In Pennsylvania during the campaign, I contemplate regional diversity

We were in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania this weekend.  It’s not at all like Brooklyn. The biggest lifestyle difference was driving everywhere.  There were things that reminded me of Montana where I grew up and Nebraska where my parents grew up, historic places and times where and when we could go around on our bikes by ourselves as kids.   My friend lives in a beautiful neighborhood of cul-de-sacs that has much in common with the home of my relatives in Orange County, California, beautiful houses on a hill but nowhere for a kid to ride a bike.

 Sometimes I fantasize about living in a house in a neighborhood where my kid can go outside by herself and have some autonomy.  But, that’s not possible in many suburbs, built in my lifetime, without sidewalks or street lights.  I wouldn’t let my kid ride her bike along the side of the two lane highway anymore than I would let her ride up Fulton and cross Flatbush on the way to school or a friend’s house in Brooklyn. Whatever happened to riding your bike and playing with the neighborhood kids and “Come home for dinner when the street lights come on.”?

 Pennsylvania was insurance company calendar rural instead of what I think of as farmland which is mile after mile of mathematically straight rows of wheat and corn with giant tractors and combines.

Subtext being the presidential campaign, it was gratifying to have the woman selling pumpkins by the side of the road and the biker chick waitress at a restaurant both complement me on my Obama t-shirt.

Our friends  took us to Lake Tobias Animal Park, a family farm that has been turned into a zoo.  I wore my bright orange Obama Mama t-shirt, but nobody commented at all.  I’l bet the people there saw it with disdain and disapproval. The tour driver told us they called the longhaired breed of Scottish highland cattle on display, “hippie cows”.

The kids loved Lake Tobias, a popular local school field trip destination.  It was disturbing (although not deeply disturbing if I thought of it as a farming operation) to ride in a topless bus and watch people give crackers to small children who held them out to the bison that loped up to the side of the vehicle.  This, goes against everything I know about wild animals.  But, I suppose technically these were not wild because they live with a steady parade of topless busses full of outstretched arms and crackers.  Who knew such eclectic private zoos existed?   It was bizarre to see elk and yaks and water buffalo together in the same pasture

 I grew up with regular visits to the National Bison Range in Moiese, Montana. (The Snake Pit tourist trap on I-90, notwithstanding, it was the closest thing we had to a zoo.)  When comparing notes on our childhoods with a college roommate who grew up in Annapolis, Maryland we discovered that the big 3rd grade field trip where she was from was a day at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.  At Lewis and Clark Elementary in Missoula, Montana, the big 3rd grade trip was to the bison range maintained by the US Department of Fish and Wildlife Services.  The bison range is deeply educational, you can go there and experience the animals as brown spots miles away because the 18,500 acre preserve is experienced via a one-way 2-hour car drive.  (There is oh so much for a disaffected teen to ignore and it’s the kind of place where parents feel compelled to go to battle with their children to put away the novels and video games in order to look for the distant wildlife that only adults paying attention can see.) There is ample time to read the brochure cover to cover learning more than anyone outside of the Department of Interior needs to know about native prairie grasses, birds, rodents and the breeding habits of the elk, deer, bighorn sheep, antelope and black bears that share the range with the bison. 

Because of our visit to the Lake Tobias wildlife park in Pennsylvania, I now understand how it is that the tourists in Yellowstone National Park come to make the kind of stupid mistakes that get them killed.  In Montana we never cease to marvel at the tourists whose deaths and injuries we read about every summer in the local paper.  They are gored while walking toward a moose or a bison in order to pose for a picture, or got between a mother bear and her cubs on a trail or most mind-blowing of all to a kid raised in the Rockies, attract bears by cooking in their tent.

Nancy Keenan

I noticed in the schedule of the Democratic National Convention that Nancy Keenan spoke yesterday as the president of NARAL.  I like her!  As a teacher and legislator, she was one of “our people” when I was a lobbyist intern for the Montana Federation of Teachers.

One day there was a call of the house, motion which can be adopted by a deliberative assembly that has the authority to compel the attendance of its members in the absence of a quorum. The effect of the adoption of this motion is that the president of the assembly makes out arrest warrants which authorize the sergeant-at-arms to arrest any or all absent members and bring them to the meeting hall so that a quorum may be present. This motion is usually seen in houses of legislatures, such as the United States House of Representatives.

When the members realized that they were going to be forced to spend the night in the state house (because of the two absent members, one was undergoing a root canal and the other had flown to California to retrieve a wayward daughter) some of the Butte representatives sent out for liquor and broke out the cards.  

Nancy Keenan and one of the other female lesislators set up a free-standing tent in the aisle, unrolled sleeping bags, got in and went to sleep until the boys were done playing their games.

Kill Me Loudly

I saw Deanna’s show tonight. Spent the first few minutes obsessing about not having brought my Clown Axioms postcards to distribute. The woman seated next to me was looking over the Eric Davis/Bouffon Glass Menajoree postcard in her hand before the lights went out. (I thought to myself; “Hmm. I wonder how much those two sided postcards cost. Lorraine and I should have some made for the Clown Theatre Festival!”)

I was looking forward to seeing Kill Me Loudly because I was in the workshop last year where Deanna found her character “Butt Kapinsky”. It’s exciting to see something from a workshop develop into and evening of theatre and Deanna’s show was a success. She gave it to Eric Davis to direct and so her costume developed buffoon bulges. It wasn’t a surprise when Eric announced after the show, as he was inviting everyone in the audience to adjourn to the adjoining bar, that this show would be in the New York Clown Theatre Festival in September. Bouffon Glass Menajoree has been playing around town since it was in the festival two years ago.

Jeff Seal got to show off some of them clown skills he acquired out there in California and that was good to see.

Also that space, Milagro Theater at Clemente Soto Velez, on the Lower East Side is a good space. I wouldn’t mind doing a show there.

On the subway coming home my head was full of pithy and critical thoughts about clown theatre in general and Deanna’s show in particular, but when I got home My Kid was still awake and there was much ado about a bath, itchy ears, eating cherries and brushing teeth so now it’s all gone.

Also, I am still a little jet lagged.

The Husband just reminded me that it’s 1:30 in the morning and I have rehearsal at 10:00 am. So I’m going to close my eyes and go to sleep now in our new brass bed that was delivered at 8:45 this morning (thank God I didn’t leave clearing out the room for morning) Rehearsal today was at PMT from 10 till 2. Then I schlepped back to Brooklyn. I had to pay attention to My Kid. There e-mails to check and send before I could go to the show tonight. We’ve been scheduled for the New York Clown Theatre Festival Cabaret on September 11. I’m just waiting for Lorraine to confirm. (I wonder if she has 9/11 issues. She did fly out of Boston on that morning… I wonder if I have 9/11 issues… I saw the second tower come down from the Monument in Fort Green Park where I was standing with My Kid in a pack on my back.)