Friday, May 12, 2006

Working girl

I'm beat. I've had the never ending cold to beat all colds. I've been sick for 2 solid weeks and finally tomorrow I'm going to see a doctor because my cough, wheezing and sore throat are getting worse instead of better. I am so sick of being sick. (I think Riff might be sick of it, too.)

This week I assisted in a really cool loft near the Empire State Building. Here's the view from the fire escape:



And here's what you see when you look down:



The photographer and his digital assistant had flown in from London to shoot for a company that makes bows and hair clips for little girls. The campaign was to shoot girls doing mischievous things like writing with crayon on a wall or stealing a cupcake while mom's back is turned (all with bows in their hair, of course.) The girls were all terribly cute and we had a lot of fun goofing off.



I might just steal a cupcake for myself...



Today I worked a temp assignment in the Empire State Building. It was weird. I'll write more about it soon. When I'm feeling better.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

DR Pride


A plethora of Dominican Republic flags strung between two buildings in Williamsburg.

Tuesday, May 02, 2006

Sunday, April 30, 2006

Gallery walk

Here is Travis blogging my copy of New York Magazine featuring our favorite borough. We, however, are having a Manhattan moment as we have just stumbled onto a hot gallery opening graced by that icon of college indie pop, Michael Stipe. That's right, I squeezed past him on the 6th floor where we had just left the debut of Christy Bush's "Soundtrack to Nothing" photography exhibit at Bespoke Gallery. The audio track accompanying the photographs of fans at Interpol, The Others, Elefant and The Secret Machines shows was written for the exhibit by Sam Fog of Interpol and Dagon James in collaboration with Stipe and other music biz luminaries. So I'm sure Stipe wasn't the only star there, just the only one so easily recognizable. I wonder how I can get a soundtrack to my food photography...

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Marcello as Nixon


My friend Marcello atop the brooklyn warehouse where we work
"follow me people, i am not crook"

Friday, April 21, 2006

Friday, April 14, 2006

temp job #2

Thursday. A dreaded reception gig. Everyone was really nice and it was pretty easy. Good news: I'm assisting on Monday and Tuesday! I can't wait.

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Soda

Drinking after work!

Ken, if you liked the post about my brother, you'll love this one about my job!

The world of temping, part two: The pee test. Yes, dear devoted readers, what you are about to see is my pee. Turn away now, if you are faint of heart. The temp agency gave me a form to take to the testing facility. Note the specimen bottle seals on the bottom of the form:




Am I getting a job as a driver of a car, boat or plane? Will I be around small children or animals? Performing medical procedures? Balancing on a tight rope, swinging from a trapeze or juggling flaming objects? Ok, how about operating a forklift, using a welding tool or even a sharp knife? The answer to all of the above is NO. I will be updating Excel spreadsheets. That's it. For 3 or 4 days. Me and some spreadsheets. Thank god they will know that I am not a pot smoker, coke snorter, pill popper or heroin user. Can you imagine how fucked up their spreadsheets might end up?

So I took the form and walked down Lexington until I got to the fancy testing place:



I had to sit in the waiting room for about 20 minutes drinking water. Eric, the nice gentleman waiting to handle my pee, was patient and jovial. In the waiting room, he told another guest not to worry about his upcoming blood test, and then said, "I'm new." The guest asked how long he'd been doing this and Eric answered, "What time is it?" and laughed heartily. Diagnostic humor.

When you are being screened for drugs, there is a ritual that must be observed. You must remove all outer garments. You must remove everything from your pockets (including my cell phone - too bad for all of you.) You must lock the contents of your pockets in a padded box and take the key with you into the bathroom. Eric watches you go into the bathroom with your plastic cup, upon which he has drawn a black line to indicate how much urine you must provide. Once inside you are instructed to urinate, and come out without flushing. If you accidentally flush, you fail the test. There is no sink in the bathroom. You pee, zip up and come out. Eric then instructs you to hand him the cup, pours a portion into a specimen bottle and hands it back to you. "Dump this in the toilet, flush and then you can wash your hands." I follow his orders carefully as I do not want to fail.

Once we are finished Eric gracefully allows me to photograph the final product:



After the photo op, Eric seals the bottle into a plastic bag with my form and tosses it into what I assume is an "out" bin. My part is over, now it's in their hands.

But wait, the best part: The corporation that wants me to be clean and sober for my 4 day office job is, (drum roll..........) the owner of a major tobacco company! Yea, temping!

Monday, April 10, 2006

My ride

My (semi) sweet company van. Today it got a flat.

On the road of life...

there are potholes and pitstops. And there are people who chose a different path, like my brother, Emile. His mother met my father the same day we met each other. I would say that was a fateful day, although the influences on my life have faded into memory at this point. When my dad announced that he would be marrying the mother of Emile, I whined that I didn't want a brother. (I was only nine years old, and used to having my parents to myself.) I have a picture of Emile and myself on their wedding day, and I look as though I don't mind so much that I have someone to goof around with. We spent summers together and then 6th grade in Kansas City. We had skateboards, listened to ELO, watched the Dukes of Hazzard (secretly, because my stepmother thought it was too violent,) played D&D (you go 10, 20, 30 feet, and you come to a door...,) did chores for poker chips and got our first dog, who we named Bolt.

After sixth grade I moved to Washington, DC to live with my mom for three years. My parents have both been into transcendental meditation (TM) since I was born. While I lived in DC, my mom took part in a project where the meditators attempted to measure the effects of large groups of people meditating together on a regular basis on crime levels in the city. They even set up a school called the Age of Enlightenment school, which I attended for a year and a half. Meanwhile, Emile also went to a TM school where he lived with my dad and stepmother in Fairfield, Iowa. When we lived together again in Pennsylvania, Emile didn't want anyone at our school to know that our family was different in any way. He continued to meditate but we were far away from the community he had known in Iowa. We went to a private school, had a pool, got drunk for the first time together on the warm beer Emile had hidden in his closet and gin pilfered from our parents' dusty liquor supply (and replaced with tap water.) We had lots of good times, and sadly, plenty of bad times as our parents' marriage deteriorated. The object of much of my stepmother's anger, I was often running from the house in tears. Once, Emile held his mother back while I made my escape. He was always steady and fair minded, although I remember how when he was angry he would stomp around and clench his jaw and growl if you tried to tease him. He liked to joke around and have fun and he was the sweetest brother. He loved to tickle and torment our sisters, Eva and Tarah, who were little kids when we were in high school. Our family finally divided during my last year in high school. My dad and I moved into an apartment and eventually my stepmother moved herself and the kids back to Fairfield. Emile went back to the TM school there and graduated from the college, a meditator thru and thru.

For the last few years (or more?) Emile has been in a TM program in which he spends most of his time meditating, studying the Vedas, and living simply, like a monk. Although I have seen my dad and sisters every year or so, my path has not intersected Emile's in a long time. This year, he was able to go to India where he got to meet pundits (Hindu scholars,) meditate in an ashram and see an amazing country. My dad forwarded on some photos and I had to laugh. My brother, the monk! Still wearing silly glasses, but now with a lot more hair!



Tuesday, April 04, 2006

My first temp job

Look. Look at the chair and desk. See where Melissa types. Type melissa, type. Do you know what a cubicle is? Can you see yourself there for many, many years? Type faster, melissa, faster.

Sunday, April 02, 2006


Taken at "june" restaurant this morning with my new camera phone. We had a nice Sunday brunch with Naomi, Farhad, Ashley and David, then we all went to the Alibi, a local dive bar and sat out in the sun, Spring is here in NYC!!

Thursday, March 30, 2006

my new boyfriend


Max Arlo. Isn't he adorable?




His first love: mom.




...but I think he likes me, too...

Saturday, March 18, 2006

seattle rulz!



Holy crap I've missed my girlfriends since I moved to nyc! These bitches have been around for a long time and I can't believe I don't get to see them all the time anymore. (I'm tempted to use an emoticon here, but I'm going to hold back.) This "bring the rock" photo is from the Silent Extinction show on 3/16 at the Fun House. Ears bled. Faces melted. Here's a crowd shot (I think Claudia forgot her earplugs!):



Mad drum skillz:



Jim and Riff:

Sunday, March 12, 2006

iSight

Now Riff and I have iTravis, thanks to his nifty new MacBook with a built in camera. Sweet video conferencing!

Friday, March 03, 2006

in like a lion

We actually got some snow, hail, and freezing rain yesterday. Oh, and then in the late afternoon it snowed again. Somewhere in there I was on my way back from the pool so it was extra special. Yeah, that was during the freezing rain to hail transition. This morning there really isn't any accumulation - everything pretty much turned to slush yesterday and today it's frozen into sheets of ice. Here's our back deck again: the sled belongs to one of our neighbors above - it's been abandoned since it leapt from its balcony on a past windy day. Poor sleddy. You only got out once this year.

Monday, February 13, 2006

Blizzard of '06

Here's a big drift on our back porch. We've gone from rain to snow, snow, snow!

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Around the neighborhood

This church is a few blocks from my house.



Here's one from my Stuy-Cam. (As in Bed-Stuy, my neighborhood.)



You can see more stuy-cam pics here: flickr

Sunday, February 05, 2006

a rainy Brookyn winter...


Seattle is having a record number of rainy days this winter. I think New York is trying to make us feel at home.

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

a close call, a strong feeling

Dear friends and family,

It is with a shaky hand and a chill on my spine that I type this post. Yesterday was a day unlike every other. I have to tell you what happened and what it means to me today, while it is still fresh.

On Tuesday morning, I set out on my way to Reading, Pa from Brooklyn at about 10:45 am. It was a clear and sunny day and once I reached the New Jersey turnpike, traffic was moderate with a high ratio of trucks to cars as usual for this highway. My mom called right before I crossed the border into Pennsylvania and I told her I would be arriving in just over an hour at around 1:45 pm. Just a few minutes later, I was buzzing along in the left lane at about 75 mph, (yes, over the speed limit, but moving with traffic,) when I was distracted by something off to the side of the road. "Is that a... body?" I thought to myself. I looked back to the road and found myself facing the tail end of a semi with his brake lights on. I slammed on the brakes and skidded and screetched towards the crash, thinking only, "oh my god i'm going to hit this truck i can't believe i'm going to hit this truck i'm going to trash my car oh my god i can't believe this." My car started to veer to the right as I came within 3 or 4 feet of the back of the truck and I lost control of the wheel, swerving into the right lane where an suv or van appeared briefly in my rear view mirror only feet behind me. I regained control of the wheel and pulled onto the shoulder stopping just short of hitting a tractor trailer parked on the side of the road. A woman ran by my car on her way to the body by the roadside. I sat for a moment stunned and then realized the radio was blaring away at top volume. I punched it off and jumped out of the car with my cell phone. "Call 911," i told myself and started towards the body only a hundred feet or so from where I'd landed. The roar of traffic and the wind made me realize I wouldn't hear the 911 operator so I got back in my car and told the operator where I was. "Are you calling about the person who was hit by the truck?" he asked. "Yes." "We're on our way," he told me. I hung up and burst into sobs, realizing that I had very nearly been killed or at least in the worst accident of my life. I called Riff who listened to me cry and consoled me, and then I hung up and headed to the group of people now gathered around the victim. One person was doing compressions, while another person did mouth to mouth. He had his shirt off, later I realized he was trying to stop the bleeding. I could see that the victim was a woman, with gray hair, gold rings on a bloody hand, jeans and black socks. One of her shoes lay sadly on the roadside several feet away. A man in front of me kept turning away from the scene shaking his head. Another man leaned against a pick-up truck with his hands on his knees, his skin turned grey. I asked if anyone knew what had happened, no one did. The paramedics arrived quickly and put a neck brace on the woman and transferred her to a board so they could lift her onto a stretcher. The person doing compressions kept working until the paramedics transferred her to the stretcher, but they didn't take over and they didn't speed away. I saw things I didn't want to see and I knew she was probably not going to make it.

The strangest thing was the impression I had for the fleeting moment that I saw her body alone on the side of the road. She looked like a homeless person sprawled out sleeping and I couldn't shake the feeling that she had chosen to lie there on the cold cement of the overpass. Even when I was calling the police, I had a feeling that she didn't need our help because her condition was voluntary.

I stayed for a bit longer, but once she was in the ambulance I felt that I should leave. There was a cop interviewing the woman parked behind my car who turned out to be an EMT in training (I think.) She told the officer that the woman was gone. "She'll get to the hospital, but it will be too late to open her up." The officer continued to ask questions and the woman had me pour a bottle of water over her bloody hands to rinse them.

I left the scene still shaken and was relieved when I pulled into my parent's driveway. I felt the strangest feelings about my close call and this person I didn't know who I had witnessed in her most vulnerable, most desperate moments. I felt connected to her and but a sliver of a moment away from being like her. It was hard to go about my mundane tasks of the day. As I had planned to leave my car with my parents, my mom was going to drive me back to New York and spend the night, but obligations had come up so I told her to drop me at the bus station. It felt safe to ride the bus and gave me time to think about what had happened. I had looked online for news, but all I found was that the accident had closed the highway and backed up traffic for two hours behind me. That night, back in Brooklyn, I found the following:


Investigators say a woman killed on Interstate 78 in Northampton County yesterday, committed suicide.

The coroner says the woman from Sellersville, Bucks County was hit by a tractor trailer when she jumped into the westbound lanes of 78 at Route 412.

Today I found this update:

BETHLEHEM | A tractor-trailer struck and killed a 54-year-old Bucks County woman who stepped into its path Tuesday on Interstate 78, state police said.

Kathleen L. Bulla, of Sellersville, was hit about 12:30 p.m. in the highway's west lanes, near a bridge just past the Hellertown exit. She was rushed to a hospital but died shortly before 3 p.m., said Capt. Robert J. Mahady of the state police at Belfast.

I don't really believe in this kind of stuff, but now it has happened to me: I knew that this woman had killed herself! Without thinking it could be true or understanding what it meant, I had felt strongly that she had chosen to be there and did not want help. Later on the bus, I had even visualized her standing on the side of the road and throwing herself into front of the truck. I didn't consciously believe that this was the case, but I knew I had to find out who she was and what happened to her. When I read that she had killed herself it all came together and I realized that my feelings had been some kind of intuitive comprehension in that singular moment. The fact that I came within a split second of terrible accident myself might have something to do with my deep emotional response. Folks, I don't know. I just have to say that I have never experienced anything like this before.

Eventually, I felt angry. Kathleen L. Bulla of Sellersville didn't just decide to end her life, she chose to take a few of us along for the ride. The truck driver who will carry her with him along every highway from now on, the woman doing compressions on a mangled body. The guy with his shirt off, desperate and frustrated. The 20 year old EMT in training with blood all over her hands. And what if I hadn't made it? Kathleen, it was a close call. It really was.

I just found this on mcall.com:

Kathleen's obituary


Beyond anger what I mostly feel is pity, because I know that this didn't have to happen and I am sorry that it did. I don't understand why I was involved or why I made it out unscathed or whether it was all random chance and my feeling of intuition a delusion. I am just glad to be here and to be alive today. I am reminded that everything can change in an instant whether it is our choice or is thrust upon us.

As for this person who entered my existence with a violent act and caused me much panic, distress and sadness:
I forgive you. I wish that I had held your hand, Kathleen, there on the side of the highway, because then you might know somehow that we are all the same, my flesh and your flesh and the ground beneath you and the blue sky above. And all the pain and wretchedness of your existence but a fleeting moment. Rest in peace, Kathleen L. Bulla of Sellersville, Pennsylvania. I hardly knew ye.

Saturday, January 14, 2006

Home Depot


Travis at Home Depot. See that guy in the background? He's about to come over and tell me that I can't take photos in the store. What a bunch of crapola. I guess I'll have to get a camera phone like everyone else so I can take stealth pics.

sexy


It just doesn't get much sexier than an auto body repair shop, does it? And it's right here, in beautiful Bed-Sty.

Thursday, January 12, 2006