Staying Awake in Seattle: A 21-Day Salute™
There is a reason they call it uprooting yourself.
If you’ve never moved, you have no idea what I’m talking about, and if you have, you’re know exactly what I’m talking about: that weird feeling that you’ve landed on another planet, where the ordinary rules of gravity and suchlike don’t apply. You can walk, because your legs still work, but you’re taking in so much information that it all feels new, like the first time you walked (I think—really, I can’t remember that far back.)
You pull into a parking space and you’re not sure if it’s a legal space because they mark things differently, so you feel even more unbalanced as you go to check out your new place—the place you will call home for the next few weeks. And it’s fine: you have not, in fact, landed on another planet, but on a very thin slice of this very same planet, which happens to have stairs and running water and windows and walls and floors just like your own slice.
Still, this is not your own slice. The strange smells and sights that assault you at every turn assure you of that. You are an alien; you are here by the grace of something other than you. This ain’t you, babe.
So you unpack your stuff. And as you obsessively unzip and unpack and plug in and turn on (narrating the whole damned thing like your Big Move is a show on the National Geographic channel), you of course think of Carlin and his stuff. And you wonder about all the other people who move around all the time, and how they make their nomadic whistle-stop lives feel grounded and substantial.
You fuss and muse and make a few calls (because those lifelines to other worlds, they are grounding) and finally, you decide to take one of the homegrown maps your absent host—your Ghost Host!—has drawn for you and walk for provisions (and definitely walk, because you’ll be goddamned if you’ll get back in that car and drive up disorienting hills after three days on the road, only to return to find the maybe-parking space is gone and now you’ve got to find another…in the dark.
It’s beautiful here. Even tired/jazzed and disoriented, you can’t help but notice. Around every corner is another picture-postcard view. And different from the picture-postcard views you’re used to, with their Hollywood signs and magic-hour lighting on the palm trees, so you really see them.
The store is not your store, but it has food like your store. Food so like your store, you try your customer affinity card at the checkout, and are secretly delighted that it works. (Secretly, because you have no one to tell; you’ve made a friend of the checker, who is also a SoCal transplant, but she left San Berdoo eons ago and it is her job now to talk to the wobbly and disoriented of all stripes.)
You feel a little better walking back. You’ve walked this way once, so it’s already less unfamiliar. You start to think about how in a few weeks—maybe a few days, it will feel familiar. You need to mark this, the feeling, and sit in it, and for god’s sake, don’t rush past it.
And then you look left. A giant spire, lit up like Christmas, looks back at you. Points toward the rest of a sweeping vista, a carpet of lights ringed around a bay. For you. Here. For you.
This is why you haul your ass out of town. This is why you leave things and change things and try things. For the feeling of imbalance. For the reminder that you’re just a floating speck on a floating leaf. For the occasional glimpse of beauty that’s both shockingly new and hauntingly familiar.
Ladies and gentlemen, I am here in Seattle to wake myself the fuck up the rest of the way. Done what I could where I could; now I let my new, host circumstances take care of the rest.
We shall see what we shall see.
xxx
c







8 Comments, Comment or Ping
Andrew
As someone who has moved at least a few times, I can relate. The first provision quest is a fun tradition nobody had to tell me about when I moved into my first apartment. Then there’s “Someday, this will be familiar …” which I took comfort in after my last major move.
I find it helps to have some of your favorite music at the ready. Years from now, it will still remind you of this adventure.
Have fun!
Sep 28th, 2008
Bon
Coooooooooool.
Sep 28th, 2008
Catherine
Hi! Welcome to Seattle. I found your blog via your Twitter, which I found linked to someone else’s. Anyhow, I can relate to being in a new place to jump-start your new way of looking at life. I’ve also been new in several cities (NY metro, Philly, Chicago, and three years ago, Seattle), so I can relate.
Anyhow, have a good time! And maybe watch the intro to Mary Tyler Moore Show on youtube. Sounds cheesy, but that was actually really inspiring, what they did with that 70s show.
Okay, cheers. I’m “catrink” on Twitter.
Sep 28th, 2008
xqzes
Yay!
Sep 28th, 2008
Scot Duke
Change is probably one of the hardest things a person may have to do in life…well, OK, I hear Child Birth is much worst, so maybe making a change is the 2nd thing a person has to do in life..no,no,no, I think losing your parents is probably harder than making a change in life, but I can safely say that Making A Change in life is the 3rd hardest thing a person has to deal with in live, right after buying your first car….so, for clarity, making a change in life is the 4th hardest thing to do in life. And I admire people who place them self in a position to deal with change a few times in life. It really builds character. Where ever you are or go, you have to know you have friends here…even though we are in lalaland.
Sep 28th, 2008
Dorothy
Wow - interesting that we’ve just been corresponding about the benefits, and challenges, of moving your butt out of its comfort zone! Without that periodic sense of imbalance, the body/mind/spirit is not forced to recalibrate. And, it’s that process of experiencing new things (as well as old things in new ways) which expands the horizons of our consciousness and what we create and share.
So, enjoy swimming in a new stream up in Seattle, and the liberation of being away from all your stuff. (Thanks for sharing that George Carlin clip - it made my weekend!)
Sep 28th, 2008
Ilise Benun
colleen, i’ve always loved essays written in the second person. well done.
Sep 29th, 2008
the communicatrix
Andrew - Funny you should mention music. I made a few “genius”-assisted playlists for the drive up and oh, how weird it was to be transported back in time and space with some of the songs. Now to come up with some new ones for this trip.
Catherine - I actually brought a few discs from Season 1 with me. I kinda-sorta figured they might be fun to watch up here.
Dorothy - These things, they happen in cycles and clusters. Glad you liked the clip!
Ilise - Another thing I never knew about you…
Sep 29th, 2008