departure

Jan. 27th, 2008 11:54 pm
Jeff, Gabe, & Bree

Here's Jeff, Gabe, and Bree just before I left Pasadena this evening. Looking appropriately miserable, of course—look at those forced grins. Fear not, though: I hope to be back for many visits during the next year, during which I will be based in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

It's been raining all week, a rain like Los Angeles hasn't seen in years. The city desperately needs the water, but it gives a mood more conducive to sitting inside and drinking hot chocolate than setting out on a 2,000 mile road trip. Angelenos aren't particularly accustomed to driving in it either; I passed one car pointed the wrong direction on the 210 freeway.

Seen on a delivery truck for the 99 cent store: "Driver carries only 99¢!"

I'm taking I-10 most of the way, more or less, traveling through Tucson and Las Cruces and Alpine and Marfa and Austin and Houston. What should I see? Where should I eat? What are your recommendations? (Phil suggests the Titan Missile Museum.) Also, I still need your music. I made the bewildering discovery that my car lacks a radio antenna. (Either it's never had one, or I haven't found where it's supposed to be.)

Special thanks to Rana for lending me his digital camera.

I intend to be in Tucson tomorrow night.

I didn't return any of my keys. So far this feels more like a long trip than a relocation.
The City Newspaper printed a letter from our friend Jon "Far" McKamey:
REGION: Another young adult heads out
On May. 29th, 2007

As one of the organizers for RocWiki, the thing that struck me most when I read the RocWiki article was terrible hemorrhaging of talent from Rochester. All of those crazy and ambitious people that started RocWiki.org (Ry Dahl, Tobin Fricke, Rob Polyn, myself) are going elsewhere. Ry and Tobin left last year; Rob and I are leaving within a month. Of the five to six or so regular "under 30" contributors I know, three (including administrator Adam Dewitz) are leaving Rochester this summer too.

This is some pretty sad math for Rochester. As a 20-something leaving, I hope our projects, organizations, and businesses help this city retain its 20-something talent of future generations. I love this city. We all do. But the opportunities simply aren't here. From all of us who have to leave to follow our dreams, I'd like to say "Good luck, Rochester. We love 'ya, but it just didn't work out."

Jon "FarMcKon" McKamey, South Plymouth Avenue, Rochester(McKamey is a software developer who has worked for Imaginant Inc in Pittsford. He and his wife are moving to Philadelphia, where she will work for the Academy of Natural Science, and, McKamey says he hopes he'll found a start-up company.)
I had kind of hoped to avoid this angle regarding my depature. It belies our boosterism. It is both true and untrue that the "opportunities simply aren't [t]here;" the vacuum itself was opportunity. The very fact that the departure of our group of friends from that city is being discussed in its weekly paper illustrates something desirable about the place.

Rottenchester has a good reply to this article on someone elses blog. He says, in part: "Jon is going to Philly, Rob is going to Asheville, NC, and Adam is going to Minneapolis. Each of these places is quite different from Rochester. Is there something they have in common that Rochester doesn’t? Other than being the next adventure for three creative minds, I don’t see it."
Radiator burst.

We'd gotten not two miles out—in fact we were just stopping at the Hungerford building to get some things from the loft—and then the ominous green pool was noticed.

Oh well, another night of hottubbing never hurt anyone.
We had hoped to have company for the trip by picking up craigslisters and shuttling from from municipality to municipality from the northeast to California, and friendly-looking hitchhikers should we find any, but it's clear there will be none of that, unless they want to ride on the roof. I've put the GTI in "Station-Wagon" mode. The rear seat folds forward making a huge cargo area (huge in the context of a Volkswagen Golf, of course) and it's totally full with our huge pile of books and clothes and blankets.

Ridiculously, only just now, about an hour before our departure, I just learned of a co-op house in Syracuse called Bread And Roses House. Ridiculously, just yesterday, I met a Computer Science professor who wants to work with me on an interesting project. Leaving Rochester is hard!
I was thinking I would delay the public announcement until everything had fallen into place. But there is no sense in that. Here it is: Bree and I are moving to Los Angeles in December and to Louisiana in July and will remain in Louisiana for at least a year. (Briefly, and in a pun, we are moving to LA.) After Louisiana: Unknown.

To pre-emptively answer a few questions: There will be a big Going Away party. The co-op will persist. In California I will work at California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, better known as Caltech. In Louisiana, the LIGO Livingston Observatory. All of this is predicated on various applications being approved and accepted that have not yet been so. Thinking two steps ahead, planning two moves.

What I need from you is a Reading List and a little networking. I need to hit the ground running. What should I read? For Los Angeles, I have City of Quartz. I have "Los Angeles Against The Mountains." I need more. I need to be culturally aware. I need the zeitgeist. I need the Weltanschauung. And Louisiana—I know nothing! Give me a reading list. Who should we know? And, where should we live? I grew up in Los Angeles's shadow, but know nothing of it.
I met with Adrian today and he presented and I agreed to the whole Louisiana Plan. I wish there were some source of informed yet impartial advice on these things, because it's so hard to know what's right, what's best. But for now I'm moving to California in January and then to Louisiana six months later and the Girl is coming too. I've always had a Plan before but this seems so much a shot in the dark. It's an adventure that leads I don't know where and the plan may yet change before it is realized, but this is how it lays before us for the time being. I talked to the Girl on the phone tonight and she was excited, as am I, about the heading out, the packing up of the car and the heading out into the world. This is how it plays.

I thought 11.5 hours had to be a new record for the SF - LA drive, but then I remembered the time that Chris, Toyoko, James, and I were all squeezed into the Golf and driving back after thanksgiving. Interstate five was slowed to a crawl with the post-thanksgiving traffic and the slowness was driving me crazy. With the help of Chris's goading, I was inspired to turn off five to zoom off onto some crazy backroad (I believe "This is what we call the 'illusion of progress'" were my words) that would connect us to the 101. Some ten hours later we arrived in Berkeley, after various oddball stops, such as in SLO to visit/wake up [livejournal.com profile] shamster and [livejournal.com profile] bobolly and for donuts at the wonderful twenty-four hour donut shop there ("Late night or early morning?" is the clerk's friendly greeting).

ANYWAY. My crazy craigslist adventure turned out to be all that I had hoped. The first passenger had warned that he had "a few boxes," and, emphatically, "BUT NO FURTNITURE!" I was already surprised by the amount of stuff he had piled up in front of his apartment when I stopped by to pick him up. "Only six more boxes!" he said in a voice I mistook for irony but which actually was understatement. Jack certainly lucked out in getting a ride from a craigslister with a huge, almost entirely empty van.

Then there was a couple from the City who barted over to Berkeley to meet me, and who wanted to go "anywhere in LA." They were at the start of a three-week Grand Hitchhiking Adventure, with their first selected destination Deek Creek hot springs. ("You've heard of it?!") They invited me along, and had I not had work to go to and the entire contents of someone's apartment in the van, I just might have gone along. It was a fun ride and they were all interesting people. Jack and I independently decided that Sarah reminded us of Lola from Run Lola Run, and then we had to explain that this was actually a compliment. A police cruiser tailed us as we drove through the Military-Industrial lands of El Segundo in search of fuel; and while searching for Jack's friend's apartment on the UCI campus in the dead of night another cop had cause to drive up in his cruiser, shine his big spotlight at us and yell "get out of here!" in a menacing voice; apparently us recent-college-grad types are Not Welcome in this town. (Being awake at 3:00am in Irvine might itself constitute Probable Cause.)

Sarah and Keith planned to sneek-a-camp somewhere and hitch a ride out 15 towards Vegas in the morning. The chose Ortega Highway as a good spot to camp and to hitch a ride towards Elsinore. I told them about the hot springs there, but didn't mention the murders or the mountain cats; I hope that doesn't count as irresponsible.

I dropped them off on 74, then drove home over new streets through neighborhoods ("Starting in the low $500,000's") that didn't exist last year, over the Oso Parkway bridge. the spatious streets with tree-lined meridians with sound walls and zero other traffic, and back into Mission Viejo and finally down my street, noticing that the number of monster trucks parked outside houses might now exceed the number of minivans, but prehaps slightly fewer American flags than in my August 2002 return.

Leaving for OC in half an hour.

It's clear that school is almost over, with all the hooting and hollaring outside tonight. Last Friday night of the semester, I guess. Weirdly I've noticed the effects of "finals season" much more this term than any other, perhaps because I'm outside of it. The "stress level" of posts on my livejournal friends list is directly observable! Tomorrow is move-out day, and it will be nice to have about a week in a quieter Berkeley. Already the house and campus networks are a lot faster, and from work we can hear the air-horns, cheering, and Pomp and Circumstance from the Greek Theatre.

Finals are always kind of stressful, but I always remember liking finals for the chance to relax, because there's no class and no homework and there are often many days between finals. I usually procrastinate studying to the last possible minute. Such as now, 02:00 before an 08:00 final, and I still have half the textbook to review. Only it doesn't matter much this time around. Three memories from finals in the past: the time I had three finals in one day (and two of them were really hard), the time a guy in my quantum course had a heart attack during the exam, the time we made the magnetic card decoder in dead week.

I have only a week left in Berkeley. So that means we have to live it up for this week! I have a lot of work to do, but breakfast/lunch/dinner are always fair game. Saturday morning (today, I suppose) I have the 141A final; then I'll probably want to take a nap; and then it's the annual lab party at Ken's house, and then Diane and I are off to see the Cardigans in the City. (woo!) Rumor has it that there's a summer-residents slumber party here on Tuesday. I think those are all of the definite plans.. although I would at least like to meet Tyson M., go to the Parkway theatre, have a picnic, go to Urban Ore with Kenny, have dinner in SF a few times, bicycle around West Berkeley, and test wireless connections between co-ops in that time. The boundary condition is that on Tuesday next week I start work at UCSD. Maybe on next Monday I can find a place to live.

Rumor has it that Alex and JennyJo are going to go traipsing about taking photos for the Wiki. That's super-cool; exactly the scavenger-hunt type activity I'd hoped the Wiki would engender, and that I found it inspiring in myself too. But that's not all! Alex says they'll wear reporter hats that, instead of having little cards that say "Press", they'll have little cards that say "Wiki". I did say that they're the coolest people in the world, didn't I? Even if they don't pull off the hats, it will be fun just imagining them as Wiki-agents.

My dad mailed me a bunch of awesome maps of Rochester, NY and the surrounding area (western NY and finger lakes region). I received them today at work just as we were having an ice cream sundae party for the departing undergrad (who actually managed to write an allegedly-impressive senior thesis out of work in our lab.. grumble grumble) and they created a lot more excitement than I would have expected. Ken (a Cornell PhD) exclaimed, "My old stomping ground!" and proceeded to pore over the maps, becoming oblivious to all other happenings. Other than that, nobody at the lab seems too excited about me going to Rochester.

Tobin: "I have relatives there.. my dad grew up there."
Luis: "Ah, *that's* why you're not prejudiced against the place."

They seem to forget that I'm going there, since it seems like every few days I have the conversation: "Have you decided on a grad school yet?" "Yup, I'm going to University of Rochester!" "Oh, you don't want to go there! It's too X, Y, and Z!"

Anyway, the maps make the place a little more exciting, since I can associate an actual geography with the place names, and pore over the funky features of the terrain. I have a secret hope that it will be kind of like Sweden, where I once bicycled to the beaches at Malmo, and on the way stopped at a nifty little cafe and had a tasty breakfast. Maybe that's just because there's a county of "Sweden" that butts up against Monroe County, though.

Malmö seems like a much larger, more legitimate city when one arrives by bicycle, threading through all the over- and under- passes, and crossing over the vast rail yard antecedent to the train station. I rode around the canals and through the parklands. The city was full of people enjoying the wonderful weather, lounging around by the canals, etc.


Maybe I should actually get back to this Solid State Physics. It would be nice to get an A, even if it has absolutely no consequences (partly because that's not entirely true).
Just back at the old Location Alpha after a harrowing night on the Interstate, jockying with 18-wheelers at the speed of 0.00000065c, gusty winds blowing the unloaded, nearly red-lining Vanagon like a bumper car in the lane. (Kris calls it the Silver Zephyr... but I think I'd prefer a name from the Soviet space program.. say, Progress, or, maybe, Buran. Yes, Buran.) Unloaded it's a light-weight craft, yet aerodynamic as a brick. At times it was hard to stay on the highway — after a hundred miles of this there was a helpful electric highway sign that said, ``Caution: Gusty winds!'' Thank goodness for Caltrans. Passing trucks, too, is a bit of a trick when you're travelling at Mach 0.11 in a metal rectangular prism through a thick soup of Nitrogen, propelled and guided only by the small friction provided by the weakest of known forces, between rubber and asphalt. Trucks. Steer away from the vacuum behind them, but then into the bow-wake when passing, and, oh! watch those oscillations. Thank god for closed-loop control systems.

The Interstate Highway System, some would have us believe, is the envy of the world. Whether or not that's true, it's somewhat mind-boggling to think that there is continuous system of concrete and asphalt ramps that can deliver you to nearly any point in this country, and probably not require more than half a dozen routing decisions before you get there. Some of us, I guess, are just suckers for networks of any kind.

It doesn't take long for the San Francisco Bay Area to drop out of view. Bump on over Altamont Pass and suddenly that wonderful station on 92.7 MHz (Party! Your station for continuous [if repetitive!] electronic dance music!) turns into Christian Rock. Scanning the airwaves one suddenly finds nothing but televangelism and Christian Rock. And the Rock stations are interrupted after each song with these little reflections about the Lord. (``And the big message we have to remember from this, the message to take home, is that we are nothing. That's right, we are nothing. We are worthless! We are nothing, nothing, nothing without Jesus.'') What's the godless heathen to do? And why is the demarcation between urban and rural so strong? It's downright bizarre. Stay in your little Buran, friend, and you'll be OK — they're praying for you.

So, now, down in the mirk of the Central Valley you're free to, as I said, jocky with the 18-wheelers, swim with the jellyfishes as it were, only there's a bit of difference in kinetic energy.

The first time I did this trip, — in the other directoin — it was exciting indeed, with Tony, in my then-whole Golf, ditching school to hit up the BeOS developers' conference in Santa Clara, then crash the dead-week festivities at Stanford (yeah, that Junior University across the bay...) and then visit 2018 for the first time. The car having a defective spedometer, my co-pilot marked off the miles and our velocity with a watch and a texas instruments calculator. The Vanagon, on the other hand, lacks clock and gasgauge, so we guess on the gas and ignore the time. It's amazing to me that people used to fly with fewer instruments than this. No co-pilot this time. Just bumping through the night. Now it's a pretty routine (if semiannual) thing — push on till the welcoming glow of Kettleman City with its In N' Out and cheap petroleum distillates comes into view.

Push on over the Grapevine, up through Gorman, Valencia, the fringes of LA, and suddenly there's life again on the radio. The highway widens, the traffic slows, and there's that luminous sky ahead. Yeah, Los Angeles. There's a song on the radio ``Send me an Angel'' and it sounds like they're singing ``City of Angels.'' (Like that Depeche Mode song where they keep singing ``so this is free love'' — I always heard it as ``so this is freedom,'' and I liked it better that way.) Good music, clear night — I can't help but pulse ahead on the highway, flying through the quiet LA freeways at seventy-five, the amber glow of San Pedro opening up on the right, scanning the mirrors hoping not to see the sudden lights of CHP. Since I first left Orange County, I've felt that I should have some kind of immunity here in my native City, you know, ``Oh, I'm sorry sir, it's you, you're back. Be on your way..'' But it doesn't work that way at all (I once had the following interaction after being pulled over in Orange County: ``Did you know you have a burned-out headlight?'' ``No, thanks.'' ``So, been smoking any dope?'' — I kid you not. Apparently ``probable cause'' is spelled ``non sequitur' in these parts). Pulsing along, no immunity. (Four hundred thirty one babies are born in Los Angeles every day.) Los Angeles will always be special, but I am an expatriate. I cannot live there, if only because the air burns my lungs.

Buran comes to the 5/405 separation, I'm in the center lane — It splits and goes both ways. (``If you come to a fork in the road, take it.'') Wavering between the choices. Interstate 5 all the way, urban decay, Disney monstrosity; or 405, wider, faster, through Santa Monica? At the last minute I go to the right. Even the uninitiated could know that this is a legitimate choice to make; because the third digit in "405" is even, you can tell that it reconnects to the main interstate after going through the city. (You can also tell that it goes north-south, since it's odd, and that it's big and probably crosses the whole country, because it's divisible by five.) Coming into south Orange County, the freeway opens up to a full twenty lanes. I've driven the entire California segment of Interstate Five (most of it in the last week, in fact), and I can tell you that it is here that it is most monstrous.

I think expatriotism suits me well. It's nice to have a home, somewhere else, to be a sort of outsider. In any group I end up in a similar position — interested, but unwilling to become totally absorbed, totally dedicated to the feverish subculture. Whatever it is. theatre tech, amateur radio, EECS, there is always something outside. I am a sort of tourist or organiser. Maybe it's a way of staying special.

Down from Castaic, pass the brewery that marks the exit for Haley's house, pass LAX and Aerospace Corporation, pass San Pedro, Fountain Valley, Santa Ana International John Wayne Airport, UCI, Mission Viejo: Next Five Exits. Home. `Location Alpha.' It feels like a ranch to me, a skunk works with space for projects and for comfort. And I'm still breathing okay. That's a good sign, if unusual.

* * *

I didn't feel like I was leaving Berkeley until I came home and half my stuff was tossed out into the hallway. Well, I didn't take move-out day seriously, but I suppose it should have occurred to me that someone would be wanting to move into my room. Suddenly homeless, but not really, since I just ended up staying with Nadia for awhile. I came back to Oscar Wilde this week to a joyful reunion with that house's denizens. It was as if I had left semipermantently but then come back again, and it was nice to see that I had been missed, nice to see all my friends' faces, nice to be back to our funny house where everyone greets each other as `lover!' (pronounce: "LAVA!"). Now, sleeping in the living room again, my stuff packed in bags in the hallway, the feeling of nomadicity was again pulsing in my veins. It's intoxicating stuff, the uncertainty, the crisis of it all, things changing in uncertain but (therefore?) exciting ways. It increases with every root uprooted: Relationship, school, work, co-op. And on the horizon: ten days on the East Coast with no predetermined itinerary.

But nomadicity certainly has its downsides. We know what Shakespeare had to say about parting, and it's true. Sinews and connective tissues, torn apart, snapping, breaking uncleanly. I learned at some point that every living situation is temporary, that each is a moment in time and space that is inherently transient, that at some point will be only a happy memory, unreachable in physical space, un-return-to-able. There was 2018, there was Alaska, there was Sweden, there was Israel, there was Oscar Wilde. I guess people do stick around, and that's comforting. But I remember the pangs I felt when Stina left our korridor in Sweden, how disproportionately much it seemed to hurt. I think it's easier to leave than to be left, because in the former case you can retain the illusion that the thing that was left can be returned to, whereas in the latter case, its dismemberment takes place before your eyes.

I remarked to Jeff that I thought it must be incredibly hard to live in the co-op for many years, watching everyone come and go. Because for me there was really only one set of residents at Oscar Wilde, and when the summer came I missed the old residents and eyed the new ones with suspicion. And then it occurred to me that, somehow, I've become one of the leavers, one of the ones who doesn't stick around. I have mixed feelings about that. I will come back and visit, though, I promise.

All of these places, I've been to once but not returned. Alaska, Sweden, Israel. This summer starts something new, but also it's a chance to return to Sweden; I think that will be my first Return other than to Orange County. I'm excited about that, although perhaps slightly worried that it could be disillusioning.

I will miss Oscar Wilde, though. I really made some great friends there, and, as far as the theme goes, I now feel part of a new community, even if I am an outsider — which is, after all, kind of the way I like it. And even those who I didn't quite become good friends with, I think I admire them more than they know. I was overjoyed this morning to discover one of our house T-shirts in the free-pile, a fortuitous discovery if there ever was one. I put it on immediately and drove home with the typewriter font `wilde' across my chest (and `oscar wilde co-op; lgbt theme house' on the back of my neck) — now I have another home-away-from-home, another place to lovingly expatriate.

Returned Soda and Cory keycards. They would only give me back $5 of my $35 keycard deposit, based on the combination of an accounting technicality and that my blue keycard was obsolete (``I'm sorry, we haven't used these for years!'' — well, sorry, I still want my deposit back!) CS 70 timecard dropped off. LBL time card — what was my project code again? LBL termination. Whoops, admintypes already left. Math major advisor — they're so friendly there! Small department, big university — winning combo. Submitted final application for mathematics degree minor. Abstract algebra course equivalency? Profs have vacated. Will do it via email. College of Engineering exit survey — check. Automatic control course equivalency? Still no word from prof. Error correcting codes course equivalency — check. Return library books: UCB, BPL, CSUA. Check. Transfer files to my computer. Check. Pay $69 fee to Oscar Wilde House. Check. Return house key. Check. Return LBL key. Check. Move splorg.org. Woops, will have to happen next week, without me. Almost ready to egress.

March 2020

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