, and it suddenly dawned on me that I could do anything I wanted. I wasn’t a slave to anything like I had been before. Nothing drove me to a bar or a convenience store to get a fix. Nothing told me I had to be somewhere that I could fall asleep anytime soon. I didn’t have to work in the morning. I didn’t have anybody who knew where I was or was expecting me somewhere. I walked across the frigid parking lot to the adjacent Walmart, bought a Butterfinger candy bar and a Red Bull, walked back to my car, and drove into the countryside, smoking cigarettes, laughing my ass off at freedom.

 

********************************************************************

 

Philadelphia is a great city, but there’s nothing special about it in the winter. It becomes winter just like every place else becomes the winter: slowly, and then all at once. My first winter in the city was also the first winter I’d spent anywhere without a car. During the summer I had learned to get around by riding my bike and walking, and was just getting pretty good at it when the gradual winter hit all of a sudden. It was cold and it was windy, but didn’t snow for the first few months, and then one day, a day that I also happened to have off work, the sky opened up and dumped down about eight inches. It was a very different experience than my previous winters elsewhere, where you might go outside and walk around, do some shoveling, maybe go see a few of the local landmarks covered in the fluffy cliches. In a densely packed urban area that stretches out for miles and miles in any direction, and where local landmarks are a dime a dozen but breathtaking beauty might be a little scarce, I wasn’t sure exactly what to do with myself, other than sit on my couch and watch Netflix. Eventually I decided to just bundle up, put on some heavy shoes (since I never really am in the habit of keeping boots around) and venture out into the snow and see what happened. I started walking through the streets of my South Philly neighborhood, unplowed, unshoveled, the houses squished up against each other like sandwich bread, snow building up in the trashy pedestrian alleys between them, choking the tops of open the trash cans, pawprints sometimes the only sign anyone had been down a sidewalk.  And I kept walking and walking, taking note how it was different than my previous experience, and also ways in which it was similar, compare and contrast, compare and contrast, that is essentially how I Live every moment of my life. One experience must always be similar or different from previous ones; otherwise, how do you measure anything?  Eventually the neighborhood started to change as I kept walking, buildings got farther apart, the roads got wider, the streets were starting to be plowed, cars started moving around, the city seemed to wake up. I started passing people on the street and there was an air of conviviality, of shared experience. Everyone was saying hello, commenting on the snow, and it wasn’t just what people were saying, but the attitude, the feeling, like we were all finally together, not that we were undergoing any major hardship, but just that the presence of something so different, something so sudden, almost held us together like a web. Connection.  Eventually I realized I was closer to Independence Mall, which is the cluster of extremely significant historical sites in the city, than I was to home, so I just kept on walking. I arrived behind Independence Hall probably an hour and a half after leaving my house, still trudging through almost a foot of snow, surprised to see that there were a few people milling around, but only a few, much less than the hundreds and hundreds that crammed into this park in the summer months. I circled the building, taking note of what the roof looked like covered in snow, imagining it would have looked the same to George Washington or Thomas Jefferson when it snowed in the late 1700s. I crossed Chestnut Street, which is directly in front of Independence Hall, my feet not quite hitting the cobblestones, but still feeling the unevenness of the walk, as the snow impacted into the cracks around the cobblestones, as it surely has done to other foot travelers for centuries. I trudged across the open space in front of Independence Hall, the Liberty Bell to my left, taking note that it was still open, the Park Service still there and operating, but I didn’t see a soul in line to see the famed bell. I kept on going, heading towards the visitor center, with its bright glass interiors, newly built restrooms, shiny gift shop and concession stand. I often used to stop at the visitor center in the summer, as I was riding my bike around the city, for its quick and easy access to a restroom and bottled water.  As I swung open the heavy glass and stainless steel doors, it was clear to me that everyone inside the visitor center was surprised to see me, not because of anything about me, but simply because I was a human being. I was literally the only non-employee in this entire visitor center. It’s amazing what snow does to history tourism. Despite the fact that it was winter and snowing, I was sweating greatly, and was glad of the opportunity to take my coat off, breathe a little bit, stomp the snow out of every crease and crevice. I was thirsty and hungry, as I didn’t leave the house with the intention to walk halfway across the city, so I went straight to the concession stand, got me a bottle of water, a hot coffee, and some sort of breakfast sandwich.  I sat alone in the bright, metal cafeteria, my belly growing content as I fed it.  I took note that outside, it had begun snowing again, and heavier this time.  It was quiet in the visitor center.  I was far from home.

 

**********************************************************************

 

This day started very early. I woke up around 4am not knowing what I was going to do with the day, but knowing that I wanted to wake up early enough to have a really thorough day, if you know what I mean. I was living by myself in Erie Pennsylvania, in an apartment, one bedroom, on the second level of an old house that was nearing dilapidation, but still teetering on the edge of respectability. It was smack-dab in the middle of summer, and waking up at 4am, the whole apartment was already laden with a heat, an oppressive second floor apartment kind of heat; a thin layer of sweat somehow on everything you looked at. I rolled out of bed, made myself a latte on my proudly-acquired home espresso machine, and set about pondering what to do with such a lengthy, summery kind of day all to myself.  I took a long, overly hot shower while the local morning news played on the television which I had crammed into my tiny bathroom. I stayed in the shower for the whole newscast, mind mostly blank. After the shower, while air drying mostly to cool off, I randomly selected a DVD from my bloated collection, and came up with “The 40 Year Old Virgin”, a movie that I don’t know how it ended up in my collection and no longer resides there, but at the time, a mindless comedy seemed just the ticket. I laid on my couch and let the Steve Carell comedy wash over me. Having gotten up so early that an immense amount of day still laid stretched out before me, even after my lengthy ablutions. What to do? Living by one’s self for so long, and so far from everyone you know, turns days and 31316_1458245861882_8379455_nmornings into quiet studies of one’s inner mechanics, and if you linger too long without plans, your cogs and belts begin to make a lot of noise. Suddenly it hit me: Niagara Falls. I’d been living relatively close to Niagara Falls for almost a year at this point, and it was always something bouncing around the periphery of what I wanted to do, but I never quite made it there, never quite made that my actual plan. Almost the moment that it struck me, I bounded off the couch, went to my computer to MapQuest the directions, threw on some clothes and some essentials into a backpack, and I was out the door.  I don’t remember much about the drive, although certainly there had to be a drive. It was close but not incredibly close, probably something like an hour and 15 minutes. A decent trip, but then again, much closer than almost anyone else in the world lives to such landmark. I remember having trouble figuring out where to park when I got close to it, the town itself surrounding it not exactly being incredibly helpful with instructions.  Finally I did get my car parked, and walked across a large grassy mall, the sound of the falls quite distinct, just like you expect the sound of Niagara Falls to be: thunderous, droning, like a white noise that comes from within.  I remember hearing the falls, I remember a large grassy area you had to walk across to get to it, but I don’t remember actually arriving at the falls.  In fact, the order of what I did that day and the specifics of how I did it, are lost in the labyrinth of my brain. I did the touristy things, I rode the boat, I walked up and down the path alongside the falls, I wore the poncho they provide you. I took selfies on the boat, all by myself, surrounded by revelers and families and church groups. After doing the requisite attractions, I found myself walking around the grounds, reading the historical markers, interpreting the interpretive maps. I noticed that there was a small landmass called Goat Island, out of the middle of the river, one of the features that gives the Falls that look, where it is divided occasionally, not one big solid Falls. It was accessible quite easily via a pedestrian bridge across the river, so I went out there, reading the Wikipedia entry on my phone as I went, the long and somewhat interesting history of the island, its ownership and various names. I arrived on the island to find a sweltering patch of grass, the heat dense with liquid, the roar of the falls now like a white noise outside myself, like a curtain descending. The island itself was no larger than a small park, and trees lined the northern edge, so that one couldn’t actually see the land fall away at the end.  I had the island entirely to myself. Of course the only thing to do on an island like that is to walk toward the edge. Walking through the grass I was assaulted by bugs everywhere, insects nipping at my legs, bouncing off my knees like miniature Kamikazes. The closer and closer I got to the river, the more amazed I was that there were no protections of any kind in place. One expects to find some sort of railing here, some warning signs, maybe even Park Rangers or something. But no, the island just walks right up to the river, and right up to the falls, anyone with dark designs would be in no way dissuaded.  The design of the island makes it challenging to walk right up to the falls, but instead it is very easy to sit at a clearing about twenty yards away from the actual precipice. I took my backpack off and sat in the grass, and looked out across the Niagara River, just beginning to get a real good head of steam up, just beginning to get its little whitecaps and wavelets, the water not knowing it was about to fly.  The heat washed over me, the insect buzzing began to mesh with the white noise of the falls, it all became a hot buzzing constant, I laid my head on the grass and sunk in, sunk down into the dirt, I was so far from home, and for a moment, I had no idea where I was, or maybe even who I was.

 

********************************************************************

“Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day
Fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way.
Kicking around on a piece of ground in your hometown
Waiting for something or someone to show you the way.

Tired of lying in the sunshine, staying home to watch the rain.
You are young and life is long and there is time to kill today.
And then one day you find, ten years have got behind you.
No one told you when to run. You missed the starting gun!”

‘Time’, by Pink Floyd

 

Days of Everything

 

It was a cold night, but not too cold, which was fortunate, because we had to park very far away from the arena. I unbuckled Boy from his car seat and heaved him into the air, bringing him next to my cheek to give him a kiss in the crisp evening air. “This soccer game?” He asked. “Yes,” I told him. “This is the big building I told you about.” I sat him down and stuck out my hand for him to grab, as we strolled quickly through the immense parking lot together. He had lots of questions. He kept calling it football, which was interesting, I thought, since most of the world referred to soccer as football, but he couldn’t possibly know that, could he? Most of his questions weren’t really about the sport we were about to go watch, but the building it was in. How could a building be so big that you could play soccer inside of it? How tall was it, was it taller than the telephone poles? Taller than our house? Will there be snacks? Soft pretzels? I’ve become accustomed to the constant barrage of questions at this point, pulling from deep within me a patience I honestly did not think I possessed.  Not that this patience is without limits—but at any rate, I seem to have more than I thought.  I suspect a toddler will prove this to be true of most anyone.

I was surprised by the patience he displayed as we waited in a long line to buy tickets. It seems every day, he is making leaps and bounds, growing in things like patience, understanding, and empathy. Which is not to say he’s still not a little ball of emotions that doesn’t know how to act, just maybe a little less so than a few months ago or a year ago. He’s becoming much more of a companion as opposed to a force of nature to wrangle and watch. While for the most part, time with Boy is still all about teaching, there are moments now of truly just being.  And “just being” with a little guy like boy is more magic than I’m accustomed to.

Finally, tickets procured, we entered the concourse, looking for our section. I hadn’t studied the arena map extensively, and had chosen seats in the section on the complete opposite side of the concourse, so we had to walk past countless souvenir stands and snack bars, him wanting desperately to stop at each, and also wanting to enter into each section as we passed, with me constantly trying to tell him that it wasn’t much farther, not much farther. But through it all, he didn’t freak out or melt down or cry, just implored me strongly. Finally we came upon our entrance to the arena, and I picked him up because I knew the stairs were going to be steep and he was probably going to be shocked by the sight of walking into the big room. Carrying him on my side, we entered the arena proper, and although an indoor soccer field lacks the nebulous breathtaking quality of a baseball field, the sudden shock of green and the expanse of a sudden cavernous room had its desired effect on the countencance of Boy, which is to say, it produced a certain amount of awe. After pausing to allow him to soak it in, we climbed up the steep steps, to find our seats. We were all alone in our section, something I had to ask the ticket man to do, in case it did not go very well. Boy was beyond excited to sit here. He was very into his seat, enamored with the idea that the number on it matched  the number on his ticket, and in this enormous room, this seat was his and his alone. He was not restless as I had feared, his eyes trained on the action on the field. I would steal sidelong glances at him, see his eyes glued to the action, his head swiveling as the ball bounced back and forth, his complete concentration and immersion something only possible in the earliest years of life, and during a first exposure to things; the sights and sounds meshing with dawning understanding, realization writ large across his face. He would sometimes stop his concentration to ask questions about the goalies, which he called The Goal Guys, their different colored jerseys causing him no end of confusion. Later, as he was able to again float back into our world, he would watch me for cues whenever the arena sound system would play the tropes of modern sporting events: the “Charge!” song, the “De-Fense!” chant, and on and on. He saw and understood there was an audience participation element and he wanted to learn.  I would raise my fist and yell “Charge!”, glancing over to see him mimic it, his tiny voice bursting forth its own “Charge!”  This moment, especially, nearly crippled me with emotion.

He paid close attention to the game and stayed quite interested for well over an hour and a half when he started to fall asleep on my shoulder. I told him I thought it was time to go, and he protested quite strongly, saying he didn’t want to miss anything. And I kept giving in, saying we could stay, and then he kept falling asleep again, until eventually I picked him up, went up the stairs to the upper concourse, and told him he should get down and walk around and look at all the empty chairs, all the sections without anybody in them. The arena was quite empty, in fact, especially once one got up to the upper reaches. We got to a very high section, a corner section so high up you could almost touch the roof in a few of the spots, and as we emerged into it, it became clear that it had not even been cleaned out or looked at after the preceding weekend’s Motocross event in the arena. Everywhere there was trash, even half-eaten food and some beer cans on their sides. It was an astonishing array of trash and smells to walk into amid what appeared to be an otherwise normal arena. It was immediately too late for me to backtrack and take him out of this section, he was much too interested in the hows or whys this could have happened. I explained as best I could that they assumed they would not sell any tickets in this section for the soccer game, so they must be waiting to clean up from the Motocross. He did not want to walk around the section, but he also didn’t want to leave. I picked him up and we watched the soccer from way high up near the ceiling, looking down on all that old trash and beer cans, until he looked at me and told me he was ready to go home. I felt that I had a companion here, a little guy who I could teach and learn from, who was now going to be interested in things, who was present with me.

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It wasn’t too long ago that we had a little get-together for Boy’s birthday. My Love’s father was there—and let me tell you, I like Love’s father so much it’s nearly criminal–as well as both of my parents and my paternal grandmother. My parents have been divorced for quite a few years, and yet they get along like the best of friends, and there was my dad’s mother, chatting it up with his ex-wife, all while boy ran around and told everyone he loves them all the time, and climbed on everybody, and climbed on me, while I held Loves hand, while the room was full of talk and laughter, while there was warmth everywhere, and everywhere I looked there was future, future, future.

 

**********************************************************************

 

My love and I put on our light spring jackets and walked into the crisp evening. Just the two of us, we interlocked our hands, and headed down the street toward Midtown. It is one of the benefits of living where we do, that usually, given the right weather and the right child care situation, we can walk to some of the places that we like to spend time together. This night it was simple: we were going out to eat. It was one of the last walkable nights of the year, and we knew it. The cold was setting in, soon we would be driving everywhere and stuck inside like prisoners.  So tonight, we knew, was a walking night.

There was a very popular and artsy restaurant in the middle of Midtown, which somehow we still had not made it to. Recently they had started serving a very popular veggie burger, that all of our friends were talking about, and we still hadn’t tried. It had been on our list for weeks.

The thing about taking a somewhat lengthy walk with the person that you love is that it forces conversation you don’t normally have inside the house or perhaps in a moving car. You see things that you don’t normally see, are reminded of things you might only see or think of by yourself, you’re moving at an interesting pace, a different speed. I love holding hands and walking with my love. I love the way her hand feels, I love being connected to her physically in that way, I love being able to look at her face from the side so often. I love being able to point out things, and have her point out things to me, elements of our neighborhood that we only see when we are walking the dog by ourselves.  I love kissing her outside. Many people spend most of their lives in relationships and begin to take things like this for granted, maybe even very early on in life, they assume they will have a companion in this form. Having spent so long single, small things like holding hands, walking down the street, these things never seem anything other than magical to me. My love thrills me.  Literally every single thing about her. It’s electric.

Twenty minutes later we found ourselves the only customers in the artsy eating establishment, it being only five o’clock. We were talking about the art on the wall, the interesting sculptures, the funny man who kept looking at us askance from inside the kitchen. We talked about the interesting ordering system the restaurant used, the haphazard way salt was placed on some of the tables but not others, we talked about our days, we held hands and looked at each other. Sometimes we didn’t say anything and that was lovely in its own way. When you know someone is your true partner, being in their presence is a constant salve.

The food came and it was delicious, just as delicious as everyone says it is was, and it was fantastic to share a meal with someone who shares so many of my worldviews, who has the compassion in the same places I do, love and freedom in the same proportions, to share a meal with a woman who has taught me so much. As I was finishing off my Diet Pepsi, stealing glances at this woman, I kept thinking some of the same thoughts I come back to all the time.  How I waited so long to find her.  How, when I did find her, I couldn’t and still can’t believe how perfect she is.  How my journey to find her wasn’t about me, or even the journey, but it was about her, about us.  How I still learn about her every day and she’s such a delicious mystery.  How she fits so well.  I looked at her as I sat there, finishing my Diet Pepsi, and I said to her the only thing one can say, given the unbearable weight of the world:  I can’t believe you’re finally here.

 

***************************************************************

The days, good or bad, really do just stretch out like deserts, uncountable deserts, again and again and again.  Some, you find, contain nothing: plodding marches under a bored sun.  But sometimes, they are filled up, filled with everything you ever dreamed, brazen neon signs of days, confetti and love love love.  I don’t know about you, but I’m trying to figure out how to keep them filled up.  I want the days of everything, forever.

Patterns Appearing

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , on May 5, 2015 by sethdellinger

Three weeks ago, while staying at my father’s house as the previous tenants were leaving our new townhouse, my love and I cuddled together on my childhood bed.  We giggled and shared stories, smooched while watching Netflix.  At some point she noticed the quilt we were laying under was quite unique.  Look at this quilt, she said.  I’ve never seen anything quite like it.  It was a large, heavy quilt.  On one side were impressionistic patterns of airplanes: all identical, all seemingly painstakingly cut from heavy felt of deep-hued green and red.  The reverse side appeared to be random swatches of patterned fabric: trees, field mice, pictures of men laying railroad ties, elegant castles.  I turned to my love in the near-dark and said My Grandma Cohick made this for me.  I’ve had it almost my whole life.  She seemed to contemplate this.  That’s crazy; it looks almost new.  She must have been great at making things.  I paused and thought.  Yes, I said, I suppose she was.  Not everything, but some things.  My love turned the heavy quilt over in her hands and made a final pronouncement.  She must have used a pattern for these airplanes, but this other side, she must have just been thinking about Little Seth.

Three days before our quilt conversation, we had found ourselves driving hurriedly through the streets of Philadelphia.  We were almost late to pick up our U-Haul, which we were going to use to move all of my belongings back to Central Pennsylvania, where, eventually, a townhouse waited for us in the much smaller city of Harrisburg.  But currently we were vexed by the address of the U-Haul place, an address that didn’t seem to exist.  I was driving, and as I passed the spot where I had thought the U-Haul store might be, I turned right, hoping to make a loop back around to see if I had simply missed something.  As I drove, my love used the internet on her phone to try to figure things out, as well.  After a few more loops with no luck I took a new direction, following a hunch I had about an address misprint.  My love looked up from her phone.  I don’t know how you know where you’re going, she said.  I know you’ve lived here for over a year but you seem to know the whole city.  I smiled.  I wanted to take her compliment but I knew the truth.  I said, I’ve never even been here before.  It’s really quite simple; the city is laid out on a grid, and once you understand the grid, it’s like having a map in your head anywhere you go.  For instance, right here is 7th Street.  I know what 7th Street means anywhere in the city.  And here we’re coming up on Oregon Avenue, which is another street that stretches the city, going the other direction.  They’re points on a grid.  You would have had this down faster than I would have.  She smiled at me, not believing my humility.

Two days after the quilt conversation, I’m still staying with my father out in the boondocks as we wait for our townhouse.  It’s noon on a weekday and my love is at work but I have the day off.  I hop in my car, put some super-serious music on the stereo, and drive through the countryside of my youth.  After the previous four years, during which I have moved around quite a bit, sometimes it gets difficult to remember where I’m from, or even where I’m at, at any particular moment.  Especially somewhere like a big box retailer; wandering the aisles at a Best Buy, I find myself unsure if I am in Erie, or New Jersey, or Philadelphia, or Mechanicsburg, or maybe the Great Hereafter.  Many places are very different but also many places are quite the same.  I focus now on the rolling hills around me as I drive, the great elms and sycamores and dogwoods that clump in the middles of vast fields.  I don’t know what is growing in the fields and I never have known; I am from this place but not of it.  Each of these back country roads holds memories of a kind for me, even if many of them are just memories of driving down them.  The memories can be of where I was going, or who I was with, or even the smell of an air freshener.  Suddenly my mind is outside the car, imagining what this vessel I am driving looks like cutting through the air on this gorgeous morning as the sun dapples this newly-paved desolate road; like a movie camera, my mind’s eye pulls up and away from the car and I can see the green-brown field on either side, the trees, the nearby farm’s outbuildings and their shabby off-white clapboard frames.  I keep pulling the camera up and now I can see more adjacent fields, these in slightly different colors: yellows, hues of red, deep browns; the kind of view you might see from an airplane window.  It is the view of a structure that is impossible to see when you are within it.  The beauty of the moment stuns me, even though I am only imagining it, the deep, meaningful colors, the rolling of the hills, the solitary silo, the geese in formation.  I pull up further, further.  It’s a patchwork quilt, this map of my youth, and it has the face of my grandmother.

Yesterday, I was leaving for work from the new, beautiful, modern townhouse my love and I inhabit in Harrisburg.  I still get a thrill every time I press the button from inside my car and the garage door automatically starts going up.  I’ve never had my own garage, let alone one with an automatic door.  I can’t help but be thrilled by the modern amenities we now have, although I worry I’ll get soft, or boring, or worse.  But for now I just enjoy having a dishwasher and central air conditioning and an automatic garage door opener.  I tell myself that not everything that’s easy or comfortable is evil, and I hope that’s true.  On this particular morning I have decided for the very first time to try to get to work without using my GPS.  Despite having grown up very close to Harrisburg, I don’t know it well, but I’ve been driving to work from this house for a week now so I’m going to try to do it unaided.  A few blocks away from my house and I’m a little worried.  But then I see Fourth Street.  Ah, good.  I think to myself.  I know what Fourth Street means.  Now I just have to see what comes next.

Winter Song #2

Posted in Rant/ Rave with tags , , on November 14, 2014 by sethdellinger

I was really into this song for just about two weeks in the winter of 2009.  It remains a notable winter song in my mind because once, I had to drive home at night in an HUGE snowstorm (from York, PA to Carlisle, PA) and I had this song on repeat.  The storm was so bad, I didn’t dare take my eyes or concentration off the road to turn the music off or take it off of repeat.  It’s a GREAT song, but now, it is simply, to me, all about that horrible, terrifying wintry drive:

Philly Journal, 11/2/13

Posted in Philly Journal with tags , , , , , on November 2, 2013 by sethdellinger

It’s been quite awhile since I posted a Philly Journal.  Click here if you’d like a refresher course in the older ones.

So, today I finally got word that the row house I’d applied for in the city will be mine for the taking.  I haven’t said much publicly about my quest to move from South Jersey into the city, and that, as you may know, is pretty typical of me.  I don’t really tell people what I’m up to until things are kind of a done deal.  So, here’s what’s going on:

About a year and a half ago I moved from Erie, PA to the development in Jersey where my mother and sister live.  I got a new job, in the city of Philadelphia.  The goal was to stay with my mother for awhile until I figured out where I wanted to live in the city, and then be a big boy alone in the city.

It took a little longer than expected.

Mostly, because it took me almost a year to know for sure where I’d end up working in the city.  I work for the largest chain of coffee shops in the world.  I got hired as a manager but had to undergo some training before I got my own store, and that training does not have a specified length.  Not wanting to move onto the opposite side of the city from where I’d be working, I waited.  Then, once I got promoted, it still proved a daunting task to move into the city.  It’s just so big!  Try as I might, I just could not find a proper way to begin the task.

Also, there was the matter of my car.  I really, really wanted to not have it.  I didn’t like the idea of worrying about parking in the city (it’s a very legit hassle), and ridding myself of the expense would also be a major plus.  But, see, I had bought the car new, and still owed more on it than I would get by selling it, so I was in a precarious situation.  Eventually, over the past year, I paid it down enough to make selling it a viable option, and about three weeks ago, I did sell it.  I currently have no car!  It is a very, very strange feeling, one I have not felt since I was 16.  For those doing the math, that is 19 years ago.  So for the past few weeks, I’ve been driving my mom’s car while I took the final few strides toward finding a place in the city.

Luckily, even though I could certainly be classified as a bit of a loner, I have made a few connections in the city over the past year, one of whom happens to be a real estate agent who specializes in showing people apartments that meet their criteria.  So, I told her what I was looking for and where I was looking for it, and this past Tuesday we walked our rear ends off checking out apartments.  I liked quite a few, and it turns out I can totally afford to live in the hippest and coolest sections of the city, but alas, though affordable, they were all super small.  I fell in love with the last place we went: a townhouse well outside the cool parts of the city, and even a pretty good distance from my work (but really, just a ten minute bike ride, which is how I’ll almost always be getting around).  It’s not incredible, and certainly not much to look at from the outside, but I was just head over heels with the interior, and the idea of having so much space for myself.  Those of you who’ve been reading for a long time may remember how thrilled I was by the space I had in Erie…well, this is considerably more than that.

The house is in the neighborhood of the city known as Pennsport, by all appearances a neighborhood that is not an incredibly good one, and not an incredibly bad one.  I will here copy-and-paste the contents of the very brief Wikipedia entry about Pennsport:

Pennsport is a neighborhood in the South Philadelphia section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Pennsport is home to a large working Irish American population and many Mummer clubs. It was also the site of a controversial push for casinos along the Philadelphia waterfront.[ Foxwoods Casino was proposed for Christopher Columbus Boulevard at Reed Street.

According to the Genealogy of Philadelphia County Subdivisions, Pennsport was originally part of Moyamensing Township. Most of the area north of present-day Mifflin Street was included in the Southwark District from 1794 until the consolidation of Philadelphia in 1854. At that point, it was mostly contained in the First Ward. The First and Second Wards ran east of Passyunk Avenue and were divided by Wharton St. (First to the south, Second to the north). The southern boundary of the First Ward initially spanned south to the river, but it was stopped at Mifflin St. in 1898.

That is the extent of the entry.

Here is a map of South Philly neighborhoods.  Now, if you don’t know the city, this will be rather meaningless, but you can see Pennsport there on the far East of the map; that is the city’s end, so my neighborhood borders the Delaware River, and in fact, my house is in the 100 block of my street, so I’m actually dang close to the edge of the city:

philly map

So that’s pretty much it.  I got word late tonight that my rental application had been accepted; however, my move-in date isn’t until the 15th, so I’ve got a little time to do some South Jersey victory laps.  I’ll be resurrecting the Philly Journal for this process of moving and the new journey I’m on.  There will be pictures soon!

Believe it or not!

Posted in Photography, Prose, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on April 6, 2011 by sethdellinger

1.  I almost forgot to mention, about my recent trip home:  I had more fun riding around aimlessly in a car with my momma for two hours than I would have had on a round-the-world cruise.  Pure bliss. 

2.  I stopped for dinner at this small town of Zelienople for dinner yesterday.  I Facebook’d and Tweeted it just because I thought it was a cool town name and a rather adorable tiny, town-that-time-forgot kinda place.  And of course 6 of my FB friends replied that they knew the town, and it led me eventually to IMDB and finding out that it was one of the filming locations of the original “Night of the Living Dead” (and a few other movies)…kinda crazy!  Now I’ll have to go back sometime on purpose to sightsee the filming locations!

3.  I love this line from a song by The Band:  “Life is a carnival, believe it or not.”  Ha!  That shit is funny.

4.  I am very annoyed that my buddy Kyle mentioned Tim Allen’s ubiquitous voice-over presence in a blog entry before I could.  I’ve been bitching about it IRL for months!

5.  Just about every day lately, I am reminded of this great line from one of Kurt Vonnegut’s most famous short stoires, “Harrison Bergeron”, which is set in the year 2081:  “April, for instance, still drove people crazy by not quite being spring-time.”  Good to know this was a problem in the fifties, when the story was written, and will continue to plague folks well into the 2080s.

In an effort to make the “You Would Not Survive a Vacation Like This” blog post a little shorter, I did not include the photos that I took in the countryside around my dad’s house in Newville.  So now here some of them are:

 

 

 

Erie Journal, 1/28/11

Posted in Erie Journal with tags , , on January 28, 2011 by sethdellinger

Thought I’d drop you a line via the Erie Journal to update my faithful readers on how the ol’ dreaded winter is going (click here for all previous Erie Journals).

Well, so far, so good.  By Erie standards, it’s been a mild winter.  We’ve actually missed all the huge snow storms that have made national news.  So far, the biggest “official” snow fall has been around 8 inches.  However, this does not mean the “lake effect” snow is not in effect; instead of getting a few multiple-foot events, what we get is snow every day.  Seriously.  One to three inches, every damn day.  So while we haven’t got any of the huge totals of other spots in the north, we still have a higher season-to-date inch total that most places (we’re around 60 inches so far this winter).

The reason I give you all this background info is to explain a phenomenon I only recently realized was happening to me (actually, two phenomena):  One, I quite seriously do not even notice the snow anymore.  I mean this very literally.  Both when falling from the sky, and gathered on the ground, I usually do not even realize it is happening.  And two, when you are constantly driving in snow, you get very, very good at driving in snow.

I don’t think I’ve ever been a bad snow driver, but sometime about 3 weeks ago I realized I had suddenly become very good at it.  This is not to say that I’m not still very careful when need be, but much of the techniques of snow driving (such as the differences of what to do between a rear-wheel skid and a front-wheel skid, and the subtleties of snow braking) have become instinct and happen without any thought.  And the fact is, skids happen a lot, but since almost everybody is always going an appropriate speed with ample distance between vehicles, if one knows how to properly steer out of a skid, it’s really not a big deal.  And since 80% of my driving takes place in areas with high concentrations of red lights, there are frequent stop-skids, but as I said, proper speed and distance are key.  Again, I have gotten off track here.  What I’m trying to get at is, it’s quite strange how quickly that driving part of your brain—where a lot is happening below the surface—adapts with skill to new environments.  I had done plenty of snow driving back home, but the difference between doing it 12 times a year to seven days a week is pretty huge.

And the fact that I don’t even notice the snow?  Weird.  I walk out to go to work, snow is falling from the sky, and it’s just…nothing.  No thought about how I am going to have to drive in this mess, not even an oh that’s pretty.  It has become way too normal of an event to be worth noting in even as much as a Facebook status.  Might as well say “It’s really hot” every damn day during the summer.  That is the equivalent of the snow in Erie.  And really, it’s not totally a bad thing, at least, not as long as it keeps only being a few inches a day.  If we start getting feet at a time, it will be a different story.

Oh, and there is a quality to the Erie air (I don’t fully understand it) that causes ice crystals to form on the inside of your car windows, but only on especially cold days (seems to happen at around 20 degrees).  It doesn’t happen to everyone, but it seems to afflict about half of all vehicles, by my very unscientific polling.  Here is a picture of the ice on the inside of my driver’s side window on a recent day:

 

As you can imagine, this is quite frustrating, as it is not at all easy to remove (especially from the windshield).  You can’t really use a scraper, and it seems to actually be hardier than ice on the outside windshield.  This interior ice often takes as long as 15 minutes to melt via defrost.  It is quite odd.  I’d love to know why my car is one of the afflicted ones.

OK, that will be enough for now, even though I’ve got enough material for another few Erie Journals, but this is getting kinda long.  More coming in the near future!

Erie Journal, December 2010

Posted in Erie Journal with tags , , , on December 14, 2010 by sethdellinger

 I know there’s a lot of typos here, but I’m in a time crunch.

It has started snowing in Erie.  And that’s pretty much the only way to put it.  It snows here.  And snows.  And snows.  And snows.

Some days are just laced with intermittent squalls with no visiible accumulation.  Other days are one long flurry; like those rainy days that just drizzle and drizzle and drizzle.  Other days are “snow events” with inches or feet of accumulation.  But every day has one thing in common:  it snows.

It waited until later than normal to start, but once it started, it has essetnially not stopped.  There’s not a whole lot of snow on the ground.  The wind blows so hard all the time, the snow just drifts up in the most conspicuous places, leaving just a few-inches layer of smow everywhere, being held to the ground by ice like a paste. 

Since the first day I moved here, countless people have told me, over and over and over again, how “they know how to handle to snow up here”.  Well, they lied.  Either that, or despite our constant complaints in Harrisburg, it’s possible that Harrisburg is amazing at handling snow, because Erie fucking sucks at it.  They pretty much DON’T plow.  They just let us drive over the snow and count on the traffic to flatten the snow.  The most heavily-used arteries do get salted and end up being very navigable, but even the just-barely-secondary roads are totally ignored.  The street  that I live on has not seen a plow since the snow started.  It has icy ruts and ridges as though they were tire ruts deep in the moistest of mud, and then flash frozen.  Walking from my apartment to my car is sometimes treacherous.

In my neioghborhood, nobody shovelled for the first three days of the snow.  Now I see why.  To shovel every time it snows would be insanity.  One must wait until a good amount builds up and then take care of it once or twice a week (shovelling down to the base of ice which I suspect will be with us for a few months).

Mostly, though, I am so far struck by the similarity to central PA.  Sure, there’s a lot more snow and wind and crappier roads, but everyone and their brother has been saying to me since I got here “Just wait until you experience Erie’s winter” and now they’re all saying “So how do you like Erie’s winter?”, to which I have in recent days started replying, “I’m not from Hawaii!”  I know about snow.  Granted, we have yet to get one of these multi-foot dumps we are bound to get (in a city that averages 80-some feet of snow a year, multiple “feet” of snow events are inevitable) and I may feel different after 3 months of constant snow, but so far I’m not seeing the huge deal.

I am confident I will write another entry like this very soon, however, where I admit that this shit is serious!

Audio Poem from “This is What is Invisible”, #12 of 12

Posted in My Poetry with tags , , , , , on November 27, 2010 by sethdellinger

As a reminder, I am posting an audio version of each poem from my new collection, “This is What is Invisible”.  This is the twelfth and final posting, and it’s called “Air”,

Air

When I try to think of all the things I’ve done,
try to review things perfectly like some wireless Victrola
and all that comes through are voices, the laughs,
the smell of the air, the weight of the air,
always the air and people talking
and in my sleep beside me I feel your weight on the bed
although I never loved you—not properly—
and other folks’ dogs padding through houses
waiting to be fed and slurp from the big red bowl
by the fridge—
when I try to remember all the places I’ve gone
and the marvels I’ve seen
I get the taste of the crisp soda in a tiny, tinny mouth,
the sun, the clouds, big things everywhere,
friends who are strangers who speak slowly
and with care,
things I said wrong, things I did wrong,
people I knew,
the breath of people and their spit flying in minuscule orbs
as they rant, my righteous anger,
the rain like tin pellets on the roof as you worried,
worried about everything—
when I attempt to measure as a distance
the places, the clearings, the rustling firs
the concrete porticoes with that tickling wind
or the paint-peeling balconies
and people’s eyes always looking, expecting,
expecting a certain thing from me or them
or the air in between us
as if sprites might emerge from a silence,
as if suddenly neither of us had been wrong,
as if I were not pretentious and they not insipid
but we always were, we always were,
and I always liked drinking cold cold water very fast
and driving, driving everywhere
passing other cars, slamming on the brakes,
all everywhere passing and stopping
and I never should have accused you—
the moments pass suddenly into shadows,
they always have and they aren’t going to stop,
you’d do best to listen to your breathing,
listen to her breathing, the dog’s,
and do.
I see children, too, waddling like huge lobsters
they’re your children—not mine—
oh those children are always hungry
even their hands are hungry,
under the blankets like dolls
looking at you in the half-lit doorway with hungry hands,
listening as their breath escapes into shadows.
What was that, just then? Ah, what it always
was, a moment, a breath, a just-barely.

Wednesday’s Picture

Posted in Photography with tags , , , on October 27, 2010 by sethdellinger

Alleged Pancakes Today, Cowboys Smell Swallowing. Machine Freak Miner Clothes!

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 20, 2010 by sethdellinger

1.  I bet, if you are falsely accused of a highly publicized crime (and I mean actually falsely accused), I bet every time a news commentator says something like “Well, these are still alleged charges, there hasn’t been a trial yet”, you think to yourself, That news commentator knows I’m innocent, whereas that news commentator’s remark makes the rest of us think you are guilty.  I don’t know what made me think that.

2.  An odd thing that’s happened to me since moving to Erie:  I’ve become a regular at a Bob Evans.  Before moving here I’d only been to a Bob Evans about 5 times.  I’m not even a huge fan of it there.  I really have no idea how it happened.  I mean, I do love their breakfasts but the atmosphere is so not me.  And yet.

3.  Haha Matt Lauer just referred to David Fincher as “Hollywood”.  And speaking of the Today show, I’m gonna need you to take less breaks for me to get my local weather.  Seriously, it’s like every 15 minutes.  It starts to feel like a cheat, like you just don’t have enough programming of your own.  Sometimes I can watch the Today show for 20 minutes and not actually see any Today show.

4.  You know I’m not a sports guy, though obviously my hard-line anti-sports stance has relaxed in the past year or two as I dabble in mildly following a few things (though I stand strong behind my feeling that sports are about 800% over-reported in our “news” and that our culture simply cares TOO MUCH about NFL football, but I no longer feel as though caring about sports at all is shameful).  With that caveat out of the way, as I have started paying attention to sports again over the past year, I am struck by the idea that there are a few teams in every major league sport that I just cannot understand anyone liking.  It’s like they were made to be disliked.  These teams are:

–Dallas Cowboys
–Los Angeles Dodgers
–Boston Celtics
–Pittsburgh Penguins (sorry!)
–Toronto Blue Jays
–New York Yankees
–New England Patriots
–Boston Bruins
–New York Knicks

Do you like any of these teams?? If so…how????

5.  Watch this, but not if you’re a prude:

6.  If, like me, you listen to a lot of talk radio, have you noticed that women seem to have trouble swallowing silently, whereas I never hear a man swallow?  (please please people, I’m not bitching about a gender here, this is a harmless observation).  I am constantly hearing female broadcasters swallowing between sentences. (it’s a tad off-putting)  Do you think there can be a physical explanation for this observation?  If you’ve never noticed it, start paying attention to it!  (Tell Me More‘s Michel Martin or Fresh Air‘s Terry Gross are good starting points).

7.  I recently cancelled my subscription to the Erie Times-News.  Not because it’s not a great newspaper (it is) and not because I don’t love newspapers (I do), but becausde, time-wise, I find I really only have the proper amount of time to peruse a newspaper 2 days a week, and I have discovered there are many newspaper machines very close to where I live.  Hence, I have developed quite a nice little ritual out of walking to the newspaper machines on my days off, in the wee, still-dark hours of the morning.  If this is anything remotely like something you can do, may I heartily recommend it. (nevermind the fact that I’ll probably have to re-subscribe in a month or two when the weather gets bad enough)

8.  I’m reading this book called “Freakonomincs” by Steven D. Levitt.  It’s pretty famous so I won’t bother telling you about it.  I’m almost done with it, and I still can’t tell you if I love it or hate it.  Some of the chapters I read and think, I could have written that.  That is fucking common.  Like the dude who thinks he’s really funny saying to you, “Hey, why do we drive on parkways and park on driveways?” as though that wasn’t only NOT a joke, but practically a cliche.  Well, some of the chapters are like that.  And then out of the blue, he also amazes me, usually just as I am about to give up and stop reading the book.  Here is a passage where he is trying to figure out what exactly is true when it comes to the various myths about the safety of driving vs. flying.  I’m not sure if anything is even actually discussed here, but this kind of passage dazzles me for some reason:

So which should we actually fear more, flying or driving?
It might first help to ask a more basic question: what, exactly, are we afraid of?  Death, presumably.  But the fear of death needs to be narrowed down.  Of course we all know that we are bound to die, and we might worry about it casually.  But if you are told that you have a ten percent chance of dying within the next year, you might worry a lot more, perhaps even choosing to live your life differently.  And if you are told you have a 10% chance of dying within the next minute, you’ll probably panic.  So it’s the imminent possibility of death that drives the fear–which means that the most sensible way to calculate fear of death would be to think about it on a per-hour basis.
       If you are taking a trip and have the choice of driving or flying, you might wish to consider the per-hour death rate of driving versus flying.  (Hey, Seth again.  You can imagine that the next few paragraphs are incredibly interesting.)

9.  I sure wouldn’t want to be one of those Chilean miners.

10.  It’s amazing what I will go out in public looking like when I know there is an absolute zero percent chance of running into anyone I know.  I mean, this is beyond sweats.  We’re talking really, really ugly t-shirts, old, ripped PJ pants, super-generic velcro’d sneakers, no socks, no underwear, not shaved, not showered.  Now, I don’t go do anything of substance like this, but I find myself frequently leaving the house to do minor errands like shopping, gas, post office, etc, in this shameful state.  And guess what?  It’s pretty damn liberating.

Audio Poem: “Here Are My Plans”

Posted in My Poetry with tags , , , , on August 1, 2010 by sethdellinger

Moving out, finally from Open When I Get There, we now move into the second sober collection, The Mundorf Bench—so named for the bench where most of the poems in the collection were written, deep in the Bernadette Morales Nature Preserve in Flemington, New Jersey.  Though truly, there is little difference between Mundorf and Open When I Get There, as they were both written in the 6 months I lived with my mother in Jersey, and as I’ve said before—probably the 6 most exciting months of my writing.

Today’s audio poem is “Here Are My Plans”.  I do not have a copy on a computer, and it’s very long, so there’s no way for me to put one here for you to follow along with (it would take way too long for me to type in).  I also explain a little bit in an intro in the audio file.  Enjoy!

Here Are My Plans 

Living Like Living Was Good

Posted in Prose with tags , , , , , , on July 29, 2010 by sethdellinger

I can rise in the morning and electricity like bugs will crawl from the top of myself down through my extremities and out my toes to meet the world.  This can be in excitement or dread but it is never in boredom.  Boredom would be to not feel the sunshine, or the echoing confines of an empty room, or the dawning smiles of the friends who love your own dawning smiles.

I can drive along colorless interstates and imagine each unique spot in the countryside as we pass. That tiny grove back in the field that no one can be bothered to safely look at: I bet it gets nice shade, and is full of happy and fattened bugs and rabbits.  I’d like to read a nice comfy book there.  I’d like to nap like a praire animal.  Smell it’s smell.

I can light incense in the living room and dance poorly naked.  I can wear new socks without shoes when I take the garbage out.  I can make instant coffee and smell the vapors coming off it, my nose a visceral clitoris. I can wear any hat I want, but I don’t.

I can sit on my couch and turn off everything that uses electricity.  I can be in the silent dark.  I can live like living was good.

Erie Journal, 5/17

Posted in Erie Journal with tags , , , , , , on May 18, 2010 by sethdellinger

Popped into my new restaurant today and I really liked it!!!  But I’m not going to talk about work much on the Erie Journal or I’d have to password protect the entries, not to mention work is not a major way of how I define myself.  So that will probably be the last time I mention work.  It looks like it’s going to be a very positive experience.

Some random observations about Erie:

1.  It has very little “downtown”—no real skyline or anything—but the city itself seems to just go on and on forever.  It must be the largest example of sprawl ever, anywhere.  You can just drive and drive in any direction and, unless you get on a highway, you never seem to actually get out of Erie.  Odd.  Interesting, but odd.

2.  There are no Dunkin Donuts.

3.  There are a shitload of small Wal-Marts.  I would estimate that there is a Wal-Mart for every 2 square miles, but they are about half the size of the Wal-Marts I’m used to in Central PA.

4.  There are more newspaper machines here than I’ve ever seen anywhere, and they are always empty.

5.  Erie cares alot more about thier minor league teams than Harrisburg does.  Their (our?) baseball team—the Erie Seawolves—are a TOP news item, both in print and on TV, and I see shit for them everywhere I go.  I’ll have to attend a game or two (especially when Harrisburg is in town!).  Oh and their hockey team, the Otters, seem to be this area’s hockey focus.  So far I haven’t seen or heard ANYTHING about the NHL, despite being knee-deep in playoff season (did I just sound like a sports fan?)

6.  There is a Subway and an Arby’s every 3 blocks.

7.  People have no qualms about parking their cars on the sidewalks.

8.  Generally speaking, people here are more nice than I am used to.

9.  I can’t find a street mailbox.

10.  Nobody mows grass here, not even in the parks.

Driving at Night

Posted in My Poetry with tags , , , on December 28, 2009 by sethdellinger

Here’s the road through fields,
across gullies, up mountains
new lovers drive to expose
their kisses to moonlight, starlight.
Public where no one can see them,
they wrap themselves in excess,
immodesty, failure of love
for the common day,
for streets laid out in a grid,
identical houses, lives
like socks in a drawer, in fists,
in hidden knots of fabric,
linen stacked in closets,
dishes cleared away.
Tables gleam like water
over depths, shadows
through windows, breath
an act of stealth
from room to room.  My sister
sleeps, my parents mumble
in their sleep, my lovers
are all laughing at me, or
kissing me, or smoking
long expensive cigarettes,
our dog is dying and we
loved her, but she was never
anything more than a dog, and she
is dust with my grandfathers
and my old notebooks
and laughs that echo through
your rent-free basement
efficiency, or the city at midnight.
Now, from the overlook,
the valley stretches it’s rocky skin
further than silence.  The breeze
between us.  We might
be alone for good, following
riverbeds narrow and dry
so we can believe the water once flowed.
Night opens.  A large bird
dips to the windshield, veers.
Night closes us in.

Friends 4evah

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , on August 13, 2009 by sethdellinger

I spent a good deal of time today with two friends of mine who nourish my soul greatly, but neither of whom I get to see nearly often enough.  Those friends would be Tasha and Michael, and I am in such a tremendously good mood now due to my time spent with them.  A few notes from the day:

1.  Today was the first time in 2 years I’ve spent any time with Tasha’s daughter, Milaina, and she is awesome. She is very much her own person, with quite a mind of her own.  She’s gonna be a handful.  Soon.

2.  Michael gave me a swivel office chair she was getting rid of, and it is amazing!!  If you push yourself around in a circle just a few times, and then take your feet off the ground, it will keep spinning forever and ever!

3.  Tasha is a comedic genius.  At one point, in LeTort park, Milaina had a little tiny leaf and was pretending to paint my nails with it.  Tasha just casually says, “Leaf Press-On Nails.”  Then later she made another pun that was truly incredible, but I forget it.

100_2732

4.  We went shopping at K-Mart, which seems to be a running theme in my life lately.  There, I learned, through her clothing selections, that Tasha is 70% evil.

5.  Michael’s mom mysteriously showed up at her house for a brief moment.  I sure do like her!

6.  So many of those crazy ‘coincidences’ kept happening with Michael and I that there was surely some sort of universal force at work there.

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7. Michael and I wound down the afternoon playing each other some of our current favorite songs and videos.  (we’re big fans of exposing each other to new art/media).  I ended up tearing up 3 times during this session.  it was rather incredible.  Of the new things Mike showed me, I’m really still stuck on this song, “Feelin’ Good Again”, by Robert Earl Keen.  Do yourself a favor and look up the lyircs and print them and follow along:

By the end of the day, I also ended up loaning her one of my Billy Collins poetry collections (see pic of her waving it around, above).  Hopefully I’ve actually put another Billy Collins fan into the world!!!

8.  Tasha and I argued about Dane Cook, and she made a face like this:

0813091158-00

9.  I beat Michael at a game of tic-tac-toe and immediately got cocky.  I then beat Tasha at a game and got cockier.  Then Tasha schooled me in two successive, very quick games.

10.  Michael and I drove around for an hour and shared.  Alot.

11.  Tasha and I came up with yet another million-dollar idea:  mattresses with a thin layer of grass on top of them.

12.  Tasha to woman at coffee shop: “How big is your big one?”

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IMALL4UL

Posted in Snippet with tags , on August 8, 2009 by sethdellinger

I like trying to figure out the vanity lisence plates while I’m driving, but just now, on the way home from work, I saw this one that I just can’t figure out:

IMALL4UL

Any thoughts?