Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Random commentary

Our Los Angeles neighborhood


Too many cars and no place to park. Hard to see here but many streets are hard to navigate, because due to the parking crunch, parking is often allowed even where it shouldn't be and cars are jammed into any available space... frequently making already narrow streets into unnerving tight squeezes when you're driving up the street and another car comes from the opposite direction.


Dried-up unkempt lawns with garbage strewn everywhere


Wrought-iron fencing, garbage and debris on the sidewalk and in the gutters, walls completely covered with graffiti


The gang-infested alley we have to drive through to get home, because the only entrance street is so jam-packed with traffic and most people are too rude to let you in to make the turn onto our street. Further down this alley, not pictured here, is a favorite area of several homeless who make their cardboard shelters and leave their garbage here.
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There is something primal about driving in downtown L.A. traffic that can turn a gentle, mild-mannered humanist into an out-of-control, raging, cursing, feral beast. One episode can do it, but doing it 5 days a week is liable to bring out a side of you you didn't know existed, a side you wish didn't exist. After almost a year of this, I'm so through with this commute. I'm a pretty defensive driver, but almost every day I have a dangerous near-miss situation as someone makes a reckless move and almost takes out everybody around them. This, coupled with the fact that the main freeway I take has regularly been plagued with drive-by shootings in recent months, often makes me wonder why in the world anyone would ever move to L.A. and how existing residents can stand it here. It doesn't help that my current job is frustrating sedentary work in one of a sea of cubicles. I think there is something about being that caged up that can drive people to the brink. Maybe that's why we have so much craziness here.

If there's one thing that working field positions in a wide area has taught me, it's that the farther away from L.A. you get, the friendlier and more peaceful people are. You find that the grocery clerk stops to chat with you, people on the street say hello to each other, and drivers cooperate so everybody can get where they're going safely. I mean, naturally there are always exceptions, but in general I've found that this friendliness factor is in direct proportion to your distance from L.A. Of course, I don't know how far that radius actually extends.

I am so looking forward to finding out. :)

Friday, October 07, 2005

Take off, eh!

Bob and Doug McKenzie once sang, "Take off, to the Great White North!"

Nickie and I have decided to heed that advice.

It's Friday. Only one more week of work left. I gave 3 weeks notice at my job, 2 Mondays ago. Now it's just a waiting game. It's gonna be awesome!! I wanna take off like a bat out of you-know-where. I take comfort in the fact that it is a Friday, so I have some reprieve before another stressful week. Then it's time to pack up and embark on our adventure!

The North American Rail Pass gives you unlimited train travel throughout the US and Canada for 30 days. In the US, all trains lead to Chicago (it's some kind of hub). So first it's off from L.A. to Chicago then east to see my offspring and Niagara Falls in NY. Then north à Montréal, où tout le monde parle français. We'll then head back west through Ottawa (who can resist seeing the capital?) and Toronto (who can resist seeing the largest city? And the CN Tower, the tallest human-made structure in the world?). On westward, possibly stopping in Alberta to visit relatives, my birthplace, or Banff. Then all the way to the coast for the majority of our trip.

We will be scouting for a new place to live, starting in the Greater Vancouver area. Since going to Vancouver without checking out the gardens, butterfly nursery, and provincial parks by Victoria has to be some kind of cardinal sin somewhere, we are committed to a stop on Vancouver Island.

Our scouting will continue down into WA, OR, and northern CA. I like the idea of staying somewhat coastal (i.e. within 100 miles or so) so as to avoid drastic cold in the winter followed by drastic heat in the summer. Although frankly, if I never saw another 80-degree day in my life, that would be just fine, even if it meant dealing with some occasional snow.

We are chomping at the bit. There are some things to wrap up before we go. Maybe I will make a list here later.

Take off! It's a beauty way to go.
nineteenthcentury-no