Thursday, March 3, 2011

Life in the Provinces

At the tender age of twenty three I made the bold decision to leave the great state of New York (and my family and friends) and leap into the unknown world of living in the West.  Prior to a three month tour of the country, in a big daddy Caddy, I had considered Pennsylvania to be the west.  As it turns out there's a whole shitload of country between Pennsylvania and the Pacific Ocean.  Not only is there lots of land, but there are cities, people and running water to boot.

Armed with a duffle bag filled with jeans, short shirts and sandals, eighty bucks and a one way ticket to Oakland, off I went.  If you've never been to California, I would heartily suggest that you don't make Oakland your starting point. My family was confounded.  Why would I want to leave New York to go live out there with a bunch of fruits and nuts?  This is not an uncommon lament for East Coast folks. I once spoke to a gal who works for a large credit card company and she told me that people on the East Coast are more likely to get their credit applications approved as they are very easy to find because they don't leave. If you can't find them, you can find someone in their family; across generations, East Coasters generally tend to stick around.

After living on a teacher's salary, for a number of years, in the glorious city of San Francisco I realized that I didn't always want to have three jobs and moved to Denver. I have been living here for the past twelve years and have come to terms with being an outsider.  I have learned a great many things about living out west and have made adjustments accordingly.  My Ohio bred husband often makes fun of my disbelief (and outrage in some cases) when it comes to my expectations and begs me to pardon everyone living outside of New York; apparently those residing in the provinces know not what they do.  My grievances and personal adjustments made accordingly fall into three major categories:  food, apparel and transportation.

FOOD
  • GOOD bagels are hard to come by. Offerings of round, chewy pieces of bread with fruit infused flavorings (cranberry pumpkin???) are not bagels, they are some weird amalgamation of cake and possibly muffin.  While I would like to applaud people for their efforts and creativity, I can only shake my head and laugh.  If you are among the lucky and do happen upon a decent bagel shop, you will fork over nearly three dollars to get your onion bagel with butter fantasies fulfilled. I don't even want to talk about getting a hard roll or a bialy.
  • Cold cuts (also known as lunch meat) are sliced as if you are going to use only one piece of meat and cheese to make an entire sandwich.  If you dare request that they are thinly sliced, you will be looked at like the suspect in a major homicide and will run the distinct possibility of having your lunch for the week being tainted by someone else's saliva.
  • Pizza hut, Domino's, Little Cesars and all those other 'pizza' chains are not only actually considered pizza, but are actually preferred by many who have had the luxury of eating REAL pizza.  I have been fortunate enough to find a few (actually two) really good pizzerias (owned by actual New Yorkers), and realized the important lesson I had passed on when my son refused Domino's at a sleepover.
  • Chopped meat is called one of three things: ground beef, hamburger - as if this is the only thing you make with it, and hamburg (for those who just can't bear to pronounce that last syllable).  I learned this the hard way when requesting one pound of chopped meat at a butcher.  They had no idea what I was talking about & quite frankly I didn't know another way to say it.  I wound up pointing to the meat in the case and pantomiming eating a hamburger.    
  • Soda, I mean pop, I mean Coke.  Um, actually I mean soda, you know that stuff made from soda water with sugar and all kinds of crap you can't pronounce?  If I ask for a pop, assume either that I would like you to punch me in the face or I am asking after your grandfather.  And if I ask for a Coke, please do not ask me what kind.  Coke is brown soda and should not be confused with anything else unless we are hanging out with Charlie Sheen.
Apparel
  • Even if you have never been within ten feet of a tennis court and/or tennis racket, sneakers are called tennis shoes and more annoyingly tennies.  The sheer lack of logic here goes unheeded and even in Spanish they are referred to as such.  I suppose I could handle them being called gym shoes, because most people have at least stepped foot into a gym, but despite my protests (and obvious superior knowledge of important matters like this), people insist on the name they know.
  • Sandals with socks are allowed all over the place.  This hot mess of a combination is, remarkably, not reserved strictly for Eastern Europeans with gold teeth.  Anyone with a Birkenstock or a Teva finds it completely acceptable to throw on some bunchy socks and slip into these sandals, critics be damned.  This sock/sandal wearing phenomenon is not relegated to just one sex either - both male and females equally enjoy this fashion don't.  
Transportation
  • People really, and I mean really love their cars.  So much so that I have met an impressive number of people who have never even ridden public transportation.  When I first started working in schools in Denver, I took the bus to work and after getting off the bus, I walked the few blocks to school. I once commented that I couldn't get over how poor a job people did with shoveling in front of their homes.  I was told that my problem was that I walked.  I have to admit, this was the first time I'd ever heard of walking as a problem and a possible detriment to my well being.
  • Public transportation outside of New York actually runs on schedules.  Schedules that are kept.  And there are phone numbers that you can call to complain about a bus or train like conveyance that missed it's schedule or didn't show up.  What crazy, novel ideas.  Other than the fabric covered seating - I try my very best not to think about the thousands of filthy people that may have sat on them before me - public transportation outside of New York City was an adjustment that wasn't too hard to make.
This weeks tip:
Before consideration of moving out of your hometown, wherever that may be, do your homework.  I'm not talking about contacting the Chamber of Commerce for maps, or looking up housing or cost of living comparisons.  I am talking about finding a person who may have blazed that trail already.  Find out the names for things, where to get a decent meal, how much a beer costs and the time difference so you know exactly what time to call your mother crying about homesickness.


2 comments:

Kell said...

sent from a friend via yahoo:
Loved both recent blogs....Living with Jack made me want to laugh hysterically while tearing up sentimentally. What a wonderful blog to give to your brother! Love abounds.... you are no outsider here outwest, but a voice in the wilderness~~~ but Ceasar's is to real pizza...

Kell said...

The following is the conversation on facebook after posting my blog link: (3/4/11)
Lisa Schwerdt I love this and New York is waiting for you to come "home". Love you!! And San Fran was an experience I wouldn't gave done without you and there is no one I would have wanted to share it with besides you;)
Friday at 5:41am · Like

Christine McCaffrey- Myers Loved it.... I can't get a decent bagel here either and I'm only 370 miles from NYC. What a shame. And I miss having a pound of ham piled onto a kaiser roll with cheese, shredded lettuce, sliced tomato and being asked if I wanted salt and pepper on it. Subway seems to be the "deli" of choice here... LMAO

Christine McCaffrey- Myers and when I say ham - I mean "Boar's Head"!!!

Melissa Libasci-Eberlein Loved it. Even better was Tues with Binney

Kellianne Rothwell Thanks girls!! @ chrissie - i can find boars head here in a few places, but the 'thick' slicing can ruin even the BEST turkey!! when i was @ lisa's house like two years ago i ate almost a whole 1/2 lb of both ham and turkey b/c they were so perfect!!!

Teresa Santi Awesome!!!
Friday at 6:55pm · Like

Christine McCaffrey- Myers And there are no "deli's"... unheard of. I can't walk into a store and say, "can i have a container of regular coffee, or light and sweet"... lookin at me crooked doesn't even begin to describe the look on their faces. Bakery? Only bakeries here are attached to the back end of most of the supermarkets with generic cakes and no pastries. NO PASTRIES.... WTF is this world coming to?
Yesterday at 6:45am

Jason Sidwell shut up, all of y'all, and eat your domino's fancy crackers and oscar-meyer vacuum-packed wet-ham like the rest of us.
5 hours ago · Like

Melissa Libasci-Eberlein That's gross Jay. I never ate Oscar Meyer, Ever. And what are Domino crackers. Loser.
5 hours ago · Like

Jason Sidwell kell prevents me from calling subpar pizza by its name. i have therefore renamed such food "fancy crackers." and who are you fooling?! you have your fingers digging into the hamjuice at the bottom of an o-m hambag, right now.
5 hours ago · Like

Melissa Libasci-Eberlein Bet you think supermarket Italian bread is the bomb!!
5 hours ago · Like · 1 person

Kellianne Rothwell they don't EVEN HAVE F-ING italian bread (i can get semolina sometimes) but jason does like his subpar roast beast on french baguette!!
5 hours ago · Like

Kellianne Rothwell i understand now why middle american residents are such fans of mayonaisse
5 hours ago · Like

Melissa Libasci-Eberlein Guess Jason never had a St josephs day cake or went to a PORK STORE. I don't even know how you love the man sometimes. Is his fav pizza papa johns or dominos? Is he the type to order spaghetti and meatballs at Dennys. I'll fuckin fly out to Denver and kill him tomorrow if the answer is yes.
4 hours ago · Like

Jason Sidwell not to interrupt your rage, meliss, but you have a little something pink and glistening stuck on your forehead...what is that?!! did you have your face in the bag, dude? jesus christ. ok, go ahead. what were you saying?
4 hours ago · Like

Jason Sidwell btw - i know The Pork Store. that was the name of the pornshop at the edge of town, at the mouth of the dark forest.
4 hours ago · Like