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Impressions of Minnesota

27 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by mnhanson in Minnesota, St. Paul, Twin Cities

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Terry stands there all day to welcome each visiter individually.

Rather, I should say these are my impressions of the small portion of Saint Paul I’ve inhabited for the past couple of weeks. I suspect it may not be representative of the whole. Either that, or the “Minnesota nice” thing is lies. LIES.

When I was a sophomore in high school, we performed Meredith Wilson’s The Music Man for our spring musical. Yes, I was in the chorus. I had a solo at one point, but I’ve worked hard for many years to obliterate the memory with self-hypnosis and drug therapy.

Anywho, there’s a song in the show talking about how frigid and unfriendly Iowans are. It makes me think Meredith Wilson never went to Minnesota Highland Park. It seems to be heavily populated by the type of people who, no matter how unremarkable or ineffectual they are, believe everyone else is beneath them (the immediate neighbors excluded, thankfully). After stewing about it for a couple of days (however weird Chicago could get, people were usually pleasant as Mayberry), I realized that this neighborhood is pretty nice in that it’s safe, walkable, and has high property values. Lincoln Square, the neighborhood a couple of blocks north of my own in Chi, was very similar and had similar demographics. Thinking back, I realize that people in Lincoln Square also seemed to be the dickiest in that area; the sidewalk was often flooded with self-entitled upper-middle class couples wearing $140 jogging shorts and pushing double-wide strollers right down the center of the walk, looking hurried and humorless. What’s especially telling about this is that these neighborhoods are essentially the portrait of the American Dream (in the classic sense, not in the modern we’re-proud-to-be-rednecks-and-we-have-a-reality-show sense – and, yes, I am talking about the show with the fat, disgusting, southern pageant family, which I won’t dignify by looking up the name). It’s a common theme dating from the beat era ­– the spoiling of the American Dream, which rots from the inside to the out. The American Dream kills the American Spirit.

Son of a bitch, I miss Hunter S. Thompson.

He was/is my bodhisattva.

I know Minnesota’s a great place, though. I’ve heard too many good things about it – they can’t all be fabricated. And there have been some nice surprises. For example, I turned on MPR Classical the other day in time for the tail-end of a song, after which the announcer proclaimed, “Finally, it’s over.” He and his co-host then talked about how the composer must have been drunk at the time and how he reasonably quit his conservatory shortly after writing the piece. I was doing housework and not paying much attention, so I never got the name of the composer or the critical DJs (are you allowed to call them DJs if they “spin” symphonic arrangements on public radio?), but my heart swells with warmth and pride of my species when I think of it.

Other things I love about Minneapolis-St. Paul: Open Book Literary Center (which now includes The Loft), the theater community, the park system and greenspaces, Supatra, Tatters, Garrison Keillor’s relative proximity and his bookstore, the weather, the adjacency to Canada, Nye’s Polonaise Room, 89.3 the Current, Neopolitan Punch pizza, Ax-Man Surplus, the lakes, Dinkytown, and the light rail. I haven’t been to the library yet. I’m kind of afraid to because I called the local branch to ask if they had printing services (as most libraries do these days) and the librarian didn’t know what I was talking about. First, she asked if I meant a xerox, then, when she was finally able to comprehend my description of a printer, she said uncertainly, “Well, we have a printer connected to the internet machine…” Her obvious uncertainty foretold an afternoon of speaking loudly and using expansive gestures that I just didn’t have the energy for. Since the document I needed was only three pages, so I just called my brother-in-law and asked him to print it off at his office. He did so because he’s awesome.

If anyone has any suggestions regarding places I should visit, pretty please leave them in the comments. I’m especially eager to find a good dive bar that hosts shows. Loud shows. Loud music with cheap beer, where I can’t make it through a whole night without ripping my stockings to shreds.

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A Fragment of an Underdone Potato (May Be the Cause)

17 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by mnhanson in Poetry, St. Paul

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According to Wikipedia, “Sleep paralysis is a transition state between wakefulness and rest characterized by complete muscle atonia (muscle weakness). It is thought to be a result of disrupted REM sleep which is normally characterized by complete muscle atonia that prevents individuals from acting out their dreams.”

That’s what happened to me yesterday when I was napping hard and my nephews began pounding on my door. I woke momentarily, aware that I was sleeping and aware of my surroundings, but unable to move. This has happened to me before. It’s a bizarre sensation, though not frightening. It’s like that scene in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind when Jim Carrey pries his eyes open in his dream and is able to see, just for a second, what is actually going on in his room as he sleeps.

The experience characterizes my move here – to Saint Paul, Minnesota, where I’m now living with my sister and her family, including my two nephews, ages three and five. Highland Park. It’s a nice neighborhood. There’s a bookstore conveniently close by, St. Cat’s university campus, two coffee shops and a teahouse, a grocery, pharmacy, a library, and even Planned Parenthood for all my womanly health needs. I am, however, floating through my days with the sensation that I am in a dream state. I spent the last twenty years of my life in school, and now that I don’t have academia, I feel like a vine plant trying to latch onto a support only to grab air. It feels unnatural and unreal.

Luckily, I have Coursera, which offers free courses online from accredited universities around the world. In September, I’ll be taking a class called, “Modern and Contemporary American Poetry” from the University of Pennsylvania. There are 21,000 people in my class, which is 10 weeks long and has a workload of five-to-eight hours per week. That will keep me grounded as I look for work and get to know my new city and settle into my latest digs.

I refer to my decor style as “makeshift chic.”

… very much so.

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Out of Chicago

04 Saturday Aug 2012

Posted by mnhanson in Chicago, St. Paul, Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

I’m sitting in my parents’ living room, eating potato chips, doing wrist curls with a 6 lb. weight, reading ‘Death by Black Hole’ by Neil DeGrasse Tyson, and watching ‘Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House’ on their giant television. All at the same time. People say I don’t know how to multi-task.

I spent my last month in Chicago making a desperate attempt to experience everything I possibly could, but there is so much left undone. There are still many parts of the city I am unfamiliar with. Landmarks I never saw. Food I never tasted. And I miss the place. Damn it, I miss that city and that horrid little studio with the bad plumbing and the walls like onion skins.

Last night there, I walked through Wicker Park Fest at 9:45pm and got to see a massive alley brawl. Barbaric, yes, but it’s much more amusing than watching hogs fight over bits of corn.

It was kind of like West Side Story, only less nauseating.

And I love the noise and chaos. The fest was still very crowded at that point, it being a Saturday night, but I could easily see the stage when I stopped to watch the performances. One band looked and sounded like they were channeling Robert Smith and Siouxie Sioux. They were loud enough that when the L passed overhead, behind the stage, I had no problem hearing the instruments over its roar. Another group, electronica, had a great stage and some freaky pyrotechnics. They had rigged a flaming trash barrel that shot fire several feat in the air, and the stage looked like someone had torn a corner out of a dilapidated tenement and set it in the middle of the street, fully intact, with rough edges of broken siding sticking out.

In a place like that, I can scream and no one is disturbed. I can jump about, flailing my limbs and cursing, and that’s all okay. I can’t even hear myself. That’s what I like about loud live shows, with the speakers booming right next to my head. I can go mad, have a nervous breakdown, and no one notices or cares. It’s screaming quietly because no one can hear you.

Then I went to Brain Frame to watch experimental performative sequential art. It was awesome, as Brain Frame events always are. I came away inspired ­– rejuvenated. It was my trip to the spa.

Minneapolis/St. Paul, do you have another place like this for me? I will be in you soon (heh). Will I be disappointed? How will I find the Twin Cities analog for the Mutiny? Gannon’s? The VFW Post 7975? Friggin’ TGFKA Happy Dog?!

Withdrawal. So much withdrawal. I picked the wrong time to quit smoking.

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The Long Weekend

16 Wednesday May 2012

Posted by mnhanson in Holidays, Sam, Spencer, St. Paul, Wedding

≈ 1 Comment

Alternate title: A Wedding and a Funeral

If I get married, I’m going to forego the traditional First Dance in favor of Couple’s First Pie Eating Contest.

This weekend, I learned that the mind of a five-year-old child is much more complex than I previously thought. I discovered this because my cousin Katie got married. (Congrats, Katie and Josh!) My sister was a bridesmaid, and her role was to march down the aisle at the start of the wedding, then back up the aisle at the end of the wedding, each time escorted by whatever dude they paired her with (I think his name was Mark). This is pretty standard procedure, but her five-year-old son, Sam, hasn’t been to many weddings, I guess, because he thought he was watching his own mother get married to another man while he, his father, and his little brother sat in the pews. At first, he was quite upset. He refused to speak to his mother, wouldn’t sit for photos with her, and was just generally morose. Due to this, his dad took the two boys home instead of to the reception. Later, however, as Daddy was putting the boys to bed, Sam was much more pragmatic about the issue. He wanted to know if his new dad would take him to Legoland and where they would all live.

The next morning, Mommy made sticky buns for breakfast, and, of course, all was forgiven. I repeat: the mind of a child is a fascinating thing. How does it function? How does our reasoning evolve? It goes beyond socialization and experience. I assume the development of the frontal lobe plays a major role, as well, but what else is there? What I really need is for someone to map all the brain in each of its developmental stages and explain to me which does what. I’ll have to post a request to reddit as soon as I can come up with a title that won’t fill up the page.

Gramma Esther’s memorial service was this weekend, as well. It was a beautiful day; we told family stories, ate lunch, then took a bunch of flowers leftover from the wedding to put on all the family plots.

Love you, Gram!

One of the plots we beflowered was my great-grandfather’s, who died in 1961 (dude was born in 1876). He still has progeny paying tribute at his gravesite. Pretty awesome.

But, sigh. No more grandmas. No more grandpas, either. It’ll take some getting used to. Is there some organization I can apply to that will send me barely-legible checks for ten dollars every year on my sister’s birthday?

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Gutterballs

21 Saturday Mar 2009

Posted by mnhanson in Grandma All, Iowa City, Iowa Writers Workshop, Meredith, New York City, Sam, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Spring Break, St. Paul, The Big Lebowski, University of Iowa

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Watching The Big Lebowski. I decided to watch it after reading I’m a Lebowski, You’re a Lebowski, which I had to do to cheer myself up after reading about the bombing of Hiroshima for class. I didn’t think I would find a book more depressing than Primo Levi’s Survival in Auschwitz. Then I read Letters from the End of the World: An Eye-Witness Account of the Bombing of Hiroshima. It turns out that things can get even more depressing than an account of someone being systematically dehumanized while being physically, mentally, and emotionally crippled by the intense suffering inflicted upon them by their fellow human beings.

As it happened, I was not accepted into the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, but I’m actually pretty happy with this turn of events. I’m excited for the future. Still haven’t heard from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, from which I’m supposed to get a letter sometime soon. I’m going to be glad when it comes, whether I get in or not. It’s the waiting that kills me. Plus, the program is really unique and innovative, which makes not knowing ten times harder. I could see myself living in the South Loop, going to grad school. And when they called me for my phone interview, it sounded like they thought they were stealing me away from the Worskhop. I just let them keep thinking that.

Woo hoo! SPRING BREAK!! Yeah, I spent it traveling with my parents. I spent St. Patrick’s Day with my parents and grandmother. I was in Spencer on Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning, celebrating my grandmother’s 96th birthday. She’s starting to talk more about going into a nursing home. Of course, she wants it to be near Uncle Jim and Aunt Mary. When we got to St. Paul, we spent an evening having dinner with Jim, Mary, and Kate. I told Jim about how Grandma manages to steer the conversation to Jim no matter what we’re talking about. For example: I was telling her about that book I was reading for class, and how horrifying it was to imagine this poor man running around the bombed-out city of Hiroshima, desperately seeking his family, and somehow, we went from talking about that to talking about how Jim spent so much of his free time helping the neighbors out with yard work without being asked. She also mentioned during this trip that Jim was such a perfect son, he never once threw a temper tantrum.
Anyway, we took Grandma to Cindy’s Steakhouse for her birthday dinner, and they brought her a small, yellow cake that was still warm. The whole meal was good, but the cake was especially nice. I think Grandma enjoyed herself, and she got to see a couple of her former students.

Then to St. Paul, where I bonded with my nephew and spent some time with my sister and her husband. Got another great meal from a fancified restaurant. We talked about my possibly staying up there for a while when the new baby comes, helping out a bit and saving money. I thought this might be nice, especially since Sam and I get along so well, and Meredith is able to get so much more done when she runs errands if there is someone else along to keep him occupied. When we went to Lowes on Thursday, she was able to get all of her business done while I took Sammy around the store. He seemed to like it. We looked at all the tools, then he sat in every riding lawn mower there. He calls them tractors. He also wanted to test out all of the bathroom fixtures: toilets, faucets, whathaveyous. It’s pretty easy to keep him entertained. I think we spent at least an hour over a period of three days sitting in their front window looking out at all of the cars passing by on the road. “Big truck!” “Where are the people going?”
Also, he’s scared of the car wash. Interesting.

So, that was spring break. Now I’m back in Iowa City sorting through things that I need to get rid of, being that I know for sure now that I’m not going to be here in the fall. The question is, where am I going? Chicago? St. Paul? New York City? Even Los Angeles is in the running.

For tonight, though, I’m keeping a narrow focus on movies and a Tombstone pizza that is currently cooking in my oven. Perfect, lazy end to a lazy spring break.

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On the Road II: Withdrawl

13 Wednesday Aug 2008

Posted by mnhanson in Dublin, Grandma All, Ireland, Keenaugh, Lynne, Meredith, Mom, Nadia, Poetry, Roddy Doyle, Roundstone, Sam, Sligo, Spencer, St. Paul, Yeats

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August 2
The last couple of days have been tough. It’s pretty impossible to get any time away from my parents. All I want to do is sit quietly and watch people, but Mom won’t let me go anywhere by myself. I found my way around Dublin by myself for six weeks – they never gave us directions, just told us a time and a place. And yet, I managed to survive. But now, it’s like I have no ability – apparently, I can’t read maps or follow road signs. It’s horrible. Roundstone was a town that literally had one street. How am I supposed to get lost in a town that only has one street?
I don’t really have any time to do any real writing, either. Just documenting. Like, about the trip to the Aran Islands. That was wonderful. I was happy to be with my parents then – touring the island of Inishmore, seeing the fort, and I even got a sweater made ON the island. I’m really excited about it. But I can only spend three or so days with my parents, constantly by their side, before I start to feel like I’m going to strangle someone. I’m just not used to spending so much time with people.

Before we came to Sligo, we stopped in Cong, very small town, almost impossible to get lost, though we did manage to lose each other for a few minutes looking through the old monastery/cemetery there.
The Irish are very pragmatic when it comes to utilizing space. Nothing is wasted. When a church is falling apart (they don’t tear them down, because, unlike our country’s Puritan founders, they revere what they see as holy relics – the Puritans never liked to put any stock in earthly things) and the graveyard is full, they start burying people within the old building’s crumbling walls. But it was beautiful there. Huge trees, clear water, and green, green grass. By far the most beautiful grounds of any holy place I’ve seen.

In Sligo Abbey, there was a grave marker with the family name, date of death, and details about the mother chipped away. Or maybe they weren’t details about the mother. Maybe the (vandal?) chipper had removed the words, “May he rest in peace.”

Sligo Abbey is pretty full of death. Near the Abbey are the ruins of a private home built using stones taken from the Abbey that was out of use by that time (18th Cent.). I guess living on such a small island teaches a society how to make use of everything.
Went to the museum today. Mom, Dad, and Lynne are going to his grave to pay homage, but I just can’t. I can’t survive wtihout time to myself – silence and stillness. Both are necessary for me to maintain some semblence of sanity.


Sorry I Didn’t Visit, Mr. Yeats

A family built their home
With stones
Taken from the Abbey
And its cemetary
Where graves became unmarked.
Long lost Christian bone
Missing soul that disembarked
Years ago and gone
To worlds unknown
Perhaps beyond the Hill of Tara.

The alter stands alone
Remaining
Without its sacred tome
To give it meaning
So ferns and flowers grow
Through the cracks that are
Ever lengthening

A man’s existence can be erased
With a chisel taken to the stone
That once marked his eternal place
But now serves as a mantle
For the family’s fireplace
Inside their modest home.

August 3
Getting on a plane tomorrow. Good thing we’re not staying two nights in this B&B. The hostess is so uptight. She has little signs posted everywhere with the house rules. She has to have everything just so. Not the type of person who should be welcoming strangers into her home. It’s called Rathview House in Swords. Beware. Beware.
I did end up seeing Yeats’ grave. On the way out of Sligo, Dad stopped the car so Mom could get into her bag and I could have a look at the man’s grave. Not what I expected, but now that I’ve seen it, I realize that it’s exactly what Yeats would have wanted. Maybe even too elaborate for his taste. It’s kept very clean so that it looks like new. Also on the way out of town, I saw, from a distance, Queen’s Maeve’s burial mound. She’s purported to be buried standing up, facing the enemy. I read in “The Feckin’ Book” that in her time it was said that she bedded up to thirty men in a day. She must have been exhausted. My hat is off, Queen Maeve.
Stopped by to see Maggie Delaney on the way to Swords. Stayed for less than half an hour. We might have had more time if we hadn’t stopped in Ballyshannon first. There was a “French” market going on there. Apparently, “French” just means “open air” market to the Irish. There was nothing French about it. Except all of the French-speaking tourists.
Down the road from Maggie’s house is an old mill, all crumbling and full of trees, overgrown with ivy and moss and raspberry bushes.

I with we couuld have spent more time there, in Keenaugh, with Maggie and looking at the Mill, but we were off to Swords, where we ate at a tavern called The Cock and served boring food like the type you would get at Applebees. The menus said, “Tommy Guns, Burger Heaven, USA.” Weird. Our uptight hostess recommended it. Should have guessed that that anal retentive priss would sent us to a shitty place like that to get dinner. She probably thinks it’s rustic.
Still reading Bibbonne. This book has a lot of typos, but it’s really interesting. Learning a lot about rural life in Ireland from the 1920s to the 1970s.

August 8
Holy shit! So busy these last couple of days – and when I wasn’t busy, I sat on my ass and drank.
I read half of “A Star Called Henry” by Roddy Doyle on the filght home. It’s freaking awesome. Almost finished with it now. After spending a few days at home, we’re up in St. Paul to visit the Tessiers. Mom and Dad have taken Sammy to the zoo. He’s learned about a million new words since I last saw him. Now he babbles like he’s paid to do it. Meredith and Andrew are getting ready to go to a wedding and after Mom and Dad bring Sam home and put him to bed, we’re all going to sit down and watch “The Quiet Man,” which I’ve wanted to watch since the second week I was in Ireland. After visiting Cong, where it was filmed, I wonder if any of the locations will look familiar or if it all will have changed too much. At least we know the pub will look the same.

August 10
Left St. Paul this afternoon and arrived in Spencer at about 4:30pm. It’s bloody awful hot in the upstairs with no air conditioning. It’s hard to imagine that Grandma All’s house came from a catalogue for $600.
I’ll see Ilse in a couple of days and we’ll talk about how we miss Ireland. I felt really nostalgiac watching “The Quiet Man” though we were only in Cong for an afternoon. A little more than a week ago, it was.
I already miss Sammy, too. He loves water. His favorite things to do at home are to play in the kitchen sink (“washy” he calls it) and to play with a hose attached to a small, plastic fire hydrant that hooks up to the garden hose. He also loves bath time. He likes trucks and ball – “golf!” he knows. Daddy must have taught him about golf. He also loves to walk Nadia. She’s still very tolerant of him, though not quite as attached to him as she is to Meredith and Andrew. Mom and I make sure we spoil her whenever we visit. I gave her chunks of hamburger and the strips of pure fat from my bacon accompanied by maple syrup leftover from the awesome waffles Meredith makes.

Tonight we took Grandma out to dinner and showed her pictures from our trip. Tomorrow we’re taking her out to breakfast and then it’s back to Davenport so I can get my teeth cleaned. The dentist found two cavities a few days ago – one for each year since I was last there. Ooops.
John Rogers told us before we left for Ireland that the return home would be more difficult than the trip there. All I can tell is that I’ve been irritable.

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