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The Storm May 27, 2009

Posted by millyonair in New Orleans.
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The Storm by Pierre Auguste Cot

The Storm by Pierre Auguste Cot

In New Orleans, there is a name that no one says out loud. Just like no one names their children ‘Lucifer’ or ‘Judas’, no one mentions the name of the angry monster that clawed at the city’s face, that washed over her like a broken promise, dragged her under the water and held her there.  They refer to it as The Storm, or, if absolutely necessary for clarification, The Hurricane. but nobody- nobody- calls it Katrina.

At first, I assumed it was a kind of camaraderie, a we-all-left-we-all-came-back-we-all-know-what-storm-I-mean way of separating the pansies from the pirates, the wheat from the chaff, the locals from the tourists. But I suspect there is more to it.  I once read that African villagers will refer to a snake as “a string” after sunset, so as not to summon the serpents. In a city as casually superstitious as New Orleans, the declination to conjure strikes closer to the bone, a tacit and commonly understood agreement. The name is a black cat, a shattered mirror, a ladder we won’t walk beneath.

But even without the superstitious element, to use the name within the city limits seems almost profane, callous at least, a raw reminder of  so much sorrow. It is a dark name, all purply-black like a bruise. It rumbles like thunder on the tongue, foreboding and foul, blank as a boarded-up window, bloated as a corpse. It falls flat and dead from the lips of those who utter it, people sidestep the name on the buckling sidewalks and wait for the rain to wash it into the gutters along with the Bourbon Street trash.

In one of the many French Quarter trinket shops, my husband leafs through a photo book of The Storm’s devastation. Put it down, I want to scream. Don’t touch that! Wash your hands, cross yourself! It’s all I can do to resist slathering him in holy water from the St. Louis Cathedral, but he’s not the superstitious type. The woman behind the counter watches us,takes a drag off her cigarette and shakes her head. There are hurricane tours, I’ve seen the brochures. I cannot imagine anything more vulgar and morbid than creeping through the wreckage with a camera and a cocktail, gliding past the collapsed houses and gutted groceries in air-conditioned comfort.

In mere days another hurricane season will commence, and in the silence on this subejct is the collective finger-cross. No one, after all, wants to summon another Storm. A city below sea level faces heightened risks. And yet, with such risk comes a great gift; one that citizens of more secure cities may never know: uncertainty heightens one’s appreciaton of the Now. Tomorrow is a myth in New Orleans. There are only the bright colors and blaring sounds, the rich flavors and pungent aromas of Today. The floors, the streets, the piers are paved with minutes to be trodden over, danced across in naked feet.

N.O.-body Home May 23, 2009

Posted by millyonair in Uncategorized.
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I still don't know I'm going to New Orleans. I just want a glass of wine already.

I still don't know I'm going to New Orleans. I just want a glass of wine already.

In case y’all been wonderin’ where I been at, I’ve been in NEW ORLEANS! That’s right! My sweet husband felt that my graduation from college (and my birthday)  merited a surprise trip to my Favorite City on Earth, so I spent the last week walking around with a glass of wine in one hand, and a camera in the other. I’m pleased to report that the City is her same old self: lovely and listing and painted and peeling, oozing music and moisture, drenched in ferns and dripping with beads. There are poor people and rich people, weirdos and wanderers, vacationers and veterans. Streetcars and fire engines, taxis and horse-drawn carriages, skateboards and footloose, fancy free, barefoot chicks. Well, actually, I was the only barefoot chick that I saw but I’m sure I wasn’t the only one.

It was so inspiring to be back, surrounded by all the art and artists, all the free-spirited-ness, the tolling cathedral bells, the smell of perfumed wax inside he churches, the smell of cigarettes and Old Bay seasoning, to be surrounded by all the different kinds of people, all the grease/sugar/alcohol-soakedness, all the colors and texture, all the flaking bits and pieces of the City. I will be writing more posts about this in greater depth later. For now, please enjoy my Flickr photos and live vicariously through me. Of course it’s not the same in only two dimensions, so you’ll just have to go to New Orleans and check it out for yourself!

Chickens Are Très Chic! May 16, 2009

Posted by millyonair in Food, Life, Social Commentary, Things Environmental.
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Miss Edna. Her cheeks are fluffier than yours are.

Miss Edna. Her cheeks are fluffier than yours are.

Just before I got my chickens, I remarked to a friend (who was also about to embark on her own chicken experience) that I anticipated a profound learning experience. I had no idea how right that statement was, how much I would learn, and how much simply having some chickens in my yard would change me.

Chickens are amazing little creatures. Before I had chickens and was therefore able to observe them up-close-and-personal, there were, in my mind, a lot of myths about chickens. For instance, I’d heard that chickens were moronically stupid, and would drown themselves by throwing their heads back and opening their beaks to a rainstorm. Nevermind that this makes no sense if you think about it for longer than two seconds. I never questioned it. I also assumed they were indiscriminate omnivores, and would eat anything you put in front of them. This is also not true. Chickens have very specific preferences.  Or mine do, anyway.  They love mushrooms and grapes and tomatoes. Especially tomatoes. Tomatoes send them into a fluttering, jumping, squawking, trilling, pecking ecstasy of excitement. They like to be fed the plump caterpillars from my flower garden, which I pluck from the lantana bushes with a pair of chopsticks. They also like to eat my ferns, which is considerably less charming, and seems to be something of a thrill simply because it causes me to squawk and flutter as I shoo them back into the yard. Surprisingly, they don’t care for mango or blackberries, red bell pepper or carrot. And all of them but one are teetotalers. Only Goldie, one of my reds, has a taste for wine. I serve it to her in an acorn cap, like a tiny chalice. No, I am not kidding about that. I have happy hour with my chickens nearly every afternoon. (more…)

On Loving That Which You Will Outlive May 8, 2009

Posted by millyonair in Life.
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Jubilee (RIP), Rocki, and Edna

Jubilee (RIP), Rocki, and Edna

Yesterday afternoon I returned home from the first of my final exams- my last round of final exams as an undergraduate. I was ready for a glass of wine, I was thinking of the soup I would make for a friend who is ill.

My front yard was still, smoldering under a suffocating layer of humidity and late-afternoon Texas sunshine. I noticed the yellowish leaves of my magnolia tree and made a mental note to give it some iron. And then I saw my chickens. Five of them were grouped together beside the front porch. They weren’t perching, or scratching or rolling in the dirt. They were merely standing, looking around them in bewilderment, as though lost. How odd, I thought. I had never seen them in the front yard before.

“Hullo, girls,” I greeted them merrily as I slung my backpack down by the front door. My approach usually elicits great excitement, and I’ve grown accustomed to seeing their chunky little bodies trotting towards me in eager anticipation of a diced tomato or a handful of scratch. But the hens didn’t move. When I got close, they scattered, clucking apprehensively. Something is wrong, I thought. I scanned the yard for the other five, but the yard was eerily quiet. (more…)