10 Pancakes I Have Known

Fluffiest Pancakes

1. My grandparents lived in a 40’s ranch-style house in the hills of LA County. Spending the weekend at their house meant blueberry pancakes during Sunday morning breakfast. My grandfather was a research chemist. He loved electric ranges because they had a scale, and a 7 was always a 7 and a 5 was always a 5. My dad swears that he kept a lab notebook in the kitchen and flipped his pancakes when cued by a timer. I don’t remember any of that, or very many of my own memories of my grandfather, but I do remember the frozen blueberries he would add to the batter. I remember their taste of burnt fruit sugar.

2a. In the summers, we would take vacations in Mammoth Lakes, where my dad had lived in his twenties. There’s a country cafe there called The Stove, the kind of restaurant where things come in skillets and has a gift shop. One day, I wanted to order buckwheat pancakes, something I had heard about from Literature, probably one of the Little House books. I felt very grownup, ordering such a sophisticated pancake. It was the first time I remember being aware that different flours, different grains, could have different tastes. They tasted like pancakes with a new dimension.

2b. Later, as an adult, I noticed that there was a buckwheat pancake mix on the shelf and put it into my cart. I learned to add extra water to the batter to create the thin, flat cake that I love, and to sweeten the batter with thick, black molasses. They still make me feel grownup.

3. I was eleven years old and we were traveling through Idaho on the way back from a trip to the great National Parks. We stopped at a beautiful rambling rural house, all screened porches and garden plots and plaster walls. Produce was in high summer season, and we ate from the garden. My job was to make sure that my brother and sister bothered me first about being bored, and to look like kids you would want to have to my dad’s old friends, they that owned the house. Everything went wrong. The tent–adventure!–my siblings and I slept in had a hole in it, and we were consumed by mosquitos and other summer bugs. My brother got a spiderbite that caused his whole hand to swell up and ooze clear pus from the bite marks. In the morning, they made us pancakes from expensive, organic pancake mix of various flours and nuts. The oils in the mix were rancid, and the cakes tasted awful. My sister and I were confused, because maybe they were supposed to taste like that? My brother has always been pickier, and he threw pleading eyes at me. My stomach turned at the thought of insulting a host. I was the oldest, and I knew that it was my job to say something, so I said something. And of course the hosts tasted the pancakes, realized that the flour had spoiled, and then felt even worse that my sister and I had tried to eat them anyway. Later, when I am asked to think of an example of when I was vulnerable, I think of this memory. When I think about a time when I was a leader, I think of this memory.

4. Once in Mrs. Kwazny’s 3rd grade classroom we all made pancakes. I loved using the flour sifter. O proud me brought back the paper handout with the recipe, so that we could make it at home. We never did, but it’s there in my mother’s recipe binder 16 years later because someone loves us all.

5. Pancakes and fried eggs taught me how to cook at the stove. The mistakes I would make! Pancakes with uncooked Bisquick in the middle. Burned black on one side, carbon dioxide holes like pockmarks on the other. My mom would never have anyone over to the house without having twenty people over to the house, and would never cook a meal without cooking three meals, in portion and number of dishes. I learned to cook by helping her entertain. I haven’t yet learned how to fill my house like she fills hers, but I think that when I have a single dish to cook, I’m just as good as her. She doesn’t know I think this. Please, gentle reader, don’t tell her.

6a. There would be buses to town on the weekends, and the rich kids that could afford to eat at restaurants would get breakfast on Sunday mornings. One of the restaurants was French, and had delicious crepes. These are technically pancakes I haven’t known, because I never ate there. My friend John would talk about how much he liked them, and I would say that I didn’t like them, and call him pretentious. One day, the dining hall made apple blintzes. I thought that they were very gross, and that they were what crepes tasted like, so I never wanted to try them again.

6b. Later, in Portland, a friend makes me try her lemon and sugar crepe from the carts on 11th and Hawthorne. When I feel myself getting too attached to a position, getting too entrenched in a dislike, I think of how much I like crepes now.

7. “Banana Pancakes” by Jack Johnson is the best pop song about pancakes, by default.

8. We went to Albuquerque to scatter my grandmother’s ashes on the mountain that overshadows the junior high school where she met my grandfather. We stayed at a hotel that had a pancake machine with a tank of batter and integrated, hot plate-like griddle so that you could press a button and it would make a fresh pancake. I watched people make pancake and felt the joy of human enterprise & the earthy optimism of mechanical invention.

9. I have never been in love, but I would like to someday. My best friend and I talk often of first pancakes, pancakes that are meant to be thrown away. When I meet men I try not to think of their cakeyness, because when I make pancakes now I don’t need to throw the first one away. When I worry, I worry about batter, not burning.

10. My roommate Lauren made pancakes this morning. I never turn down pancakes, and I was right. They were delicious.

 

 

 

A new start

I never wanted to be one of those people on Cory Arcangel’s project “Sorry, I haven’t posted.” I try to keep perspective on who reads this, and I never wanted to feel like I had a responsibility to a hobby on the internet. But this blog hasn’t been actively updated in years, and it feels like one of these moments that might be the start of something different, and I want to start with why I haven’t been writing on the internet.

The past year has been different for me, with a lot of change and changes. At some point I lost faith in my voice, and I’m just now dreaming about finding it again. When I look at old posts on this blog, all I read are the qualifications on my thoughts, my uncertainty to voice opinions, my wordiness. I feel like my inner monologue is different these days, and I want my writerly self to reflect that difference.

Good writing comes from bad writing. That’s what they say. I have faith in that power of practice, but the thing that I’ve yet to discover is that freedom from inhibition, that freedom to be funny, to be fresh.

I hope this is the beginning of something new.

Geology is destiny

For a time in late childhood, I would spend a week every summer at a Christian summer camp in the mountains north of San Luis Obispo, in central California. Typical of that region, the wild- of its wilderness was not provided by, as it is in the Northwest, a density of trees and brush and water and leaves. The land itself—its small sagelike scrub, infrequently encountered live oaks, dirt— did not resist its wanderers. But stray too far from established paths, and you are still confronted with the impossibility of moving forward: a valley that ends in sheer cliff, a sudden drop of elevation, the crest of a ridge that magically leads to more ridge.

In front of the camp’s parched dining hall and main building, there was a small courtyard landscaped with the black slate rock found in the area. I have many tactile memories of this rock: the treachery of its seemingly orderly and level surface, the way its sharp edges always seemed to end up between my toes and my sandals, the way it would become so hot in the naked ultraviolet August sun that I felt like I was being cooked from above and below. The most interesting thing about those rocks were how they were both hard and fragile at the same time. These rocks—Wikipedia tells me it is because they are metamorphic—have tiny little fracture points. Hit the rock from one angle, and it will break skin, a window, damage concrete. Exert even the smallest amount of pressure on one of those fracture points, even just the gentle friction of your finger pads, and it will flake off as though it was always sand.

There was a young man named Jeremiah there. He was both our drill sergeant and our first among equals, a young seminarian with an intense scowl and an affect that now I might recognize as a byproduct of an intense struggle for self control. He was reading a book called Wild at Heart, a Christian book from the Promise Keeper era about how men are knights and need a cause and women want to be rescued and all men are like this and all women are like this and you will never be happy until you embrace your knight and. Jeremiah was reading this book by the pool and because I was a boy that liked reading, I asked him what the book was about. “You’ll understand when you’re older,” Jeremiah scowled, because he was the worst.

I haven’t yet been able to release that exchange into forgetting. At the time, I didn’t believe that there there was anything that I would understand better with more time—the delusional belief in my own maturity has remained my most immature trait. Later, I’m fascinated by this exchange because I cannot believe that Jeremiah could not see with his own eyes how wrong he was.

I’m not going to tear into Wild At Heart, because I have not read the book and it would kind of feel like a step backwards for me to really fight those old internal fights. But sometimes I think about those assumptions: all men want a cause to fight for, a dragon to slay, so that they can get the girl. I think about those people, the Good Christian Men and how different I would be if I didn’t end up in social situations with different conditions. How long would I have held on to that model of manhood? Would I have been more unhappy? I can’t imagine I would be less unhappy?

I don’t think Jeremiah was particularly happy. Instead of a picture of him in my head, memory has dimmed to an emotional tone palette, swatches of color, none of them very bright. Young men with beliefs have a hard time because the world is such a persistent contrafactotum. Sometimes I think that all “life experience” is is an either/or condition, a binary, of accepting that, shit, anything can happen. [n.b. Remember obnoxious false maturity] Reconciling the belief and the hope and the want for consequence requires either tremendously painful reflection or a massively willful reordering of reality.

I had to leave those people and those places behind, because I no longer believed that they were doing good in the world. I’m still looking for my dragon, how messed up is that.

tuesday

This is going to be loose. Long Facebook status loose, with no shaping, and no filter. Today it seems very important to me that I write tonight.

 

(We’ll come back to that.)

 

I had a very fun, very drunken weekend. This meant that I outsourced some of my social decision making to a chemical—Hi, alcohol!—and because I am also cripplingly insecure in some ways, engaged in this weird Mobius strip of personality where the alcohol gave me the courage and looseness to be more assertive and outgoing than my everyday self, but the insecurity and second-guessing and paranoia about being an asshole led me to be a little more mellow and easy-going than I usually am too.

 

I don’t really need to explain myself. I didn’t need to say all that. What is really essential is this: I spent a few hours on Sunday talking and having a really good time with someone that I would usually deflect attention away from/filter out as not one of my people.

 

He had crazy intense eyes. He “shit, I haven’t had a real job in years.” He evaluated experiences by how many times it got him laid, and bragged that he knew every hot chick at his college, and referred to the library kids as “the real freak show” at a school where everybody secretly believes that they are the library kids. In short, he exuded that aggro, young straight dude vibe that usually drives me as far away as possible, right now.

 

He was a little over half a decade older than me, long enough that our high school experiences and college experiences were enough different that there was a little distance. I can’t remember exactly what he said, and I can’t remember exactly what the context was (the drink, remember), but it was something like his was the last generation to experience adolescent rebellion as a “fuck you” attitude, instead of <disdain>posting about it to twitter or some shit.</disdain>

 

I can’t remember exactly where I was going with that, because I was drunk then and tired now. Probably something about how I think the kids that were rebellious in generations past would be rebellious now, and are probably not on twitter. People kinda keep doing the same shit, I think.

 

Anyway, I’ve been mulling that little encounter over and over again as I’ve pieced together my weekend and started to move forward—

 

Oh yeah, that’s where I was going with that: basically he said the weird flipped version of what the olds say about the millenials. Back when people liked us, back when they needed us to elect Obama, there was all this stuff about how settled we are on social issues, how much we like all kind of diversity, how much we were dreamers and wanted to solve the big problems. This dude was basically like you guys are all pussies because when you’re supposed to shake things up and break shit, we’re all trying to get along and be nice. Hold on to this.

 

—with processing all of the big emotions that came up during the weekend. Because I’ve been thinking about all the effort that I’ve put into living as a better human being, to live with more awareness, to live with a better spiritual balance, and at the same time how weird a thing it is to be a young man with spiritual questions. At least in my culture, in my time. Part of it is gendered. I grew up in a church where men were expected to be leaders of the church, to get involved or whatever, but where women were the spiritual heart of worship. I also was raised partially in a culture of devout Catholicism, but where Sunday was another country.

 

I need to wrap this up. Feet don’t fail me now.

 

Am I totally off base? Are not young men, 18-25 the avatar of our current unwritten morality that starts and ends with “have as much fun as possible but try not to be an asshole,” and isn’t it weird when they believe things, like really believe things with prayers and scriptures and beards and robes or white collared shirts and bikes or tattoos or hats or languages?

 

I’m just trying to have as much fun as possible without being an asshole.

 

I’m trying to do better. I got some morning pages done. I’m writing right now. This is my second full day without a cigarette—that hasn’t happened in months, maybe years. I’m hoping to have a more consistent presence here. Let’s see what happens.

Card Catalog: August, 2013

This month, I’m going to do something a little bit different. August was a little bit slower, and I’m going to update every day starting today with a different book on the list, just to try and get some momentum going. Here’s the list:

Mirrors Eduardo Galeano

Edinburgh Alexander Chee

Gun Machine Warren Ellis

The Interestings Meg Wolitzer

American Poetry Since 1945 Jennifer Ashton, ed.

China Airborn James Fallows

Caught and Released*: The White Album Joan Didion, How to Be Gay David Halperin, Drinking With Men: A Memoir Rosie Schaap, Considering Genius Stanley Crouch

*i.e, started but not finished.