Thursday, December 13, 2012

Christmas Time in the City

Christmas time was upon us, and with no car, the prospects me returning homing were looking rather bleak.  I was sad, but hell-bent on making the most of the situation.  I had learned over the course of a few weeks that I had really great people, already, in my new life that were willing to give me rides and make sure that I found my way.  My New Orleans family was beginning to take root.  Although I wasn’t going to be home for Christmas, or New Years, or anytime soon, (so I thought) I had to keep my head up.  I moved to New Orleans to become an adult, dammit, and that is what I was going to do.  I did have a little something to look forward to, though, the company Christmas party.
I had never attended one before, and I didn’t really know what to expect.  As it turns out, the company Christmas party would become a tradition of bad decisions (on my part).  That first party was interesting.  The boss invited a TON of people that none of the servers really knew at the time.  There were so many people there speaking Espanol, that all of us decided to just take the table outside.  Over the course of the few months that I had worked there, I had tried a few things on the menu, but this really was the first time that I was able to chow down on the chef’s delicious food. I think that this was the night that I discovered that I really did like ceviche (raw fish in lime juice). I chatted it up with my fellow co-workers and met some of the night crew that I never worked with.  Up to this point, I was the lunch girl, only allowed to work during the day until I could prove that I could keep up with the demand of the night.  Oh, and then there was the alcohol, and plenty of it.  Luckily, I contained myself for this first party, and was able to make it home unscathed.  I did not know at this point, but things were about to change for me.  
Napoleon was the first of many long-lived servers that went.  Right around Christmas time, a few of my co-workers decided to leave permanently, and new night-crew positions were immediately open.  That next work day after the party, my manager told me that I was going to start working some nights, and I was thrilled.  There was literally a night and day difference between daytime and nighttime shifts. My earning potential had just exponentially grown in a matter of 24 hours. Finally, I was going to be able to start saving for that apartment. The manager told me that I was going to be faced with new obstacles, and I would have to really prove that I knew my stuff........challenge accepted.
There were two different menus for day and night at this restaurant, so I had a whole new menu to learn.  That wasn’t the hard part, I still hadn’t gotten the hang of opening wine bottles.  Turns out, the more you open, the more you learn.  Thus began my wine-o phase, haha.  EVERYONE, and I do mean everyone, in New Orleans drinks wine.  Considering I hadn’t even drank alcohol for that long, I was still rather disgusted by the stuff.  The only interaction I had with wine up to this point was seeing my grandmother carry around a glass at our family gatherings.  Another challenge I had to face was reciting the nightly specials.  Every night the chef would do some sort of special Tapa or Entree’ and it was the servers responsibility to communicate that to the customers.  No biggie, except most of the time they contained ingredients that 1. I had not a clue what they were and 2. I couldn’t pronounce.  That first week on the night shift was definitely a learning experience.  However, I took the bull by the horns, committed to proving myself, and took off.  Every night someone would bring a bottle of wine, mostly Yellow Tail Cabernet, and we would drink...and drink.  I am telling you, the New Orleans lifestyle is not for the faint of heart, or the occasional drinker.  
By the second week of night shifts, the Megan-drive had kicked in.  I was selling specials like they were hot-cakes, and I was opening bottles of wine like they were nobody’s business.  The chef took notice.  The manager took notice.  Things started to change.  Slowly but surely, I began to feel more comfortable in this environment, and I didn’t feel like ownership hated me.  
On Christmas Eve, I called my family and there were at the house making gumbo (our family tradition) and eating ‘horderves. I cried like a baby.  I didn’t realize how difficult it would be to not be with my family.  Christmas with Will’s family was good, just not the same.  I made it through, and the following week somehow managed to be off on New Year’s Eve.  I don’t really remember that night so who knows what happened lol.  Will and I probably went and played pool.
Something significant happened in December, besides being promoted, my mom bought a Tahoe.  This meant that there was now an extra car in the family’s possession, another CR-V. My parents offered to “lend” it to me, only problem was getting it to me.  Thus began the conundrum.  

Monday, September 17, 2012

Winter Wonderland


                That car was my life.  I put about 100,000 miles on that Honda, and it never even broke a sweat.  I drove that ole’ girl home every weekend, 3 hours one way, from College Station when I was at A&M, and everywhere else all over God’s green earth.  I sang my lungs out blasting Christina Aguilera, Amy Lee, and Dashboard Confessional all along the way.
                So when I made the call to her CRAPPY insurance the days following the accident, you can imagine I was rather PISSED that they only wanted to give me half of what the car was worth.  I won’t even get started on how retarded Louisiana car insurance is.  So what happened?  Nothing, I got jipped on the value and there was nothing to do about it because it wouldn’t have been cost effective.  My new position was no car, no money to replace no car.  
                New Orleans isn’t such a bad place to live if you are without vehicle.  There are plenty of means of public transportation.  I had always thought that the street car was so touristy, considering every time one passed me by on St. Charles there were about 20 camera lenses aggressively pointing out of the windows.  Turns out, though, that I had a direct line to get to work.  All I had to do was go up Oak 4 blocks, hop on, ride all the way down St. Charles to Peniston, walk 7 blocks, and voilah!  Only problem was this process took about 40 minutes.   Street cars aren’t exactly the fastest moving vehicles on the planet.  That’s not to mention the fact that sometimes 30 minutes alone could be spent just waiting for the car to show up to the stop.  Oh yeah, did I mention it was freezing cold outside during this time of the year?  In summer time it’s hotter than hades, and in winter you freeze your ass off.  Why?  Once again it’s the humidity factor.  Those water crystals in the air feel like tiny needles on your skin when it gets anywhere close to 40 degrees. 
                God bless Pennsylvania.  She was living pretty close to me at the time, and since we worked together virtually every morning, she began offering to swing by and pick me up.  December was upon us, and the weather lady had forecasted the slight chance of snow in the morning.  (Reference: we are still in 2008)  The next day Will came running into my room like a little kid on Christmas morning and sang out “IT’S SNOWING!”  I rolled over, looked at my phone, and it was 7:00 a.m.  I remember thinking to myself, “Hell must be freezing over if Will is awake at 7 in the morning.”
                I rolled out of bed, threw some warmish clothes on, and opened the front door.  Sure enough, there was a gray sludge covering the ground and a micro-snowman sitting atop the trash bin.  Neighbors up in the down the street were outside on their porches also watching the weirdest sight I think I’ve ever seen.  It was snowing in New Orleans, like really snowing.  I have some pictures of this somewhere, I’ll have to dig through my archives and upload a couple. Once again, thank goodness for Pennsylvania, because being from Pennsylvania and all, she knew how to drive in snow.  Will walked me up the street to Rue De La Corse so we could see what the street car track looked like.  I will forever have a picturesque moment painted in my mind of the time I saw the beautiful street car, covered in snow, with a Christmas wreath on the front coming up Carrollton Ave.  The entire drive to work that morning was a little scary, slipping here and there, but beautiful.  By the time we got to the restaurant at 10, all the snow had nearly melted. HA.
                No, I didn’t have a car.  I didn’t have any prospects for a new one either.  I felt for sure though, that everything was going to be alright.  The city was putting on a beautiful show for the spoiled Texas kid. 

Monday, August 20, 2012

Death to Bessy


                Everyone remembers their first holiday spent away from home.  Like I previously mentioned, money was tight and I knew that being one of the new girls at work, I wasn’t exactly going to be at the top of the list for requesting time off.  Things were gradually beginning to progress at the restaurant, but I definitely wasn’t going to push my luck.   To keep from being totally depressed about my situation, I decided to replace feeling sorry for myself with optimism.  I was finally going to meet one of Will’s older sisters, who is quite infamous in the family for being witty and quick.  Also, Will’s other sister was going to be in town with her husband and son.   I figured it would be a good opportunity for me to make an impression.
                Will gave me a few pointers the week before Thanksgiving as to how I should probably present myself to his family.  After all, these were women who had grown up in New Orleans, and party was just simply in their blood.  He informed me that, more than likely, I wasn’t going to keep up.  He then proceeded to reminisce upon the times when he and his sisters would go out.  Without going into too much detail about his tales, I will simply describe my emotion; SHOCK AND AWE.  I decided promptly, no, I couldn’t “hang”. 
                Nevertheless, the day arrived when the family came to town.  In a matter of hours the house shifted from quiet to buzzing, and I was so very intrigued. There is definitely a hierarchy of needs in most New Orleans based families.  First order of business on the agenda, of course, was cocktails and beer. His sisters were truly fascinating, and hearing them all sit around talk about “the good ole’ days” was equivocal to reading a novel.   We all decided at the end of that first night to go to “Cooter Brown’s”, one of my favorite bars in NOLA.  I, of course, was tired after about an hour and a half after arriving……freaking light weight.
                It was the night before Thanksgiving and we were all merry, jolly, and full of good cheer.  We arrived home around 1 a.m., and my head, of course, hit the pillow like a sack of bricks.  I had thoughts of turkey and stuffing, and pumpkin chiffon pie (a Thanksgiving staple in Will’s family).   That is, until all hell broke loose on the street outside.
                It was approximately 3 a.m., and Will and I were assigned to the “water bed room”, the room that EVERYONE, and his mama (ha), had to walk through to get to the bathroom.  Red (codename for older sister right above Will in the sibling line up) came into the room and proclaimed in the dead of night “ummm…Megan, I think someone just hit your car”. 
                “No, not Bessy”, my beloved silver CR-V, “it can’t be,” I groggily thought to myself.  No, not Bessy, the car that back in August had carried Will, GG, and I to Atlanta to seek refuge with Red and her family during hurricane Gustav.  In short, to briefly describe that little adventure, we decided to evacuate because most New Orleanians, still being shell shocked after hurricane Katrina, decided to get out of dodge at the first word of “hurricane”. While we were there, Bessy’s rear control arm exploded as Will and I were coming down a hill.  That cost a pretty little penny to repair, a pretty penny that I did not possess.  Needless to say Mom and Dad were not very pleased with that bail-out.  Also, I do not like Atlanta, that is all.
                Anyway, I somehow flew out of bed and threw on some decent clothes.  Did I mention it was REDICULOUSLY cold outside?  So I got out, in my pj’s, at 3 a.m., the night before Thanksgiving, in the freezing cold,  and found that my car had been made into an accordion on the side of the road by a drunk, dumb, bitch.  A drunk, dumb, idiot who, according to the insurance adjuster, who came the next day, must have been going at least 70 in a 25 to cause the damage to my car that she did.  Initially, all I saw were flashing lights.  The cops and all of their amigos, the fire department and EMS, were all there right outside waiting for me.  The idiot driver was still in her car on the other side of the street  through my neighbor’s fence, WHICH, she crashed into only after pulverizing his car.
                The rest was kind of a blur.  Of course I followed protocol, insurance, driver’s license, registration, etc.  The only thing to do was pick my jaw up off of the ground, go back inside, and go to bed.  As I laid my head back down on the pillow, the first thought came bursting through like a needle piercing flesh;
 “I don’t have a car anymore”.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Halloween Schmalloween


                 My every day routine was beginning to resemble the movie “Groundhog’s Day”.  Wake up, shower, work, home, Buddha Belly, PBR, Pool, Sleep, repeat.  One day I woke up and realized that I had a hobby.  Pool is a fascinating game. Once you learn about how to execute the shot you have much more chance of sinking a ball.  I always kind of approached it with the attitude of hit ball, hope ball goes in.  I began, however, to learn something new about the game every day.  Learning English, angles, bank shots, along with practice every day, created an environment for daily mini tournaments.   Before I knew it, I was a challenge to beat.  I began to notice after a while that the guys were starting to get a little bit too much testosterone involved in our little tournaments, and soon, quarrels over rules were common place.   It annoyed the crap out of me.
                Work was getting better; I was finally starting to get into the groove of the routine.  It was actually kind of embarrassing to admit when my co-workers would ask me what I did the night before.  My answer was, without fail, “played pool”.
 Halloween was approaching and everyone was buzzing about what they were going to dress up as and where they were going to celebrate the hallowed occasion.  You see, in New Orleans if there is any reason in the slightest to dress up, people do it.  It doesn’t matter if it’s Halloween or May 2 (random date).  In New Orleans people do Halloween, and they do it big.  So many special events were going on in the city, and I honestly didn’t even care.  I didn’t have any plans on dressing up, and I certainly didn’t have an interest in going out.  I know right? What a fuddy dud I was.  Halloween night came, and it was all hands on deck at the restaurant.  I came in to work the day after and Napoleon was gone.  No call, no show, no more Napoleon.  Apparently Halloween was THAT important. 
                The big night was interesting, and some of the costumes that I saw grown men wearing were shocking to my conservative eye.  Yes. I saw a man wearing the Borat costume, you know , the one where he’s pretty much naked.  I also noticed that Halloween translated into “let me find the skankiest costume EVER” for most of the women.  There is a different air about it in New Orleans, though.  Nakedness is celebrated at times.  One word: Hippies.
                There were literally warehouses dedicated to Halloween paraphernalia all over the city for weeks preceding the big event.  Advertisements for “The House of Shock” flooded the air waves.  The House of Shock is a HUGE production put on by freak shows.  I heard stories of what went on there, and I wasn’t really interested considering I am the biggest chicken I know.  I didn’t dress up. I didn’t go to the House of Shock.  I just played pool.  If I hadn't been so poor, I might have considered attending VOODOO music festival.  But alas, no dinero. 
               The food at the restaurant started making more sense to me as I learned about the culture from where it originated.  It was like I learned something new every time I went in.  A lot of the people on the wait staff spoke Spanish, so it started becoming part of my every day vernacular.  “Permiso” and “A tras”, meaning excuse me and behind you, were some of the first terms that I became comfortable using. This was mainly because that’s what everyone said, regardless if you were “gringo” or not.   Slowly, many other Spanish words started coming into fruition in my brain.  A large part of my learning process was a result of listening to others around me. Considering a lot of the kitchen was Spanish speaking only, it was learn or don’t communicate.  I, of course, had taken two years of Spanish in high school, but I don’t think it really stuck.  I probably shouldn’t have skipped out on Senora G’s senior Spanish class so much my senior year.  You know, I had to go work on the yearbook (aka, I was going to go to Burger King with Nikki).
                We were now in November and slowly the temperatures began to decrease.  I started making plans for Thanksgiving, but discovered that I really didn’t have any money to go home.  I was barely paying the bills still, and the apartment idea was slipping farther from reach.  I opted to spend Thanksgiving with Will’s family.  GG had already started to plan the menu early on, as two sets of Will’s sisters were planning to come to town.  I thought it would be a great opportunity to meet Will’s older sister, and I also couldn’t wait to see A.L. (code for Will’s sister right above him).  Little did I know that something was about to happen that would certainly put a damper on things. Adulthood and everything that my dad had warned me about was about to bitch slap me. 
                

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Where Everybody Knows Your Name


                Transitioning into living in a new house completely different than what I was used to was an interesting challenge.  Don’t get me wrong, Will’s Mother’s house is spectacular.  It is an old style New Orleanian shotgun house that was erected in the 1930’s.  For those of you who are unfamiliar with the term “shotgun”, it refers to the style in which the homes are built.  You walk in the front door and you are in the living room, you open the next door and you are in the dining room, the next door is a bedroom with a bathroom attached,  and the last door is the kitchen, all in linear progression.   In the case of Will’s Mother, rooms were later added to the side of the house as well as in the very back, thus; making it was a modified shotgun.  My first thought was, why would anyone build a house like this? THERE IS NO PRIVACY. PERIOD.  After a short period of thought, I remembered something from my architecture days.  During the time of no air conditioning, people had to get really creative with the way they built buildings.  The shotgun home was the perfect solution because when one opened the front door and the back door the house created its own ventilation.  Even during our modern times of central air and heat most houses in New Orleans only have window units, and the residents STILL stick to the front door/ back door method of cooling.
                Because this particular home has 14 ft. ceilings, it’s nearly impossible to cool the entire thing off at one time.  Usually, we would keep the door to the living room, where the television lived, closed off so that we could turn on the window unit.  The poor machine never really did make the room feel like an icebox, but it at least made the climate slightly more bearable.  I actually don’t ever remember feeling completely cooled off ANYWHERE I went in New Orleans.  Even the central a/c at the restaurant had trouble keeping up with the blistering temperatures.  I remember a few shifts where the whole unit just froze up completely, and we had to run around trying not to drip sweat on the plates.  New Orleans is truly “hawt as hell” in the summer.  Being from Texas, I am used to some heat, trust me.  The heat in New Orleans , however, is accompanied by 100% humidity every day.  In simpler terms, this just means that you constantly have a slight to severe sweat glaze over your entire body, no matter what the temperature, at all times.  I soon found that there really was no point in trying to put on makeup, as it would melt right off my face every time I attempted.
                Anyway, the entire interior of the house is lined with these beautiful beveled wooden panels, even the ceilings.  Sometimes I would lie on the bed looking straight up and wonder how difficult it must have been to put those things all the way up there.  Having a contractor’s daughter’s eye, I would also spot all of the discrepancies in the paneling, cleverly hidden to the naked eye.  The floor was real hardwood, not this fake stuff you see in a lot of modern day houses.  It creaked and moaned in some areas, making it impossible to go to the bathroom at night without someone hearing you.  The entire house created its own acoustics as well.  I could hear most of everything that was being said in the living room while standing all the way back in the kitchen.  GG, my nickname for Will’s Mom, has it all so cleverly decorated, too.  There are baker’s wracks full of books, and decorative snakes, fish, and crawfish on the walls in the living room.  In the dining room, there is a HUGE candelabra on the wall with pictures of Will’s Grandmother’s and relatives. In the kitchen there are hot chili peppers Christmas lights and a Salvador Dali print.  As eccentric as it all sounds, it is one of the warmest and inviting homes I still to this day have ever entered. 
                Every afternoon when I got home, that is if we weren’t down by the levy or at the fly, it was the same routine.  At 4 o’clock the local news would come on, by 6 GG was home and watching Brian Williams on NBC, and right after would switch the station over to Wheel of Fortune.  I can’t tell you how much we laughed at each other as we all sat there screaming out ridiculous solutions to the “things, phrases, people, and places”. 
                However, after my 21s t birthday our afternoon time options changed up a little bit, and it was as if the flood gates to the adult world opened up like a snake’s unhinged jaw. I could now go to all of the places where people were REALLY hanging out.  For those of you who are familiar with the sitcom “Cheers”, it kind of hits the nail on the head for the ENTIRE population of the city.  Every neighborhood has what New Orleanians like to refer to as, “the home bar”. The “home bar” is the one you ALWAYS go to, usually in your neighborhood, where everybody knows your name.  In New Orleans, you are never more than 100 yards away from one.  In fact, where I was staying, there was one only a block away.
 Our “bro time” with Will’s friends eventually shifted into going to play pool in the evenings.  I had only ever played at our neighbor’s house a few times growing up, so I was literally starting from ground zero.  My first home bar, although it was not in the neighborhood, was The Buddha Belly on Magazine.  Will said that back in the day when no one really cared how old you were in Louisiana, they would all go there to play pool and try to score booze.  The Buddha Belly was one of six bars owned by Igor, a very well known entrepreneur in town.  If you went to one of Igor’s bars, it was like you had gone to all of them, really.  They were all kind of decorated the same, they all had pool tables and gaming, and they all had coin laundry.  Brilliant.  Need to do some laundry?  Why not grab a few beers or ten while you’re doing it.  We began frequenting the Buddha every day, because frankly, pool is fun.  As we all began to get a little more skill to our game, the competition in the air grew exponentially.  I was becoming a pool shark, a pool shark who despite my distaste for beer, was forced to settle for the $2 PBR.


Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Holy Hand Grenade, Batman


                August 2008 flew by in a fury, and before I knew it was almost time for my 21st birthday.  We all know what that means, especially in a town like New Orleans.  My boss had already agreed to let me have the day off, as well as the day after.  I had actually been to Bourbon Street before, but I knew it was going to be under a few different terms this time. 
                Let’s flashback to a younger, adolescent, awkward Megan, shall we?  My FAVORITE place to vacation was New Orleans growing up.  It was so different back then, for I saw it with child-like eyes.  The French Quarter, Café Du Monde, and the French Market were all like a trip to the past.  My Mom and Dad always made it a point to make our vacations educational in some way.  So, of course, our walk through the quarter was filled with historical information and educational tours.  I remember the first time being in Jackson Square and the magnificent St. Louis Cathedral.  I remember BEGGING my parents, along with my other siblings, to let us take a ride on the mule-pulled carriages.  I remember my dad and mom using all of their limbs to cover up all of our eyes as the driver took a turn onto Bourbon Street.  I guess they had not anticipated a peep show for their children that day. 
                The second time my parents took us to New Orleans, tragedy fell upon us nearly ruining the whole gig.  At the time, we had a 91’ gray Chevy Suburban that was used for our family vehicle.  I distinctly remember the way that thing smelled, corn chips and b.o. Not only was it the family vehicle, but also the Boy Scout mobile.  The days following a week at scout camp that thing was almost unbearable to climb into.  Anyway, the DAY before we were supposed to leave for New Orleans the ole’ girl gave out from transmission failure.  All five children were crying, even Matthew.  Dad announced to the family that we were probably going to have to cancel the trip, and my two little brothers’ hopes of seeing The Big Easy were thrown out the window. That is until Dave and Suze disappeared that afternoon.  While they were gone, we were all praying that they had gone to go get a rental or something of that nature. Daddy called around 8 o’clock and told all of us to come outside because they had a surprise.  We were all standing in the front yard when this shiny, green van turned onto our county road from the highway, drove down the road, turned into our driveway, and into our parking spot.  David and Suzie were sitting in the front seats with smiles on their faces.  My siblings and I were jumping around like heathens screaming “YAYAH!”
                That was the beginning of MANY adventures in that 98’s Dodge Caravan.  It was the van that saved our vacation to New Orleans, it was the van that I learned to drive in, and it was the van my parents made me drive my brothers to school in L haha.
                My second time to visit Bourbon was right after I had moved to the city.  Oddly enough, a young man who had been a missionary in our area, of whom my family and I were very fond, called me up and said that he was in town with some co-workers.  Of all places in the city, this guy wanted to meet us on BOURBON. Irony.  Will and I headed down there and met the group of returned missionaries in front of Razoo, one of the most well-known night clubs.  I wasn’t 21 yet, so I had to watch as this group of young LDS men went into the Cat’s Meow and sang a few Karaoke songs.  They all came out giggling like school girls, no one would have even had a clue that they were all sober.  Bourbon Street, Mormon style.
                The day of my 21st we were with JJ and D.  We went over to their place to discuss our plans for the evening, as nothing had been solidified.  I remember sitting there and JJ and Will were ping ponging ideas back and forth about where the best place to take me would be.  All of the sudden JJ stopped, looked at me, and said “Wait, have you ever smoked hookah before?” “A whattah?” I replied.  “Hookah, it’s shisha, aka fancy flavored tobacco, and you smoke it out of a hose”.  “ummmm…”, I said.  It was settled then, we were going to go downtown, start at Frenchman, go to the Hookah Cafe’, and see where the night took us.  I was only along for the ride, because heaven knew I wasn’t driving.
                Disclaimer: To my readers who are shocked at my complete honesty, don’t be.  Let’s face it, everyone’s lives turn out the way they do because of their own personal choices.  Like I said in the beginning of this project, the decisions that I made led me on a journey with a positive ending result.  It might not be the positive ending result that was expected, but somewhere along the line I created my own expectations.  I love you all.
                ANYWAYS, Will and I went to pick up JJ and D around 8 p.m. and JJ agreed to be the chauffer for the night.  We headed downtown and ended up in front of the Hookah Café about 15 minutes later.  So, let’s say it’s YOUR 21st birthday and your friends are taking you out on a night on the town.  What is the first thing that you grab?  Well, we got to the door and the door woman asked for our I.D.s.  

...........................Whoops.

 What kind of human being forgets their I.D. ON THEIR 21ST BIRTHDAY? I propose that it is one with frizzy red hair and an air bubble for a brain.  JJ just shook his head, then started laughing at me like a hyena, and we all loaded back into their car to go retrieve it.  Forty minutes later, we returned… with my I.D.  
                And so the night began, the Hookah Café was cool, man.  There were hippies everywhere smoking out of these alien looking pipe things with like 4 hoses coming out from every direction.  I think JJ ordered our hookah.  I think that the name of our shisha actually did have the word alien in it.  It was absolutely amazing. It was so smooth and tasted like passion fruit.  I was kind of hooked on the hookah.  JJ bursted my sober bubble by buying my first shot of Patron.  We went to the bar, bar tender poured two shots, gave me some salt and a lemon wedge.  Of course I didn’t know what the hell, haha.  JJ gave me instructions “lick the back of your hand, shake some salt on it, shoot the patron, lick the salt, and put the lemon in your mouth”.  It all seemed so complicated.  So, we shot, I licked, and I sucked the lemon, and my esophagus caught on fire. 
                After the Café, we decided it would be a good idea to go to Bourbon.  I’ll be completely honest, after that shot of Patron, I was kind of feeling warm and fuzzy.  When we got there, JJ handed me this green bottle thing that had a hand grenade at the bottom.  “New Orleans hand grenade, dude” he said with a Cheshire grin.  It was delicious.  I drank it real fast, too fast.  The rest of the night involved more gallivanting and more hand grenades.  I fell asleep on some random steps on our way back to the car, and I’m pretty sure Will puked on someone’s vehicle.  On my 21st birthday, I was on Bourbon St, in New Orleans, drinking hurricanes and hand grenades.  Not boasting, just saying.
                The next day I had a hangover the size of Texas.  My first New Orleans hangover.  Holy hand grenade, Batman.  Will walked into the bathroom as I was desperately splashing water on my face and said, “Welcome to the REAL New Orleans.” 

Thursday, July 5, 2012

We Rep' Tha 17th, Ya Heard?


                My head began to be stimulated from a variety of different cultures in those first few weeks.  Initially, I lived in what they call “Pigeon Town” down in the 17th Ward (Lil’ Wayne’s hood, homie).  The neighborhood is predominantly African American, demographically, and is right down the street from Hollygrove.  Hollygrove is one of the most notoriously dangerous neighborhoods in the city of New Orleans.  Don’t fret, I was far enough away to not be in the thick, but close enough, nonetheless, to hear gun shots at night time.  Right down on the river bend by the J.P. /Orleans Parish line is where I made that first nest.  I never really felt eminent danger in the beginning, being all naïve and what not.  After all, the street I lived on was full of businesses. This, of course, illegitimately created a safety net in my mind. 
                Will was one of the only white kids in his little band of neighborhood friends from back in the day.  The culture of NOLA runs so deep and crosses so many racial lines, thus creating this wonderful melting pot that I previously spoke of.  There aren’t stigma’s attached to social situations where there is a mix of people.  Folks in the neighborhood say “Hey, how you doing!?” as you walk past each other on the sidewalk, regardless of what color your skin is. 
                With that being said, people still like to rep’ their ward and area of the city. West bank, East bank, 9th ward, 7th ward, 17th ward, or wherever you were, each division was distinguishable in their own way. Each part of the city contained its own unique place in history.  Will and his best friend (we’ll call him JJ) always had big dreams of holding down the 17th with their music.  Music is how Will and I even began to be involved in the first place. JJ lived just around the corner in an apartment with his girlfriend D.  Their apartment was right across the street from JJ’s grandmamma’s house where his mom, his sister, his grandmamma, paw-paw, and a little Chihuahua named Coco stayed.  When Will introduced me to JJ and all of his family, it was like they immediately adopted me as one of their own.  D, JJ’s girlfriend, and I hit it off.  We came from completely different backgrounds and cultures, but she was one of my first friends.
                Will and I began frequenting JJ and D’s about two to three times a week.  Mainly,D and I would just sit around and hang out watching Cat Williams and whatever else came on BET while Will and JJ worked on music.  The two of them were like frick and frack, JJ of course writing lyrics over Will’s beats.  Those were the beginning days of big dreams and making it into the New Orleans Hip Hop scene.  At the time, I had dabbled into writing lyrics on top of Will’s tracks, but I had predominantly been a singer/songwriter folksy type genre.  JJ and Will were two key players in my style change, and trust me, JJ ALWAYS had an opinion on my music.  When I began to really start writing to Will’s tracks, JJ was the one who encouraged me to make a voice of my own.  He told me I needed to get rid of that country twang if I wanted to be a singer in this genre of music.  It stressed me out.   However, over the course of 4 years, I did indeed develop my own style, and no, I didn’t get rid of that country twang.  Why? Because that is who I am and where I come from, no matter what kind of music I am singing.  About 5 months ago we showed JJ some projects I had been working on, and thankfully he approved.  He even told me, “damn, I don’t know what you’ve been doing, but you’ve done it.  You don’t even sound like you”.
                Anyway, I think it was the excitement that JJ possessed about the music that REALLY helped push Will, JJ, and I to begin pursuing the next level. 
                Meanwhile, work was really kind of sucking.  For some reason I just couldn’t prove myself the way that I needed to in order to gain my boss’ approval. I’m pretty sure they hated me in the beginning. I think they looked at me as a naïve girl who didn’t know what she was doing.  Why? Because Pennsylvania kept talking to me, dammit!  I’ve always been a hard worker, and I’ve always done my job to the best of my ability.  However, Pennsylvania was just so fascinating and so different than any girl I had met.  I couldn’t NOT talk to her, I mean we worked together nearly every day! First of all, she was a vegan.  I had never even heard of veganism.  Honestly, at the time, the sound of it kind of sucked.  NO animal products, period.  Somehow, she presented it in a way that I kind of understood, though.  In later years, I would meet a very interesting man who also was vegan.  He was so extreme into animal rights, that he even made ME feel guilty about eating a burger. 
ANYWAY, Pennsylvania was a strong female who knew exactly what she wanted in life.  She worked and still works in the film industry and had very interesting stories about famous people she had met.  Being from Texas, the most famous person I had ever seen up to that point was Mark Nestler, and that was from afar.   She, at the time, had a crush on a gentleman that she is now currently serious with.  I got to hear all of the details of their relationship, which was interesting as well.  Pennsylvania was one of the most open minded people that I still to this day have ever met, and she had VERY interesting ideas about relationships.  She was VERY open about sex, haha.  It makes me giggle even now some of the things she said, but for the sake of my more conservative readers, I won’t delve into.  She did say that one day she wanted to present the idea to her future husband of taking on her last name.  She even knew someone back in Pennsylvania who had swapped names in that fashion with her husband.  Oh the times, the times.  
My first few months were just a big fat culture shock.  Everyone needs to hear different ideas at some point in their life though.  How else can you decide where you stand?  Everything in my life, up to that point, had been rather one sided.  This wasn’t a bad thing, and I wouldn’t change my upbringing for ANYTHING.  However, something started happening to the way I thought about things, people, and issues.  I was not in Texas anymore.
               
                 

Thursday, June 28, 2012

The Fly, The Levy, and all of the Smellies


As I began to settle into my new environment, I found myself starting to relax a little bit.  There is nothing quite like moving to a new place where no one knows who you are.  There are no expectations, no one telling you what they think you should do, and no one honestly gives a crap anyway.  Especially not in New Orleans
I’m talking about men walking down the street wearing a red dress and high heels, women not shaving their legs, and the rich Jews rubbing elbows with them all on Mardi Gras Day.  There’s this thing called a second line where people march down the street with a brass band, and then EVERYONE comes out to dance.  Leave your cares behind, and come out to the swamp.  In New Orleans, they celebrate life every day.
                 It was kind of hard at first for me to get into the mentality.  I'll be honest, coming from a conservative part of the country, everything seemed a little bit off color. The everyday vernacular of the locals even confused me a bit.  Rather than saying “I’m going to the grocery store”, they say, “I’m going to make groceries”.   A coke is a “cold drank”, and it’s not “oil”, it is “earl”.
                I was mesmerized by it all, and it felt amazing.  I felt like I was in the land of the free. 
                That is, until I discovered I was only making about $200 bucks a week at the new restaurant.  Saving up for the new place wasn’t going to go as quickly as I anticipated.  Of course as a dumb 20 year old, I didn’t see the urgency of the situation.  Since I was only working during the day, I had my afternoons to go out and experience the city.  I wasn’t 21 yet, so going to bars, which is the main form of entertainment in NOLA, was out of the question.   It was during this time that Will introduced me to “The Fly” and the levy.  
                So, Will had this group of guys that he had been friends with for a long time and we would all go chill in the evening time at “The Fly”(a river view park behind the Audubon Zoo).  Of course, I was ALWAYS the only chick.  I’ve always had the ability to rub elbows with the fellows and be accepted.  They would all bring their “40’s” and watch the sunset.  At the time, beer disgusted me.  I couldn’t even attempt to keep up with their drinking habits.  Nevertheless, it was on the banks of the Mississippi with a group of smelly boys that I witnessed some of the most beautiful sunsets that I have ever seen in my life. Exhibit A:

The thing I loved most about my time in New Orleans was there was always time to appreciate beauty.  Time goes by just a little bit slower there.
If we couldn’t stake claim to our last gazebo at The Fly, then we would always go down to the tower at the levy.  Same premise, just a little more hands on.  You could go back into the woods and hike down trails that the homeless river dwellers cleared.   
The boys would build fires and throw rocks at beer bottles to see who could make them break.  One time, one of the fellows even built a homemade potato gun and fired off potatoes at the stagnant barges.  The boom of the exploding potato against the rusted steel pierced the air like a firecracker.
As the weeks flew by and I settled into the new job, I began to become more acquainted with my new coworkers too.  A few girls from Pennsylvania, a rambunctious blonde from Chicago, and a VERY hip California girl were some of my first friends.  I had never even touched a bottle of wine in my entire life until I started working at the restaurant.  When the owner asked me if I as comfortable opening wine, I had to say no.  It was the awesome blonde from Chicago that took the time and showed me step by step how to do it.  If it weren’t for her, I would have been clueless.  For some reason, my boss wasn’t very fond of me because of the conversations I would have with one of the Pennsylvania girls. The fact that I couldn’t open wine didn’t exactly work to my advantage either. Pennsylvania was fascinating though.  She was the type of girl who could talk to strangers all day, and BOY did we have a lot to talk about!
These people were cool, they were real.  They weren’t from Texas or Louisiana, they weren’t conservative bible belt Christians.  They were different.  They liked to drink red wine and talk about REAL issues.  They weren’t concerned about small town gossip.  A few of them were even, dare I say, Liberals.
I was totally diggin’ this new life.


Saturday, June 23, 2012

Hey Napoleon!



                In this entry I wanted to begin by backtracking a little bit. For those of you who don’t know me very well, it might help for me to give you a little background information about myself so that you understand some of my perceptions.  I come from a very loving home.  I am the middle of five children (Heather, Matthew, Megan, Jacob, Caleb) and we were thankfully raised right by my parents, Doo Doo and Tha Suze.  It was a very conservative, sheltered environment in which I was able to flourish.  In high school I was the goody two shoes over achiever, and I think I was 18 the first time I ever uttered a cuss word.   When I previously mentioned I come from a small town, I’m talking population 2,300 or so in the heart of the Bible Belt.  People leading “alternative lifestyles” weren’t really something you saw widely accepted where I come from, and that’s just the truth.   I always found it kind of weird that Christianity reigned supreme, but there was so much intolerance toward anyone or anything that didn’t fit into the mold.  Heck, I was made fun of in high school because I wasn’t part of the congregational norm.  My family is LDS, aka “Mormon”.  I know how this is sounding, circa age 18 ½  I started getting the “rebel itch”. 
Which reminds me, for those of you who have been following, I just remembered that I was actually 20 when I made the move, not 19.  I was 19 going into that last year of school, and I turned 20 that fall.  I forget how old I am now, sorry for the confusion.  However, same age bracket, same level of not knowing your butt from a hole in the ground. 
Onward: So, Wednesday, August 13, 2008 I arrived at the restaurant wearing a yellow blouse and black trousers.  I came in through the side door, and when my eyes beheld what was in front of me I had to do a double take.  The first thing I noticed was the curly, sandy blonde fro.  Then as he turned around, and at first sight of his face, I had to seriously question myself. “Hi, I’m ******, you’re one of the new girls, right?”
This dude seriously looked EXACTLY like Napoleon Dynamite.
  I jest ye not, it was uncanny.  The resemblance was so shocking, I even asked him later on that day “umm…has anyone ever told you that you look exactly like, um, John Heder?”  His response: “Yeah, I’ve heard that before, but I don’t see it”. 
Obviously, my first character to be discussed, codename: Napoleon.  There was another very nice young man working that day with blonde hair, charming speech, and beautiful clothes. He was my first up close glimpse of that “alternative lifestyle”.  He was such a sweetheart, so codename: Sweetie Pie.
Thus began my day, with Napoleon and the Sweetie Pie.  They started showing me the ropes on how to do stuff, “coffee, in a filter, in the coffee maker,” stated Napoleon.  “White table cloths, butcher paper, plates, napkins,” chimed in sweetie pie. “Oh yeah, and we make our own drinks everyday,”  Napoleon chirped.  I’ll be completely honest, the fact that I had JUST came from a restaurant where all I had to do was refill my sugar caddies and sweep my section at the end of the shift  made all of the prep crap look pretty lame.  That was my lazy side thinking, though.
“Let me show you how to cut the Limes,” Napoleon offered. Little did I know that over the course of four years, I would cut close to one million.  Okay, that might be an exaggeration, but dammit I cut a lot of freaking limes!
When service began for the day, after an hour and a half of prepping, I began to see all of the beautiful food coming out of the window.  I had never seen food like this before in my entire life.  If it wasn’t American food, I.e. , Chili’s, Cheddar’s, TGIF’S, etc.. OR not covered in beans, cheese, and served with tortilla chips, I was at a loss.  Actually, thanks to my Cajun roots, I did know most of that stuff too.  This stuff, however, was a HUGE mystery.  I remember that first week when I had to try the ceviche.  Fish marinated in lime juice? What the hell?  In that moment I wasn’t a huge fan, but as time passed it became a staple and something that I craved.  By the way, it’s super healthy too.  A lot of cuisine there was healthy.  As I started to meet more of my coworkers, I started to be more exposed to weird ideas like veganism and being conscious of planet earth.  “Hi, my name is Megan, and I like to eat meat and use Clorox products when I clean my house.” Oh no, no, no.  I was about to get schooled in environmental consciousness, but we’ll save that for future blogs. 
Napoleon was a very interesting character.  He had served in the Navy, but had to be released for health issues.  He was the kind of guy to tell you EXACTLY what he was thinking, and  not really one of those to keep comments to himself.  He was the one who informed me of the sexual orientation of everyone who worked there.  He also knew all of the juicy gossip, as if I cared.  I was in a severe cultural shock.  He also made a Mormon joke on my first day, and when he noticed the awkward expression on my face he said, “Oh crap, you’re a Mormon aren’t you?” 
Unfortunately, that October Napoleon was relieved of his duties at the restaurant for not showing up on Halloween night.  A few years later in passing he told me that he really regretted doing that.  Listen, there was a lot of prep to do at this place, and like everywhere it had its crap, but compared to other restaurants around town it was like a haven. 
In conclusion, my first day was not as expected.  I was told by the boss that I was going to start out as a back waiter (server slave), and work my way up.  My own progression would determine how quickly I would become a server, and it would also determine how quickly I would be able to move into night time shifts.
 I had no idea what I was getting myself into.


Monday, June 18, 2012

"New Orleans is Hawt as Hell in da Summatime"


                I triumphantly arrived to Uptown New Orleans at 12:07 p.m. July 29, 2008.  The AC in the old CR-V struggled to keep up with the heat the entire journey.  As I opened the door and flew out into the busy little street, nearly getting run down by the cars driving TOO FAST, I noticed I was kind of gross.  I quickly found out that no one really cares what you look like there.  There’s no point in putting make-up on when the humidity is 100% EVERY DAY.  New Orleans= hipsterville, no make-up, no deodorant, no problem.  Hell, just dred-up your locks and you’ll be just fine.
                As I was opening the iron gate to the old house, an elderly black gentleman walked past me and sang out, “Sheeeew, New Orleans is HAWT AS HELL in da summatime”.  I would later learn the appropriate response to this proclamation would have been, “YEA, YOU RIGHT!”
                So, here’s the thing about knowing everything when you are 20, you really don’t know crap. The euphoria of life is from the confidence in believing that you want or want to do something.  When you finally get slapped by the icy pimp hand of reality, elementary knowledge starts to sink in once again.  Remember that $1500 dollars I had saved up?  Not QUITE enough to find a place right off the bat.  The cheapest apartment I could find was $750, plus $750 for deposit. It’s basic math, 750 plus 750 equals 1500, equals broke. This also equals no gas money, no smokes, no student loan payment, for which I do not have a degree to show for, by the way, and no cell phone payment.  I obviously couldn’t afford to use all of my savings right from the get go, so I set out to get myself in the NOLA workforce. It was like eating a big old slice of humble pie that I couldn’t even afford to eat HA.
 I started to notice a few snags in my master plan. No one wanted to hire a waitress with only 2 ½ months experience.  I applied to every restaurant up and down St. Charles Ave. in the BLISTERING heat sweating my buns off. The service industry is the heart and soul of New Orleans, and nearly every person that I met while there was a member of the force or had been at some point in their lives. However, everywhere I went the story was the same, “sorry, we’re in our slow months, come back in October”.  October!? I didn’t have time to lose, and I’ve never been the type to be easily broken.   After the third day of “so sorry”, I decided to see what was up on craigslist.  There wasn’t very much to choose from, but, I noticed a post that read “Bistro seeking back waiters and servers”.  Happenstance.
                Of course I clicked on the link, and in doing so, I ultimately set forth my path in motion.  No, I didn’t know what a back waiter was, but I surely wanted to be one.  The ad was very brief, only stating “Small restaurant on Magazine seeking back waiters and servers.  Please call for more information 555-555-5555. “ So I called, and spoke with a very nice lady who invited me to come for an interview. 
                The Lord has blessed me with the ability to smile through it all.  Honey, did I EVER smile as I sat down with the owner and she asked me a few questions.  I feel like it was my saving grace, for a few years later as I was going through my file I stumbled across a note on my application that said “very bubbly personality, nice smile”.  Needless to say, I was hired.  My philosophy: your uniform is not complete without a smile…..even if it is sequins.  I have my high school years to thank for that.
                This interview was on a Tuesday, August 12, 2008 to be exact.  My first day was the next day, Wednesday, August 13.  I was asked to wear black slacks and a nice bright blouse and to show up at 10:00 a.m.  So, I did. Thus began the beginning of a journey that would test my limits, thicken my skin, and introduce me to the most vivid characters I had ever been exposed to.  Welcome to New Orleans, Megan.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

In the Beginning, there was a CR-V and an Idiot



                I’ll be completely honest, I moved to New Orleans to be with my boyfriend Will.  Also, I was sick of the same old same old of Southeast Texas.  I was 20 then, and I didn’t have a CLUE about ANYTHING.  I had spent my last semester using my student loan money to make sneak trips to New Orleans.  I’ll never forget the first time I went as an “adult” (meaning over the age of 18, I wasn’t an adult mentally).  I actually had the blessing of my parents to drive to NOLA in my 97’ CR-V to visit Will and his family for Christmas. 
                I was so nervous on that four hour drive.  I left home around 8 in the morning the day after Christmas, and set out to find my future.  Just me, the open road, and Rachel Yamagata (Megan, the emo years).   When I got to Baton Rouge, there was an idiot in a red truck who held up a sign against his driver's side window that read, “what’s your number?”  It was at that moment that I knew I wasn’t in Texas anymore, and I was dealing with a WHOLE new breed of redneck.
                That first trip to NOLA was intoxicating. Will spent the entire trip chauffeuring me around the city to show me the sights.  It was so different than the mundane SeTex country side I was so acclimated to viewing.  The elementary school he had attended years ago was in a building that was erected circa 1920 in the middle of a neighborhood lined with shotgun houses. I must admit, I thought on my French roots and immediately felt like I belonged.  I fell hopelessly in love with the scene.  THAT is the charm of the city, that is why so many people call it their refuge.  There is such a sense of unity and togetherness everywhere you go.  “How you doing?”  or “okay baaybay” are common things you would hear from any given person on a daily basis.  My first impression, though, was not of the people, but of the beauty of the city itself. New Orleans is like something out of a period piece.  It’s classic, and a lot of it is unchanged as the decades pass by.  The huge houses on St. Charles Ave and the charm of the French Quarter, still as it was a hundred years ago, are breath taking. I could go on and on.  If you’ve never been there, there isn’t really a whole lot that I could put into words that would accurately describe the magnificence.  As a previous architecture student (who thought she knew what was up), I was hooked.  It was like sugar for my sweet tooth, air in my lungs, and music to my ears.
                I didn’t want to come home.  That was when I knew I wanted to live there.  I immediately started developing the plan in my head on how it was going to become a reality.
                So, I’ve discussed the CR-V part of the title, let me expand on the idiot part. 
                I decided that my $7.25 an hour job wasn’t going to get me anywhere fast, so my dear friend from high school hooked me up with a server job.  I was BIG ballin’ at the end of June with $1000 bucks in my bank account, and I knew that the time was approaching.  I put in my two weeks prior to the last week in July, told my mom on July 27th that was I moving July 29th.  That’s right, this idiot gave her parents a two day notice of evacuation of the premises with $1500 IN DA BANK.  Peace out SeTex. 
                Ballin. HA. It makes me “smh” when I think about it. The plan was, I was going to move in with my boyfiend’s mom until I could find a new job and get a place on my own. I would enroll in school as soon as I had things "figured out".  That morning of July 29, 2008 I loaded up my CR-V with all of my clothes, said a very sad goodbye to my parents, and hit the road.  Windows were rolled down, shades were on, cigarette was hanging out of my mouth, and Brand New was blasting.  “Jude Law, and a Semester Abroad”.  That was one of my life’s greatest “Movie moments”.
                The next coming weeks and months would be NOT as I expected.  I was twenty, in love with life, and quite frankly, stupid.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Confessions of a Humbled Servant: Forward


Confessions of a Humbled Servant
                So as you all know, I just spent the past four years of my life living it up jazzy style in “The Big Easy”.   I kind of fell off of the radar, and the rest of the planet for that matter.  Life in New Orleans was QUITE the humbling experience for me.  Jumping out of the proverbial “mother ship”, aka the parent’s umbrella, turned out to be the biggest challenge of my life.   Since all of my laptops kept getting infected by a rogue worm and dying, I didn’t really have the internet.  That is unless you count the Samsung Continuum I carry around in my purse (I hate getting on my phone for internet access, by the way).  As far as never calling anyone from said Samsung, I’ll be completely honest, there’s no excuse other than my head just wasn’t there.  Don’t get me wrong, I love my family and friends DEARLY!  Life in New Orleans just does that to you, you forget that there’s another world out there and that you are literally in a bowl sinking into the earth.
  I would say after four years of residence my emotions are actually a little jumbled.  I experienced things that I probably just shouldn’t have, but I also experienced some pretty cool things too.  I met the most insanely awesome people I’ve ever met, but I also met the scums of the earth.  Sure, you can say “that’s just everywhere, Megz”, to which my reply would be “I don’t think so, Tim”.  There are things that happen in New Orleans that just simply DO NOT happen anywhere else.  There are some things that I experienced that, if you weren’t there with me, I will probably never talk about, and we’ll leave it at that. 

That’s not really where I want to go with this blog, I really want to talk about my good experiences.  I worked in the SAME restaurant the entire time that I was there.  It was like home, like family, in all of its dysfunctional glory.  I have made ties there that I will probably have for the rest of my life.  Every day was a new day different from the one before.  I met people from all over the world, and I learned how to speak conversational Spanish.  Not too shabby, if I do say so myself.  Every day I would think to myself,” man I need to be writing this stuff down!”  I was always taught that a journal is a very good habit.  If I didn’t have time to call my maw-maw though, I sure as hell didn’t have time to write in a journal. My point is this, everyone has a story.  Everyone that I met in New Orleans had a story, and through meeting them, I started to author my own. 

This blog is going to be comprised of the good times, some bad times, and the ridiculous things that I witnessed during my stay.  It will be a testament to the growth that I experienced.  I moved to New Orleans as a naïve girl from Texas, and left as a strong woman who knows EXACTLY what she wants out of life. For all the good and bad things, I am grateful.  A man at my new job told me that “New Orleans is the cesspool of Louisiana and should just fall off into the Gulf”.   I looked at him and politely said “that cesspool helped make me who I am today”.  Go figure.  This stubborn redhead had to find out for herself.

For the sake of respect, I will use code names for my characters mentioned in this blog. Friends, if you message me and give me your permission, I will use your real names, otherwise, you will be called something like “snow white” or “guy with the long hair”.   Get ready to have your minds BLOWN and laissez le bon temps rouler!!!