Tuesday, December 31, 2013

YEAR

I began 2013 in a room full of people in an apartment in San Francisco, not far from Haight-Ashbury.  It was a great night.  I couldn’t have slept more than an hour.  Then I packed up my things and moved into a new apartment at the edge of the city but on a huge hill overlooking the whole city.  The price I had to pay for access to that hill overlooking the bay was that it was directly alongside the freeway.  I was also sharing quarters with some very strange people, although some of them were excellent housemates and teachers.  Speaking of which, after a couple months of living in a mostly empty room, writing letters, reading books, collecting my thoughts from the whirlwind journey of 2012 and writing an impromptu book on this web site, I finally got a job teaching at the American Academy of English on Golden Gate Avenue, a few blocks from City Hall.  Every morning I got off at UN Plaza and then taught about 15-25 students from around the world whatever I wanted, so long as they increased their vocabulary, grammar, speaking, writing and listening skills.  We took field trips at least once a month, watched an education film or movie once a week, and shared as much as we could about what we knew of our shared world.  Meanwhile, I continued writing on a consistent basis, climbed the hill a lot, and tried to drive to the ocean or explore somewhere new in the city whenever I could.

Unfortunately, I didn’t make a lot of money, and there weren’t any extra hours available, and nobody wanted to pay a private tutor with no references, so I barely scraped by and didn’t enjoy much of what one of the most expensive cities in the world had to offer.  Then again, looking back, I was incredibly blessed: four Hiromi Uehara shows, my first Sigur Ros show, Ahmad Jamal, the Museum of Modern Art, the San Francisco Zoo, Golden Gate Park, Golden Gate National Recreational Area, the Pacific Ocean, a wetland, canoeing on San Francisco Bay, driving on Highway 1 to Big Sur, Kings Canyon, the largest living being on Earth, Yosemite National Park, Muir Woods, West Oakland, Berkeley, the most beautiful view in the city and being surrounded by people with different backgrounds and opinions constantly.  And of course, there were those types of wares that made this city so popular for hippies J

I was lucky to see my cousin’s wedding in Mexico in June, the first family I’d seen since I’d left New York in May of 2012.  Actually, it was exactly one year since I’d seen a family member.  When I returned I got to explore Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks, canoe a little and keep writing.  Eventually I moved to a sublease in Berkeley, and decided I wanted to visit home in August.

Three weeks in New York reminded me of everything my homeland had to offer, with gorgeous green trees and fields filling the countryside, a spectacular magic lake, friends, family, and the most famous city in the world, in which I had previous living experience.

Upon returning to California I didn’t have a place to live, which led to a series of adventures.  Despite the beauty of Yosemite National Park (where I escaped to one weekend because I didn’t have anywhere to stay and it was free), I decided that a year in California was all that I had wanted of my West Coast living experience, and that I was ready to plan to go back home.  I spent a month living in Oakland, and then drove back across America, my third coast-to-coast journey in the United States, and second by car.  The Jetta Wagen has gone across this country and back, and it all began with 170,000 miles on it.  I’ve got about 600 to go before the big 200K milestone.

I was fortunate to land a job my second day in the city, and I have been living on my good friend’s couch and going to work in the Bronx teaching English ever since.  One of my initial leads was also a tutoring job, something that will hopefully begin to come together next week when I retake the SAT, something I was promised I would never have to do again when I was 17.

Currently I am tracking down and printing out all of the absurd necessary paperwork it takes to rent a crappy room in a cruddy apartment in this dirty noisy city.  You might ask: if it’s all so crappy, cruddy, dirty and noisy, then why am I even here?

I am here because it is the most exciting place close to the people I love, and because I can get work here doing something I know how to do, even if I would prefer to do even more with the language than the job allows.  New York also happens to be the most complex mixture of human culture on the planet, for all of its drawbacks.  By living here, I have access to the countryside, a lake, my college town, the ocean, many friends and relatives, and the entire city.

If you asked me a year ago if I thought I would be living in New York City at the end of the year, I wouldn’t have said it was impossible.  Then again, I didn’t want to live here again until I had established myself more, because I remembered how disheartening it can be to live in the ego capital of the world, where wealth, luxury and fickle fashion appear to suffocate all of the honest artistry, quality craftsmanship and love that made it what it was.

In all of my years of traveling I have been both blessed and saddened to gain the perspective of how lucky I have been compared to most of humanity.  I have access to clean water, shelter, plenty of nourishing food, information and entertainment.  What’s more, I have a family who loves me and friends who make me enjoy life and care about me.  And I have the beautiful opportunity to do the same for them.  It takes patience and practice, but I am slowly improving when it comes to refraining from letting the unimportant problems ruining my appreciation of this wondrous window I get to peek through into the universe’s imagination every moment of my waking life.

All of that having been said, there is still the same hunger and drive that caused me to leave this city in the first place.

I was hungry for real experience, inner truth and true love.  All three are up to this world I don’t fully understand but do my best to enjoy anyhow.

Speaking of enjoying the world despite inherent uncertainty, I have three resolutions for 2014:

1.       Stay alive
2.       Love
3.       Tell a story to make your world very genki

Happy New Year!
To You and To Me

2013: Part 1