Saturday, July 21, 2012

Learning to Get Lost -- and Like it


Living in a new place, it's hard to get acquainted without feeling overwhelmed. A trip to the DMV can take days of planning, trying to build the confidence to make the thirty mile journey, find parking and then fill out unfamiliar paperwork.

A grocery store shopping trip could turn into an exhibition, walking mindlessly up and down the aisles to find pickled roasted red peppers that aren't conveniently listed on one of the locator signs.

Finding the courage to venture more than a few short miles from my apartment was difficult at first and I was stubbornly determined to relinquish the attachment I had to my GPS. This is, after all, New Hampshire, not Syracuse. I did not have to worry about accidentally ending up in a not-so-great part of town, where I might encounter less-than-friendly people. I doubted that people in New Hampshire had heard of turf wars or RICO busts, let alone seen the aftermath of one.

For me, putting my GPS in my glove compartment was not only a test on my limited sense of direction, but on my driving anxiety as well. Before embarking on any type of trip, whether it be four hours or ten minutes away, I'd print out the most direct route, as well as two alternatives. I needed the list of directions, the street view and the actual map. I'd mentally prepare myself, literally visualizing every turn I would make, writing out directions in abbreviated form on a Post-it to stick on my steering wheel lest my printed list get blown out the window of my car. I was, and still can be, the definition of a paranoid driver.

But letting go of that anxiety and letting myself experience a place for what it is, without a purpose in mind? I'd never done that before. 

So I started letting myself get lost, choosing a direction to set out in, making turns down rambling dirt roads to see the place I'm now calling my town. And if my stomach clenched at the thought of not being able to retrace my steps in a heavily wooded area and end up stranded without GPS or cell service with the threat of bears and moose and all other types of scary woodland creatures that could attack me at any moment, well, I'd just have to get over it.

The first few times, it didn't work out the way I planned. I drove through Plainfield, turned off on a dirt road that promised a "scenic drive" and got caught in a downpour, tires slicing into the mud to turn around with the slight fear of ending up stuck in a ditch (not all winding mountain roads in New England believe in guardrails). Or, when I decided to try to find the Hillbilly Flea Market in Bridgewater and nearly had an unfortunate encounter with another car on a narrow bridge.

There were, however, moments of great enlightenment. Like learning that in Vermont, it is legal to pass someone on a double yellow-lined single-laned portion of Route 4. 

My coworkers had been great in suggesting places for me to go, cafes in Hanover or produce providers in White River Junction. But as much as I appreciated, and enjoyed, their recommendations, I had to "discover" the Upper Valley for myself. 

I needed to find the roadside vegetable stands and barnyard bookstores. The used furniture stores and yarn shops. The best places for maple sugar candy and library's with perfect rocking chairs.  

I didn't find my favorite place in my college town through careful planning with exact destinations in mind. The nondescript used bookstore on Utica Street I found on my own prerogative and the calm of Tim Horton's at 3 a.m. had been an amazing accidental discovery. In "finding" those special places, I became better-attached to my college town, beyond the guise of popular bars and cheapest gas station beer.

And here, I've needed to do the same. Getting lost on a darkened road at 11:30 at night may be terrifying, but I have to learn to be comfortable being scared in Lebanon, New Hampshire. 

I have to learn to feel affection for the town I'm now calling my own.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Ten things I learned from being raised in Jersey


Last month I moved out of my parents' house in Jersey to a small town in New Hampshire. Officially, I'm no longer a resident of Jersey -- permanent or temporary. 

The two weeks I spent at home preparing for the move were quite telling. I often found myself going out for a short errand, only to take a 20 minute segue to drive by a place I loved. I might not have gone into Sun High Orchards where my family buys their sweet corn or the Randolph Beach where I spent so many summers, but just driving by showed my appreciation.

I don't believe in really saying goodbye to places, but I do believe in acknowledging the importance that they had in my life. So here it is, a list of what I learned from being raised in Jersey.


1. It's OK to display your rough edges -- and be proud of them.

I am awful at following driving directions. So awful that when I'm driving to a new place, I often give myself a 30 minute window instead of a ten-minute one. So awful that a former editor had to draw me two maps to walk to an assignment that was less than five blocks away. 

But I own up to it. I make fun of myself for getting stuck in the wrong turn lane, ending up in the EZ Pass lane instead of the cash toll one or print out five sets of directions for the same route.

It's one of my rough edges and in some twisted way, I'm sort of proud of it.

Jersey's the same way. Our trashy board walks are shown in tourism ads. Our driving skills are worn as a badge of courage. We grudgingly admit that our politicians might night always be clean-cut. 

And our pride from being from "the armpit of the country" is undeniable. In embracing our rough edges, we own them and let no one else define our state's "flaws."


2. The true meaning of sports rivalries.

Jersey has an intrinsic network of sports team loyalties. There's the divide between Jets and Giants fans ("but they both PLAY in Jersey!") not to mention the mash-up of Devils/Rangers/Flyers fans. There is no uniting factor that brings all Jersey diehards together. Someone always gets left out, someone always gets pissed off.

But that's one of the things that makes Jersey so interesting.

I went to a bar last month to watch Game 5 of the Devils/Rangers series with my grandfather, dad and his friends. His friends live in a mix of towns in Northern New Jersey and when we got to the bar, a mere 40 minutes outside of NYC, it was apparent how loyalties were divided.

The bar owner was wearing a Rangers Jersey and had seemed to have memorabilia from every sports team except the Nets and Devils. Such is Jersey, where sports rivalries run deep and long. In high school there were constant arguments between Jets and Giants fans, Yankees and Mets fans. 

But the rivalries add another layer of excitement to professional sports. It was definitely much more interesting sitting in a bar filled with Devils and Rangers fans trash-talking each other than it would have been with a group of people rooting for a common cause.

And when the Devils won Game 5, it made the victory in the bar that much sweeter.


3. Sometimes the best defense against stereotypes is embracing them.
Can't make left turns. Can't pump gas. What exit? The smell. 

Anyone who's from Jersey and moved out-of-state has heard those and others a million times before. No, the whole state doesn't smell, just when you drive past the refineries. And maybe through Newark.

Yes, it really is illegal to pump gas. And yes, I can make left turns, I just choose not to do it that often.

But instead of trying to deny them all (I don't know what smell you're talking about) or reacting with extreme sarcasm (yes OF COURSE we call it JOISEY), it's better to embrace it.

So here's to my friends who fist pump at parties, tease their hair as high as they can and answer the question "What exit?" with a straight face. You're Jersey, and regardless of what people think of it, you're proud of it. 



4. Bruce Springsteen really knows what he's singing about.

It's hard to imagine Springsteen singing about any other state than Jersey. And it's also hard to imagine Jersey without the influence of Springsteen.

I learned about my home state through his lyrics: Asbury Park, the working class, the strength that goes into maintaining a life, not knowing what the outcome will be.

Springsteen is Jersey's troubadour. He's the person politicians quote when they want to inspire, when they want to prove how Jersey they really are. 

His lyrics speak of having pride in a place that's not quite perfect, and never will be. There may not be a reason for every misfortune that strikes, but there's always a reason to get past it. And that's what Springsteen, and Jersey, is about.


5. Sometimes you just need to say what you feel the moment you feel it.

My high school had a few rough edges and a bit of a not-so-good reputation. It was the type of places where parents in my hometown uprooted their kids after they completed sixth grade so they wouldn't have to attend that school

Throughout my years at Dover, I was constantly fielding questions about the metal detectors (there were none); the drug sniffing dogs (nonexistent); and the guns the security guards and school-assigned cop carried (yes, they had them, but they never used them).

There was one characteristic that I came to admire in the majority of my classmates at Dover, one that wasn't quite taught to me in my elementary school:

It's OK to stand up for yourself.

In sticking up for yourself, if saying what you feel ruffles a few feathers, so be it. If the words you string together to prove a point aren't the most eloquent, so be it. And if your reaction causes a bit more viciousness to come your way, so be it. At least you said what you wanted to the moment you wanted to say it and you don't have to go around carrying those words around in your head, just begging for the perfect moment to be said, because they've already been spoken.


6. Accents aren't always a bad thing.

I used to talk really fast. LikehowmanywordscanIfitintoonebreathIbetitcanbemorethanthirtymaybefifty.

Fast. Coupled with my slight "aw" accent, I was quite the interesting study when I first went away to college. I wanted more than anything to blend in with the rest of the 2,000 or so undergrads in my class (with their even-paced tones and almost rhythmic way of speaking) and forget Jersey entirely. A new beginning.

Unfortunately that was not to be the case. The more anxious I got about meeting people, the more my accent surfaced. WhichledtometalkingsuperfastandthenforgetwhatIwassayingonlytocutoffmidsentenceandfeelsuperembarrassedandevenmoreanxious.

But there's something to be said for accents. My slight Jersey accent became an irreplaceable part of my character and a constant reminder of where I came from. (Which as a freshman in college is very important to remember). 


7. Roots -- and your loyalty to them -- matters.

Wanderlust.  We've all been afflicted with it at some point, that desire to leave where we grew up and live somewhere entirely different. Some of us leave, only to be drawn back fairly quickly by some sort of force that won't let us be away for too long.

Then there's those of us who leave and never give a second thought to coming home. Or, for most of us that move outside of Jersey (and I really don't know how much authority I can say this with, just based on experience) and develop a strange give/take relationship with our roots: alternatively praising and dismissing the first place that became familiar to us.

Jersey tends to inspire strong feelings in people: they either completely love it or entirely hate it. For whatever reason, there is no middle ground.

So that makes its defenders that much more necessary. While I momentarily cringe when someone insults really insults where I come from, I can almost understand it. Just like I hope they will understand when I retort with a swift, and often brutal, defense.

I'm proud of where I came from and while I might not always like to admit it, I'm loyal to the tiny town on the top of the hill where I road my bike through the woods, got into my first fender bender and bought my first bottle of wine.


8. Every piece of land means something to somebody.

Across the street from the block I lived on in Jersey is a deserted wooded area filled with remnants from my hometown's iron ore mining history: sink holes and cow bellies with undisclosed depths. The woods descend from the top of the massive hill my town is built on down to the valley, into a favorite sled riding hill. 

Ten or so years ago a development group that had possession of the land tried to orchestrate a condo complex on it and I got my first taste of small town politics. My father was part of a group of townspeople who vehemently opposed developing the land and wanted to leave it as is. 

I was recruited to distribute pamphlets in mailboxes that listed the reasons why a new condo development would disrupt the peaceful, quiet town (or as quiet as you can get for a suburb in Jersey that has a major highway running through it).

At the time I didn't quite understand my father's dedication for a plot of woods that I regarded as creepy, but I was fascinated by the dividend between the "outsider" development corporation and the town resident oppositions. It was a somewhat twisted dedication my father's group had to the woods defense: we may not want to build on this property, we might not like this property, but we'll be damned if an "outsider" makes a decision about our town.


9. Confidence.

Jersey Girls have a reputation.

As a woman, as soon as you connect yourself to Jersey, the stereotypes flood in: big hair, big make-up, big mouths and a certain lack of refinement that a lot of "outsiders" frown upon. 

Maybe that's where the old joke stems from ("Jersey girls aren't trash, trash gets picked up!") And maybe that's where people begin to mistake being upfront for looking for fights. 

But there is one undeniable characteristic that the "typical" Jersey Girl has that often gets overlooked as something negative: confidence. The ability to stand up for what they believe in, regardless of the consequences. To wear heels that are too high and skirts that are too short, yet still command the respect they deserve.


10. People always find a way to survive.

Perseverance. The town I went to high school in is a mix between blue collar and middle class families that deserve financial aid to put their kids through college, but won't get it because their salaries rank too high on the national scale. There's throwbacks who's families have lived in Dover for generations and remember when the town's sections were classified by which European country its inhabitants immigrated from. 

And then there's the mix of the new.

If you drive downtown between 7 and 9 a.m. on weekdays you'll see them crowding the streets surrounding the train tracks.  Some are holding styrofoam cups of coffee while others stare down at their scuffed work boots and blue jeans. Some have papers, but most probably don't. They're waiting for a landscaper or maybe builder to come by and offer a days work for unreported wages.

And they'll be there every day.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Whoever said roots can't come with you?

It was a nameless summer night, one of many after my junior year of college. My best friend Katie and I were sitting on her back porch swing outside smoking cigarettes.

Late summer nights were routine for us; ever since we were 15 and 16 we spent part of them together. Midnight swims in her aboveground pool followed by whatever late-night movie was playing on TV. We passed a lot of idle time together making plans for the future, for getting out.

That summer had been particularly brutal with heat, making it nearly impossible to enjoy. Night offered some relief, but it also brought mosquitoes. The smoke from our cigarettes kept them at bay.

Late nights are one of the few times I feel I can be completely honest. There's something different between the hours of midnight and five a.m. that just make it OK to say things I wouldn't usually say; offer insights I wouldn't usually offer.

This was one of those subconscious nights.

"I don't feel like I have a home anymore," I tell Katie, who raises her eyes in a quizzical look, her way of saying to continue.

"I don't belong here anymore, but I don't belong permanently in Oswego and I don't know where I'm going to belong next year. I'm just...temporary."

"You're lucky you got out," says Katie, who has been plotting her escape since high school.

But the problem, as I've found with getting out, is that metaphorical sense of "roots" begins to disappear and a feeling of "everything-is-temporary" begins to replace it.

What does it mean to have roots? I always thought it meant a place I could always go back to, no matter what point I am at in my life. But the further I get away from the place I grew up, the more it feels like an abstraction: something I'm supposed to have but not quite sure if I have it.

So I've decided I'm ripping my metaphorical roots from whatever ground they're currently planted in and taking them with me. Every place I've been and fallen a bit in love with is not staying where it is anymore. It's coming with me.

Mine Hill: my favorite oak tree I used to sit in for hours reading, aging aluminum slide in my backyard,  dirty bike paths behind the elementary school. Coming with me.

The Shore: the feel of the sand after the beachcombers are done raking it, "watch the tram car please" announcements, rickety roller coast on Pier One in Wildwood. Coming with me.

Dover: empanadas by theater, annoying air conditioners in the high school, five hour marching band bus rides. Coming with me.

Addison, Vermont: dairy cows that wake me up at 5 a.m., basement bar, miniature donkey farm. Coming with me.

DC:  Mr. Smith's the piano bar, Frances Scott Key monument on M street, Shake Shack. Coming with me.

Ecuador: rides in the back of a pick-up truck, winding roads of Quito, my host mother's amazing cooking. Coming with me.

Oswego: 24-hour Tim Horton's, the river walk, the cubbies outside the library (the perfect place to curl into with a book). Coming with me.

Roots. Metaphorical, but not temporary anymore. Every place I've ever been, will always be with me.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Every Jersey girl has a memory involving her father, her hometown and Springsteen

I was raised on Springsteen.

For as long as I can remember, Saturday mornings were always my father's errand and garage sale day, when my mother ushered me out the house so she could clean or take time to herself. At the time, my father worked five days a week in Newark. Often, he would not get home until long after I went to sleep. But Saturday mornings, I was his responsibility. 

He drove a teal Ford Ranger at the time (a truck that would later become mine) and he'd settle me into the front seat on top of a pillow so that I could see over the dash. The night before, we'd scour the classifieds of our local newspaper (back when people used the classified section), choosing interesting ads to go check out.

We typically avoided the ones that started on Friday ("All the good stuff will be gone by Saturday," my father would say) and look longingly for estate sales ("Those are always the best"). Taking a red sharpie, we'd outline the boxes and then my father would lay out a map of our county to plot the next day's route.

My father loves maps. Even after GPS's and Google Maps became reliable, he still uses "old-fashioned" maps to plan his journeys. He'd measure the distance between each address on the map, choosing where we would start and finish our trip. Saturday mornings, we'd wake up early. Leaving the house by 8, we'd be gone well into the afternoon, trapeezing across Morris County, New Jersey. A weekly education of the place I was growing up in.

And these trips would always, always include music.

Music was always playing in my house. Whether it be the low hum of a top-40 station in the kitchen while my mother is making dinner, or Sunday morning Mozart after mass, music is a constant. My father took control of my music education at a young age. Springsteen, The Moody Blues, Pink Floyd, R.E.M., Rush, ELO, The Who, The Stones, Meatloaf...Every early memory I have of my father includes a background soundtrack from one of these bands.

I can probably sing Springsteen's entire "Born to Run" album. "Cadillac Ranch" is the funniest song I've ever heard (and best inner-album art). "Blinded by the Light" will only always be a Springsteen song to me. And NO ONE can play the sax like Clarence Clemmons did (especially his solo in "Jungleland").

My father would make tapes of his favorite records and we'd play them in the truck between garage sale stops. He'd quiz me ("Song, band, album: Go!") and I'd be rewarded with an affectionate "that's my girl" if I got it right or receive a "lecture" on the band's entire discography/history/style if I got it wrong. The result? I became the world's youngest classic rock connoisseur. I could lecture about the significance of The Moody Blues' "Every Good Boy Deserves a Toy." I could explain why Pink Floyd shouldn't be defined by "Dark Side of the Moon." I could hold a discussion on the depth of U2's "Joshua Tree." And I was eight.**

My father would rarely have a particular item he was looking for at garage sales. We would go "treasure hunting," hoping to find an antique perfume bottle for my mother or a discarded coin collection for him. I'd be content to look for slightly loved toys and books with scarred covers. Between sales, we'd stop for lunch or go to Home Depot for items he needed. 

Next to smell, sound is one of the strongest memory triggers. Every time I hear a Springsteen song, I am instantly transported to Spring Saturday mornings, going from house sale to house sale with my father.

When I turned ten, I decided I was too old to be seen in public with him anymore and our Saturday morning journeys stopped. Our relationship became strained and only in the past five years have we worked to repair it. 

Older now, and I realize how those trips meant just as much to him as they did for me. The summer before I went away to school, I bought him Springsteen tickets for his fiftieth birthday. Standing beside him and my mother, we sang the words to "Born to Run" as the Boss played to a sell out crowd at Giants Stadium. And when I'm home from college, I run errands with him every chance I get.

My favorite Springsteen song, "Thunder Road."




**(Note: this is not the only 'knowledge-that-little-girls-should-probably-not-have' that I got from my father. These trips also included extensive NHL lectures. I could tell you the entire history of Philly's "Broad Street Bully" years; track the career of former Devils' captain Scott Stevens and explain the difference between offsides and icing to people three times my age. I was an oddity to some family members, but my father's friends got a kick out of it. History was also not off limits and I learned all about different WWII campaigns, battle sites of the Revolutionary War and American war heroes.)

Sunday, April 15, 2012

It should be better: Noel's story



Noel grew up in Washington Heights in New York City. He left home to go to college and returned after graduating to teach. Now going for a master's degree, Noel talks about growing up in a community that can be very difficult to leave.


Description: It's beautiful and poisonous. The culture is very diverse and rich in the arts, music, food and everything else, but there's a kind of... element that will not let you grow if you stay there too long.



Positive: I taught for the Dominican Alliance, a summer youth program for teens and young adults. We train students before they go to work. 

I was able to come back to my hometown and share with them the experience of getting out, what the world looks like outside of the hood. I also taught them about basic sexual health which, for people their age, they had very limited knowledge of.



Negative: I went to a private school in the South Bronx. It was a really great school, but in a shitty neighborhood. When I went to school every day in high school, I was always worrying about which colors I had on and if it would be viewed as disrespectful toward a particular gang. If you wore the wrong color... 

This went on all throughout high school. Depending on if you wore gold, red, or blue there was a possibility of people assaulting you. If you weren't in a gang and you wore those colors, you could get attacked. 

People were getting their faces cut open a lot during that period. There's a population in Washington Heights that, if you look at them, they have a big cut across their face which means a gang got to them.


Advice to living there: Thoroughly research what part of Washington Heights you're going to live in. the good parts are really good and really expensive. The Hudson River is right there. If the rent's too cheap, you probably don't want to live there. 


Smell: Smells like summer heat.


If you could change one thing: The attitude of the children toward education. It doesn't exist. Even in the private schools where I taught, children didn't take education seriously. 

It's a vicious cycle: they don't learn, they drop out, they hang out with the people that are causing trouble, and then they become the people that are causing trouble. 

There's a really low expectation of what you're going to do if you're a teenager in Washington Heights.



If you could keep one thing keep same: The arts, the music, the food, the culture. Un-Americanized culture. Because it's what makes it different.


Bottom line: It should be better.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Softball games and that awful downtown traffic: Becca's Story



Becca grew up in Dover, N.J., the town where I went to high school. Becca, her mother and sister moved to Dover when Becca was in fourth grade, in a house connected to her grandparent's house. 
We met when we were in elementary school, got close in middle school and became inseparable in high school. We talk (or text) nearly every day: outlets for each other's frustrations, sadness and insecurities. Told over an exchange of emails, text messages and phone calls, this is Becca's story.


Description: I have no idea how to describe Dover so that it sounds good. I know how I would say it but... whatever. Basically, I guess, it's a small town where you can't wait to leave, but it always brings you back. 

Where the best empanadas are made. Where taxi drivers are the worst drivers. You can add in whatever. You know Dover pretty well lol. 


What Dover smells like: Well...there's two different smells. In the winter it smells like a mix of Spanish food and pollution.  In the summertime, it smells like "springtime:" with all the trees and flowers blooming.


Least favorite area of town: Downtown Dover because of all the traffic and pedestrians (Author's note: who like to walk in front of cars when there are green lights and will literally pat your car on the hood when they walk in front of it.)


Favorite part of town: Near home, because it's where I know best.


Thing to change about town: The parking on Blackwell Street because it's all parallel and I suck at it.


Thing to always keep the same: The pride everyone has for Dover. It shows going through school and at the Friday night football games.


Positive: As for a positive memory, I guess it was being able to finally start playing sports, I really don't know. 

Is it sad I barely have any positive memories from Dover at all? 

Since we moved closer to my grandparents, my sister and I could play sports if we wanted to, because my grandparents could take us and pick us up when my mom couldn't. And playing sports like softball really helped me on many levels: like focusing and an outlet for when I was upset or angry. 

My best memories are from softball practices, bus rides, games. There is nothing like that feeling when you hit a ball into the outfield, watch your teams score go up and eventually winning the game. Or sliding into home knowing how close of a call it was. There's something about the way spring smells that always brings me back to those memories. 


Negative: Negative memory? Well, going to North Dover Elementary for my 4th grade year before being able to transfer to Canfield Ave in Mine Hill because I had no friends. And the teachers were not willing to help me when I needed it: basically getting D's and C's on my report card. 


Advice for someone who's moving to town: Don't try driving to the mall in rush hour. It will take you forever!


Bottom line: It's hard moving and transfering schools, leaving all your friends behind and having to make new ones is never an easy task. But if you find something you truly love, like softball for me, it can really help make the transition easier.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

What's in the word home?

When looking up what the word "home" means, many definitions come up. Home, in most cases, is used as a noun, but the meaning of that noun varies. 

Everyone defines home in their own way. It's sort of like one of those inkblot tests: a different image appears out of the inkblots for every person who looks at them. 

Below are five of the definitions I found for home and the way I relate each one to my perception of "home." I invite you all to leave comments, showing the way you relate to these definitions.

Home (n): The place where one lives permanently, esp. as a member of a family or household

I don't really live anywhere permanently right now. In the past year alone I've spent time in five different locations: Oswego, N.Y.; Mine Hill, N.J.; Washington, D.C., Syracuse, N.Y. and Ecuador.  In each place, I've found a way to make it my home, based on trying to pick out the best parts of each and becoming attached to it.


Home (n): A place where something flourishes, is most typically found, or from which it originates

I'm not entirely sure that I "flourish" in places, per say, but what activities I'm doing in those places.  I find that anywhere I have the opportunity to be absorbed in knowledge is where I "flourish" the best. 

Also, I don't really know where I spend the most time, but the majority of time I am engaged in some sort of reading material.  It doesn't matter where I am location wise, as long as I have access to a newspaper or novel.

Where I originate: I have a problem with this part of the definition because I am from Mine Hill, but I had my most formative years of schooling in Dover.  I have always identified more with Dover than with Mine Hill.



Home (n): The goal or end point

Because of the point I am at in my life, this definition means the most, but also puzzles me the most.  Coming upon graduation, I always thought I'd have an idea of where I would want to make my home.  

Going through the job application process, I find myself almost "interviewing" potential hometowns.  When I apply for a job, I read about the community I could potentially be living in, trying to imagine what kind of life I would have there. 

I actually kind of hate the idea of a specific, defined "end point." The word "end" particularly bothers me because I don't ever want to think I am permanently stuck anywhere, that there isn't any more room for growth.  

Home could be more a state of mind than an actual goal. I'm much more comfortable with that idea.



Home (n): The place where a player is free from attack

Based on the stories that have been shared on this blog, it is hard for me to believe this definition.  For so many people, home was the opposite: where they were bullied in school, where violence happened in the streets next to their house. There is no ultimate place to go where one is fully free from (emotional or physical) harm.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

My hometown, but not really: Aimee's story



Aimee grew up in Peekskill, New York, but attended a Catholic school in a neighboring town. This is her story on the connection, and lack there of, she feels toward her hometown.


Description: Geographically, Peekskill is pretty small, but it has a big population. It's right on the Hudson River too. It's a big immigrant city too. A lot of people are from Mexico.  Mel Gibson is also from there. The schools have low test scores. My mom teaches third grade in Peekskill's public school system, but she didn't want my sister and I to go there. I went there until I was in third grade. My mom tells me I used to have nervous habits: biting my hair, chewing my nails. I don't remember being scared there, but my mother noticed. She said that I stopped them when I changed schools.


Positive: I feel like I was pretty disconnected from my hometown so my positive memories are about people, not the place itself. My whole life, I just wanted to get out of there. When I came to Oswego, I started to miss the people, the nostalgia of being home. Every time I go home, I appreciate it more. Like being able to spend time with my family and friends.  I always get pizza at Anthony's Pizza. 


Negative: There was a murder in my neighborhood. It was a girl who lived down the street. Her boyfriend killed her then committed suicide.  It was pretty crazy. There were crimes at the school: you'd always hear about people bringing in weapons and stuff. My school was half an hour away and it kind of sucked driving all the way there my senior year, even though it wasn't as bad as the bus.


Bottom line: It's my hometown, but I don't feel that connected to it.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Bullying and the best friends that made it better: Laura's Story

Laura was born in LA and her family moved to Scotts Valley when she was nine years old. This is her story about growing up in a suburban California town. Now working as a writer in New York City, she says that in a way, the bullying encouraged her to work harder 
Description: It's a very, very small town, five minutes from Santa Cruz. I moved there when I was nine. Before that, I lived in LA which I liked because there was more diversity. With Scotts Valley the school was 98 percent white. I remember being really surprised, moving to a town with so many white people. I was also really surprised that there was no graffiti like there was in LA. I had my parents drive around the town twice to confirm it. It was a nice place to live at first and it was safer, but the kids were a lot meaner there.


Negative: I really started getting bullied a lot in seventh grade. Sometimes, I liked to indulge in being the victim, but it got to the point where it was beyond my control. It wasn't just one group of people who targeted it me: it was people from all different cliques. There were the stereotypical popular kids, the punk kids and the jocks who weren't that smart (but very malicious). 

I had a famous duel with the most popular girl in the grade. She would write swear words on the wall, with my name below, but spelled wrong. I caught her once. She was writing it all over the white boards and walls in school. She also had a boyfriend who would make fun of me. One day he opened a stapler and started flinging staples at me in science class. Then he pretended to accidentally trip into me from behind and put a "kick me" sign on my back. I didn't realize it until I went up to the board and everyone started laughing at me. It was like a scene from a movie.

In eighth grade the girl stopped bothering me. It was after we had both joined cheerleading and we were told by the principal that we couldn't communicate at all with each other. But by that point, she had damaged my reputation so much, the entire school knew I was this bullied kid. While she stopped, her friends didn't. 

In cheerleading we had to perform at the school dances. In the middle of the dance, everyone would go to the bleachers and watch us perform. My parents were chaperoning one dance and when we performed, some of the girls started cheering for me, but it was insincere. There were mean comments mixed in with the cheers. After the performance was over, my mother asked me why they were yelling at me and I was ashamed. My parents knew that I was being bullied, but it was the first time they saw it.

I just kind of took it because I thought I was guilty, that if the bullies were saying things, they must be true. I blamed myself.

At one point, we had a unit on school shootings: how to prevent them, what the signs were. One of the boys that was mean to me came up to me and asked if I thought about bringing a gun to school because I got picked on all the time. I was angry: there's nothing in me that's violent. I don't have it in me to do something that terrible and it really hurt my feelings to have such things said about me. 

He knew how badly I was being bullied, to the point where he thought I could do something like that, yet he and his friends continued to make fun of me. They assumed that people who were bullied would do it. They knew that what they were doing to me could drive someone to do it and they continued to be mean.

In a way, the bullying was more traumatic than the death of my father, who passed away while I was in high school. I was OK with his death because he raised me really well and I didn't feel shortchanged on family life. The bullying, however, kept going on and on. 


Positive: The best part of Scotts Valley were meeting my best friends Crystal, Lauren and Nikita. It was the first day of fourth grade and I was assigned the seat next to Crystal. We became best friends that day, after we found out both of our birthdays were in July. When you're a little kid, something like that means you have to be best friends. We still are. 

She introduced me to Lauren and Nakita, and we became a group of four. We had so many asinine inside jokes. We'd have sleepover and create mischief: throw bottles of nail polish in the street, glue dollar bills to the road. 

The last time we all hung out, we had dinner. We were still ridiculous together, still telling jokes. It just goes to show we're never really going to lose that side of ourselves. It's a positive tie to our childhoods. Their childhoods weren't perfect either, but we had each other. 

I think I came out luckier than I thought I did. Some people don't have friends that they've known for that long. I went through two years of hell in middle school, but I had people to make it better.


Bottom line: It was a classic, small town experience. 

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Shared, miserable experiences: how our definitions of "home" can tie us together


When I was home over Thanksgiving Break, I stumbled across an old journal that I kept when I was in sixth grade. Looking through it, I found the typical anguish that anyone at the age of 11 has: my parents making me go to bed too early, the English teacher who seemed to single me out for humiliation and annoyance at my little brother for pulling my hair.

But there were entries in there that weren't about my parents making me eat spinach for dinner.  I wrote about girls who would pretend to be my friend one day, then write mean things in a notebook about me another and "accidentally" let me overhear them talking about it. I wrote about mean notes shoved in my locker and hearing vicious rumors spread about me. I wrote about, what I'm finding is more and more common now, being bullied.

I started this blog because I am fascinated by the way people define their hometowns and the associations they have with it. I didn't know what to expect when people began telling me their stories. What I didn't expect was to find out that school bullying had such an effect on so many people.

Bullying was almost regarded as a "right of passage" when I was in elementary school: something that you just had to deal with it, because it "will always get better." And while that may be true in the long run, when you're 11 years old, it's not easy to believe. 

Bullying may not leave permanent scars, but it does, while indirectly, have an impact on the way we run our lives. For one of my friends, it was constantly questioning her appearance, even years after girls stopped calling her ugly in the hallways. For others, it's the constant doubt that they are never good enough.

For me, it's been the fear of letting people get too close to me.

While this may paint a bleak picture for the millions of kids that are bullied each year, it also gives me reason to hope.

The people that I've interviewed that have been bullied are compassionate and giving. They are nice to other people. They remember what happened to them and they try their hardest to not let it get repeated.

When I started this blog, I kept getting asked what my story was. What did I like about my hometown? What did I despise? I'm still having trouble answering that question, but I'll try to answer it in a way now.

Description: Mine Hill, a small town where everyone knows your business whether you want them to or not.

Negative: The elementary school I attended where bullying was treated with a slap on the wrist, and possibly a lunchtime detention.

Positive: The amazing people I have been able to connect with later in my life over shared, miserable experiences.

Bottom line: It's not a place I'd like to return to, but it's not a place I despise entirely. 

Sunday, February 26, 2012

SU Basketball and one violent summer: Katie's Story



Raised in Syracuse, NY, Katie is an avid Orange fan who always roots for her boys. She grew up in the heart of Syracuse and is no stranger to the violence that can plague the city. But, while violence may draw the city apart, it's support for "the boys" that brings them together.

Description: Syracuse is a small town that wants to be a big city. We have a huge mall, a huge university, we are a big city, but you would never know it. You feel like you're in a small town because there's so much support for the boys. Everyone in Syracuse refers to the team as "their boys."

Positive: One of the most positive memories I have of Syracuse is in 2003 when SU won the national championship. You saw the entire city come together. There was orange and blue everywhere: in the streets, in the stores. Everyone was wearing blue and orange. People had painted their cars. They took markers and wrote of their windows "Let's go boys!" I was 11. 

I remember it because it was huge: in my school we were watching the games. If the game was on and we were in class, the teacher turned it on. We were a small town from upstate New York competing against these schools. For us, it put Syracuse on a lot of people's maps. Nobody thought we were going to win that year. We were a little city in upstate New York that nobody knew about until then. 

I think it changed the way our city viewed itself. We saw that our basketball team, that we could compete on this national level, that we weren't just little Syracuse, New York. We were Syracuse New York with Syracuse University. We gained a lot of national attention. All of our games are on ESPN and now we have our own local sports network: all the games are broadcast are there. I think we just inspired a lot of support for the boys.



Negative: Summer 2008 was just crazy. There was constant violence: constant stabbings, constant shootings. No one could do anything to stop it. I was disappointed in the city to a degree. We knew the police officers were doing everything they could, but there had to be something missing. There had to be 25 to 30 deaths that summer. It was really scary. 

There was a stabbing that happened four blocks away from my house. They were longer blocks, so it was little bit farther away, but it was still in walking distance. My parents were very scared. They pulled us in as soon as it started getting a little bit dark out. My little brother and I weren't allowed outside at night unless we were in our fenced in backyard with parental supervision. It was scary because there wasn't anything the police officers really could. They kept trying, kept arresting people, but there were still crimes. Not even the same people were doing it. It was just a huge crime wave that summer. I think we realized that as a city, you're going to have violent crimes, but they definitely cracked down. They put more officers out at night. Trouble areas were guarded more. In 2009, there were only eight deaths. 

I hear about violent crimes in Syracuse and I think about that summer, how scary that summer was. I'm definitely a little bit guarded at night. I have to drive by one of the most common spots for stabbings and shootings when I come from work. So if I come home at night, I take a longer way home to avoid it. I'm just too afraid to go past that place at night by myself.

Bottom Line: I love the city with all my heart, but that's not where I want to live the rest of my life. It's a great city to go home to, but it's just not the place I want to live in.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Bike riding and the loss of a student: Kerry's story


Kerry, originally from Queens, now makes Goshen in Orange County, N.Y. her hometown. She moved there when she was seven. These are her memories of her hometown, Goshen.

Description: Goshen is a small little Puritan society where nothing ever happens. Every knows each other, but doesn't, really. We have a lot of churches and there's no supermarket in my town. There are a lot of little cafes and small businesses that don't matter. If you don't live in the center of Goshen, you pretty much need a car or else you will be bored and resort to drugs. Basically we have a big drug problem in our schools. Whenever I ask people why they do them, they say "What else is there to do here?"

Positive: When I first moved there, the first thing that my parents did to distract me and my older brother David was to take the training wheels of our bikes to get us out of the house. I was seven and he was ten.  We learned to ride our bikes on our own. I didn't need any help, David needed a push and help stopping though. 

That's when I started to love riding my bike. First, it was just riding around my cul de sac in circles. Then, when they changed the railroad tracks that ran by my house into a bike path, it became my escape. 

You could go two ways from my house. If I went right, I could go to the store, get candy or ice cream, and my parents would never know. If I went left I could go as far as Chester which is what I did a lot with my dad. We rode a lot together when I was little. He used to try to teach me endurance by saying if we made it all the way to the pizza place we could get pizza. I would complain the whole way, but I would make it there. I think it was a good lesson for me. And it was really scenic. Sometimes we'd pass farms, sometimes we'd pass the highway or big, giant ponds. Before they put up fencing, you could just go get lost for awhile.


Negative: Basically, there was this kid that wasn't known for more than just being the quiet kid in high school. He went to high school after I had graduated, but I still heard about it. He committed suicide, left a note for his parents and everything. 

I don't know much of the details, but the biggest problem was how the school handled it. The administration wouldn't let students wear shirts that were in remembrance of him because they thought it would be promoting suicide and they sent letters home, I believe. They said that he couldn't even get a moment of silence on the loud speaker, which is what the students were demanding. 

There was another girl that was a senior when I was a junior who went to SUNY Oswego and died of meningitis. When she was at Goshen High School she was soccer player. she was very well known and popular. But being popular is vague, because to some of my friends she was a bitch. I think that's important, otherwise I wouldn't have said that. For her, they canceled Spirit Week. We weren't allowed to decorate the halls and we weren't allowed to participate in our clubs and activities. Every day that week they made an announcement for her. They even made bracelets for her. I have one.

I think it's just sad how one person's life is worth more than another just because of the way their life was taken from them. 


Bottom line: You have to make your own adventures to live there.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Awkward sex talks and stupid bullies: Sam's story


Sam is from a small suburban town in Hunterdon County New Jersey called High Bridge. The 3.5 mile town is filled with woods...and not much else. Sam didn't have the easiest time growing up in High Bridge. Kids were mean to her and teased her about everything from her short stature to the color of her hair. Her one escape was High Bridge's woods, where she spent time fishing in the lakes and streams.

Positive: The woods were my escape. There was always something to do among the various streams and rivers that ran through High Bridge.  My favorite place was Lake Solitude. On one side of it there's a waterfall that kids like to jump into, despite the signs saying they shouldn't. A couple of kids have died jumping into it. I never took the risk.

I also love to go fishing. There was one time, though, when fishing got a little awkward. In order for me to be allowed to have my first boyfriend in eighth grade, my dad took me to Lake Solitude to have "the talk." My family doesn't talk about sex. Ever. In my family, you literally have to sit in a car and lock all the doors to get anyone to talk about sex. My dad started "the talk" and I wanted to jump into the lake. It was so awkward. He kept asking me if I had any questions and I kept saying "I'm okay!" It was just so agonizing for both of us. And really funny. My dad talking about sex... I make sex jokes all the time and he can't flat out talk about it.

Negative: It isn't High Bridge itself that I have negative memories of. It  wasn't the town that bothered me, it was the people at school. Everything else was fine: I love the people at my church and my family. But school? The girls would gang up on my, beat me up. I was too short. Too ugly. Too weird. If it was one thing, it was something else. I didn't do my hair right. Wore my makeup the wrong way.

They told me no guy would date me because I'm too short. It's funny because right now, I'm dating a guy who's six-two and I'm four-ten. They used to tell me how ugly I was, how no guy would ever date me because I was a tomboy. Now I have burping contests with my boyfriend. He likes me for who I am and we've together two years now. 

The school system and the kids in the school system were just awful, but there was one positive: the middle school guidance counselor who was the only one willing to help out.

Bottom line: Beautiful town, ugly kids. (But Sam wants to clarify, the kids in her grade only. There are more good ones now.

Side note: Sam wanted to mention that most of her former bullies are now drug addicts and she is on her way to Army Officer Candidate School, as well as applying to the New Jersey State Trooper Academy.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Deep fryers and locker shoving: Matt's story



My little brother Matt also had the (mis)fortune of shared childhood memories in Mine Hill, N.J. Now 14 and going to high school in a different time, Matt takes a look at Mine Hill where he still resides.

Positive: I got my first job at the Mine Hill Beach when I turned 14 working at the snack bar. On my first day, the deep fryer overflowed. I was mopping up grease from all over the floor and countertops for what felt like forever. Then I went to the freezer to get something and a huge chunk of ice fell out and hit me on the back of my head. It didn't break skin, but it sure left a mark. I also got silly stringed by one of the lifeguards. The beach is relatively small. There's an area sectioned off for shallow water, but then there's also a few docks and a water slide in the deeper parts. I learned how to dive off those docks when I was 12.

Negative: At Canfield Avenue Elementary School I spent two of the most miserable years of my life. I was mercilessly  bullied for being smart and called a teacher's pet. It got to the point where I was being shoved into lockers. People also wrote threatening letters and shoved them into my books. I remember going to the principal and he said the only thing he could do was put them in detention. It didn't deter them and they kept on doing it.

Bottom line: Nothing stays private in this town, it's too small. I'm so happy my high school is in a bigger town where people don't treat you as an outcast just because you're smart.

We all have those places we love to hate and hate to love...

And that's what our hometowns are for. They're the places we can't wait to leave and can't wait to go back home to.

In November 2011, I came across an old middle school journal. In it, I detailed the actions of the peers that made fun of me for knitting in class and lugging around giant poetry books. There were also entires describing my plan for escape: get out of Mine Hill, NJ and never look back.

It's funny, because when the time came for me to actually leave, I had trouble holding onto those bad memories.

This blog is dedicated to sharing those made-me-want-to-leave and made-me-want-to-stay stories.