Monday, August 27, 2012

Oregon coast with friends

For the last week, our family joined three others for seven days on the Oregon coastline at Lincoln City. Sam and Jen came from Spokane with Toby and Robin, Jono and Anastasia came from Brooklyn with Lionel and Sabatino, and Chris and Trudy came from Ann Arbor with Miles and Jules. If you're counting, that's 8 adults, 9 kids, 3 being our girls, the rest little boys, and so 17 bodies.

Highlights include a walk with Jono and his kite on his last day, a talk with Trudy about reading books, Stephanie's amorous return from a margarita pitcher at Lee's, a wedding surprise on the group's last night with rice and dancing, distracting nauseous kids on a winding road by singing Sailing by Christopher Cross and Jump by Kris Kross, Sophie's luminous joy climbing rock formations at the Devil's Punchbowl, playing Cards Against Humanity in what counted as late nights, talking with Sophie and Lionel about reading assignments on our way back from a waterfall hike, reading Three Robbers to Robin and Jules and especially to Sabatino who kept calling me Steve, a bicycle ride down the coastline on a sunny morning by myself, but otherwise and above all, being together with such good people.

Lowlights include running through a river and continuing to pound out miles of shore until a blister grew on my soggy skin, and a toenail popping off. 

Jono and Anastasia
Robin
On a bike ride
On a bike ride
Jono at the batting cage, Sonny at left
Sabatino
Drift Creek Falls (see Amelia?)
Maisie near Devil's Punchbowl
Jules near Devil's Punchbowl
Maisie at Devil's Punchbowl
Sophie and Maisie at Devil's Punchbowl
Jen and Robin at Devil's Punchbowl 
Sophie, Maisie and Amelia at Devil's Punchbowl
Sophie and Amelia in Sam's kayaks on Devils Lake
Sam, Amelia and others at the world's best skatepark
Amelia on wheels
Robin and Sam at Lil Sambos 
Jono and Sam juggling pins
Anastasia and Jono pelted with rice
Impromptu dance party
Cutting the Safeway sheet cake

Top: Jono, Anastasia, Chris, Trudy, Jules
Bottom: Sophie, Stephanie, Maisie, Lionel, Amelia, Toby, David, Sam, Jen, Robin
Jen, Anastasia, Trudy, Stephanie, Sophie, Maisie, Amelia
Jono, Lionel, Toby, Sam, Robin, Chris, David
Jono, Anastasia, Robin, Sam, Jen, Stephanie, Sophie, Chris, Maisie, Trudy, Jules,
Lionel, Toby, Amelia, David

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Biking & Solitude

I don't know why Stephanie thought I was joking, except that she said I kept talking about it and not actually doing it. Taking a little trip by myself, though, made me more careful than perhaps I needed to be -- hinting, declaring, asserting, planning, all so slowly and deliberately that it probably came out funny. Better that way, though. Household ecologies are delicate, and extrications are more than a matter of logistics.

Adventure with the family can be had in three or four hour blocks. After that, every day this summer is scheduled with the girls' lessons (music, kayaking) and various rounds of camp. Then those hours often overlap with some playdate or another, and that's the day. There is a way around all this. If we really had an idea in mind and we planned in advance, those three or four hour blocks could turn into legitimate outings; but somehow, we fail to make such little plans in advance. We're not good at inviting people over, or for planning outings, and for the same reasons. We join well but also lump at home -- all too well.

So, for maybe two weeks, every few days, I'd tell Stephanie I was going to go on a camping trip. And I was so subtle about it, that the day before, when I was finally definitely going, when Stephanie was arranging some kid logistics with another parent I heard her say, "He just spontaneously decided to go camping tomorrow." 

The route wasn't going to range far. I hadn't logged enough time in the saddle to stand the kind of trip that appealed to my greatest sense of romance, one in which I crossed entirely out of the familiar biome into mountains or desert or ocean, all on whatever power I generated myself. But with the help of a ferry or two, I could at least skirt around the far side of Puget Sound.

The plan below was organized around state parks. And because I'd hit three different spots in Kitsap County with ferries back to Seattle (Southworth, Bremerton, Bainbridge), I gave myself plenty of room to bail if my body cramped or crumbled. If it didn't, I'd make a small tour of state parks in central Kitsap.



I started by biking to West Seattle. Loaded touring is a little slower and more unwieldy, but I have a terrific, solid bike, and I didn't bring the really heavy stuff, like stoves or groceries. By the time I got to Manchester, I had biked maybe 20 miles, the sun was out, and I was out in the beauty. I'd biked here before on a group ride around the Sound, but had forgotten the miles of fencing and razor wire, though I'd remember soon enough the solid presence of the U.S. Navy throughout the county.

Manchester State Park
At the park (C in the map above), the rangers tried to persuade me that their park was more beautiful than my destination for the night in Seabeck (D). One of the rangers also wondered how I'd get there from here. I just pointed to the list of Google Map directions I'd strapped to my handlebar stem, and maybe she figured I knew what I was doing, because she didn't say anymore.

I didn't stay long, maybe forty minutes. I walked a wooded trail, examined some of the old military remnants, checked out the campsites, just in case, exchanged words with a couple families, then took off.

On my way out I saw something that looked like a camel in a yard. 

Sometimes people keep camels.

The ride from Manchester to Port Orchard includes a slow road immediately off the water with a clear view to Bremerton and its dramatic bridge and naval hulks on the other side. I blew a tire in Port Orchard and tried to stuff inside it the long, skinny tube I'd been carrying around  as a spare for years. Fortunately, a bicycle store was only a mile away, maybe not a coincidence, given that the builders' staple I pulled from my tired came from the grit of town.

The bicycle store or the camel. One of these heightened my sense of adventure more than the other, but which? The camel was exotic and peculiar, but the bicycle suggested a story, a protagonist out of Dickens. The owner danced through the detritus on the floor of his shop to reach me, then sold me a tube. I asked if I could install it there and borrow a pump and wash up afterwards, and he said fine, but I'd have to do the work right outside. My bicycle had been blocking the only ingress and egress available. When I reached what felt to be good pressure (his weak pump had a broken gauge), I too picked my way across the floor for the filthy bathroom in the back. He cursed the governor for her rapacious taxes as I paid.

Who was I going to curse for tiling the waterfront with highways? My bicycle map told me to stay on the highway and then exit to another, but the ramp was in a left lane. I headed into Bremerton and pointed the nose of my bike in the general direction I wanted to go, and eventually, with the help of a young clerk who had never heard of Seabeck but had access to the Internet, I got back to Highway 3 and the exit advised.

The sun was shouting down for all the world. My exit, Newberry Hill, baked in it. A large concrete retaining wall loomed on the right and the hill, as it seemed at the time, went straight up. After struggling to find my way and fighting the highways in the sun, hitting that wall drove me right off my bike, which I walked until I crested and stopped off a driveway to nowhere strewn with road waste and litter. I crossed the street to find some shade and found my jaws too tired for the energy bar I was chewing. But before turning off Newberry Hill I filled my water bottles with cold carbonated water and downed an ice cream sandwich, and the turn onto Seabeck Highway also brought with it trees and shade. 

In another 10 miles, I was in Scenic Beach State Park. It was a beautiful spot opposite the Olympic mountains across Hood Canal. The campsites and trails are forested and laced with mossy curtains. On a bike, I took the best campsite in the whole park and paid less than half the cost for the privilege.


And though I was counting on a grocery or something more than a pizza place to lure me over the hills for dinner, I was content with a handful of jerky and nuts and dried fruit.

So here's the wondrous part. I walked through the trails. I walked on the beach. I waded in the water. At one point I read a fifth of Wiesel's Night in preparation for teaching it to ninth graders. But otherwise, nothing. I didn't read, didn't write, didn't listen to music. I was available, not busy, not full.


And at eight o'clock, I sat down on the beach and waited for sunset. Nearby, another couple waited, silently. We sat and watched the water reaching to the shore and shielded our eyes from the progress of the sun towards the mountains.


What was I thinking about in all that time? I wasn't fretting. I wasn't planning. I wasn't reflecting, or counting blessings or wondering. Time passed. Oyster shells scraped across rounded pebbles. My chest and face were warm, not unpleasantly. And then I walked back through the woods before it was dark.

Nothing in this trip was better than the presence I experienced here, the quiet of my mind. The next morning when I had breakfast in Poulsbo restaurant, I was unembarrassed to eat without reading, because then, still, I un-Americaned and didn't mutli-task; I ate, I looked around or didn't, and comfortably enjoyed my eggs and lightly buttered rye and the man at the other table reading a paper and the server preparing for the day.

Fay Bainbridge State Park wouldn't be the same. Its campsites all had RV hook-ups and a small bush beside that. They lined up next to each other rather like a row of toilets without stalls. I finally selected a site next to a friendly looking older lady sitting in a canvas chair outside her big RV. We chatted. She told me she didn't have Internet on her phone, so she couldn't tell me the weather, but that her husband could do it. When I returned from paying for my space, the husband was cursing at the friendly older lady. He was very loud. I was ashamed, and confused about my role. I jumped on my bike and went to Winslow six miles away. I toyed with catching a ferry to Seattle for the day, and then coming back at night to sleep. I could see a movie. But I turned around and went back. I wasn't going to let this schmuck turn my adventure. I returned with a sandwich, a beer, a yogurt, cherries and grapes, and there was not a trace left of the couple when I got back.
Unloading in my new site.

A ranger told me there were cheaper campsites for bikes on the bluff above, and he'd refund me if I'd give up my space. I was only too glad.

I wandered the beach, talked to a family stranded without gas in their boat, finished preparing Night, started another Holocaust book by a different Hungarian Jew who also, as a young teenager, went to Auschwitz then Buchenwald -- Fatelessness, by Imre Kertész -- failed to finish my beer, then returned to my campsite, where firewood scavenged from pits around the bluff made a fire to warm my body and ward off the mosquitoes buzzing round.

View of Seattle from the ferry home
I biked 120 loaded miles. I can still feel the adventure in my back, in my bottom. It's nothing that I'm most proud of.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Taming of the Shrew



I teach Shakespeare. That means I should enjoy attending and evaluating interpretations of Shakespeare's plays, and that my appreciation should be heightened by what I know. Good news! These things are true.

Last Friday, we brought the girls to a couple plays at Woodland Park, about a mile from our house. First we saw Henry VIII and then, a couple hours later, Taming of the Shrew. Any Shakespeare production is interesting for me, if not fun, because this stuff has been out there so long and so long valued and yet with enough play within the plays (no stage directions; no playwright's Forward!) that people really throw their creativity and brains and compassion into the projects, and different stagings and sensibilities emerge though they richly resonate with what we already know. Plus, every year I learn a little bit more about the plays and their contexts, and so I notice ever-finer details and understand better the deliberateness of decisions. Shakespeare in the Park is another layer of cool because, a) it's free, an inclusiveness and civic mission I always appreciate, and b) stagings have to be loud and energetic and stylized to compete with open space, babies and airplanes, which makes comedies over-the-top fun and tragedies and histories more accessible and energetic.

As a Shakespeare teacher and father of three kids, one would hope that my children also know something about Shakespeare's plays, and maybe even enjoy them. More good news! Somehow, through no fault of my own, they do! When the girls were younger, with groups of amenable people we played a couple theater-in-a-box style productions of King Lear and Merchant of Venice, which come with collapsable daggers and, in the case of King Lear, a plastic eyeball. Maybe that helped. The kids also really got into A Midsummer Night's Dream, I don't remember why. We owned the movie with Stanly Tucci, Michelle Pfeiffer and Kevin Kline, and for a while, they watched it over and over. Also at some point, while we were visiting our great friends in Vancouver, Rachel and Isabelle and their three kids (probably just two at the time), the adults decided it was time the kids watched one of our plays for a change, and we put on "Pyramus and Thisbe," the wedding play put on by the truckdrivers of Midsummer, and, I have to here assert, we blew their world.

This doesn't mean our kids are happy to watch anything. Sophie brought things to draw, Maisie regretted she didn't, and Amelia's always ready for a live performance but can be disappointed though not glum. Sophie rarely looked up through Henry VIII, though she said she heard everything (and people back in Shakespeare's day didn't go see a play -- they went to go hear one), and afterwards, Sophie had some good historical questions that got into the holes of Shakespeare's Tudor propaganda. But nothing special happened here.

As for me, I liked the Catherine of Aragon character a lot; I liked the message repeated throughout the play, Don't hit someone when he's down; I liked the speeches given by characters at their lowest points; I liked musing about the crafting of this play in Elizabeth's court with Shakespeare's possible Catholic leanings; the acting was excellent; but it isn't a play to introduce people to Shakespeare (sorry, Nathan; glad you could make it).

Stretching out on blankets in the park to see some dusty History gave us mission, though.

Using a blanket to stake a claim for a performance was something we had recently rehearsed, and I do want to say something tangentially about this.

Tangent, go: We visited Rachel and Isabelle again the week before and went to Vancouver's Folk Life Festival. The sun beat down at day and the beats spun up at night, and it was a fine tiem. Among other groups at the many stages was Besh o droM, a group we knew from Hungary (thank you for the albums, Barna).

A highlight of the visit was the final meal. Rachel had put the kids to the task of planning and preparing a meal for the adults, something her kids had done before. They spent a day and a half planning. Ben's a giant detail guy, and ended up assigning himself to drinks within which he had multiple giant fruits and hammer-crushed coconut. Maisie and Gabby put themselves in charge of desserts, ice cream sundaes with raspberry sauce, perhaps the most triumphant dish of the night. Sophie's soup, though, was a small broth; and perhaps we should have worried when Ben asked if he really needed to put in 58 cups of water for the amount of pasta Amelia was going to prepare. In the end, the pasta was an astonishing thing. No one knows just how the effect was achieved. But it put the paste back in pasta. And I don't know when I'd seen people laugh so hard.


To work my way back from the tangent, at the Vancouver Folk Life Festival, we used blankets to stake our territory, and now we were doing it again.

By the time Taming of the Shrew opened, shade was mercifully spreading across the field. The actors had been practicing cracking a bullwhip and rolling around on each other and slapping faces. A little man in a green hat was distributing candy coins. The crowd had grown substantially.

I love productions of Taming of the Shrew, because it's so sexist it's a riddle but so quick and funny it's irresistible. People put it on, and then we get to see how they deal with a play that tames its free-thinking woman by depriving her of food, drink and company until she gives a speech at the very end saying, "Thy husband is thy lord, thy life, thy keeper, thy head, thy sovereign" and "our lances are but straws, Our strength as weak, our weakness past compare."

A few years ago, Seattle Shakespeare Company handled this problem by casting everyone as a man at a bachelor party, staging the play in a final sexist bacchanal -- until the groom delivers Kate's speech with such irony we see he rejects it. Two years ago, Wooden O set Padua in a trailer park, and we could laugh freely because they were rednecks and Kate was genuinely fiercesome. I actually thought I'd never see a better live production. Franco Zeffirelli, meanwhile, handles the issue so brilliantly in his film with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. We see Taylor's Kate, jealous and hurt, we see her making deliberate quiet choices to build a home for herself in her war with her new husband, and in the final scene, we see her watching children, with longing, before she delivers the speech, and we see that this too is a strategy but also partly sincere.

Greenstage's production, though, didn't try to do anything tricky for its modern audience. They trusted to Shakespeare's own devices. I think it worked, and it was a revelation. At the very beginning of Shakespeare's script, there's a drunk dude named Christopher Sly, and people think it'd be hilarious to put in a fancy bed in a fancy house and tell him he's always been rich and here's a play for you, a I'm in-charge-of-fortunes-and-women fantasy. Greenstage played this up, and it was ferocious, and so funny. Then, in the larger play, Petruchio is given free rein to have full reign, and we reveled in his sly control; meanwhile we sympathized with Katherine's unfair portions in life and felt a rising delight as we saw she would emerge into more happiness than she ever achieved in sour competition with her sister. The production even made the versifying funny, emphasizing the rhyming and laying bare its ridiculousness. The show was thoughtful, boisterous, creative, and Sophie was up and watching the entire time.