Jason got a fantastic job opportunity in Boston, so we’re
leaving Washington for a few years to try it out.
It’s a huge change. Neither of us have lived anywhere but
Washington. It means I have to give up my first museum job. We have to leave
our Spokane friends and family all over again, and this time also leave our
Seattle people. The logistics of getting two adults and two fussy pets 3,000
miles is tricky, not to mention all our things. I like the idea of a big
shake-up, but I’m worried, too.
Finding an apartment from across the continent is even more
difficult than we imagined. Boston uses brokers, which means you find an
apartment you like, and then pay an agent one-month’s rent to get you the application
and submit it for you. I’m sure many of them do more than that for clients, but
it seems to us we’re just throwing away several thousand dollars since we are
doing all the leg work ourselves. The first place that responds to us and has a
unit to rent can’t provide us photos or a floorplan, but they’re happy to take
our money. The second place we finally get a response from keeps moving the
goal post, even after I’ve sent them money to secure a unit. Their emails are a
mess, never responding to the correct chain, and often talking about a third
floor unit when we keep correcting them saying we only want a ground floor
unit. An availability of April 24 gets moved back to May 1, and then June 1. On
the day we are going to sign a lease for June 1, they email again and say the
unit will be undergoing maintenance and so not available until maybe the middle
of June, but they’ll let us know before June. We have to make some noise to get
our deposit back, but eventually do.
Jason’s job can’t wait for him any longer, and he flies to
Boston without me to start working. We’re fortunate in that he’s friends with
his coworker, so he stays in their apartment. We have to be out of our Seattle
apartment by May 1, so I move in with my mom-in-law, Judy, until we can find a
home in Boston. I take the pets, a few clothes, and some art supplies to Judy’s.
The rest of our pared-down furniture and things fills a small storage unit.
Jason and our puppy neighbor, Mel |
Bailey in the jungle |
I spend the last days of April packing and cleaning. I’m
cranky about cleaning the apartment by myself, and then frustrated at myself
for being aggravated. It’s harder to be alone in a new city away from your
family and friends, working 12 hour days, and adjusting to culture shock than
it is to scrub a toilet. I feel petty for being upset. I go through the rooms,
touching the walls and thanking our apartment for four good years as our home.
We had some very difficult times there, and some very beautiful ones, too. It was
our only home in Seattle, and it saw us through three graduations, five wedding
anniversaries, two masters degrees, several jobs, some desperate depressions, a
few snowfalls, and dozens of delightful times with friends.
I don’t know when I’ll get to join Jason in Boston, so I
spend as much time as I can seeing people in Seattle. Lunch with Kaitlyn.
Photos and dinner with Sarah and Amy. More photos with Rachel and
Katherine. Each time I see someone, I say “No, no, it won’t be the last time we
hang out before I leave” but I’m never entirely positive that’s the case. I
meet Christina and her baby, Sebastian, at Alki Beach. Jason and I always loved
the groovy, beach-town vibe of West Seattle, and I have good memories of Alki.
We visit the Loghouse Museum, a small community museum in a preserved log
house. They have a world map where visitors can place a mark to show where they’re
from, and I’m delighted that people from all over the world have visited. Maybe
if the world is that connected, Boston won’t seem so far. Christina is so
logical and scientific, funny in a dry and blunt way. We talk about
relationships, motherhood, careers. I hide a small reliquary near the beach for
a stranger to find, and it’s later found instead by a friend.
Liz visits from Spokane, and brings her beautiful little
family with her. We visit the zoo and the aquarium, snatching little starlings
of conversation between playing with Liz and Matt’s young daughter, Lydia. Lydia
gravitates toward make-believe wherever we go. The zoo has a little African
house, and she mimes a bedtime ritual over and over again instead of looking at
the zebras. The aquarium has diving suits and flippers, and she and I spend
very involved minutes being fish and mermaids and divers, bringing food back to
our home. The real diver and sea creatures are much less interesting to her,
and she talks instead about what color fish I am.
A diver feeds fish at the Seattle Aquarium |
Lydia's attention makes my heart sing |
We feed French fries to seagulls at Ivars on the Pier |
When Liz and I do get to talk, it seems familiar:
relationships, motherhood, careers. The big pillars of our lives. I’ve known
Liz for 21 years this autumn, but she always has something new and interesting
to say to me. We recently started a podcast called Ouija Broads, where we talk
about weird things in our neck of the woods. I like hearing the history, but my
favorite stories she tells are the personal ones. She recently moved back to
Spokane from the east coast, and I feel particularly deflated that she’s come
back to Washington just as I’m leaving it.
Selina visits from Spokane as well. She's a constant, and being a military kid knows how to maintain a long-distance friendship. We talk about art and moving, about relationships both romantic and platonic. She's such a feminine powerhouse, such a moving example of how to be a strong, tough, and also delicate woman.
Selina visits from Spokane as well. She's a constant, and being a military kid knows how to maintain a long-distance friendship. We talk about art and moving, about relationships both romantic and platonic. She's such a feminine powerhouse, such a moving example of how to be a strong, tough, and also delicate woman.
Kate teaches me how to dye fabric with natural dyes, like
indigo, cochineal, and sandalwood. She’s a witch, stirring a bubbling cauldron
of colors. We talk about art, process and progress. And about people, oh yes: about
people. We talk about the trips we’ve taken, and where we’ll visit next. Something
I really like about Kate is that she does the things she says she will. She
experiments and tries and follows through. She has her own small business, selling her dyed textiles. I like that bravery. We go on a beach walk with Sarah and her sweet dog Red, and I can't stop smiling at how happy Red is to be disgusting and dirty, rolling in dead flotsam. I photograph Sarah's exhibit at a local gallery, and I'm so moved by her passion and voice.
With Kate at Montana Bar |
My tattoo, Kate's dyed fabric |
Red, about to get really gross |
I visit Spokane and see family and friends, but it’s not
enough time to say and do everything. I almost never feel I put in enough
quality time with my mom and dad and brother and sister-in-law and stepson when
I’m in Spokane, and it’s just amplified knowing I won’t see them for months after
this trip. I try to spend meaningful time with Judy in Bothell, but I feel like
I come up short on that, too. I’m shortchanging the people I love most, because
they’re the ones who don’t make a fuss even if the dollars don’t add up. I
already miss my family so deep I can’t think about it or my eyes well and my
throat tightens. My brother grounds me and inspires me in equal measure; my dad
shows me there’s no other way to be except tall and strong; my mom is the woman
I want to be, so loving and funny and brave. How can I leave them? I break down
in tears every time I remember how much physical distance the move puts between
us.
On the drive to Spokane
|
I spend time with my Maggie, my first friend in Seattle. She’s
my hedgewitch: she knows more about Washington’s plants than anyone else I know.
We take walks, and she points out flowers and leaves, telling me their names
and any interesting facts she knows about them. Trillium is her lucky flower,
gorse is the yellow-flowered bush I see everywhere, and she points out salmonberries
and thimbleberries. She takes me to a hidden little meadow full of periwinkle,
and we talk while sitting on a log floating in Lake Washington. She listens to
me talk about people she doesn’t even know, and with such gentleness and
attention.
Mystery flower and seed pods, which of course Maggie figured out is a Paulownia tomentosa |
Trillium, Maggie's lucky flower |
Becca joins me a few times in Bothell. We look at antique
shops, and walk on a floating boardwalk through a wetland preserve. We leave an offering at the Princess of Pike Place's grave.We try on
blue lipstick at the mall, I’m too shy to ask for a makeup sample to take home.
But Becca has no problem asking for me. She tells me how she probably would not
have asked for herself either, but doesn’t have any hesitation asking things
for others. I’m grateful for allies like Becca, in things small and large. We
talk about ourselves and about other people. We talk about the weird gap that
opened between us when she moved back to Seattle after a summer away, and how
we’re glad we closed it with time and talking. And we talk about the people we’ve
recently felt disconnected from, and whether we can fill in the holes for the
friendships to be whole again.
On the boardwalk with Becca |
Adding our offerings |
I quarrel with a new but dear friend, and of course it’s
about our relationship. About expectations and what can and can’t be given.
About wants. About fulfillment. I think we’re talking through things when
suddenly he stops talking to me entirely. The rejection hurts deeply, it feels
like I’m not worth the hard parts of a friendship. And it hurts that maybe there’s
something I can’t fix, that all my acceptance and patience and love aren’t
enough.
I quarrel with an old and foundational friend about our
relationship, too. About perceptions and words and old hurts and new ones, too.
About how “being there” maybe isn’t enough when the other person doesn’t feel
your presence. About emotions she can’t express and anger I never healed. This
fight shakes me even more, because if someone I’ve known for this long can’t share
authentic feelings with me, then how can I expect anyone to?
And I quarrel with a family member. With a woman I care
deeply for, but who I haven’t shown that to, enough. This hurts the most of
all, because I feel fully in the wrong for this fight, and all my apologies
feel too late. It’s a reminder to answer texts even when I’m tired. It’s a
reminder to make time for my family above all, even though they’re the first
ones to say “If you don’t have time for me, it’s okay, I understand.” It’s a
reminder to slow down enough to show my genuine love and appreciation for her
presence in my life, and my heart breaks to think maybe I’ve gotten these
reminders too late to fix our bond.
Relationships and people. I’ve long been bothered by the (supposed)
Eleonore Roosevelt quote, “Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss
events; small minds discuss people.” I almost exclusively talk about people, it
seems. Ideas and events are fantastic, but they don’t hold my interest or focus
the way people do. I learn theory best through case studies. I retain history
best through personal accounts. I have a hunger and a passion for people. And,
honestly, that hunger has turned into a sickening gnaw lately. I love people so
much, but I’m so exhausted by them, too. I feel tired and spread thin and
diminished, and I blame it on spending too much time on people and not enough
time on myself.
Which is actually bullshit. It’s a lazy way of placing
blame. If I’m exhausted by people, it’s probably because I’m spending too much
energy on non-restorative people. Or things. Or my own thought spiral, an
oroborus of anxiety. My roots, and my truth, is that I love people, and I love
spending time with people. I need my time alone, too: to draw, to quilt, to
edit photos. But those hold no joy for me if I don’t have a person to give that
quilt to, to talk art technique with, to share my photography with. I’ve been
holding those separate in my mind too long, forgetting they don’t exist in a vacuum,
and they’re not competing priorities.
Small minded. I don’t like that quote because I don’t like
thinking I’m small minded. I don’t like thinking I’m less intelligent for not wanting
to talk on a cosmic scale. But the longer I sit with it, I think that’s just
ego, baby. That’s just feeling badly someone else’s priorities (and quotable
quips) don’t match up with your own, and worrying they’re right and you’re
wrong. I want to talk about people. So I will. I’ll talk about people because
maybe that’s how I bridge those distances. How I keep them with me every day,
even though we are 3,000 miles and a lot of time zones apart. Small minded, but
big hearted. That’s pretty self-congratulatory, but my ego doesn’t mind.
Jason finds us the most beautiful apartment in Boston. It’s
in an old building, on the fifth floor, and full of natural light. It’s been
remodeled, but has kept the original charm of beamed ceilings, wainscoting,
ornate door mantles. The cost is staggering, even to my Seattle-attuned price-gauge.
But Jason is adamant he wants to get me, get us a good home that we look
forward to being in. He makes plans to drive our UHaul from Seattle to Boston
with his coworker, working in shifts so they can make it in 3 days. I think to
myself that maybe I don’t deserve this man as my partner, that I don’t deserve
the friends and family that I have. I am surrounded by the most beautiful, brave, strong, smart, vulnerable people. I don't deserve this grace.
But I’ll gladly spend the rest of my life trying to be
worthy.
Bailey, in the UHaul and ready to hit the road |
At Lake View Cemetery |
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