Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Ticket to Ride



“I'm ready for my close up, Mr. DeMille,” I squinted to my red lipsticked pucker reflected in the bathroom mirror. Fully coiffed for my photo shoot I don a coat and hat and head to the town offices to renew my expiring passport during the highly anticipated Passport Fair sponsored by the U.S. Postal Service. The word “Fair” itself swirls intoxicating images of international food carts manned by peoples of diverse cultures, however when I arrive, there are only 2 leftover slices of cold pizza discarded by the staff and curled up next to some complimentary Home Cooking Guide calendars, Greetings From America coloring books and government issue crayons. A very friendly gaggle of postal workers greets all who enter – with forms, directions and answers to several improbable questions posed by the U.S. Department of Leaving and Re-Entering the Homeland.

While most will prepare for months to impress fellow alumni at high school reunions, I'll starve to get the perfect mug shot on the 10-year passport. Unrepentant vanity caused by the reality of this photo – the representation of the future me in retrospect of the current me – can send me to the gym, the hair stylist and a make up artist. It's a type of temporary insanity flamed by the vision of having to live with this image for an entire decade every time I'm required to whip out the little blue book to get through a maize of airport security checkpoints and sneering customs agents. Ten years is an unforeseeably long time – major physical changes will take place, especially in appearance – and from mid-fifties to mid-sixties, aging is serious transformational stuff.

My expiring passport portrait reflected a frumpy, unhappy dark-haired woman ready to escape to anywhere from the throes of 13 years of rural, provincial-thinking upstate New York. My demeanor and physical appearance changed dramatically for the better after moving back to Crested Butte and I wanted this new passport to represent that transformation back to normality... or at least the youthful glow of perpetual childhood reinstated by living amongst my own joyous, free-spirited kind.

The passport application has some stumpers... flawed questions that seem to make no sense or have no possible accurate answer. For example, how do I correctly answer something as complex as “hair color” when they won't accept Clairol as an answer and it isn't multiple choice or “all of the above?” Definitely not written by a woman, although the paperwork didn't require divulging weight info – probably because someone figured out that body mass changes over the decade life of a passport and people are going to unabashedly lie about their poundage anyway.

But the question that really sent me into a tizzy was the entire section about the former spouse. “Were you ever married?” seems logical enough along with the numerous spaces provided to write in all your aliases, however, requiring a divorcee to recall the ex's birth date, birth place and “Date of most recent marriage” is traumatic – especially if the divorce was finalized 3 decades ago and thousands of dollars later in therapy just to forget all that information. Since I couldn't fit the Ex's last 5 marriages into the little box provided, I moved on.

I think about my grandparents, whose passports in the early 1900s were solely for immigration purposes. No stamps to recall adventures in exotic places, no visas for play, but the prospect of a new life and a golden future, hard earned in the young, promising America.

I gladly hand over my check for $120 to the smiling postmaster who asks, “So, where are you going?”
“Everywhere,” I dreamily visualize distant shores as I walk back into the blizzard of white.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Hall of Fortune



“… And I'm near the end and I just ain’t got the time
Oh and I'm wasted and I can't find my way home...” Blind Faith, and perhaps the closest thing Crested Butte has to a local anthem.

I had intuitively arranged my home into niches and corners with pleasant ambiance, sensitive to the pattern of sunlight as it falls through windows throughout certain times of the day. Incense, candles, flowers, mirrors and crystals placed with attention to where the cat would find most intriguing for a comfy snooze spot... but something was amiss and through the feng shui article I was reading during a brief respite between my job driving bus runs, I had ascertained that my front entrance hall was too cluttered and therefore uninviting to financial prosperity.

Determined to immediately tend to the problem when I returned home for dinner break, I removed 3 full bags of plastic bottles, 2 extra pairs of skis and poles, dismantled cardboard boxes, swept the floor, hung a good luck mirror and set up the recommended indoor water garden – a small copper 3-tiered cascading waterfall guaranteed to attract everything needed into my life. My front entry was now ready to accept and manifest new endeavors of fortune. The house felt more welcoming. I left to continue driving tourists from their slopeside condos to downtown bars and back, wondering how to set up the proper feng shui on the bus so as not to attract those who couldn't hold their drink...

Gratefully home at last after an arduous night of bus circling, I slip my backpack and coat off in the prosperous hallway, greeted by my cat – and a strange male voice slurring from the living room. The cat glances sideways – talented as he is, I know he's not a ventriloquist and the last I checked I was still living alone – I cautiously peer around the wall to the direction of the grunts. Slumped into my couch is a guy I recognize from around town, mostly in bars, although I don't know his name.

“Er... hi. What are you doing here?” I manage a friendly but confused smile which, at 1 a.m., is not easy to conjure.
“I live here,” he states, quite matter-of-factly.
“Uh, no, I live here,” I offer, now rather amused.
“No you don't, I do,” he bellows belligerently.

“Ummm, I've lived here for 4 years now. Are you sure you aren't in the wrong condo? You know they do look alike... somewhat... after a long night at the bar.” I look around beginning to question whether I'm in the right place myself... but no... this is my befuddled cat, my furnishings, my front door, my fountain and prosperously welcoming hallway... I DO live here.

“What's your address?” I ask with the stern tone of a Catholic nun, hoping to get to the bottom of this, reclaim my home and get some sleep. He slowly sits up, and squints into space.
“Ok... is this YOUR cat?” I point to my suddenly horrified furry companion who bolts under the bed.

“Huh...” disoriented he repeats himself, “Huh...” now more confused, “Maybe I live next door somewhere...”
“Come on, I'll walk you there. We'll find your home,” remembering that the intoxicated fall down in the snow and sometimes fortune does not find them in time.

“I hope she's still waiting...” his mumbling voice trailed off as I watch him stagger across the tall snowbank to his door – or at least I hoped it was his house that he entered. Either way, it was up to the next person to see to it that he didn't freeze.
As I walk back into my most prosperously welcoming hallway of fortune and wealth, I lock the door, unplug the fountain, douse the incense, pile the bags of plastic and cardboard recycle back into the corner and lean the skis next to the entrance – realizing I am already most fortunate.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Good Thing



I've heard the adage about getting too much of a good thing... but I'm not sure I ever bought into it – until I had to drive busloads of tourists and locals up and down blizzard roads in a white out this week with the fatiguing knowledge that this storm was just the tip of the iceberg.

“I can't see the road at all. It's total white out,” I stressfully whispered to my Mountain Express supervisor. On the way up I passed several large southern tour buses projecting sideways from towering snowbanks and multitudes of cars ejected into the vast tundra of uniform white. Steely-faced and serious he offered, “Use the Force,” then turned and headed to help yet another who was snow blind and stranded. I knew I was in for a long night as the skies slammed us relentlessly in answer to the collective prayers for deep powder.

Judging from the zombie pallor on the faces of Crested Butte's labor force, who hadn't been able to catch their breath since early December, after the lifts opened and the big snow first flew, the exhilaration of finally having work after the drought of off-season was beginning to wear off. Most working the normal 2 to 3 jobs to financially exist in paradise were already taxed to the max. More snow meant more work, more tourists, more Butte Bashers.... double-time shoveling for all and less time to hit the slopes. The anticipation of the ropes dropping on the deep steeps was sustaining the hopes, but many of the lifts were sporadically closed from high winds for a few days. The Masters of Explosion, the ski patrol, were busy contemplating control – overloaded with the white stuff, it could be awhile before some of the favorites would be safely opened.

Cozy in front of the fire, my first real day off, the snow mounting well above the upper sashes of my windows, I stare at my new ski gear wondering when I'll actually be able to use it between the work load, my lacking ski ability level, zero visibility and the force 4 gale winds. A thunderous snow slide from the 3-story roof sends the cat jumping in one long jolt into the closet. As the windows rattle and the foundation shakes I'm reminded that I live in an outdoor-oriented community for a reason – for the extreme of it all. I bundle up, tunnel out from my home, load up the kicksled and head off to the cafe for a visionary espresso to assist in redefining how much is too much. In Crested Butte, when it comes to fluffy, endorphin inducing crystalline snow, it’s a lot like eating too much chocolate… overwhelmed with too much of a good thing, you addictively have to have more.