May 022012
 

I have this complicated relationship with fate. Probably just the Catholic upbringing, but when things are going well, I tend to become highly suspicious, and things have been going eerily well for me here in the Pacific Northwest.

Not perfect. My basement apartment is sort of weirdly freezing all the time, regardless of the temperature outside, and I’m working stupid-long hours, but we found an amazing home that’s pretty close to work, the schools are really good, and I’m enjoying the hell out of all the different work I’m doing.

And then my wife flies into town and everything I’ve loved about Portland she completely gets, grinning like I haven’t seen her grin in years as we’re walking from the loan officer’s place to dinner downtown. She loves this city. She loves the house in Washington that’s only fifteen minutes from downtown Portland. It’s great here.

To my mind, of course, this is the last nail in the happiness coffin. Things are officially going smashingly, and something’s got to give.

Turns out, it was the Subaru.

The poor, long-suffering Outback–already sporting a dry erase board in place of the rear passenger-side window from the Jones bike that crashed through it at the start of my drive across the country–ended up getting stomped by a van as we left the city.

Statistically, the odds of being attacked by an indy band with Radiohead influences while driving in Portland are like 1 in 3, and I’ve since found out that the incredibly nice young gentleman driving the van is one third of a band called Rags and Ribbons. The guy on keys was also in the van, was also an incredibly nice guy, and nobody was hurt all around, which is the best part. This particular band seems like pretty talented guys and create an interesting sound for a trio with no bass player. Plus, and they have a video where a kid runs through the woods in his pajamas.

Really the most fantastic part, considering I’d been sort of expecting the worst, is that we weren’t killed right then and there. This realization, that the godsmack had occurred and we’d survived, made me weirdly happy as I exchanged insurance information. I’m sure it wasn’t lost on the band, who watched me giddily tearing the ground effects off my car so that I could drive it from the scene, and probably wondered if everyone from Pennsylvania was like that.

Maybe I’ll be struck by lightning tomorrow, but for now, I feel like I’ve passed some sort of pop quiz Portland decided to throw at me. It could have been really bad–a much heavier band in a much larger van–but it wasn’t.

Further proof that my ch’i was in need of realignment before I could start my new life as a lumberjack? Today I walked out to my car, armed with the same excellent black duct tape that was used to install the makeshift dry erase window, and prepared to tape my side mirror back into something like its original location.

Being Portland, it had rained most of the day, but unlike Portland, this had been a hard rain, the kind that soaks your shoulders and thighs when you ride your bike in it, even through jackets and rain pants. The poor Subaru was saturated–far from an ideal moment to apply tape.

“What I need,” I heard myself think, “is a kind of rag or something.”

And then there it was.

For some reason, when I sold my business and packed up a bunch of stuff to move to Chicago (similar to the Portland move only eternally sad and fruitless), I came across a genuine Shamwow. I don’t know where it came from, but it went with me to Chicago, and then home again, and somehow it was on the trip to Portland.

Given that my window had been busted out, I’d removed everything–I mean everything–from my car in case of break in, but standing there in the rain holding my mangled and dangling mirror in one hand and tape in the other and thinking, “I need a rag,” I noticed it there on the floor of the car. The Shamwow. Say what you will about Vince, the embattled Shamwow spokesman, but there is no better product for cleaning the surface of a snapped off mirror before attempting to reattach it with tape than a well-traveled Shamwow.

Not only did my tape manage to reattach the mirror–handy, because I have to be at a house inspection and then back at work as fast as possible tomorrow–but the mirror even adjusts position electronically again. None of this would have been possible without the Shamwow, which I think will become some form of pop art in my new home or go with me everywhere from now on. I’ve never been out for big wins and world domination so much as just surviving and focusing on what really matters. Ribbons are swell, but rags are really useful. And Shamwows are just plain magical.

Good Neighbors

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Apr 252012
 

Anyone still reading this might have noticed I’ve been somewhat distracted lately. Basically, I’m taking time off from Canootervalve, but seem to still be writing. Peculiar, that.

Between the two gigs, the occasionally Manic Mechanic piece for Dirt Rag and the suspension system design, dull moments have been few and far between. Add in a house search that commenced 9:00am the morning I hit Portland and has chugged along steadily (second day in a row of going house hunting after work), and at this point I’m just looking for a peaceful and beautiful home where I can finally have that massive heart attack.

We’re committed to Surburbia–sort of intentionally. Bear taking monster dumps in your yard, and constantly having to relocate rattlesnakes is OK when you’re twenty five and have no kids (actually, it’s not even OK then, really), but three kids later, we’re more than ready for the cul de sac. After hearing the wife and kids got hit with fifteen inches of snow back home on the mountain in Pennsylvania this week, this sentiment has only been reinforced.

Still, all these houses I’m seeing sure are close together.

Growing up my life was pretty great when we were one of only a few houses in the neighborhood. Lots of dirt in which to play all day long. Between the lead in the soil, mine shafts that would occasionally open when I used to play, and general radioactivity, it’s somewhat surprising I’m not clutching my Deschutes Black Butte Porter in my handy prehensile tail as I type this.

The search goes on, anyway. I’ll be plenty happy when all if it’s over, and I can once again blame my typos and general incomprehensibility on the fact that I was typing all this while watching The Colbert Report. Until then, I’ll practice getting used to some actual neighbors by wearing pants inside the house. At least during peak hours.

My Pacific Northwest Hipster Raw Food Diet

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Apr 232012
 

There are some people out there who have a blog for legitimate reasons, but I’m not one of those. No, my blog exists because there are still some parts of me unfit for consumption by any of the people who employ me to do exceedingly important and difficult things. Why, for example, has no one come up with a 650b product called the “Jan”? As in Jan Brady, the middle one. I would so call a tire that. One of many reasons I am not, in fact, a licensed and practicing bicycle component manufacturer.

Speaking of being unfit for consumption, a funny thing happened to me over the weekend. Actually, more than one funny thing happened to me, but this one comes first.

I spent Saturday–and I mean from 9:00am Saturday morning until 7:00pm Saturday night–looking at houses all around Portland. If you’ve not done the house search thing, wherein you look at well over a dozen homes in one day, for multiple days, I can tell you that it’s a bit like speed-dating, if each potential date was holding a completely different power tool and felt compelled to use it on whatever parts of you were still generally intact from the last table’s visit. While telling you why they love cats.

For organization’s sake, I divided the homes I saw into two categories, beautiful but won’t work, and horrible and won’t work. I’m not looking for velvet paintings of Liberace in the family room or anything–just really good schools, but by that I mean really good elementary, middle, and high school. All three. Some sort of method of arriving at work without having spent two hours sitting in traffic is also preferred, if not the genuine ability to ride my bike to work every day (which I’m still secretly hoping to find).

Anyway, after a day of home visits that included surprising a house filled with sleeping seventeen-year-old boys, none of whom apparently realized his home was for sale, despite the lockbox and sign outside, and setting off the whole house alarm at another home, I decided to make my first trip into Washington State.

Washington is actually closer to my work than a lot of places in Oregon, and I’ve heard rumors of an ability to actually ride a bicycle across the I-205 bridge that spans the Columbia River between Portland and Vancouver (update: confirmed, more later).

Besides, in Washington, I could fill my car up with gas myself, a habit I’m finding weirdly hard to shake.

In my mentally, physically, and spiritually depleted state and with the sun setting, then, I set out for some places I want to see in Washington.

Fifteen minutes later I’m parked in a strip mall, thinking. By “thinking” I mean, of course, typing shit into my phone. I hadn’t eaten all day, as it turns out, and was realizing now that I was possibly so run down as to be unable to operate my motor vehicle properly (or as properly as I ever do). Trip Advisor, which I still blame for causing me to drive an extra hundred miles after having already pulled twelve hours on the road, finally fell on its own sword and failed to even open without shitting the bed completely and needed force closed, arguably the most thoughtful thing that app has done for me since Illinois. Yelp, on the other hand, had a lot to show me about the locations near me–mostly that they were all pretty expensive. As appealing as a $20 pizza or some sushi sounded, I have a home to purchase, so I’m on a strict diet when it comes to lavish dinners.

What was right near by was a little pizza place–very “greasy take out”-looking. It wasn’t reviewed well, but it was close, which was a heavily weighted factor in its favor. The place was called Papa Murphy’s.

West Coast friends no doubt already see this one coming, but please don’t spoil it for anyone else.

My conversation on the phone went like this:

Mrs. Papa Murphy: “Thank you for calling Papa Murphy’s Something-Whateverville. Would you like to hear our specials?”

Dumbass: “Sure.”

Mrs. Papa Murphy: “We have a large squirrel and passion fruit or whatever for only like fourteen bucks or something.”

Dumbass: “Sounds good. I’ll have that.”

Mrs. Papa Murphy: “OK! When would you like to pick it up?”

Dumbass: “I’m already in the neighborhood, so any time.”

Mrs. Papa Murphy: “Well just give me a few minutes to make it.”

Dumbass: “OK.”

In literature terms, the phrase “a few minutes” up there is what we call “foreshadowing.” So five minutes later I walk into the pizza place, give my name, and tell the guy behind the counter that I think it might not be ready yet. “Oh, it’s ready,” he says, proceeding to remove from a baking tray a neatly cellophaned unbaked pizza.

I have not only never seen such a thing in my life before, but I’ve never even heard of it before. Granted, I live a sheltered life and it was many years before I had even escaped from the monks who’d taught me to be an assassin for God, let alone experienced life, but who the hell sells unbaked freakin’ pizzas? For like fourteen bucks?

Here, then, is a rough approximation of everything that occurred.

Dumbass: “Oh, wow. So you don’t bake them, eh?”

Strappin’ Papa Murphy Dude: “Uh, no. That’s always been how we do it.”

Dumbass: “I’m sure, yeah. It’s just not something I was expecting.”

Strappin’ Papa Murphy Dude: “Well, it’s how we’ve always done it.”

Dumbass: “Yeah, I see. I hadn’t realized that because I’d been living three thousand miles away, and hadn’t encountered this sort of–” here, I regard the uncooked pizza warily–“thing. Before.”

Strappin’ Papa Murphy Dude: “Do you have like an oven where you’re staying.”

To my credit, here I did not try to explain that the whole point to ordering a pizza at 8:00pm alone on a Saturday night is clearly to drive around looking at homes for sale while eating it. My mind was busy doing quick calculations about how long uncooked pizza dough and what appeared to be meat and other things would last before “turning” or whatever the hell it is that uncooked dough does. Here are what those calculations looked like in my mind:

?!

“Yeah,” I said finally, “I’m sure I can come up with something.”

There was a young Korean kid in the store at the time, too, and he was wearing a trucker hat carefully sideways, some sort of enormous glasses–like the kind you see in novelty stores or on celebrities–and he had the tongues of his sneakers unlaced and sticking way up outside his pant legs. He was looking at me like: dumbass. I have no idea if his outfit is still hip or has come back or something, but it’s forever inseparably intertwined with my shame at being an outsider and not realizing how pizzas are sold in the Pacific Northwest, so I stood there for a second, realizing that I will forever associate exposed sneaker tongues with knowledge I do not possess.

How we roll up in here.

Anyway, I drove around the southern parts of Washington, starving, eating toppings off an uncooked pizza, which might be the best way to search for a new home anyway. Something about the added desperation of needing to get to an oven makes every home look pretty nice.

Social Insecurity

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Apr 202012
 

Somehow I lost my social security card, which, according to the government’s site for such things, I’m allowed to do ten times a year before it gets to be a problem. Regardless of the lenient replacement policy, there are hoops to jump through with this sort of thing, and you definitely don’t want to be without that piece of paper, let alone the number itself. Even a very brief visit to a local Social Security office will introduce you to people who seem to be flickering around the edge of official person-hood, if not off that radar entirely.

Speaking of which, the tiny object in the center of the picture is actually a person in one of those Hoveround motorized mobility things for people who have trouble walking. He or she is being met by the Portland police while begging on the 205 exit ramp.

This was going on as I waiting my turn at Taco Bell, a location as well known for photo-journalistic opportunities as it is meat-shaped food products. While I tend not to believe in magical signs and symbols (except for that one dog’s ass that totally looks like Jesus), watching someone being carried off an exit ramp–a second police car seemed to be necessary to remove the Hoveround–tended to affect my otherwise cheerful “I’m about to enjoy meat-shaped food products” mood.

I’d been thinking about happiness a bit lately. In particular, I’d been trying to cope with liking the work I’m doing these days, even if there is quite a bit of it. I’d joked that yesterday I’d expected a piano to fall on me or something, because things were actually going pretty well for me after a pretty bad patch, and I just can’t seem to trust anything outside my default state of mildly comic gloom. No piano today, though this image certainly had an effect. There but for the grace of a rapidly fading Subaru Outback and some luck on the job front, go I. I worry about these sorts of things, probably more than is healthy. “Maybe my mortal fear of this new kind of happiness is how I’ll be miserable from now on,” I found myself writing in an email to my sister. And that seemed about right.

I think a lot of us are a little on edge these days, a little unsure of where things might be headed next–a kind of end-of-the-world Mayan-xiety or something–and watching someone who can’t walk get removed by the police for begging sums up all of that fear better than almost anything. But really it wasn’t just the scene that got to me.

What seems to have affected me the most was the flag.

If you look very closely, you’ll be able to see it, one of those orange, triangular “please don’t kill me” flags parents sometimes install on first bicycles before sending us out into the streets all knees and elbows, wobbly and unsure. At some point, it had occurred to this individual that his or her–I can’t be certain–personal mobility scooter required one of these flags, and of course enough people for whom walking is difficult are out begging on our off ramps, that Hoveround offers the safety flag as an accessory for only $17.95 (on sale from $19.95 right now). According to Hoveround:

Our wheelchair safety flag is a great accessory for increasing your visibility while using your power wheelchair in busy areas. The bright orange color and extended height of this safety flag gets you noticed and helps to keep you safe. Made from strong vinyl material, our power mobility flag is designed to last for a long time.”

I have to call bullshit on that one, though, because this person’s safety flag had ripped badly, so that instead of being shaped like a triangle, it floated out into two points, more like the flag of a castle. It was the flag that kind of brought it home to me, because I imagined this individual at some point working through the following simple thought process:

I’m probably going to be doing some begging, so I’d better get the flag.

The helpless tend to have the kind of ruthless logic that can’t be questioned, like this note my equally cautious and deliberate six year-old son wrote, and that I took with me on my drive across the country.

Things for Vacation: 1. Food, 2. Water

In the most literal sense, Taco Bell might not have “food,” but it never hurts to ask them for water, even if you just end up giving it to someone else.

Wherein I Experience Something Like Happiness

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Apr 192012
 

Just a quick note this morning, and not particularly entertaining, if I do say so myself. I was catching up on some important work last night and then staring at thumbnails of possible new homes for my family again into the wee hours. At this point, the house hunt takes on more of that “end of Rocky Balboa vs. Apollo Creed” vibe, wherein I’m just tapping shit on the keyboard all bleery-eyed and staggering from one property to the next. Can’t we just home-school the kids? Do I really need to be able to get into work every day? And most importantly, can’t somebody just pick out a house for me and then tell me where it is? I think I’ve stopping dreaming of owning a great home, and instead started dreaming about just no longer searching for one.

But one positive thing that’s slowly occurring to me is how much I like my work now. All of it. I’m sure just writing this will cause terrible things to happen to me, but I have to say, I’m working with some really wonderful people right now and for some really wonderful companies. “Companies,” yes. I seem to be hyper-employed at present. The way some people go bungee jumping, wrestle crocodiles, or eat at Pizza Hut, my own personal extreme sport seems to be finding as many jobs as possible.

To take a quick inventory, I’m working for an e-commerce company, a bike parts manufacturer, a magazine, and I seem to be operating a bicycle design company, which was sort of an accident born out of liking bikes too much.

But the weird thing is: it’s working. I’m getting quite a bit done on all fronts right now, and have to say, enjoying the hell out of it, too. It’s partly because I love the companies I work for and partly because I like doing stuff, and partly because I’ve been what psychologists call an “entrepreneur” before, and that gig makes my current twelve hour days seem downright easy.

Anyone misguided enough to read my stuff regularly knows the optimism is hard won here. I don’t come by joy or contentment easily–and I still wouldn’t say I’m “content” (whatever that is, exactly), but I’m genuinely enjoying what I do for the first time in a long time.

So there, I said it.

This all but guarantees tomorrow’s post will be pretty spectacular. Tough to say whether an enormous eagle will carry me far up into Washington State and leave me on a cliff wall to die of exposure, or if I’ll just get run over by a garbage truck, but it’ll probably be good.

In the meantime, to take my mind off of house hunting, I’m going to decide on a name for the still mostly imaginary bike design company I actually do need to start, if just to keep my emails better organized. It’s like how the Dead Milkman were an imaginary band before deciding to become real, only I have some pretty good reasons to add yet another job title to the current list.

And I do need to add some more job titles to my resume. LinkedIn sent me some auto-generated botmail this morning to let me know that adding another job title makes me something like 12% more likely to be considered by HR departments, which suggests the more jobs you have, the more likely you are to get even more, and apparently I won’t rest until I have at least a dozen projects going on.

So I’m off into my day to have a piano fall on me and break up this peculiar happiness thing, and I’m wondering if I should call the design company VeloWorkshop or VelocityWorkshop, which are domain names I have around, or just stick with Canootervalve for the company name. I’ll be taking a break from house hunting to ponder this on the ride in to work this morning, and will resume the regular schedule of skewed perspectives and personal mishaps usually found here tomorrow. Any opinions about the name thing, please let me know.

I Will Survive

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Apr 182012
 

As of last night, I can no longer say I’ve never driven the wrong way down a one-way street in Portland. Thanks, Google Navigation. Can’t wait to see those Google cars that drive themselves.

All I wanted to do last night was go buy a few shirts. This is the sort of thing I’ve heard of people being able to do without much in the way of incidents, but for some reason Google has a weird blind spot when it comes to GPS near my rental in Portland. Maybe it’s airplane interference or something, but my phone’s little screen shows my blue arrow marauding through hapless Portland neighborhood raised flower beds, garage-based food carts, and backyard bicycle frame welding sheds while the robotic nav voice (I call her “Ethel”) prattles on frantically for me to “turn right” or “make a u-turn” or “go north, go north, no west.” It’d be pretty funny, actually, if it weren’t so dangerous.

This only happens when I have to go get supplies. The bike route I have to work is relatively simple and quiet by comparison. But any time I have to break out my poor, road-weary Outback (the official car of Portland, from what I can tell), all hell breaks loose.

Anyway, plenty of people were kind enough to stand on their horns to alert the strange Pennsylvania man with the busted out car window and mangled bike racks all over his roof that he was about to cause a major pileup, but here’s the thing about traveling down a one-way street: you only do it when there really aren’t any cars immediately in the way. One tends not to steer blindly into the grill of an oncoming car, no matter what Google is telling you to do. This is because we are hard-wired, back from our days evading saber-tooth tigers, to avoid doing obviously stupid shit that will get us killed.

So you really don’t have to honk quite that much when you see this sort of thing. In fact, the courteous thing to do, really, is just get out of the way and give the driver a little room to think. Me, I only turned down the street because it was clear, and, frankly, it got me exactly where I needed to go. Ethel is brutally efficient like that.

Once I got to Target, I was dismayed to find that all of their shirts had extra, unnecessary loops and buttons and stuff. I have this policy against wearing anything with purely cosmetic fasteners, second or third neck holes, or extra zippers that don’t really do anything (the ’80s were a tough decade). What I generally prefer to wear are shirts that have buttons in the front in order to facilitate installation and removal of the shirt, and that’s about it for adornments. Rarely do I need buttons and straps on my shoulders to bundle my sleeves and fasten them up. This is because I hardly ever Footloose dance.

This meant I had to find some other large purveyor of bland, strictly functional shirts. I ended up at a mall, which, as you might suspect, is where Puritan villagers would have tied someone like me as a kind of punishment for witchcraft or walking the wrong way down ye olde one way Streete. Malls give me what I believe to be “the willies,” but this particular mall had a JCPenney’s store, which has now been rebranded by a new CEO and an ex-Apple executive as “JCP,” and you could literally feel the new energy of that name change flowing through the aisles of the men’s wear section like great rivers of urine.

So I picked out some bland fat guy shirts in a rainbow of dark colors, attempted to pay for them and was presented with the opportunity to save 20% if I signed up for a “JCP” card.

There are moments in life when I revert to a kind of Woody Alan-esque stammering inability to process surroundings, and shopping in general is one of those moments. To be asked to sign up for a JCP credit card instead of just paying and walking away, it turns out, is one of the worst.

I said I’d do it.

I have no idea if that was the right thing to do, or if already JCP is charging me hundreds of dollars every fifteen minutes, if my name has been added to no-fly lists, or if I’ve somehow purchased five years of Martha Stewart Living magazine. I do know that the process took about an hour instead of the three minutes promised, no doubt complicated by the fact that Pennsylvania seems to have my address wrong on my driver’s license. Something I never noticed until moving to Oregon, where their JCP stores apparently offer far more rigorous identity checks than, say, the government of the State of Pennsylvania.

The sign up process ended up involving my social security number, entered multiple times into a keypad as the sales associate assured me it does not appear on his screen. Then I had to input my birth date three times because the JCP computer was confused by a leading zero in the month of 09. Apparently, the software engineer who designed this system for JCP really only anticipated people born between October and December as potential sign-up candidates, which I guess is understandable.

Finally, I was told that I had to speak to the JCP credit department representative who–and I am not joking about this–gave me a multiple choice quiz on my life.

At which of these addresses did I at one point either live or work? I got that one instantaneously, recognizing faintly the home in which I was raised and lived for eighteen years or so.

At which of these addresses did I live? was the next question, and, diabolically, it was a trick-fucking-question. The list included addresses I’d never heard of. Given that I have an incredibly poor memory and that I’ve lived places as seemingly improbable as Atlanta and Chicago, though, this shook me.

“I don’t recall ever having lived at any of those places,” I stated, boldly into the waiting silence of the receiver, and waiting. “OK,” said the small JCP voice on the line, “I have one more question.”

“Yes!” I told her. “I knew I hadn’t lived any of those places!”

I was doing so incredibly well on this test about myself that I basically forgot all about the shirts or the JCP credit card. I pressed the check-out counter JCP phone firmly against my ear, determined to ace this exam.

In which of these counties did you own property? A tricky one, though one of the answers sounded like a place in Georgia, a place I once lived as an angry young English professor who once told a Georgia State Trooper he should consider pulling over some of the Mercedes Benzes and Lexi I saw going faster than I’d been going on the highway. Who once told a woman in a convenience store that yes, the person for whom I was buying the butterfly band-aids probably did need stitches, then stared at her until she gave me my change. Where my dog once tried to attack a body builder’s pet python and nearly caused me an ass-beating.

I was so punk then.

But I got that question right, too. I had once owned property in Cobb County, Georgia, where my neighbor had told my wife and I that he was glad we didn’t have kids and glad we weren’t black. (We ended up teaching him to expand his list by becoming a foster home for unruly Alaskan Malamutes–something like ten dogs living on our white, childless property at one point, even.)

God. All of this had happened to me.

At the end of the punishing quiz, I was awarded my life, and told I was granted my JCP store card, which earned me thirteen dollars off my purchase. The card would be mailed to my current address in Pennsylvania, where I no longer live, which seemed somehow strangely appropriate.

Goodwill House Hunting

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Apr 172012
 

It turns out that searching for a house is not nearly as cool as that TV show “House Hunters” makes it out to be. If it’s really true that independently wealthy people just can’t find anything that makes them happy, I’d like to recommend following me around for a while, looking at house after house that’s either priced like a lost Van Gogh, or can’t contain my sprawling brood–twins are the Gift from God that also happens to wreck your financial planning, but you can never figure out which one to blame, so you have to just love both of them.

But that’s not really the bad part. The truly bad part about buying a new home, when you’re not independently wealthy, is that you have to wade through endless houses, each with weird fatal flaws and strange compromises. In contrast to this, the independently wealthy have the ability to live in a state of near constant wonder and enchantment.

Take this eleven million dollar home in Lake Oswego, for instance.

Lake Oswego, Oregon Home

The nice thing about being able to buy a home that’s worth more than the operating budget for the city of Detroit is that you get to be thrilled and delighted, without any of that unseemly disappointment and compromise. Prefer a master bath large enough to let you play slap and giggle tackle football with the trophy wife? Check. Personally, I would find it impossible not to fill this bathtub with gasoline and fly a radio controlled airplane into it, just to see what would happen, but then I say that about every bathtub I see.

His and Hers separate wings are the new dual-vanities.

Whereas everyone I know who’s currently house hunting is primarily concerned with finding good schools for their kids, anyone capable of owning this home could take the obvious further step of just starting a school somewhere within the home.

In fact, I’m pretty sure this home already includes one of those heavily upholstered and woodgrained schools for foppy English mutant children who’re a little frightened and unsure of their laser beam eyes and metallic skin.

In fact, why are there so many tripods in this home? That, in and of itself, seems highly suspicious, and further evidence that the truly wealthy have no idea what they’re supposed to buy.

What, no tripod in the bathroom?

But imagine how happy you’d be to be able to buy a house that had at least the basic stuff you were looking for? You know, like solid schools, a roof that won’t need replaced in the next few years, and a bathroom that doesn’t look like it was used for cooking meth. To find something like that–something that just covered the basics–would probably make the average person much happier than an $11-million home could ever make someone who can afford it.

That’s why I’m starting the Christopher S. Currie Foundation for Meaning in Wealth, an organization designed to help match wealthy but unhappy people with people who can show them how to appreciate stuff. And maybe build a go cart track in the atrium. That would be so rad.

Arriving in Portland

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Apr 132012
 

I made it here. After 2500 miles, slipping into Oregon from Idaho was pretty uneventful. In fact, a semi blocked the “Welcome to Oregon” sign, so I shot this instead.

I’m proud of myself for staying calmly seated at the first gas station in Oregon. Still weird. Going to take some time to get used to people pumping my gas, along with the whole “entire new life” thing, but at least the scenery made it tough to be concerned about anything.

Some fifty miles into Oregon, I remembered why I’m here. The hills and mountains started and just kept spreading out and becoming more amazing. Thanks to a fire alarm at the Sleep Inn in Boise, I hadn’t slept much the night before, and of course I’m a little jangled to begin with this trip, but the majesty of these was downright breathtaking. And it just kept on like that until I started up into the bigger mountains, and the trees started to appear.

After a long stretch of flat and dry land I picked up the river and followed it into the Hood River area, home of the Multnoham Falls shown at the top.

Now comes a long process of getting my bearings and figuring out how to live in Portland. Having brought a whole bunch of bikes and parts, but somehow no little, blinky tail light, I’m not off to a good start, but there’s enough coffee here to help me figure everything out.

The State I’m In

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Apr 112012
 

image

At some point yesterday, I became convinced Nebraska wasn’t a place so much as a mental condition I was experiencing. Like most of my mental problems, I was determined to ignore this one until it went away.

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It didn’t, really. In fact, I think it got worse. I’m pretty sure I was seeing signs for Godfather’s Pizza, the chain founded by once-presidential candidate and always-disturbing, Herman Cain. We don’t have Godfather’s Pizza in Pittsburgh, and I’d never encountered any signs of the chain in any of my travels anywhere before. Yesterday I realized that the only logical place for me to finally find evidence of it was Nebraska. The last few hundred miles of the state were pretty much the driving equivalent of watching that creepy Herman Cain slow-smile commercial. In even slower slow-motion.

I told myself I would not try to make it into Wyoming.

Once in Wyoming, I received something I’d not had the entire trip: a tailwind. It was suddenly quiet and a little eerie. After 1500 miles, the winds had finally quit leaning on my windshield and decided to help. At first I figured Herman Cain Nebraska hallucinations had broken me, and I was headed in the wrong direction, but clearly I was still headed west.

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Wyoming should really have a “welcome” sign that reads: “Wyoming: Now Harden the Fuck Up.” Literally, the minute you cross the line, the road goes to total shit–some sort of undulating slabs of pavement thing that, in a full-loaded Subaru with five bikes just on the outside, is extremely unpleasant to hit at 80-miles an hour. If Nebraska had toyed with my mind, Wyoming was more interested in wrecking my car.

Trip Advisor showed me a ton of places to stay in Cheyenne, so I figured I’d tough it out the sixty or so miles there, after deciding on a nice looking virtual hotel with great rates and safe-looking parking. Apps are so great. The hotel never showed up on any road signs, though, and you realize you’re past Cheyenne when you’re climbing a mountain in total darkness with absolutely no signs of life, save for the random headlights that seem to be headed toward you. Apparently there are roads that run along the highway at odd angles. I may never know what the mountain just west of Cheyenne looks like, but it was a unique experience to encounter very late at night after something like eight hundred miles of driving.

I ended up in Laramie, which I like a lot. There aren’t many Old West towns with multiple sushi and vegan places, but the guest directory at the Comfort Inn here suggests Laramie is one. Applebee’s was still open and semi-raucous, even, with hip-hop pumping through the whole building.

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I wrapped up the day eating a burger and catching up on some work, while the Applebee’s speakers were a bumpin’. Eyes on Idaho. Looking forward to some forests again. Time to load up.

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Apr 062012
 

I still haven’t decided if posts next week will be brief and inscrutable, or just nonexistent. Either way I’ll be driving across the country, probably recklessly snapping photos of anything even remotely interesting that I pass on the highway. (Actually, I think my mom reads this, so what I’ll actually be doing is signalling, pulling off to the side of the road, making sure my doors are locked, then snapping photos.)

But I’ll probably end up with more photos than text or time in which to wax faux-poetic. Fortunately, my invitation to Pinterest has just been accepted!

I like this new trend of “invite” exclusivity when it comes to new social networks. Google+ and Spotify both worked this well. Sometimes, as in the case with Google+, one finally gains access to the ultra-exclusive party only to find a few guys playing Parcheesi and eating cheese puffs behind all that mysterious inaccessibility. Other times, as is my current situation with Pinterest, one walks into a scene that’s a little scary, and tricky to nail down–like gaining entrance to one of those wealthy-people parties where everyone’s wearing those creepy Venetian beaked bird masks, or visiting Florida.

Today was only my second visit as an actual member, and I’ve begun to actually acclimate and process the experience. As a kind of less-then-helpful guide to those of you still standing outside the club scrunching your cleavage together and throwing come-hithers at the digital bouncer, here’s my unpractical advice for maximizing your first minutes up in the club.

  1. You’d better like stuff wrapped in bacon. Seriously, even if your initial configuration includes no foodies or food-related stuff, you will see things wrapped in bacon.
  2. There are a lot of pants. Pinterest is all about fashion, and if you initially went toward more of a “Chuck Norris” and monster truck flavor with your interests, Pinterest will default to showing you a lot of pants.

    Fancy Pants

    These pants are apparently nice.

  3. Only hipster bicycles exist in Pinterest. The bikes you do see are beautiful and artisanal and all, but so far, you don’t see a lot of jack drive DH bikes. Still, it is sort of interesting to see what people who mostly like to look at pants look for in a bicycle.
  4. Anything you can photograph is art. A friend of mine once took one of those little label maker guns–the kind that spit out the little embossed letters–to completely label the gun itself with various descriptions like “sticky labeler,” and “label-o-matic” and that seemed like maybe the contextual heir-apparent to Warhol’s Pop Art, but these days anything photographed is automatically considered pretty profound. Dress on a scarecrow. Linoleum. Discarded doll at a junk yard. Pinterest is the context you need to make photos of your dog dressed as Darth Vader seem profound.
  5. Guys are supposed to like cars. Somewhere in the bowels of Pinterest is an algorithm that parses content into “make-up/hair” and “sports cars.” I’m normally a motorhead, but the most commonly displayed vanity shots of cars on Pinterest all seem to be taken by someone who isn’t sure what a car is. I’m sure this will get way better as I add more people I know, and I’m desperately grateful to my friend Michael for peppering the pins I’m seeing so far with some unique vehicles, but I think I’d rather see more make-up and hairstyles than the default stuff floating around Pinterest in the “cars” category.
  6. Even after dedicating more than half your life to bicycles, searching “bike” on Pinterest will make you wonder if you even like them.

    Yes, a personalized concept “Matilda” bike with an “l” seatpost that doesn’t attach to any other part of the frame, but rather floats in photoshopped space is, indeed, an “amazing idea” because, “No one could steal your bike.”

So far, one really positive thing I have found about Pinterest is that it will help you organize the things that matter to you, and, in doing so, teach you a lot about yourself. What I learned about myself so far is that I’m not really that into pictures of things.

Won’t stop me from inflicting as many as possible on you, though. Monday’s first road trip photos should feature photo locales as exotic as Ohio. Time to pack up the car.