The perfect antidote for a rainy Tuesday morning
31 08 2010Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: food, French Quarter, New Orleans, photography, photos, pictures
Categories : food, photos
And God smiled on New Orleans
30 08 2010I am one of those people who loves symbolism, who embraces coincidence as an old friend (because we all know it’s not really just coincidence), who gets excited to find meaning here and there and everywhere. It just makes life more interesting and fun to me to be constantly on alert for that thread that connects us all, that flows through everything. I love seeing hints of it, a frayed end here, a little piece of it there. It’s all around, if only you’re open to seeing it.
So when the rain finally broke yesterday here in Nola, we decided to walk over to the French Quarter for some ice cream. Seems as good a way to spend the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina as anything else. And there, right in the sky, was a rainbow stretching itself over the Quarter from end to end. It looked as though it started in Jackson Square, and maybe it did. Sure, maybe it’s just meaningless and could have happened on any other old day. But I like to think there’s a little something extra there — lagniappe, if you will… A sign, a moment of recognition, a brief minute of light and color shining on the city on a day when many of us were thinking about those who lost their lives, and those who lost everything but, on that awful day five short/long years ago. A rainbow. Maybe nothing more. But maybe a whole lot more, if only you believe.
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Tags: New Orleans, photography, photos, pictures
Categories : photos
august 29th
29 08 2010Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: New Orleans, photography, photos, pictures, Treme
Categories : photos
So, here’s where I write about Katrina
27 08 2010The French Quarter last night was pure magic and mystery, deserted, silent, spooky, and beautiful. We walked over to eat at Bennachin, an African restaurant on Royal Street. (See, it’s not ALWAYS gumbo and poboys down here…) Finding the restaurant full, and the night pleasantly warm but not stifling, we ordered food to go and took a walk for the 30 minutes it took for it to be prepared. I can’t remember when I’ve seen the Quarter so quiet. Almost eerie. Now, granted, we were on the end of the Quarter very near Esplanade, so it’s always more residential there than touristy, but nonetheless the quiet moment afforded me the time to appreciate the beauty all around me. And to be thankful, once again, for the opportunity and the privilege it is to live here in New Orleans, a place I have loved so deeply since I was a little girl.
I’d gone back and forth in my mind about writing about the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina here. On the one hand, I didn’t live here at the time, so what do I have to say that could possibly matter? That could resonate, could begin to approach the pain and sorrow those who did felt? On the other hand, my sister’s home in the Broadmoor neighborhood of Nola flooded and my mother’s home on 2nd St. in Gulfport, Mississippi was nearly swept away. So, while I was spared, my immediate family was not, and their pain is mine, and my pain is everyone’s who watched, as I did, in absolute horror at what looked like something post-apocalyptic unfolding day by day, those horrible days after the storm. I remember thinking, “Can it get any worse? It can’t get any worse.” And then it would.
As an aside, I would vote for Lt. General Russel Honore for mayor, or governor, or senator, or President, or king of the universe, or whatever that man might want to run for. Even now when I see him on TV, the emotions well up. The dignity and calm he brought to a chaotic situation are other-wordly.
My primary plea to everyone as we come upon this fifth anniversary, and the attendant media rush and rancor about it, is to just remember, please, that this was a human tragedy. That’s someone’s sister, someone’s brother, someone’s son, someone’s mother you see there, in that old footage, standing atop houses pleading for help amidst acres of hot filth and dirty water. Those are people with dreams and hopes and fears experiencing unimaginable loss. And no one deserves to go through what the people here and on the Mississippi Gulf Coast went through.
Think about the people you love, and your home, and your neighbors, and your neighborhood. Think about your daily routine, running to the drug store down the street, going off to work, returning home at the end of the day, to sink into your bed, surrounded by everything you know and love. Now, try to imagine it all gone. All of it. Imagine the anxious uncertainty, the sadness, the despair, the fear.
I know. It’s hard for me to imagine it, too. But I try, because I don’t want to forget, I don’t want any of us to forget, that that is what we are talking about here. PEOPLE. I understand the need and the desire to figure out who’s at fault, who’s to blame, to figure it all out so we hopefully prevent something like this from happening again. I understand the need to get political about it, and to get angry. I really do. It’s just that, for me anyway, I want to honor the fact that actual human beings persevered against a situation so overwhelming, so seemingly impossible. To me, that is the best way to commemorate the fifth anniversary, by remembering that this happened to people, your fellow Americans, people just like you and just like me, and to be amazed that the folks here and along the Coast were able to come back from it.
Has it been easy? Is everything ok now? Of course not. I’m not suggesting it is. We have a long way to go, to be sure. There are still New Orleanians scattered across the country who want to come home and can’t. Across the street from my mother’s house in Gulfport, there are three big empty spaces, where her neighbors were left, literally, with slabs for homes and they haven’t built back and likely won’t. Five years later, she’s living in a ghost town for a neighborhood block, as many here are also doing.
My point is only that as you watch all the coverage this weekend and hear all the talking heads on TV, take a breath and remember the people involved here. Remember the people. Make it about the people. Be a little kinder. Show compassion to everyone around you. And be thankful for everything that you have, for your loved ones, and even for the daily annoyances that challenge you. Trust me, you’ve got it good.
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Tags: Gulf Coast, Hurricane Katrina, Katrina anniversary, Mississippi, New Orleans
Categories : thoughts
Water meter redux
26 08 2010I’ve already posted once about these old timey water meter covers dotting the city but the other day I came across two side-by-side. And it was just too cool not to share…
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Tags: New Orleans, photography, photos, pictures
Categories : photos
dirty habit
25 08 2010I smoked a carton of streetlights last night.
Pop, pop, pop, pop, pop.
They burst within my mouth,
the glass cracking and tinkling,
the bulbs smashing and burning,
the hot black metal making me cry.
All the while,
I sat,
looking at the back of your head and wondering
if it’s so wrong that I prefer it to the front.
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Tags: Poetry, verse
Categories : verse
Balcony bliss
24 08 2010I spend a lot of time walking around this city and looking up, thanks to all the amazing balconies here. Some are grand affairs, smothered in plants and flowers, or beads and other sundry Mardi Gras-ish gear, or seasonal decor. Others are more spartan, more bare, more rickety, as if actually stepping out onto the balcony itself would be to risk your life. Yet I find them all compelling in their own way, and I like trying to discern from them hints about the folks living there. The four balconies below are all in the Quarter, but naturally, we’ve got lots here in the Treme, too. I’ll share some of those in a future post.
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Tags: architecture, French Quarter, New Orleans, photography, photos, pictures
Categories : photos
I don’t mean to brag, but…
23 08 2010… I have got a pepper plant that just won’t quit! Had I any actual gardening tips, I’d provide them, but I’m thinking it must be sheer luck. After taking the below photographs, I picked 16 peppers off the plant — 16! And it’s still just absolutely covered with them. I need to go pick some more peppers today so they’ll quit weighing the poor plant down. We’re making homemade salsa with them, which is delicious and spicy. We can barely keep up with the plant’s output, though. What a “problem” to have, eh?
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Tags: food, peppers, photography, photos, pictures
Categories : food, photos
“it’s ours”
18 08 2010I love this.
“there is always that space there
just before they get to us
that space
that fine relaxer
the breather
while say
flopping on a bed
thinking of nothing
or say
pouring a glass of water from the
spigot
while entranced by nothing
that
gentle pure
space
it’s worth
centuries of
existence
say
just to scratch your neck
while looking out the window at
a bare branch
that space
there
before they get to us
ensures
that when they do
they won’t
get it all
ever.”
– by Charles Bukowski, from the collection You Get So Alone at Times That It Just Makes Sense
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Tags: Bukowski, Poetry, verse
Categories : books, inspiration
The 11th Commandment
15 08 2010Comments : Leave a Comment »
Tags: BP, Gulf Coast, New Orleans, oil spill, photography, photos, pictures
Categories : photos














