Mil palabras: fin de semana fronteriza

Night out with Oso and friends in Tijuana
At Cantina de los Remedios, Tijuana

Prior to Saturday night, I had never partied in Tijuana. Thanks to Oso, Nathan and his wife, Rosario, that’s all changed. A fairly large group met up for dinner and drinks at la Cantina de los Remedios in Tijuana and then headed over to Tangaloo for dancing. The next morning, Oso and I had a late brunch with HP in Hillcrest. Oso left to work a little later and I visited Old Town San Diego with HP. I got a little sunburnt. Ouch.

Thoughts from the night and trip to San Diego:

  • Any place with a ceiling covered in lotería cards is alright with me.
  • I drank way too much, but that’s what happens when I don’t need to drive.
  • Apparently, Mexicanos can tell the difference between a Chicana or a pocha and a Mexicana without even speaking to her. Rosario’s friend said that Mexicanas are more made up than the girls in the states. In my case, that’s right… but everyone is more made up than me.
  • The fresa boys are attractive, but they all dress the same (and Oso thinks they’re more interested in him than they are in me).
  • Mango margaritas with chile powder — rather than salt — are quite yummy.
  • I’ll dance to techno and reggaetón if I’m drunk enough. True story. So will Oso. He gets down. Hell, everyone in Tangaloo (the club we went to) was getting down.
  • You never know who you’ll bump into at la línea. I heard my name just after we crossed the border and turned to find a friend from LA who was also returning from a night out in Tijuana.
  • Those little seats at windows are not meant for sleeping. Just ask Oso.
  • Oso really needs to get some chanclas/flip flops/sandals. He is breaking the California white guy code by wearing tenís on a hot Sunday in June.
  • Eating a pickle in the presence of Oso and HP will elicit some junior high type jokes.
  • HP scares little old white ladies when he reads the nametags on their hats and says, “How you doing, Dorothy?”

In general, Oso and HP have a point. I really should make more trips to San Diego and Tijuana and Baja California.

what’s really going on?

I told Oso yesterday that I went up to San Francisco for Chispa’s graduation. He was surprised, “why are you so secretive?” he asked. I don’t know, but I’ll try to change things and let people know what’s going on with me these days. Honestly, I avoid questions about how I’m doing with school and life in general because I don’t know what to say.

Mom and her baby Family

Family is one of those areas I don’t need to improve much on, things are good. I took a trip with my sister Lori and her boyfriend, Mikey, this weekend to San Francisco. We got along for most of the trip, which is great. My dad’s been helping me out whether it’s checking in with me and offering to take me to the doctor after getting horrible pains in my abdomen or helping me take care of some problems with my car. I spent Mother’s Day with my mom and several other family members. She wants me to take a short vacation with her in mid-June in San Diego. I’m not so sure I can because of school. The siblings are okay, but the relationships are strained (no surprise). Danny sends me text messages updating me on the scores of Dodger games, well when it’s good. Adrian works a lot, but when we hang out it’s fun.

Home is generally a place where I relax. There’s nothing like sitting in the rocking swing or laying in a hammock beneath the shady mulberry tree on a spring afternoon. When I go home, I tend to stay there as long as I can. It’s not just because I’m doing laundry or because I want to play with VR.

Moore Hall (I kinda avoid this place now too) School

I’m in the last few weeks of the spring quarter. Last week all my classes were cancelled and I acted like I had a second spring break. Yup. I didn’t get much done, but that’s not new. I’ve been generally very unmotivated in my studies since the year started. This is something that goes beyond just being bored with my classes. I’m working on it and have talked to my advisor about my problems. It felt really good to let her know what’s going on with me. Prior to a couple of weeks ago, she had no clue and I just avoided her.

I’m not only disconnected with my advisor or with the other research assistants at HERI (where I worked last year, volunteer this year). I feel isolated as I don’t really have classes with the remaining members of my cohort (4 of them graduated last year). Whenever they see me, they ask how I’m doing and say something like, “wow, I never see you. How are you? You must be busy.” I don’t really tell them how I’m doing either, but felt myself telling Ross, the “boy” in our cohort last year how I was feeling after a group of us went out last Saturday.

I’m working on getting back on track. I just need to make sure others now I’m totally missing mis ganas and not being so secretive about my issues with school.

Amigos

I used to think I had a lot of friends, but then I realized that a lot of those people were just acquaintances. Yeah, I worked with them through MEChA, but never really connected. Instead, I found that I had a small but tight group of friends. In the past year, I’ve grown closer to those people and for known/unknown reasons not talking to two others. I still have a group of people I can count on and find that I’m now closer to my family. I’ve also made some new friends through school (there are people here I’m more open with) and Blogotitlán. It’s good to know that you can count on people for good music, a concert date or tips on how to deal with difficult situations.

I’m glad I went to Chispa’s graduation in San Francisco, but a little sad that it was awkward for me to sit at the same table with people I’ve known since 1998. Oh well, there are some things I’m not going to prioritize right now. Those relationships (which were never really strong and real to begin with) are not my priority. I have other things to deal with and I’ll concentrate on those friendships and people where I feel like the relationships is reciprocally beneficial and fulfilling.

I missed danza yesterday because I got sick Danza

I look forward to Thursday evening primarily because I get to make the trip out to East LA to ensayo (practice) with el grupo Danza Tenochtitlán. I started practicing with them last summer when Ralph invited me, but had to stop once school started because I had to take a class that conflicted with the practice. I missed it so much, but started going again and getting involved with the group in January. I studied the group for my qualitative research methods course and started dancing regularly again in March. Dancing makes me happy, not only for the physical activity but also because I really like the people in the group. It’s one of a handful of things that I still enjoy.

Some new science building (I think it's called CNSI Court of Sciences Building) Work

I started a new job about a month ago with a program called PEERS. So far, so good. Really. I like what I’m doing, and the directors of the program seem to love me because I’m doing everything they want me to be doing. Still, since I’m new here I’m still getting to know people and sort of miss spending more time at HERI. I also found it cool that since I work here, I had the chance to run into into an old friend from high school who is now a grad student in neuroscience.

I also recently applied to be a TA in Chicana/o Studies introductory courses. I know that will be a lot for me to take on next year, but hey it will be something I enjoy.

La abogada

Way before the JD and the PhD
Chispa and I (December, 1999)

I don’t remember when I met Elizabeth/Liz/Chispa, but I remember singing Happy Birthday to her in the Hedrick dining hall a day after our orientation. Her roommate, Cheryl, asked other Freshman Summer Program (FSP) kids to join in and wish her a happy birthday. I think it may have been her first birthday away from home. I sang and later got to know her better. She lived down the hall from me on Sproul Hall 3 North. We were “warriors.”

Chispa and I developed a strong friendship beginning that August. Since then we’ve shared dozens of inside jokes, wordy emails full of chisme and drama, countless heart-to-hearts, and many tears.

For the past three years, she’s lived and gone to school in San Francisco at Hastings College of the Law. I remember thinking it was so cool that she’d be going to school in SF because then that would mean I’d have one more good friend to visit on my frequent trips. A few weeks after she started classes, I visited her for the afternoon in her studio apartment on the 13th floor of the Hastings Tower. She had a wonderful view, but I doubt she spent much time looking out the window with all the studying she had to do during her tough first year.

Chispa graduates today. She told me a few days ago that she didn’t know what she would say for her short speech. I told her she better not cry, “crying is for suckers.”

You know, I’m a sucker.

Five, seven, five

Yesterday night after making dancing, drinking and making fun of the lead singer at the Babasónicos concert, Oso and I headed back to my apartment. Once there, he slouched on the black futon and drank water. He noticed an inflatable Cranium helmet and we took silly pictures in it. We had forgotten the lead singer, his crazy clothes and attitude. Instead the Apartment 3 topics resurfaced: boys, pop culture, politics and sex.

Oso had a complaint for me.

“What ever happened to the haiku? You owe us like a couple hundred days…”

I know. I responded. Last year I made it a goal to write a daily haiku. At the end of each month, I’d post them on the old blog. I kept it up for the first half of the year, but then I just stopped. I was running out of fresh things to say about days that were rather routine. And then when I did have something new and interesting to write in 5-7-5 format, I found that it was a little too private to share.

I’m not just writing haiku anymore, it doesn’t seem like I’m writing much of anything, including things about my personal life on this blog.

Anyway, for Oso, I wrote a haiku. Here it is… and no, I will not explain it. (Maybe.)

[deleted to protect the innocent...]

Cinco puntos

My tummy hurts!

  • I got an interview today for a half-time counselor position on campus. I’m nervous. Although I’ve had three “real” jobs in my life, I only interviewed for one position. That position was almost guaranteed and the selection committee was a bunch of people I knew well.
  • My roommate, Isa returned from her four day trip in Philadelphia with another good friend, Gabby. She brought me personalized stickers from Hershey, PA and chocolate covered pretzels from Intercourse, PA. She also added a new magnet to our refrigerator. It reads “I *heart* intercourse.” Um… yeah.
  • I picked up my diploma today. The man who handed it to me said, “congratulations.” I earned my MA in June and walked in the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies ceremony for the fun of it. I still find it weird that I have a graduate degree, but it’s definitely nice.
  • I talked to Papá Chepe today about the protests marches and his immigration history. I’ve asked him questions before and even wrote a paper on the subject. Chepe was a bracero in the 1940s and then came to work in the ’50s before slowly immigrating the rest of his immediate family. I had my staff share their stories of how they got “here” when I was working with MEChA Calmecac. I find immigration stories fascinating and a good way to get to know people. I’ll be posting about my family’s immigration story within the next few days. It’s be cool to read others’ stories as well.
  • Only 13 people have taken the survey. What’s the matter?

Mil palabras: Alfred

Alfred hooks it up
Alfred in his Coffee Bean(er) days (June, 2005)

Normally, Alfred is a part-time Starbucks barista and a full time Cal State LA student. He’s always up for Dodger games, costume parties, hip hop shows and good meals. Alfred is like my little brother, he just lives closer and is more helpful.

Yesterday, Alfred became my personal assistant. It started when I realized that I wouldn’t have time to make or buy lunch. I was working against a rapidly approaching deadline. I had several pages to write for my preliminary findings report and was hungry.

I IM’ed Alfred. I explained my situation. I told him I’d buy him lunch too. He was down.

He came over to pick up the money, took my order and went out to get food. While he was gone, I quietly mourned the death of Marco Antonio Firebaugh and kept on working. He returned with lunch.

Between bites and paragraphs, I got another idea.

Me: Do you have anywhere you need to be later?
Alfred: I have work. I think at 6, but I’m not sure.
Me: Hmmm. Can you help me out?
Alfred: What do you mean?

I explained my predicament. I had a final exam and a report due by 5 pm. I had completed the final exam for the Latinos and the Law course Sunday evening. All I needed to do was print it and drop it off between 4 and 5 at the professor’s office in Bunche Hall. Bunche is up in North Campus, not exactly close to where I needed to turn in the preliminary findings report for my Naturalistic Observation methods course. Plus, driving to campus would make me lose some valuable time I could use writing the findings section on my seven week study of a Danza Azteca group.

Alfred, eternally helpful and good natured, agreed to help me out. He printed and stapled the law final. Then he went and got my car. He drove to campus while I worked on my laptop in the passenger seat. Once on campus, I gave him directions to Bunche and he dropped off the final. We headed back toward my office. A few minutes later, he joined me there and I had him start printing out and labeling appendices A through G. He put my binder together while I worked some more.

I wasn’t even done when he had to leave to get ready for work. I came up with another plan. He’d take my car home, leave the keys with my roommate (or, more likely, hide them) and I’d take the bus home.

Once again, he was down, and even told me I should stop by the Starbucks where he works to grab a chai latté.

You know that Beatles song, “I get by with a little help from my friends”? Well, it fits perfectly well here.

Thanks, Alfred.

¿Qué pasa, blogotitlán?

El Chango Agustin provides an update on the things going on with his grad school and family. He made me wonder if moon bounces (aka brincolín) are as ubiquitous as piñatas at Mexican kids’ birthday parties.

Big Brown Girl (more frequently known as Ms. Baeza these days) tells us that the students she works with are growing on her, and vice versa. However, I agree that she should stay away from the chick flick genre.

CAD recommends watching Three Burials, about an undocumented immigrant who was accidently shot by a border patrolman. She also introduced Lola, her spiffy new camera.

La Cracked Chancla updates us on some of the things a proprietor of a small business goes through and tutors a 10-year old girl who needs some affirmation that she can read.

El Daily Texican recounts a law school joke I just don’t get and touches on the Texas redistricting Supreme Court case.

El Más Chingón quotes Ozomatli. Ya se fue.

Jeff (aka Skeptic) made me feel like a wuss for complaining about getting stuck in the rain on Monday when he’s still getting snow in NYC.

Jenn hopped on the Johari window bandwagon, discussed all the things that went wrong at her sister’s wedding and added one more way she finds to be a Chicana role model on Ash Wednesday.

Joel might be telling us “tales of mediocrity,” but I (as just one person representing about a thousand readers of his blog), I can attest to the fact that his tales are freaking hilarious. This week he reviewed one of his favorite romantic comedies, Doc Hollywood, was propositioned at work and grossed out his readers. Fun times.

Julio contemplates if citizenship matters to Chicanos. It’s an interesting question, but it’s the kind that can potentially divide.

Julissa comes back from a leave of absence. Hopefully it won’t take her another month to update again.

Kjerringa Mot Strommen excellently retells some stories about her mother in-law, Ángela, a fierce Panameña.

MsABCMom is off track and gets to take a break from teaching. She also got a cute Hermione Granger outfit for her daughter, Sabi, as part of her school’s Read Across America Week. Finally, her own brother told her she had to go to cultural sensitivity training because she tried to wipe off a co-worker’s ashes on Ash Wednesday. Doh!

Nebur wrote about seeing a free Rolling Stones show in Rio de Janeiro. It might have been free, but it was also way too crowded. His fellow blogger, Lee Stevens, reminds us that baseball is right around the corner. Finally, Nebur goes over the DUI case of Pretty Boy Floyd.

El Pocho Abogado wrote about the guy who plays bagpipes on the street. He doesn’t think the music will induce him to dance on the way to work. He also compares how much his learning expectations in law school have changed (or fallen?) as he’s gone from a 1L to a jaded 3L.

Over at el Oso, el Moreno and el Abogado we saw pictures of all three in NYC. And guess what, Moreno is, in fact, quite moreno. Oso also showed off his ethnographic writing skills and mused about why recent college graduates move to NYC

Tortilla Sandwich tells us why she’s glad the Winter Olympics are over. It’s not just that figure skating makes her violent, but regular programming (e.g. the hilarious show The Office) will be back.

Xoloitzquintle wrote about how we should be nice to any unemployed or underemployed anthropology PhD, because the process of applying and awaiting responses generally sucks.

Ollinkoatl at thirty

¡Feliz cumpleaños! Ralph Either he was sick and trying to avoid the Ralph/Ollinkoatl dances during his lunch break

Dear Ralph,

I’m going to take one minute to just write what I want to tell you, well without being mushy because that should be reserved for your card. I’m done with being so public in this space.

So, what do I need to tell you?

¡Feliz cumpleaños!

I know I call you old all the time, but the fact that you’re a little older than me is something I’ve always liked. It’s always been one of your strengths. You’ve had time to live a little more and learn a little more. And it always amazes me what you do with that knowledge. Thank you for sharing that knowledge and teaching me about everything from danza to fútbol.

I’ve shared several birthdays with you as a friend. Those birthdays were always full of dozens of people. It’s easy to see your impact on your friends and family. It’s never surprised me why people are attracted to you.

But this birthday is different. We’ve gotten closer in ways I didn’t foresee a year ago. That process may not have been smooth and at times difficult, but it all comes with the territory.

Love,
Me

P.S. This took more than a minute.

Ralph Put your dukes up Summer concert buddies Jerry and Ralph

A trivial rant

Isa kept both me and Alfred from working on our papers. We felt bad for her because her boyfriend got sick or something and her plans for the evening fell through. I understand, I felt pretty bad after the game1 too, but then Alfred and I got some chai latté’s and Thai food. I conveniently blocked out any knowledge of a football game and concentrated more on being warm.

Rather than go out, Isa, Alfred and I stayed in and played the 90′s Time Capsule Edition of Trivial Pursuit. Isa bought the game a while back, but we’ve only played once. We’re rather competitive, and in that game the ugly side of our competitiveness manifests itself. Isa kept threatening to hit me because I was answering more questions correctly (and probably gloating about it). I threatened to kick Isa out of the apartment since she isn’t technically on the lease. I can’t determine whether our meanness was just a side-effect of our mini rivalry or the alcohol, but it wasn’t good.

Last night, Alfred kinda cheated and he and Isa teamed up to help each other out so I wouldn’t win. Still, there were no fights or nasty competitiveness. However, Trivial Pursuit still left a bad taste in my mouth. Early on, these three questions came up in the important — “hard news” — categoy almost successively. Alfred, Isa and I each answered a different question.

What nation’s drug cartel hit-men gunned down countryman Andres Escobar for booting a ball into his own net during a soccer World Cup loss? (card 140)

What imprisoned drug lord was miffed to learn his brother’s million-dollar stallion had been adbucted and returned castrated? (card 295)

What drug kingpin, dubbed the “world’s greatest outlaw” was gunned down while fleeing one of his homes in Medellín, Colombia? (card 56)

We didn’t get any other questions about Latinos or Latin America after that except for one about Jennifer Lopez.

It seems like a coincidence. I mean, they can’t be deliberately trying to make Latinos look like drug lords? When I went back to the cards we had gone through I found a few other references to Latinos. Another in the viewing category, “the stuff you watched,” referenced Jennifer Lopez. Rubén Blades and the outcome of the 1994 Panamanian presidential election was the subject of another question. There was yet another question pertaining to drugs: What nation supplied 4 out of every 5 grams of cocaine consumed in the US?

Did other people of color fare better? Not really. We didn’t answer any questions about Native Americans or Asian Americans. The questions in reference to African Americans mainly concerned rappers, athletes, and crime.

What color did Dennis Rodman dye his hair in support of women with breast cancer, in 1996?
(card 266)

What gangsta rapper had just attended a Mike Tyson bout before he was fatally shot? (card 266)

Whose death did many believe was payback for the murder of Tupac Shakur? (card 269)

What rapper from the Wu-Tang Clan tried to change his name to the more accessible “Big Baby Jesus”? (card 270)

What rapper died before he could give the world more poignant songs like Fat Girl, Hit the Hooker, and Just Don’t Bite It? (card 101)

I probably have my Chicana/o Studies major and Critical Race Theory hats on too tightly. The unduly negative and stereotypical representation of Latinos and African Americans sucked out the fun of something that is “just a game.”

Oh well, at least Nelson Mandela was mentioned in a positive light: what Nobel Peace Prize winner said meeting the Spice Girls was “one of the greatest moments of my life”? (card 32).

Related: Still not a fetish.

[1 The game: yes, I know about the game. Yes, I watched it. No, I did not kick and scream. Yes, I know the score. You do not need to mention the score or anything about Reggie Bush ever again. I am sure Daily Texican will be glad to know that I am now a UT Longhorns fan. Come January 4th, I'd like to see UT have another Rose Bowl victory, but this time it will be for a national championship. Go Vince Young and UT!]

Ninety days

When my dad left the rehab center in Costa Mesa, he knew he was going to have to do 90 meetings in 90 days. The 90 day period was critical for some reason, but I forgot about it until last weekend.

Rather than do my assigned readings, I read a book that caught my eye in the library a couple months ago, Nick Hornby’s A Long Way Down. I’ve never been depressed, nor have I contemplated suicide. It’s about four people who meet New Year’s Eve on a roof. Rather than jump off — as they all had intended — and end their lives, they come down and form a gang that functions more as a support group. I like Hornby’s writing, so choosing A Long Way Down over something on academic capitalism was easy.

One of the Topper’s House four, Jess, brings up the notion of the critical 90 days.

“The other night, I was going to tell you about something I’d read in a magazine. About suicide. Do you remember? Anyway, this guy reckoned tgat tge crisis period lasts ninety days.”

“What guy?” JJ asked.

“This suicidologist guy.”

“That’s a job?”

“Everything’s a job.”

“So what?” said Jess.

“So we’ve had forty-six of the ninety days.”

“And what happens after the ninety days?”

“Nothing happens, I said. “Just… things are different. Things change. The exact arrangement of stuff that made you think your life was unbearable… It’s got shifted around somehow. It’s like a sort of real-life version of astrology.”

The ninety days came and went on Friday. All week I kept telling myself that I was finally going to do something regarding the situation with my estranged ex-roommate. I’ve put off talking to her for a few reasons. The primary one was because it was too difficult. It’s so much easier to put it off.

I considered writing a letter, but discarded that idea. I completely agreed with Oso in his explanation of why he believed he was not blessed with the art of gab

It just so happens I am not gifted at the art of gab. When I get in arguments with friends, which luckily is rare, I always find myself writing them letters instead of talking it out. The art of sincere conversation has never been mine… I cannot articulate my thoughts, not as I want them to come out. So I resort to irony, sarcasm, and total absurdity. No one takes me serious when I speak, certainly not myself, which is why the written word is a special refuge for me. My cave of sincerity.

I left a comment telling the story of what my friend, Chispa, told me a few years ago. She said, “Cindy, you should just stick to writing, because when you speak it just comes out all wrong.” I was slightly offended, but Chispa was right. She’s known me for seven years, and she’s felt me say mean and off-handed remarks.

A few years later, in an Atlanta elevator looking out towards Piedmont Park, my beau at the time admitted, “I’m crazy about you.” Without missing a beat, I responded “You’re just crazy.” I didn’t even know I was being mean until I told my sister, Lori, about the conversation. Lori is my litmus test and lets me know when I’ve crossed the line. It was only then that I realized I was an ass.

That is why I write. I’m less mean and more honest. If I try to have a difficult discussion with you in person, I’ll shut down when the conversation starts getting tought. Sometimes, I don’t completely stop talking, but it takes me several minutes to make a simple point. And I do get mean, just ask el Venado.

Oso’s post and the discussion in the comments helped me to figure something out. Sure, there are pros to writing letters, but as Abogado wrote, “they tend to be calculated which makes them devoid of passion.” Oso agreed with his co-blogger, “even though writing a letter is easier for you and me, a phone call is more fair, more honest, and more meaningful for the majority. We like the written word because we can be so exact, precise, clever, detached and thought out without interruption, but it’s also a safe way to hide from our friends’ deserving emotions.”

Today, I decided not to hide anymore from my voice. I still haven’t picked up the phone, because I thought just calling out the blue might be a little rude.

I may not have complete control of my tone of voice or what words come out, but ninety days have come and gone, and I need a resolution. Hopefully it won’t take another ninety days.