Tag Archives: atlanta

803 Miles Averaging 69.9 Miles MPH

Which got me here to my other home town in almost exactly 11 hours, 30 minutes counting stops. The 803 miles was a door-to-door distance including the very slight detours to get on and off the Interstate for gas and bathroom breaks, of which there were only four the whole way. There would have been fewer but I rarely let myself get much below half a tank of gas if I can help it.

Honestly the time flew by. I contemplated 2008 in depth for a three hours or so, giving myself some more things to think about on the way back. The rest of the time I listened to the audiobooks I bought last night on iTunes. I had no idea how much I would enjoy that, or how fast it would make the trip seem. In what seemed like the blink of an eye after I had stopped for gas and reset my odometer I looked down to see how far I had gone. 183 miles. Wow.

Tomorrow I’ll post something on one of the two audiobooks I listened to today. It was really good. I’m a litle concerned – that audiobook thing made the trip seem so fast and easy that I just might be hooked….

Paint, Whitewash and Substance Beneath

As some of my recent posts have indicated, I’ve been pretty concerned with the progress and portent of the current recession. Most days I’m able to somehow remain unperturbed by it, accepting my sense of what will likely fill our future without letting it get me down. Though I can’t recall where, I’ve read that experiences which match your expectations can sometimes bring an odd sense of well being even when you expect unpleasant things. Call it a psychological reward for having a correct sense of things perhaps, a confirmation that the way we understand the world is correct and, therefore, the future better understood and less threatening. My time in Atlanta this past weekend was filled with experiences which, despite their contrasts, did just that. They validated and reinforced my beliefs of where we are headed, and for that reason I suppose what might have been a downer was not.

My parents were in town for the same reason I was – we were going to watch the Greatest Kid in the World perform in the Nutcracker Ballet for the fifth year running, a family tradition in which most details have now become somewhat automatic. This year, however, her performance was at 7:30 pm instead of 10:00 am. Since the GKITW was spending the weekend at her mother’s house my parents and I had all Saturday to fill with something. With the Christmas season in full swing and not everything having been bought yet, out we went.

We got to Lenox Mall at about lunch time on Saturday. I have gone there dozens of times over the years that I lived in Atlanta and I still do some shopping there when I’m in town. It would be fair to say that I have a sense of the place and it was immediately obvious that things were not as they have been. By noon the parking deck on any given weekend is likely to be reasonably full, and it’s not uncommon to have to park pretty far from the doorways. It being the holidays I had some concern that just getting inside might have been a real hassle. Shockingly it wasn’t. On the next to last weekend before Christmas the parking lot was maybe half full. In 20 Decembers I’ve never seen anything like it.

The interior of the mall was still clean and brightly lit and the advertising signage still spoke of indulgence with vivid imagery and celebrity endorsement. Nicolas Cage and Uma Thurman were still smiling from their advertisements for jewelry in the form of watches and pride disguised as evening wear. There were still fantastic luxury cars parked in the hallways – a Maserati for $140,000, a Mercedes 550 for a more modest $100,000. Every sign and symbol of wealth were as prominently displayed as they have been for many years now. In short, all of the fixtures were the same.

Everything else was different.

Unlike years past, the shoppers circulating through the mall were not packed closely and struggling against one another like spawning salmon. They were spread out, timidly advancing from one place to another like cautious deer. To what may be my admittedly biased perception, it appeared that the difference in the crowd’s psychology was as certain as it was subtle: They seemed more concerned with themselves than their shopping trip.

As if the visuals were not enough, there were the snippets of conversation I kept overhearing while walking by shoppers and staff alike in various stores:

“…well all of those people at Bank of America aren’t just numbers you know – they are real people, more than a few of whom have been our customers for quite a number of years.”

“The prices you see here are not as good as the deals that you can get – our discounts are actually way more than what’s marked. Honestly we’re just giving things away right now.”

“…and I know for sure we are going to have a bit of belt tightening here too, hopefully nothing you’ll notice the next time you come to visit us.”

“It’s all 43 stores that we’re closing, not just this one. Our largest shareholder backed out and he owned more than half the company. That’s it. We’re done.”

Hearing all of this I couldn’t help visualizing what the future might look like. What would next Christmas hold at the mall? Could it be that some of the stores with nervous employees would be dark and empty, the “Sale!” signs replaced with “Available for Lease?” Will the Maserati and Mercedes be replaced with Toyotas, or perhaps not replaced at all? Will public service announcements be hung up where Uma and Nicolas once dwelled, their presence made too expensive by the times, their goods sent far out of reach of most shoppers? As is often the case, a look into the future revealed to me the past.

When I was a kid my grandmother would sometimes use an old southern expression to describe once well off folks that had fallen on leaner times. “Too poor to paint and too proud to whitewash,” she would say. It helped to explained the gentle dilapidation of the south that used to be so much more visible than it is now. Before the economic boom of the past 30 years it was not uncommon to see nice old homes that were kept up in the best possible way that a house can be maintained with no money. Neat and tidy, but worn and faded. Some flaking paint, a curled shingle here or there, a chimney with badly patched cracks, a window where broken panes were replaced but the rest left alone and looking all the older for the contrast. If the owners remained in good health their yards would sometimes retain the appearance of a grand old home in better times, but even then there were telltale signs. There were often plenty enough trees, shrubs and perennials but no annuals at all. Dogwoods and azaleas sure, irises and lilies likely enough. But pansies and caladiums, zinnias and tulips? Not likely. You could always divide the plants that lived through the winter and multiplied on their own, swapping them with neighbors that carried on in the same way. But spending money on plants that lived for only a season? That was frivolous.

It was that world and those times that came rushing back from memory when in particular clothing store. This place is something of a landmark for finer men’s clothing in Atlanta. They’ve been outfitting business executives for decades and the gentleman who always takes care of me when I shop there reminds me very much of my grandmother’s generation. Last weekend he gave me his usual greeting, but shortly thereafter did something that he’s never done in the years that I’ve gone there. He leaned in a littler closer and said just louder than a whisper, just soft enough that anyone else nearby would feel like they were eavesdropping to listen:

“You know we’ve got some really nice sport coats at 20% off right now.”

My hair stood up. For some reason that one sentence said more to me about the fact that we really are in a bad recession than anything else I had seen or heard that day or even in the weeks before. Lehman Brothers gone? Ah well. Unemployment up sharply? Very unfortunate. GM and Chrysler on the edge of existence? Scary, but remote. Now my Trusted Man was suggesting that this store needs to use price to motivate purchases? Somehow that was both very close and unsettling. It’s just not the kind of thing that they would say. Until now. I suddenly imagined myself visiting them a few years in the future, their previously glowing shelves worn and mostly empty, the carpet looking clean but threadbare and everyone on staff looking a bit thinner. It’s probably a silly visualization but it’s what I saw. It was just about all the shopping I could handle.

That night we seemed very far away from the mall as we watched the annual pageantry of the Nutcracker. There were all of the beautiful handmade sets and costumes and the beaming children so proud and happy to be be performing for their families in the audience. In that small town the whole community participates in the event – it’s not just the kids. Herr Drosselmeyer and Mother Ginger and some of the party guests are adults volunteering their time like so many others that make the production happen. As I waited for my child to appear I still carried the impressions of the day. I couldn’t help but imagine what the show might look like in future years. Will the bright and colorful costumes be faded and patched as discreetly as possible, the dancing troupe having to stretch their use year after year because of fewer donations? Will the set pieces become tattered and worn, but still serviceable?

Eventually my daughter appeared and I was back in the present moment. As I watched both the show and all of the families in the audience I found peace again. Focused in on their children and neighbors performing once again this year, they were far from the mall too. It may be that these people will become too poor to paint, but if so they’ll also keep things up as best as they can. They will make sure that the show goes on, and people will laugh and clap for their kids and bring them bouquets and proudly take their pictures. The kids would still be as proud and happy to perform as they were last weekend. Whatever hard economic times the future might bring this was a crowd that would find a way to keep up the really important things even if they weren’t always as shiny and new on the surface. They would be here for each other even if Nick and Uma were to drive away in Mercedes and Maseratis never to return.

Welcoming Paul Johnson

On Saturday I watched the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets play the Boston College Eagles in what turned out to be a pretty good game of college football. Since I was in Atlanta this weekend I invited company over to share the fun. Mike, my best friend of 20 years, brought his three boys over to the house. They and the Greatest Kid in the World did just about everything but watch the game – walking on stilts, playing “baseball” with a plastic bat and ball, riding on bikes, scooters and wagons and goofing off with my iMac and her iPod. This left Mike and I sipping beers and sitting at times on the edge of our seats as the game unfolded.

For me it was the first game of the season that I got to watch. When Jacksonville State came to Atlanta a couple of Thursdays ago I was still in Dallas. Of course that game was not televised, so spectatorship by television wasn’t even an option for me. All of my friends living in Atlanta and many others besides, however, were at the stadium in the flesh, watching Paul Johnson’s very first game as the Yellow Jacket’s new coach. As we watched on Saturday, I got to see the difference he is already making for the team. I’m convinced that our 7-4 + Toilet Bowl doldrums will be behind us soon enough.

Welcome to Tech, Coach Johnson!

Interestingly, as we watched on Saturday technology enhanced the viewing experience in both expected and unexpected ways.

First, there is the magic of the DVR. Who can ever go back to the bad old days of a TV program that you can’t pause, rewind or fast forward once you’ve experienced it? Because we started watching a bit late due to one of the boys’ soccer games and a late lunch, we were gradually catching up to real time throughout the game, skipping over every TV timeout, commercial and vapid halftime segment. In short, we were mainlining college football. Awesome fix!

Second, the camera crew on field was astonishingly bad. Paul Johnson’s triple option offense can make it difficult to follow the ball in the first place. With the added misdirection of where the crew happened to be pointing the camera at any given moment, when the Jackets had possession we often didn’t know where the ball was until the play was well underway, or even until it was over. For me this made the game watching experience a little more like being a live spectator actually – no “help” from a seasoned camera crew in following the ball.

Finally there was, of course, the cell phone. Because my iPhone gets email I checked a new message when I saw that it came in – whoops – it was a message from Marshall.

Subject: We’re fine

Three fumbles and we’re only down two points?

PJ will have them ready after halftime.

@#&%!

Marshall was in a bar somewhere down in Florida watching the game in real time. Without knowing it he had just told us what wasn’t going to happen in the final few minutes of the first half. What was looking like a magnificent drive down the field by the Yellow Jackets – one that would have given them the lead – was about to become… something less. Sure enough, the prophecy from the non-DVR but email-by-cellphone-connected future unfolded before out eyes as our team ended it’s drive with a fumble. But other questions still lay in front of us. Were both teams going to score again before halftime? It would be a stretch, but there was certainly enough clock for it to be possible. Or might the unthinkable happen with the situation becoming worse than prophecy? Did Marshall actually wait until the start of halftime to send his email, or might the Eagles have capitalized on our goof and scored again without our team answering after he had sent his message? Fortunately he had waited – Georgia Tech indeed went into the locker room down by only two.

As the game progressed the Jackets took the lead and we slowly edged toward a nailbiter ending where the smallest mistake could cost our team an already won victory, my phone rang. It was Marshall. Without thinking I answered it, and in that instant both Mike and I shouted:

“Don’t say anything! Don’t say anything!”

Imagine Marshall’s astonishment on the other end of the phone.

“OK, OK, God Almighty! Call me back.”

I turned my phone off and we resumed watching the Jackets ride on to victory without the threat of any spoilers from the future.

It was a great way to start the college football season. Jacksonville State was a cupcake, and while Boston College is far from the team they were last year, they are not terrible. We beat a real football team, new coach and changed up program and all.

This coming Saturday at Virginia Tech will be another kind of test altogether.

Go Jackets!

A Slice of Summer

My house in Atlanta is in a small, quiet subdivision built in the 1970s with no swimming pool or tennis courts. It’s the sleepy sort of place often overlooked by young people starting out in their first home, and still mostly populated by folks who became grandparents years ago. It’s not just the houses and their occupants that are older. Much of the foliage is huge with age. Giant pin oaks loom over the streets and sprawling crepe myrtles that are spread heavy with blossom this time of year stand watch over the silence.

The only time it gets really busy are holidays like Mothers Day, Memorial Day, Thanksgiving. Then you’ll see cars overflowing from driveways and a flood of children like rain come to the desert. They briefly rush down the streets and fill the yards, shouting, playing – doing the things that kids do. And then they evaporate, leaving the dry old riverbed of life behind, carried away to schools and playgrounds and other such places where they spend almost all of the year.

But even in the middling times that stretch between holidays it’s not entirely dry. You’ll find an occasional child here and there – a few younger people like me have made outposts. Most of us have very young children, scarcely more than toddlers. There are only a small number of kids my daughter’s age. For the most part they are like her, coming on odd weekends to visit their fathers.

Even so they’ll sometimes gather together, finding a way to be happy in that manner which only kids seem to know. They increase their numbers by borrowing from nearby neighborhoods and calling in school friends, making something special of the day. Of course us parents have a hand in that and today was one of those times.

There was a slip-and-slide with dish soap. Chunks of watermelon on the back deck. A tree house. A frantically happy puppy and some picture taking. There was both thunder and sunshine. There was excitement, disappointment, and then cascading laughter once again.

It was a sweet slice of summer time on a lazy afternoon, with a bit of cooling rain in the dry heat of late July.

Slowly Forward

One consequence of my summer travel tornado is that I’ve hardly spent any time at all in either Dallas or Atlanta. I fully expected my “around the house” work on things in Atlanta to slow or even stop at some point, but the freeze in Dallas was more of a surprise.

Last weekend I was in Dallas on a Saturday for the first time in two months. I finally took a big step toward making my apartment look like my home. I ordered about eight pieces of furniture to be delivered in a few weeks, hung some drapes, found a good photography shop to print and frame some of my very best pictures. When all of that stuff is in place my apartment will actually have some of “me” in it – long overdue.

Meanwhile, here in Atlanta this weekend I’ve got Home Depot coming over to measure for carpet in my daughter’s bedroom. The updates in there will soon be complete – new carpet, new paint, new window treatments and bedding. It will look a lot less “little girl” when we are done. She’s excited, I have mixed emotions. Ten years old is a mighty fine age for a dad and his daughter, but time marches.

The updates to her bedroom in Atlanta will be my last for a long while. The house will be about 50% remodeled at that point, leaving “only” my great room and kitchen as the public spaces which will need an overhaul. Since I don’t live here anymore there’s not much sense in rushing things. I’ll have to have the house ready to rent or sell at some point in the coming years though, and this work gets it done along and along.

My focus will shift to Dallas as I continue to settle in there, gradually gaining my sense of place between fits of travel for business and pleasure, moving toward making it home. Slowly forward.

Eight Straight

This coming weekend will be the first time I’ve spent a weekend in Dallas since mid-May. That’s right – I’ve been out of town for the past eight weekends in a row. I’ve only been in Atlanta for two of those eight weekends. For a couple of months or so before that I scarcely saw Atlanta at all. When my daughter and I got together we were going on adventures elsewhere. It’s been “all good” as we like to say these days, my travels to other places and meeting new friends has been something I wouldn’t trade. But it has, at the present moment, consequences. I’ve spent hardly any time at all in either of my home towns since the early spring, and I honestly feel pretty detached from both right at the moment.

Trips to Atlanta feel like I’ve woken up Rip Van Winkle style. The place changes in leaps while I’m gone. Sections of roadway that I use to get between the house and my Atlanta office are resurfaced in the blink of an eye, without me having ever driven a single day on them while under construction. An apartment building is half built in an instant, a restaurant over here suddenly looks like it’s been boarded up for years, a piece of land over there is cleared off like it never had a tree. The checkout people at the grocery store are all different. The smiling guy at the dry cleaning counter who always had a lollipop for my daughter for five years straight is suddenly gone. Atlanta is leaving me behind. I see it only in snapshots scattered across the year.

By contrast, the apartment here in Dallas feels frozen in time. It’s crazy – I still need more furniture, I still need to put stuff on the walls, I still need to do a lot for the place to feel homey, for it to reflect something of me. The great sense of relief I had when I first settled in here back in December -  that closure of finally being done with the whole decision and process of relocation – has now been replaced with a sense of discomfort. At some level my place feels both sterile and stale all at once. Yuck.

Had I been here more regularly for the past few months much would have been taken care of by now. There would have been some progress to mark the time, some sense that things were moving forward, some sinking of the roots. But the stark sameness from then to now instead is the result of simply not having been here to do anything about it. Frankly it’s no longer acceptable.

This may sound surprising, but I’m glad that most of the summer is now behind me and that starting this weekend I can begin getting things here in better shape.

3,000 Hits?

I started blogging here at Two Home Towns almost exactly six months ago, making my first post just before the New Year and building from there. I frankly went into this with just about nothing in the way of expectations. If I made new friends here in Dallas great, if I only kept old friends in Atlanta and elsewhere up-to-date fine, if it became solely an outlet for my urge to write, well that was OK too. As it turns out, it’s been a bit of all three.

Since I had not the first idea where this would go or if anyone would ever read any of it I was surprised to see my traffic building steadily over the past three months. In the month of June it has zoomed upward with a whole lot of interest in No Country for Young Women Either, An Amsterdam Afternoon and – my longest post ever – The Sky is Falling – in America Anyway. Since I would have been unsurprised to ever see much of any traffic at all, to reach 3,000 hits today is, well, surprising.

Almost all of my traffic used to come from friends new and old with family joining in more recently. Now quite a bit seems to be coming in from search engines and WordPress referrals. Not sure why that is, but I’ll take it. My first sustained hobby in many years has been a lot of fun for me.

What next? As one of my customers used to say whenever presented with virtually any information on any topic, “We’ll see what happens.”

Protected: Cloudland Canyon

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:


Maintenance Required

That’s what the dashboard light on my Honda says here in Atlanta. It’s symbolic. Everything here has gotten to the same point. The house is never cleaned up the way I like it. The refrigerator always seems to have a bunch of questionable things in it. My TiVo receiver died three weeks ago and I haven’t gotten it fixed yet because I haven’t been here. The gutters need cleaning out now that it’s raining again.

When you live in a place only on occasion it’s really difficult to “catch up” when you get behind on taking care of things, and it’s really easy to get behind. Spending time here in Atlanta is all about my daughter – it has nothing to do with truly keeping a household in the way that you do when you live in a place full-time. So when we are here we do things like go camping with friends, see movies, cook together and other adventures. We pack it all in – it’s part of the fatherhood of dispersed intensities that I’ve posted on before.

So I don’t want to make her sit through a long wait at the Honda place while they tune it up when we could be visiting friends, or hand her a broom and have her spend half a day cleaning up a messy house when it’s sunny outside and we could be throwing Frisbee at the park.

If she were any other child I might feel good about those working things as a matter of character building, but you’d have to know my little girl. She doesn’t need that. She might just be one of the most responsible and kind kids around. She does what’s expected without being asked almost all of the time. More so that I do!

So the answer seems pretty clear. I’ve got to hire some stuff out that I used to do myself when I lived here full time. Time to get a maid. Time to hire out cleaning the gutters and fixing the drains and other sundry things that would have been Saturday morning tasks on regular weekends just a few months ago.

Maintenance required. No big deal. Just have to accept that someone else has to do it now.

Protected: The Symphony of Birds

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below: