Sam Goldsmith

A blog about music, travel, writing, photography, politics, Istanbul, teaching, life, and everything in between

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Multnomah Falls Loop

A couple days ago I trekked back to the Columbia River Gorge and hiked a loop that included six waterfalls in this order: Multnomah Falls, Dutchman Falls, Wiesendanger Falls, Ecola Falls, Fairy Falls, and Wahkeena Falls. Also on the trail was Upper Multnomah Falls and Necktie Falls, but I didn't spend any time at those locations. Time was short and there were pictures to be taken! I hope you enjoy these samples:
Wiesendanger Falls

Wiesendanger Falls

Fairy Falls

Me and Courtney at Fairy Falls

Fairy Falls Close-up

What looks better: Color with short exposure or black and white with long exposure?

Wahkeena Falls: So fierce that I couldn't get any closer without getting my camera sprayed with mist!

Multnomah Falls at night: 2 minute exposure

Dutchman Falls
Multnomah Falls
Dutchman Falls
Wiesendanger Falls
Courtney looking over Dutchman Falls
Approaching Wiesendanger Falls

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Best 10th Anniversary of 9-11 Song

My old compatriot from high school and college who has the coolest middle name ever, Julian Waterfall Pollack, performed this piece as part of a 9-11 commemoration in Paris. Apparently it was a commission. Everyone should take a listen - it's a very uplifting take on the ten years that have passed.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Thankfulness

Today, thinking about thankfulness, I realized that I don't feel genuinely thankful very often. Of course there are special events, such as receiving a gift, that prompt the giving of thanks, but the overarching feeling of being happy to be alive, the feeling that life has given us so many wonderful things from music to waterfalls to travel to most everything I write on this blog and quite a lot I neglect - that feeling is hard to come by naturally. It has to be induced.

That's a big reason I like the Thanksgiving holiday weekend so much: a non-religious holiday designed for people to feel thankful (and even if your heart's not into it the four-day weekend isn't too bad either!). Of course there are religious holidays that serve the same purpose, as I feel is the case with Passover especially. But the point isn't about spirituality for me. It's about feeling how there are things in our lives that could easily not be there, about celebrating that we have it pretty good in this life.

So today, on this obligatory day of remembrance, I feel the best homage would be to feel thankful for what we have, what could not and did not get taken from us, either ten years ago or at any point in our lives when we faced whatever external threats we faced. Most of all I want to feel thankful for safety - not security, as in "national security," mind you, but for the safety of my friends and loved ones. Safety not in the sense that they are being protected but safety as a state of being, a characteristic, ranging from the caution they use when driving to the ease at which they fall asleep at night comfortably assured that they're outside of harm's reach. The safety, in other words, that you can only feel by living.

Feel free to share what you're thankful for today in the comments section.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

New Song - JB's Unfulfilling Life (featuring Greg Englar)

I've got a new First Regrets song to share with all of you, called "JB's Unfulfilling Life," and it features my good friend Greg Englar on guitar. He takes a very nice solo at the end of the piece, and it makes up for my singing - I admit, this is one of my worst singing jobs on the new record and I'm either going to redo it, outsource it, or both. But Greg is really great and makes it worth a listen.





I've also updated the music samples on the left side of the home screen to be more efficient. I know they don't say the song names anymore, but if you hold your mouse over the play button it will tell you the song name.

I'm glad to get this out before the 10-year anniversary of 9-11, because on that day it would probably be inappropriate to self-promote.
JB's Unfulfilling Life feat. Greg Englar by First Regrets

Stuff

The other day, while moving, I got this feeling that a person can be understood not by their words or their actions but by their stuff. Imagine: you come into someone's home for the first and only time in your life. Perhaps it's because you're coming with mutual friend's to a Thanksgiving dinner, or you're at a distant relative of a loose friend's house for your friend's baby shower, or you're about to have a one-night stand, or you're meeting someone from Craigslist to pick up their sofa. Or so on. Whatever the reason, you're never going to see that person again, never walk in their house and see all their stuff again. And yet the amount of stuff required to sustain that person who carries barely any meaning in your life is monstrous. Each person, all of us with the means to live comfortably, have a ridiculous amount of stuff that we surround ourselves with. Some of the stuff is the same as other people's stuff - after shopping at Ikea or Bed Bath and Beyond you start to recognize commonalities among furniture sets or bathroom supplies. Some types of stuff - a bed, a table, chairs, a bookshelf, pots and pans, and so on - are in every house and every person, nearly every person, has one of their own. Even down to the computer I'm using to type this, all our stuff, all my stuff, is just a weakly personified expression of myself.

After moving to Portland I've become a little overwhelmed by the amount of inanimate things I need to live the life I want. I come to this new city and the first thing I do, before making friends or even finding a job, is find an apartment of my own to live in and start filling it with stuff, like marking my territory. The more things or mine I set up around me, the more it feels like it's really mine, like I have a right to it. Filling my refrigerator, buying a mattress and a frame, a stereo and a iPod adapter cable, a table and set of four chairs (one of which is still unassembled), soaps and shampoos and other toiletries. This acquisition of stuff has been ongoing for days and days, and it's not even finished! I still have no couch, no mat to keep the rug clean when you first walk in, no plants for the garden I plan to grow, no bed stands and no dresser, no can opener or screw driver... and so on.

I've been dealing with the question of how necessary these things are. Sure, I could live quite well without 6 glasses - I am just one person, after all. But all six have a use (and they cost a nickel each and were in used condition, so I'm not so troubled over them). In fact, I can easily justify the existence of all these things I have. I'm not a big spender. I get nervous spending money on unnecessary things, like eating at restaurants. And yet here I am spending $125 on a table when I could easily eat standing up or in bed. I know, I know, $125 isn't than much for a new table. But for the brief amount of time I lived without one I began to wonder how much I needed one in the first place. And, more importantly, if I'm living in greater comfort than I need, how much of that comfort is excessive and wasteful?

In the end, I decided I wasn't being wasteful at all. If I want to live in a world with other human beings, in a world where other human beings can come to my home and be treated with the proper care expected from a host in our culture, I need to own a variety of stuff in order for that cultural obligation to be met. If I have friends over for dinner I must have enough glasses for them all and a place for them to sit and place their dishes upon. They need the silverware to eat with and I need the cleaning materials to clean up after them (and myself). They need a place to put their purses and backpacks besides the middle of the floor.

If I wanted to live alone, keep my space off-limits from any potential friends and neighbors, then there wouldn't be a need for a table or bookshelves or sets of glasses. All of those are conveniences - it wouldn't be hard to figure out how to live without them. But that's not the life I want to live. I want to make human connections and invite people into my home, and therefore I do need this stuff to achieve that end. So that I can have friends over for a Passover Seder, and perhaps even that friend of a friend who I'll never see again, who will just have a window into me through that one night of seeing the stuff I live with.

But sometimes - oh so often right now! - it feels like much more than a reasonable amount!

P.S. The last post was post #200 for this blog. We started in Florence, went through New York University, circled around through Turkey, and have arrived here in Portland. Thanks to all my readers for paying attention to all or any of it!

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Yesterday was Labor Day.

I know, I didn't notice it either. Because almost every shop was open.

This really irks me. It's a holiday celebrating the workforce, and yet so many people seem to be working as if it's any other day. Except for students, for whom this holiday marks the end of freedom, Labor Day barely existed. So it's barely a holiday at all, in that case.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Labor Day

Happy Labor Day, everyone.

I like holidays that are about thankfulness, so I'd like to take a moment to be thankful for the job-related boons in my life.

While I'm currently unemployed, having just moved to Portland, I know I'm employable because of the experience I gained teaching in Turkey, and I'm also in good shape financially because of my year of work in Turkey. I'm thankful that my friends and family have work and that they can live in a level of comfort.

These days there isn't much to be thankful about much to do with labor or employment, but I think it's important to try.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Why Do Men Feel Like They Have To Act Like This?

Today I was listening to the Portland classic rock radio station and I heard a disgusting display of male behavior. The DJs had invited callers into a discussion about what bugged them about their wives or girlfriends. I guess this wasn't as bad a premise as it could've been - everyone in a relationship is bothered by something insignificant - but the callers had some very insensitive things to say about their partners. One complained that his wife would use the bathroom with the door open and talk to him about her day. Another whined that his wife didn't shave or wax enough of her pubic hair. Each time the DJs ridiculed the women, making it sound inconceivable that a person would want to pee with the door open so as to have a conversation or that a woman, like just about all men, wouldn't want to be totally hairless. The exercise marveled at "disgusting" female behavior while displaying a much more disgusting insensitivity. It's not that the men were bothered by these little things (everyone's allowed their preference), but I was most perturbed by the way the DJs ganged up on the women's habits that didn't conform to sexist social norms, especially in ways that aren't expected of men. It was typical objectification, ganging up on women outside the standard male concept of femininity as if there were some indisputable truth about what women should be.

I kept waiting for the lesbian to call in lamenting her partner's obsessive football watching every Sunday or some other typical male behavior. I even felt like calling in myself and saying sarcastically, "Sometimes my wife feels like she can talk in a conversation. I can't stand it when she expresses herself or has an opinion! And sometimes she works so hard that she doesn't even want to cook me dinner." And so on. Just to see how the DJs would react.

Now, I thought about having all my women readers (you outnumber the men by quite a lot) and men readers in relationships with men to write in and complain about your male partners, but I decided against it. That would be no better than their show, and as feminists we're better than that. For now, I can only send out a message to my male readers to NOT ACT LIKE THOSE DJs, especially around young boys who might grow to imitate that behavior.

Seriously, men. We should be way better than this.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Along the Springwater Path

As of today, September 1st, 2011, I am a resident in Portland. I picked up my keys today and I'll be moving in tomorrow. Internet will arrive on September 7th. I'll be starting up a garden when I'm settled in a bit.

It feels like such an accomplishment, completely different than apartment hunting in Turkey. In Turkey there was never any doubt that I was going to have a place to live; it was in my contract with the school. I lived in the dormitory until they found a flat, so I didn't have to worry about cramping a friend's style as I've been doing here in Portland for the last couple of weeks. The process of looking at prospective apartments went something like this: the head of the English department and her real estate agent would walk me into a building, talking rapid-fire back and forth in Turkish as I pretended to know what to look for and waited for the key information - price and quality of the kitchen - to come out in English eventually. Eventually I decided on an apartment namely based on appearances and recommendation. The school set up utilities and Internet and showed me how to pay my bills.  

I never had anything to worry about. But this time I had to do everything myself, so it feels like an accomplishment. Good thing there wasn't any Turkish involved or I would've been sunk.

To celebrate I took a nice long bike ride down part of the Springwater Path. The loop is 40 miles long, but I only went for 6.5 miles before breaking away. Enjoy some photos from the excursion:

Tideman Johnson City Park
72nd Ave at Holgate

Tideman Johnson City Park

Where allergies come from... yikes!

Willamette River