Month: October 2013 (page 2 of 3)

Jumping for JOY

Sato KanaeI’m jumping for JOY! After a very, very hectic week, the weekend is finally here and with it my Fall Break! I have BIG plans and a lot of projects that I want to start, work on and finish over this time.

Woo-Hoo, to the weekend we gooooo…

{Image: Sato Kanae, Pinned: HERE}

Me and Bobby McGee

“You are what you settle for.”

Janis Joplin

As I traveled home tonight, watching the sun slowly descend and the evening mist begin to roll in, my Ipod on shuffle, this song came on:

It is my favorite Janis Joplin song, it had been such a long day it took everything in me not to jump up and start singing it! When I was in college, my business professor, did the usual “break the ice” routine. We all had to say our name, where we came from and something unusual about us.

There was a sweet, petite girl, with a short pixie cut of brownish hair, dressed very conservatively, who sat by me. When her turn came round, she told us that at the weekends she worked in a big club at the beach that impersonated music legends and she was Janis Joplin. The whole class just stared at her, I couldn’t imagine her doing that, from the looks and gaping mouths, I don’t think anyone else could either.

Well, my professor made her promise that on our last day of class she would come in, dressed as Janis and sing. And, boy, did she ever! I’m telling you, it was like Janis Joplin was reincarnated on my business professor’s desk! She was on fire, the class went WILD! I’ll never forget it!

Al Pioppi

pioppi-5As I was perusing through my blog reading list last night, I saw a post on Colossal that peaked my interest. Maybe it was because this restaurant opened on my Birthday many moons ago, or maybe it is because my family is part Italian and hearing this little man named Bruno spoke to me. He has spent the past 40 years creating a small amusement park alongside his restaurant in the woods. It is art.

pioppi-2 pioppi-3 pioppi-4

There is something to be said for Italians, there is an ingenuity there that is all there own. My grandfather can look at something and see how to fix the problem, or design something that will do what he wants, my Dad has that same gift. I call it a gift, because it is, not everyone has the “eye” to see the solution, to see how it can be improved, or to see how it could be created in the first place.

This story was incredibly charming, Bruno is quite the doll. Enjoy!

On June 15, 1969 in Battaglia, Italy a man named Bruno bought a few jugs of wine, some sausages and a few other items and set up a tiny food stand underneath a tree to see if anyone would show up. By the end of the day he had sold almost everything and the family restaurant, Ai Pioppi, was born. The next month he had a chance encounter with a blacksmith who didn’t have time to make a few hooks for some chains. Bruno decided he would learn to weld himself and enjoyed it so much he began to dream up small rides he could build to entice new customers to Ai Pioppi. It turned out to be brilliantly successful.

Now forty years later, the forest around the restaurant is packed with swings, multi-story slides, seesaws, gyroscopes, tilt-a-whirls, and bizarre kinetic roller-coasters for adults and children. In this artfully filmed 10-minute documentary by a team over at Fabrica, we get the chance to meet Bruno, see many of his rides in action, and learn a bit about his philosophy on existence and death.

For this post I also included a few photos courtesy Oriol Ferrer Mesià who visited Ai Pioppi in 2011 with several friends. You can see many more shots here and here.

{images and the statements made after the film have been taken from the Colossal post}

Munchkins and Other Things

Jennifer Michie Munchkin

Mr. Michie bought me my first munchkin of the season this weekend. It looks so cheery tucked in around my Halloween and Fall decor.

It was a very wet weekend, so we stayed in and bundled up, drank copious amounts of tea and had all our little candles flickering away. I caught up on our mountain of laundry and worked on an art project for school. So my afternoon was spent listening to the Capital Cities album and cutting and pasting and sketching and doodling. And now, I can’t get this song out of my head:

Mr. Michie took me out to dinner on Saturday night, it was a great date! We braved the rain on Sunday to run to the grocery store, my green polka dot wellies kept my feet nice and dry! All in all, it was relaxing and everything a quiet weekend pottering around should be!

A Friday Date

Jonathan Yeo NPG

Last Friday, Mr. Michie came into London to meet me after work. I had planned a mini date. The great thing about living in London is all of the magic that is on your doorstop. For one, the plethora of museums. I have my favorites, I will admit!

My feet decided to take me to the National Portrait Gallery on Friday. It was a Late Shift evening so there was a lot going on, the bar was open, there were lectures, a harp player upstairs and a very eclectic crowd. There is something special about being in a museum in the evening, it comes alive in a different way.

I wanted to see the Jonathan Yeo portraits and once I saw them, I knew that Mr. Michie would like them as well.

I loved the unfinished pieces. I loved that you could clearly see where he had graphed out his canvases. Some of the faces were almost unreal looking, there was a photographic quality to them.

After a snoop around we picked up some cheeseburgers at Five Guys. We sat in one of our favorite spots, ate too many french fries and drank too much vanilla coke, and talked and talked. It was a lovely date!

A Lesson in Welding

Vintage Welder

I am so excited! I get to go on a welding course tonight for school, so I can learn how to use the arc welder and the mig welder! My Dad has already given me a blow-by-blow of how each one works (I don’t know what he doesn’t know!) and I am tres excited to start making some sparks fly.

I think we all know what is coming next, there is only one great welding, dancing, based in the great city of Pittsburgh movie that I know of, cue Flashdance:

Hope you have a very happy Monday, wherever you may be today!

On The Tube

I read the following awhile ago, I found it on Tracey Benjamin’s Shutterbean site, a space that is always an interesting read. She does a great post every Friday called “I love Lists”. This was a post she highlighted and I thought this was a fabulous story:

Heard on the Subway: Talking About Your Gay Son

I was on my way to work, zoned out listening to some old school Shania Twain to get my life right, when two construction worker types got on the train at Penn Station.  They were both middle-aged white guys with Long Island accents, mustaches, dirty jeans — the type of guys you’d expect to see on a building site.  I caught a piece of their conversation when the music died before the song changed, and I decided to record them.

Normally, boring people and their boring conversations don’t interest me in the least, but the music dropped out right when Guy #1 said “My wife wants me to get fixed like a dog but I don’t see why she can’t just keep taking the pill.”  That in itself isn’t inherently interesting, but the fact that he was openly discussing it on a public subway train made me hit the record button real quick to see what else would come out.  I’ve been doing this for about 6 months now, trying to catch interesting things on the subway, but I haven’t had any luck so far because I ride boring trains.

Today was good though.

Guy #2:  No more kids for you two?
Guy #1:  No, she figures we’re both getting too old for a baby.
Guy #2:  How is your boy anyway?  Haven’t seen him in awhile.
Guy #1:  Oh John’s good, pitching this year varsity.
Guy #2:  He’ll definitely have the girls hanging around him now.
Guy #1:  Yeah if he had any time for them.
Guy #2:  Focused on baseball?
Guy #1:  Focused on boys.
Guy #2:  You’re shittin me!
Guy #1:  I kid you not.  Came out to me and Mary Ann bold as daylight last year.
Guy #2:  Well I’ll be damned!  I’m not supposed to know it but I overheard Patrick Junior tell his sister he might be gay not two months ago.
Guy #1:  We all saw that coming though.
Guy #2:  You’re the second person to say that.  How’d everybody see it but me?
Guy #1:  It was just a feelin Pat.  He was always a little soft, ya know?
Guy #2:  I guess you’re right.  But damn Charlie, we both have gay kids.  What do we do now?  Both our sons are gay.
Guy #1:  We don’t do anything.  We let em be gay and if some kid calls em a faggot we go to their house and raise hell with the parents like normal.
Guy #2:  Well I guess John and Lucinda won’t be getting together like we thought awhile ago.
Guy #1:  Guess not.
**long pause**
Guy #2:  Hey Charlie, you thinkin what I’m thinkin?
Guy #1:  I was for about half a second then it got weird and I started thinkin about somethin else instead.

By that point I was holding back a little tear, but they changed the conversation to something about a building code.  I thought about posting the video but I don’t know how to blur people’s faces.  Still, I thought this little exchange should be broadcast to the Internet.

And filed away under The Future of Dads with Gay Sons.

It made me think about my own journey. I love to read and I am truly embracing my traveling time as my reading time. Quite often I also listen to music as well. Some mornings that is all I do, listen to music and watch the world around me.

It is funny what you notice when you start looking. Especially when someone does something that wouldn’t ordinarly be funny but when, unbeknownst to them they are doing it in time with your music, it becomes incredibly funny! Like the gentlemen yesterday morning who was picking his nose in perfect beat to Kangaroo Court by Capital Cities. Nothing like watching a grown man go to town on his nose and it gets even better, he actually did the “pick, roll, fling” method; more than I needed to see at 7:23 in the morning.

Or, the couple who was having a very serious conversation that was bordering on an argument. Their actions got bolder and bolder, their lips got thinner and thinner and all the while, Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto Number 3: Allegro was humming in my ears. Their discussion escalating before my eyes with the ever swift vibration of the strings.

Being on public transportation is like being in High school, there are pockets of people, they all belong to different cliques. There is the sleeping group who all sit at the end of a row, so they can lean their heads onto something. The group that is already taking business calls and furiously working on their laptops as if it is a life or death situation. There is the reading group and the music group; the construction worker group, who are normally huddled together and there is always someone amongst them who is rolling up a cigarette that they clearly can’t wait to light as once it is rolled they place it between their lips, as if trying to suck the nicotine from it as if it is the very marrow of life.

There is the group that have tried very hard to dress as though they don’t care, but they clearly do, their hair is always perfectly disheveled. There is the make-up gang, who put on more make-up in the course of 3 tube stops than I wear in a week. There are the men in tailored suits who look gorgeous and they know it. The girls who always look impeccably coiffed, with the perfect dress accented with heels of amazonian height, as if they have raided Carrie Bradshaw’s wardrobe and borrowed a Vera Wang and some Jimmy Choos for the day.

There is the coffee club, the ones who must have had 5 cups by the time they get on the tube and now they are drinking another one, their eyes looking slightly bloodshot, hands shaking. maybe a bead of sweat trickling down their brow.  There is also always someone giving their life story over the phone and they always look at the phone in disbelief when we go through a tunnel or underground and they lose service, like it has never happened to them before. There is also the running and bicycling group, who are normally drenched in sweat and I can only hope they shower before they change in to their suits.

It is interesting that more often than not it is a woman and not a man who willing gives up her seat for someone more in need of it. It is also the men who are most pushy in the mornings, they won’t let a woman step in front of them to get on the tube, they will shove right past her. I grew up in the South and I don’t know a true gentleman who would do that! It is also interesting to watch the adults getting onboard be rude to the traveling school children, like they are nothing, they push them out of the way, never uttering a word, they just grunt and point at them with witchy little fingers.  It truly annoys me; for one, those kids have just as much right to be there as you and two, some of them are so small and they are making this big journey by themselves every day, cut them some slack!

As with anything done in a routine you begin to see the same patterns, the same people, like the gentlemen I see almost every morning while waiting at Baker Street. He is nice looking, a muscular man, always neat in appearance even though his shoes and pants are covered in dried plaster and paint splatters, he gives off a bit of a tough vibe; I could say many things about him, but I would never say that he listens to soft rock and yet every morning if we happen to stand near each other, he has Lady in Red blasting through his headphones and his head is oscillating to the beat.

There is a girl who I see almost every morning on the train and funnily enough we even have the same tube journey yet she never smiles, even if I smile at her. She is always the first to jump off the train when it reaches the platform and all I see as she walks in front of me is her pony tail swishing behind her,  undulating back and forth like a horse’s tail, flicking off flies, while she scurries off to the tube. There is also a very nice blind gentlemen who has the most beautiful golden lab, who I have gotten to pet once or twice and on the rare occasion this gentlemen and I get to speak, he is very kind. He is always interesting to watch, people love the dog, but have little time for the man, they get annoyed and don’t want to move out of his way, he gets bashed into and huffed at. How little patience and manners some people have, always astounds me.

Besides people watching there are all kinds of interesting architectural features you get to see from your above ground tube journey. I pass a couple of brick facade buildings with the most enticing faded painted advertising signs. Sometimes I see families eating breakfast or someone getting ready in their flat when the tube slows down. I get to watch the city slowly come to life as it is too early for everyone to be out en masse on the roads just yet.

It’s quite nice being a passenger, letting someone do all the work, so I can sit and observe and be.