summer storms

We had a huge dust storm yesterday here in Phoenix-land. It was phenomenal. I took my dog out for a walk and it was light, with a wall of dark in the distance. There was an eerie stillness, like what I remember tornado-weather was in my childhood. My dog and I went inside, I got his leash off and went to the window. In those few minutes it took me to do those simple tasks, the sky had gone black with storm and the wind was whipping through the trees. As I sat in my apartment with a candle lit and flashlight next to me, I learned from local friends that this natural chaos is a “haboob” (which is not only an intense storm, but also a fun word to say!)

Yesterday’s haboob was a wall of dust, 5000 feet tall and 50 miles wide.

I love big, passionate weather. We have some intense weather here, but it happens so infrequently, we mostly forget about the storms.

In the Midwest there are storms aplenty. Tornado weather with the ominous calm-before-the-storm asparagus green skies always frightened me. I loved the fall rains and the winter ice storms that left glittering layers of ice encasing every leafless tree branch. But my favorites were the hot summer night thunder and lightning storms.

My grandparent’s house, where I grew up, had a large back porch with the roof overhanging almost the whole thing. We would sit up there in lounge chairs during thunderstorms and watch the lightning show, count the thunderclaps to figure out how far away the storm was, and listen to the rain cascade off the roof. It was wonderful sitting outside smelling the sweet summer storm, and at the same time be mostly protected from the elements.

community

I write a lot about what I like about motorcycling and why I got into it and what keeps me interested in riding. One of the things that has always been a fantastic part of being into motorcycles is the motorcycling community.

Now, I suppose any “hobby” or lifestyle or what-have-you has this same thing and that’s one of the things that keeps people together as a group and entices people to join in the fun. But since my proclivities tend toward the motarized two-wheeled kind, I am a bit biased.

Mind you, I am writing this after four hours of sleep and some wine, so please pardon my mumblings.

I recently picked up a new project. One of the things about me is that my eyes are often bigger than my abilities. I am not a fabricator, nor am I a machinist. I am an okay mechanic when I can quiet the chatter in my head, but that often doesn’t happen before I get frustrated.

Tonight, I was talking with a few friends about this tendency of mine. Their response was that we are all motorcyclists and we help each other out. “Ask us for what you need help with and we’ll be there,” was the consensus.

This is one of the things that draws me back, over and over, to being part of a community. I have made some of my closest friends while standing around in freezing garages or sweating in the 112°F heat tinkering with a motorcycle.

Thank you.

father’s day 2011

Today I was thinking about motorcycle racing… as I frequently do. However, today I was thinking about what happens if I crash and break something…perhaps break something important like my spine? How would it affect me emotionally to not be able to walk, for instance? It’s not a good line of thinking, but the little annoying thoughts creep in sometimes. This is when I realized that I take a lot of things for granted – my health, my mom, my living situation, my dog, my breathtakingly good looks (heh) and so on. These are things that normally I don’t think too much about. Which is why I can say that I realize now and then that I take them for granted.

My dad was a jerk. He could be a real asshole. He was a slob. His refrigerator was a garden for botulism and e-coli. If he didn’t eat he would get cranky. Eating with him was a test of willpower to not get up and move out of spittle distance.

He was also tender and compassionate. He was an artist with pastels and watercolor and words. He loved beauty even if he had trouble creating it in his life. He had an innate intelligence and book-learned smarts. He was my existential question go-to guy.

I think in a lot of ways, because of our difficulties, arguments, hassles, I frequently took the good side of him for granted. I resisted visiting him because of his grubby ways. He was demanding of my grandmother, which I resented, and his mood swings were so large that spending any amount of time with him was exhausting.

But he was my pop. And I loved him immensely. We sang loudly off-key together, we played aggressive games of foos ball and Mortal Combat. He taught me how to add and subtract by shuffling through numerous hands of Blackjack. I learned from him wise words of wisdom such as, “never play cards with a man named ‘Doc’,” and “don’t bet on lucky horse number 7.” When I was a kid, he’d take me to Broadway shows. I got to see Michael Jackson perform in “The Wiz,” Diana Ross perform in “Dream Girls,” and Matthew Broderick in one of my favorite Neil Simon plays, “Brighton Beach Memoirs.”

I learned how to pour a proper whiskey on the rocks and how to bet on race horses. I also learned about meditation from my pop. We would have long, winding, philosophical conversations about the nature of “existential heebie-jeebies,” and came up with an idea of “damage assessment” of how much damage a person incurs by living in a city (as opposed to living in the more serene and relaxing country)

My dad had a great sense of humor and when we were together, if we weren’t fighting, we were usually laughing.

I dislike Father’s Day. I remember my pop frequently, but this commercial day with weeks of advertising leading up to it only makes me sad. I am reminded of the ways in which I lacked as a daughter. “I should have visited more often,” “I could have been more patient.” I know it’s pointless to beat myself up over these things, but I still do. The lesson I try to take from it is to make sure to not take the people who are presently in my life for granted, including myself.

So, friends and family and critters… thank you.

From me to you, this is your day too.