I don't love New Year's. Maybe after three months of birthdays and major holidays I'm just tired of the obligation and materialism. . There's also a bit of regret when I look back over the year and see what I could have done better, or should have done at all. I also find the pressure to remake ourselves on some arbitrary date annoying, stressful, and almost predestined to fail. It's also a possibility that I'm just old and fueling my kids to stay up until midnight just seems a little too masochistic
Friday, December 31, 2021
Resolved.
I don't love New Year's. Maybe after three months of birthdays and major holidays I'm just tired of the obligation and materialism. . There's also a bit of regret when I look back over the year and see what I could have done better, or should have done at all. I also find the pressure to remake ourselves on some arbitrary date annoying, stressful, and almost predestined to fail. It's also a possibility that I'm just old and fueling my kids to stay up until midnight just seems a little too masochistic
8 Months in Texas: A Review
As many of you know, with this move we won the Texas Military Triple Crown. Like a few other places I've lived, karma brought me to El Paso. I've driven through a couple of times, been unimpressed and made some rude comments, and God decided to have a good laugh while teaching me a lesson. I've been pretty open that El Paso is not my forever place, but I'm also a firm believer that a place is largely what you make of it. I'm also a very, very big fan of keeping busy.
In addition to the Important List (renovating my house) and Big Adventures (Carlsbad, Texas Renaissance Faire, and White Sands, among others, which will get their own posts) I tried to dive into El Paso. In my experience, if you look hard enough (and are willing to drive) you can always find something worth a stop. Some you just stumble on, others come through recommendations from strangers you randomly accost in the checkout line. You can't go wrong asking locals about their favorites--restaurants, attractions, events. Sometimes they're duds (looking at you, Chico's Tacos), but there are always a couple of gems, too.
My hands-down favorite thing about El Paso is that I finally got to live near family again. I've been lucky enough over the years to live near various members of the family, and now we get to *finally* be stationed by Erik and Amy. Amy is the best lunch date and it's been amazing getting to hang with her and her crew--and eat her cooking.
As a family, our very first adventure was to the Desert Botanical Gardens, which are hella far away over the mountains in west-side El Paso. Acres of mesquite, cholla, creosote, lots of dirt, a few brief lessons about El Paso history and the indigenous people. It was a solid Meh, especially with the long drive factored in.The oddities of a place are what make it memorable. Nobody remembers individual Targets or Walmarts, but you do remember the weirdos. Whoopee Bowl Antiques is a strange, Texas-sized hybrid of a junkyard and consignment shop. Outside the dilapidated building are rows of alien and mermaid statues, vintage cars, antique stoves and dry-rotted wooden boats. Inside are multiple floors of all sorts of treasures, trash, and everything in between. My particular favorites are the reclaimed stained glass windows and a handmade rocking llama covered in manky shag carpeting, though my preserved piranha Jeff is a close third.
One of the perks of being someplace warm is that gardening is suddenly a viable option. Rick, who comes from a line of well-known (and successful) farmers and gardeners was particularly happy about this. He spearheaded the renovation and greening of the backyard, planting trees and rigging a home-made grey-water system to make the desert bloom. Our efforts brought friends.
Old Fort Bliss is a historic recreation of the original Fort Bliss, with a store, barracks, corral, blacksmith, and other old timey buildings. It's been an interesting place to volunteer, though Covid has restricted a lot of the cosplay and immersive education that the director intends to introduce.
One of my favorite things so far has been visiting the salt flats between El Paso and Carlsbad. They're usually not that impressive--generally just a flatter part of the surrounding desert--but after the summer monsoons passed through they flooded. It was amazing. The girls promptly drenched themselves in the salty, salty water--a decision they regretted as they dried on the two hour drive home. But only a little.And, of course, some of the best things about a new place are the most random. Adult novelty stores are no surprise to anyone over 25, especially if they've ever lived in a military town. An Adult Film drive in theater, however, is definitely new. Frankly, it's not my cup of tea, but even if it were, it seems like a sketchy and unsanitary business premise. And yet, just 10 minutes from my house...I found it when I was looking up the OTHER, non-sketchy drive in theater that had been recommended to me by my sister in law. It still sounds sketchy and unsanitary, but it makes me laugh every time I drive by it.
Thursday, December 2, 2021
Journey's End
We left Utah for the western corner of Arizona, cutting through the Navajo and Hopi reservations and finally edging into New Mexico. Hitting I-40 brought back memories, most of them not great. I don't know why, but I don't care for New Mexico. I don't find the Land of Enchantment even mildly interesting. Maybe it's because I was raised in Arizona and Arizona and New Mexico have beef. Maybe it's because for years it was just a long, terribly boring smear of a state between me and family. Maybe it's a gut feeling that New Mexico is shady as hell. Maybe it's just something broken in me. I don't know. What I do know is that I try to keep my excursions into New Mexico brief. We spent the night in Gallup, visited some good friends in Albuquerque, then pushed through to El Paso, which was blessedly just across the border.