Wednesday, December 15, 2004

High Tide, Part II

I'm inside now, but I can feel the ground shake when the waves crash on the rocks. Yikes. And it's not even that big here.

High Tide

The tide is wending its way up the path to our front yard. It's as high as I've ever seen it, something that's probably related to the 40' swells on the North Shore of Oahu today. I went down for a dip this morning and it was another world. The tide obscured the shore I'm familiar with and the water was opaque with dirt and grass and other drifters displaced by the water's extreme incursion. My slippers even got dislodged from their post high up on a rock, though I found them both. And a school of little fish jumped out of the water, twice, right in front of me.

Friday, December 10, 2004

My Protestant-American Experience



Last week in Hilo I did something heretofore unimaginable. Eisa and I went, on a Saturday morning, with all our Coke-guzzling American counterparts, to that veritable retail cornucopia: Wal-Mart. We did not go in search of white bread or Twizzlers or Bounty, no. We went to get a Christmas Tree.

Now, my family is Jewish, and though I'm rather hostile towards religion, if I'm going to make any symbolic tips of the hat to organized religion (or even unorganized spirituality), they're going to be things like menorahs and matzoh (I like the ones with onion and sea salt). But there I was in everyone's favorite Christmas-spirit megastore, comparing tree stands, looking for lights, and trying to choose between Norfolk Pine and Douglas Fir.

We got one, and though my search for appropriate Jew-naments went unfulfilled, I like the piney smell in our house and I like the lights. Eisa said I couldn't call it a Jesus Tree (though why should I have to use his last name to talk about the tree), but I was fine with that.

But then, news that perhaps this was not the prototypical Protestant-American experience. Hilo ran out of Christmas trees, almost three weeks before the big day, and they weren't going to get any more. No express boats from the Pacific Northwest were en route. Turns out our little spindly green friend was one of the last of his kind, and a shortage is neither typically Wal-Mart nor typically American.

Wednesday, December 01, 2004

Editing

You must edit. You must. But if the first draft is crap, the whole thing will be crap, no way 'round it.