Paul Souders designs websites for Mercy Corps

dogs

Buh-Bye Lake Oswego

Mon, 01/28/2008 - 5:05pm -- Paul

After our first week in the new house I am — and whoa, where did this come from — missing Lake Oswego?

Well, objectively, here’s what our old neighborhood had going for it:

  1. It was a great place for walking dogs.

We have Marshall Park now, which is pretty primo dog-walking territory, but our Lake O digs were literally across the street from George Rogers Park, with its open field and duck-infested Willamette river beach. Caninirvana.

But I think the feeling I have right now is not so much missing Lake Oswego as a realization about what my life might feel like in five short months. At that time I will be a father in addition to a homeowner — which are good things, yo, that’s not the point. The point is, five or ten or twenty years after that, when I think back on the carefree, minimalist, jetset lifestyle Jenny and I had five or ten twenty years previous, the last place I’ll associate with that lifestyle will be our lovely but barely usable apartment in lovely but barely usable Lake Oswego.

So I’m feeling what, pre-emptive nostalgia? This is why I have so much trouble with displays of emotion

Point-Counterpoint: Cats Are Better Than Dogs

Wed, 11/07/2007 - 6:33pm -- Paul

Best. Onion. Ever.

p.s. For the record, I was a Cat Person for 29 years, literally until the very day I got a dog.

p.p.s. Some yabo totalled the Subaru this weekend. Jenny and her sister were going to a movie...dude makes a poorly-advised left turn out of a parking lot into their path...bam, $9000 worth of damage. Jenny is fine, Michelle is fine, the rental car we have for at least a month is not fine. That damn Subaru was 4 months old. It was manufactured in April for Pete's sake.

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Some Things Have Been Happening

Thu, 08/09/2007 - 5:30am -- Paul

Lake Oswego Residents Only Like, for example, we found an apartment. In, um, Lake Oswego. Yeah, everyone has that reaction. But really, it’s better than you think. It’s like a small town. Kind of a snobby small town, but still. We are 500 yards from a river and 100 feet from a lake and Bismarck can swim in both of them.

And my commute (oh, yeah, I have this new job ...) is an eight mile bike ride through a forest.

And it’s exactly halfway between the places we work (Wilsonville and Lair Hill).

And they have a good farmer’s market. And bike shops.

And have you tried to find an apartment in Portland lately? Everything’s for sale and nothing’s for rent.

Hey, I don’t have to defend this decision.

So yeah, the new job. I’m a (actually “the”) web designer at Mercy Corps. This is so amazingly sweet and so utterly fortuitous.

Many cosmic events conspired to keep my jobless for a month yet simultaneously offered me several opportunities. I took a job with a software company like four weeks ago and yet the deal was bungled by the company wooing me ... I mean, they actually hired me but couldn’t finish the hiring process because of boneheaded bureaucracy (and whew did I dodge a bullet there when you think about it). And that opportunity kept me from snatching a really tempting tempting opportunity with a former employer...tempting because a) they offered me a lot of money and b) it would have meant really returning to where I was before we went to China, and you know what they say about going home again.

So working at Mercy Corps is really sweet for me on a cosmic level. The Mercy Corps vibe is good. “Good” in a Matthew 7:16 way, and “good” in a “generous employer” way. It’s like drinking a tall glass of milk.

Seven Days

Mon, 06/25/2007 - 9:02pm -- Paul

We’re entering the pre-move period, familiar from a year ago, when we are no longer excited about leaving but rather just want the whole damn thing to be over with already.

Leaving Xiamen is not like leaving Portland (only in reverse). For example, I am not often struck by emotions of bittesweetness: “I sure will miss this...” Which is funny considering the likelihood of our ever returning to Xiamen is pretty low So when I think “this might be the last time I walk through Shiting Lu,” it really is the last time I will walk through Shiting Lu. On the other hand, yeah there are things I actually will miss from our year here. Off the top of my head: Huweishan park, the noodle bar, our maid Yalian, travel to Hong Kong, learning Chinese, the romance of living the expat life. But the hassle of moving (read: “the hassle of moving Bismarck”) and my psycho-crazy last week at work kind of swamp both the bitter and sweet.

TonguesXiamen is putting on its best face for us before we leave. We had a couple of farewell events this weekend: a doggy play date at Dongdu Park with all of Bismarck’s dog-friends, and a surprise party at a fantastic wine bar owned by a Malaysian couple. The weather is brilliant. Saturday was fiercely hot, clear and sunny in a manner unprecedented in our year in Xiamen. The air had a startling clarity, such that you could make out the second mountain range on the mainland (about 30 miles away), something that has occurred only once previously in my memory.

Sunny and hot In the clear air, distances seemed shorter (or rather, more like my sense of distance and scale from back in America). I had noticed the reverse of this phenomenon shortly after we moved here. Huweishan (the hill just behind our apartment) seemed impossibly tall when viewed from the lake; my sense of scale was that it must be at least as tall as the West Hills in Portland (500' to 700'), and correspondingly farther away. In fact, it’s only a little more than 300 feet at its tallest. To my eyes (accustomed to clear American air), the thick air makes even relatively small, nearby landmarks seem larger and farther away than they actually are.

Seven Irritations

Tue, 04/17/2007 - 1:55am -- Paul

OK, so: here’s what made this past Sunday so damned irritating.

First, taxes. This was actually not any more irritating than usual, and actually turned out a little pleasant. We were expecting to pay a few thousand bucks each to the Feds and Oregon, but TurboTax helpfully informed us that we pass the test as “bona fide residents of a foreign country” (by three days!) and thus qualify for an exemption on our foreign income. So instead of ponying up a few thousands, we actually get a little jangly money back. Still, the whole rigamarole took about 12 hours which I ain’t ever gonna get back, and we did this all online using TurboTax and scans from back home. So there was the usual PRC internet lag, which is a little like drinking beer through a swizzle stick.

Second, allergies. I woke up Sunday sneezing. Even for my heroic allergies this might be a first. It was a little like when you snore so loudly you wake yourself up. All day long I had this painful congestion behind my eyes, mixed in with sneezing jags that bordered on epilleptic. I have no idea what’s in the air here that causes this (particular) reaction...it’s happened two or three times since we moved here.

Opaque AirSidebar: I have learned over the years to differentiate the source and severity of my allergies, which vary in subtle ways like fine wines. Steady, low-grade nasal congestion accompanied by mounting asthma are symptomatic of my cat allergy. Sneeziness and hives on my neck, back and legs are due to ragweed and other pollen. The same symptoms plus red watery eyes indicate house dust. Mild congestion in the morning or evening comes from mold. And so forth and so on. I swear I am not making this up. China is teaching me a few new ones, although I have no idea what the source(s) are. There is a lot of stuff in the air here.

Third, the air is yellow. Newscasters can euphemize this as “haze” but they ain’t fooling anyone recently. It reached a surreal nadir of opacity two days ago, when we were unable to make out buildings that were no more than a half mile away. This is on a putatively sunny day. And remember (as we are frequently reminded): “Xiamen is the cleanest city in China.” The haze and grime followed us twenty miles into the hills.

On the road to Tong'an Fourth, we, along with a few 老外 friends, accompanied the informal “Big Dog Club” on a day-long outing to a reservoir in the hills near Tong’an, a distant Xiamen suburb. This was quite an adventure. If it weren’t for the allergies and points Five and Six (below), the adventurousness would have outweighed the irritation. There were 5 cars, 19 people, and 11 dogs on our outing. No fewer than 5 of the dogs were Samoyeds, a very popular breed with 20-something Xiamenese hipsters (who mainly comprise this group). The reservoir was about 20 miles from our home on the island, but of course with all those people, cars, and dogs, it took more than 3 hours to get there (about 1 to get back). We spent more time driving, eating, and socializing than playing with dogs. It was entirely akin to a BMW motorcycle club, or a Fiat Spider owners’ club, or somesuch. Most Chinese dog owners view their dogs as lifestyle accessories rather than companions.

None of our Chinese dog owner friends are worried about the new dog law. Some of them said they’d only take them out at night. I think most of them have trained their dogs to eliminate on their balconies or similar spaces within the apartments, and that they don’t often take their dogs out, so the law doesn’t seem unreasonable to them.

LunchAlong the way, we stopped at what is in all probability the filthiest restaurant I have ever witnessed in my life (Five). The space around the dumpsters at the Wendy’s restaurant, where I worked when I was 16, was cleaner. At this place, the toilets (adjacent to the kitchen), were little more than an open privy. There is only one table manner in China and that is: never touch food with your hands (corollary: never set your chopsticks down on the table). You can see where this would be a sensible rule. The food was OK, I had duck tripe and pig’s feet and trotters for the first time.

The reservoir itself was not amenable to swimming. The water level was incredibly low, and all access to the actual water was restricted. This did not deter the Club, however, as we scrambled down the spillway-slash-quarry to a unexpectedly scenic stream flowing through the quarry spoils. Some of the dogs (including, of course, Bismarck) took it upon themselves to swim in the only open pool available, which was kind of wedged between some rocks between a pair of small falls. Jenny, Bismarck and I scrambled downstream a long way, until the verticality of the streambank turned us back. This would be a fine place for hiking in the American fashion, with backpacks and heavy boots.

During the otherwise lovely outing my left contact lens stuck to the inside of my upper eyelid and slid up above my eyeball (Six). This has only happened to me two or three times in my life previously, and always while I was actively fooling with my contacts, i.e. touching them with my fingers. This is the first time it’s ever done this unbidden; probably due to accumulations of airborne dust. The experience is painless but really unpleasant nonetheless. There’s a void entirely around your eyeball and if you don’t work out a stray contact pretty quickly there’s a risk it will migrate behind, which I imagine would bring irritation to an entirely transcendent plane. Jenny helped me fish it out, filthy hands and all, and somehow I managed to get it back in my eye.

Reservoir Dog Club Swimming Red Feet Channel Bismarck and Jenny

To top it all, we’re stuck in an endless loop right now debating Bismarck’s fate. There is no doubt that he is legally registered (thus OK to own) but far larger than the 40cm rule prohibiting large dogs. This means, according to the police, that he is not allowed to leave our apartment, ostensibly because he might frighten people. They couched this prohibition as “for our protection” which is really creepy. So we’re left discussing how to deal with this; Bismarck can’t stay in Xiamen and enjoy the unbounded life he’s had since he was born (we didn’t even leash him when he was a puppy). We are also weighing our relative hapiness re: living in China, which is, let’s face it, kind of a hard place to like. Jenny has another year on her contract and neither one of us is wont to quit right now.

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