In case you haven’t heard here, here, or here, about 40 people were arrested at the Duke Energy protest last week. And omg, you aren’t going to believe this, the CMPD cops, who btdub, are nothing more than the henchmen of Duke Energy CEO Jim Rogers, totally arrested a grandmother. Bastards.
seperated at birth. obviously.
And great news, there will be another protest on May 7th. Here’s hoping the shenanigans continue, because old people getting arrested is awesome.

Seriously. I can’t believe they arrested grandparents. Or anybody. How dare they get pissed at people who were breaking a law. Don’t they know that people who collect social security don’t have to follow rules? And trespassing is such a silly rule anyway. Who cares about anyone just wandering onto the property of the headquarters of one of our nations largest power companies. Totally safe.

Plus, it was probably really hard for the protestors to tell when they were trespassing. Just a pink line spraypainted on the ground. That’s kind of confusing.


Lots of people didn’t get it.

Good thing they did all that non violent protest training and were sure to bring $100 cash just in case they were arrested. Dude, I always keep money on me just in case I accidentally or symbolically break a law and they police don’t get it. I also make sure to be prepared for my one phone call, like this chick:

When a bunch of people set out to be arrested, should we be shocked? Is it important news? I wonder what will happen next time. Will people be unfairly sent to jail? Will this chick be there? I can’t wait for the coverage on May 7th to find out. Seriously, protest coverage=awesome, and, um, stereotypes are fun.

Feb 9

Moving

She is sitting cross legged on the floor in front of her laptop. Surrounded by half unpacked boxes full of socks and dish towels and suitcases stuffed with worn paperbacks and old college texts. Pillows are scattered across the living room area of her new studio in fourth ward. The place looks like a very pissed off tornado, who sometimes moonlights as a pack rat, just passed through.

She is drinking $4 sparkling wine bought from the Harris Teeter down the street out of an Eat n Park coffee mug. She is toasting to herself, to the momentous changes that are going on in her life and all around her, for accomplishing one of her life goals, to live in the city. To living and living, blissfully and frighteningly alone.

She is covered and shivering from the second cold shower she took. She can’t figure out how to turn the hot water heater up and it’s the weekend. Also, being incompetent is apparently not enough reason for an emergency maintenance call.

Minutes before, she stepped into the shower, curtain haphazardly hung because several hooks got lost in the trip. She turned on the water and as the sheet of ice hit her back the breath rushed out of her lungs, she remembered. Remembered standing in the showers of her dorm room in St. Petersburg. Hot water was turned off in the summer to save energy. After her roommate moved out there was no more tea kettle to boil water beforehand. So she’d climb into the shower to perform the daily ritual. It was too sticky, too sweaty, too swampy, too gritty, too salty, too exciting not to. Either out of exhaustion or some adventure gone awry, every night when she made it back to the student house on Vasilevsky Ostrov, she had to conquer the shower. After 6 weeks she could get everything done in under 2 minutes. It goes something like this:

She steps into the stream and grits her teeth. She is walking on the streets of the city into the unkown. She is at the airport 2 years ago scared and alone. It’s 10:30 and her dorm curfew is midnight. Her bags are lost and her escort is AWOL. She walks outside of the doors and hails a cab.

And just that quickly she steps back out of the water and grab the soap, spreading it roughly and frantically down her legs. She is at walmart with a carts loaded full of plastic containers and toiletries, cleaning supplies and kitchen organizers. Her apartment is less than 600 sq feet with one true closet that also houses the damned water heater. Putting everything away is like solving a 1000 piece puzzle with some pieces missing from the set. She is running into people and end displays and when she finally makes it to a check out aisle the cart is piled so high she can’t see. The cashier rings her up as she tosses items back into the cart. A set of plastic drawers tumbles to the ground as the cashier announces her grand total: $250…made in China. She winces

And steps back into the spray. The people on the mashrutka look at her skeptically. The van has already pulled away and it occurs to her that they expect her to pass her fare forward. She opens her purse and it also occurs to her that she has yet to convert her money. She holds a crumpled bill up the driver who grins and nods at her through the rear view mirror. No change, he says. She pays $20 american dollars for a 56ruble cab ride.

She’s quickly out of the water again and tosses her head forward to shampoo so that the cold water won’t run down her back. She is scrubbing furiously and carrying big boxes up and down three flights of steps by herself. She is drained and breathless when she finally makes it to the dumpster. Not a lot of space means not a lot of things can stay. There is no room for the past. She is tossing trash bags into the compactor and pulls a scrapbook out of the front seat of her car. Given to her the day she got engaged. She leafs through the pages, running her fingers over the words that no longer have meaning. She snaps close the cover and lets it fly, pages parting and flapping in the arc.

Then she is rinsing her hair and running her finger over the lines of the metro map trying to remember the meanings but being lost in the shock of the situation. The street names push back at her. She sounds out words and says a prayer and steps onto a train.

Head still bent over, she attempts to shave her calves. She is finally in the dorm it took her two hours to find and they have lost her registration. It is nearing closing and her mind is awash in cyrillic and she can’t put sentences together. She happens upon one crucial statement which she forms insistently, over and over again, in the most precise russian that she can muster: I live here.

Just like that, it’s over. She flicks off the faucet and snatches a towel, burying her face in it as she shivers.

She picks up the keys and unlocks the door. She lets her bags fall and crosses the small room, heels clicking on the hardwood. She pulls the curtains open and looks out. The city stares back at her. Noisy and imperfect, complicated and beautiful.

She brings the mug to her lips and swallows the last remnants of the bottle. She parts the blinds from her place on the floor, looks out, and says one thing: I live here.


Overheard 11/20/08 – Bank of America

Suit #1, hanging head: *sigh*

Suit #2: What you been up to Bob?

long pause

Suit #1: Just trying to save the world.

Suit #2: I don’t think you can.

Suit #1: I have to try.

Goodbye, Ford Tempo. Goodbye vintage ride and dreams of classic cardom. How I will miss your red interior, smooth ride, and impeccable performance. I’ll always remember the days you broke down, the warm glow of the check engine light, the soft putter of the engine, the laughter of people who heard you coming. We shared seven difficult years together, and I applaud you for lasting beyond the minimum terms of our contract (4 years of college). I appreciate your thoughtfulness in waiting until I was gainfully employed to finally succumb to your many ailments. A vehicle like you was no match for the debilitating side effects of 1-77. You lived far longer than anyone anticipated or actually wanted. You were a loyal soldier and a true friend. First car in my life and heart. You will be missed…

Once upon a sweltering Carolina summer day, a yankee girl from the heart of black and gold country relocated to the town that banks built. And it didn’t take long for her to notice that her liberal, blue collar background didn’t exactly mesh with the khaki crowd. Charlotte, she realized, is a place so torn in identity that it lacks one altogether. It is the Bible belt and the yacht club, NASCAR and wine tastings, Neiman Marcus and sweet tea. Neighborhoods are either nice or ghetto, jobs are either country club worthy or “unreal”, and car payments should cost close to the amount of your rent.

Driving through the jungle of 400 foot cranes and old plantation houses, our yankee felt defiant. Maybe her 93 Ford didn’t belong on Providence Road, but she drove it there anyway. But just like the Queen City itself, driven to change not from the past, but from money, our yankee was drawn into the crowd. Sperry topsiders and The Wachovia Classic, trips to LKN and Dilworth, bills and more bills followed by shopping trips at Southpark and uptown lunches at Capital Grill. Somewhere between the Old South and New Money, our yankee became Meck. She was looking back, trying to find herself, and always striving to keep up with the Belks.