Sunday, April 28, 2019

Sick days

I pride myself on not getting sick very often, but this week was an exception. I had to take the entire week off, with a sore throat and lots of congestion. That's the longest I think I have ever stayed home. I have been sicker, but this was a longer duration. Some of it also has to do with the fact that my present job includes interacting with the public all the time, so it's more important for me to stay away.

It all started on Good Friday, when I woke up with a slightly sore throat. No problem, I just figured it was dehydration or a canker sore or something. I feel bad; that was the day I was in the barbershop, touching people all day. I hope I didn't start an epidemic!

On the day before Easter, I wanted to run up Mueller Park, which is just over 3 miles up, 6.5 miles round trip. But when I got just over a mile up, I wasn't feeling very good. My throat and lungs hurt. I might have been able to power through it, but I really had no desire to, which is unusual. So I only went two miles instead of six.

On Easter Sunday, I felt a little worse.

But Easter night, I had to keep drinking water to soothe my sore throat. I had to get up every hour to release the water and blow my nose. And when I woke up on Monday morning, I was just too congested and sore to go to work, so I stayed home.

That pattern continued three more nights. All I felt like doing was watching trashy TV shows. One of my Sundance coworkers wanted me to help out with a book she was working on, so I did work for that while I was home, only to find out at the end of the week that the publishing deal fell through.

As I was sick, I kept thinking, "How do people binge watch stuff when they're healthy?" I just feel so lazy and worthless watching TV all day! I'm sad that I got sick this week, when the weather was so nice.

Monday was Earth Day, and I wanted to do something environmental, but I was in no shape for a run or hike. So I went to the Wild Rose Trail to try to pull up myrtle spurge. That did require physical exertion, but I did it anyway. I feel like I'm hardly making a dent in it. But it's still better than nothing. One couple asked if I considered it a weed; I explained how it was an invasive species that took over the hillside. The woman picked up a piece, but I said, "Oh, don't touch it! This milky stuff can give you a rash." And indeed, I have a tiny bit of rash on my wrist, where my sleeves and gloves didn't cover. So even though I didn't pull much myself, I was able to educate people about it. And I only started doing it because I was educated last year. I should make more time to get rid of it.
The yellow flower on the right is arrowleaf balsamroot, one of my favorite wildflowers. It is tragic that the spurge competes with such a wonderful plant. There were also some vetch plants being crowded out by the spurge.
On Friday, I was finally feeling better, but still not well enough to work. My parents were camping on Antelope Island. On Friday afternoon, I rode with my sister to see them there, my favorite island. We went to the visitor center, but I was in no condition to do anything else.


Saturday was my scheduled day off. I had heard that the original Golden Spike was on display at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, but it was the last weekend there. I wanted to see it, so I did. I was glad to see it, but I was unimpressed with the exhibit. There were absolutely no explanatory signs for the spikes. The spikes have writing on them, but it was too hard to read, and I would have appreciated a caption. The rest of the exhibit was boring black-and-white photographs of the nineteenth century. There were stereoscopes, which are cool, but you can only look at so many. I liked the other museum exhibits better than the one I went to see.

Last night I wanted to try Empire Chinese Kitchen, a relatively new restaurant in North Salt Lake. But the Asian woman "helping" us spoke almost no English. We wanted a combination plate, but she told us we couldn't get what we wanted. She couldn't answer our most basic questions, and we literally did not know what we were getting when we ordered. I feel conflicted. I think it's great that immigrants can come here and get jobs and be successful and share their culture. But if you're running a business, you need to be able to communicate with your customers! I feel super racist, like one of those MAGA types saying "We speak English here!" But it was a frustrating experience. That was my worst experience with a language barrier at an Asian restaurant, but not my only one. If you can't answer my questions, then your menu and sign had better be 100 percent clear.

Oh, and then my mom got food poisoning. I don't plan to go back there.

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Easter and a cannon

I had varied experiences at This Is the Place this week. On Monday and Tuesday, it was super rainy, so we closed early. When that happens, I like to go downtown to the Church History Library to do research for a project I'm working on, and on Monday this week, I was in a line behind Paul Reeve, a famous author in the world of Mormon history, who wrote the excellent Religion of a Different Color. But I was too shy and scared to introduce myself.

Then as the sunshine returned this week, This Is the Place was super busy. I gave several field trips. One class only had two students, and another had eight. (The rest had more typical numbers.) I feel conflicted about working there. It really is a mostly relaxing, mostly low-stress job. I don't dread going to work every day, and I enjoy all the quiet time I get, and I even like giving field trip classes. I like hearing the funny things kids say. On Friday, I was in the barbershop, where we put shaving soap on people's faces and then "shave" it off. Some kids wanted their mom to get a shave, but another kid didn't want her to, so when I put the soap on her face, he started crying. One toddler, "who was no more than two," took a look at her sister with soap on her face and said, "Oh no! What happened?" Then she covered her eyes. It was hilariously adorable. A few weeks ago, one kid (probably about three years old) said to me, "Tank you! You're handsome!" as he was leaving.

At the same time, though, I work less than forty hours a week, and it's seasonal, so I get no benefits. I'm a published author working with high school students, and I get less money than I could make working retail. It's way better than retail, because the people who come to the park are there because they want to be. But I can't help but feel vastly overqualified. (Because I am.) And sometimes I feel bad about myself that I can't get a real job.

On special occasions, we fire a nineteenth-century cannon. There's no cannonball, just black powder. On Friday, we were trained to operate the cannon, so all of us new people got to shoot it. I can now add "shot a cannon" to a list of my life's accomplishments. There are various words that must be shouted with each task of shooting the cannon, and I was somewhat inadequate because I literally cannot yell. It is a little intimidating to use such an enormous, noisy, dangerous weapon.

I enjoyed preparing for Easter. It does baffle me that such a wonderful, meaningful holiday gets so much less attention than the holidays of the last quarter of the year, and it seems to become increasingly less popular. Not that it's endangered, it's just shrinking. I mean, I like Halloween/Thanksgiving/Christmas more than Easter as well, but I wish Easter got more attention. All year long, I look forward to listening to the most adorable Easter albums ever made, but they're like fifty years old. Why isn't there anything more recent?

This year, I'm trying to do new things for holidays, so this year I bought an Easter lily, because we have never had one. It is gorgeous and fragrant. Our poinsettias always die after the holiday, but two years ago I bought a shamrock plant that keeps coming back to life, so we'll see how long this holiday plant lasts.


In 2012, I began counting carrot cake as an Easter dessert, and in 2013, the fad of carrot cake flavors for Easter began. Just this year alone, I have had many carrot cake items made specifically (or presumably) for Easter: Oreos, My Sugar Fix cookies, Crumbl cookies, Normal Ice Cream composed cone, Hostess Donettes, Dove Promises, and maybe some others I'm forgetting.

I'm all for it, because I love carrot cake. But really, it's the carrots that have the Easter connection, not the cake, so I decided to make carrot pie for our family dinner. I found a recipe online. I didn't enjoy it as much as I expected I would, but it was still a perfectly passable pie.
 We did have carrot cake as well.

Today in Sunday School, we read Doctrine and Covenants 19:16–19, and one person commented about the significance of the em dash in verse 18. Not many people know what an em dash is (you probably didn't notice that I used an en dash in my scripture reference), but I do, and I didn't buy his interpretation of the punctuation mark. So I looked it up and found that the original publication used colons instead of em dashes. But I didn't have the heart to invalidate the meaning he found in punctuation.

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Living in the past

On Wednesday this week, I felt as though I had left the twenty-first century and stepped back a few decades. It was a combination of things I was doing but also just something in the air.

In the last week and a half, I have been listening to more AM radio rather than FM. I don't usually do AM, so it seems so strange to me. It's like going to a small town, where everything seems a few decades behind the times. The fuzziness of the sound makes it seem dated, and many of the stations play old or obscure music that I have never heard of before. What is this place?

Because of the weather on Wednesday, work at This Is the Place ended early, so I went downtown and was looking at microfilm of the Salt Lake Tribune from 1991. That triggers my very earliest memories. When I walked outside after doing that, my brain was so accustomed to thinking of things as being decades old that it felt like the 1990s. My research was not unusual, but for some reason the strange weather (cloudy and neither winter nor spring) that particular day made me feel like it was a different time.

On Wednesdays, I help tutor youth from a Tongan ward in Sugar House. This week they changed their location, and I found myself in a part of the city I had never seen before. A lot of the stores in the area were local, non-chain stores, like the kind of thing you would find in a small town. One of these stores was a brownie bakery, so I went and got a brownie with a Peep on it.

Then we finally got to go inside this new church building. It's a very nice building and looks relatively new. But all the classrooms were locked inside the building. I have never seen something like that before. It certainly contributed to the feeling of being in another place or time.

I'm not sure what was so unusual about Wednesday. Aside from the tutoring, the day was pretty typical of the rest of the week. But it was a bit surreal.

I don't usually have that happen to me, even though I have been in the past nearly every day of the last seven years, between editing history, dressing up like history, and researching history.

Most of my blog traffic comes from Facebook, so most of you already saw that my book The Saints Abroad arrived this week, though it's not officially released for another month. They gave me five copies, and I already know who is going to receive the four extra copies. (I don't think any of the recipients read this blog, so sorry, you're not one of them.) Though I have had my name in and on other books before, I feel like this is my book more than any other. I did most of the work on this book, and I did more for it than I have any other book (yet). I doubt it will be read much, but still it's out there.

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Think Pink

This is an irrelevant picture, but I didn't want the next picture to be the thumbnail preview image.
Back in the fall of 2017, after I had invited my sister and niece to see Lady Gaga, they asked me if I wanted to go see P!nk, since my sister loves her. But the tickets were too expensive, so we saw Katy Perry instead.

Last spring, I saw that P!nk was doing another tour, and since I had previously purchased tickets, I got a presale discount. So I bought four tickets: one for me, one each for my sister and niece as birthday presents, and one extra, because who knows what will change in a year?

So, as the concert was approaching, we invited our cousin April to come with us. My sister sent me this text:


So Wednesday night we headed off to Vivint Smart Home Arena. The show officially started at 7:30, but they had a DJ named KidCutUp playing classic rock/pop/hip-hop while everyone trickled in. Our seats weren't great (we were on the very back row), but it was OK.


The show officially started at 7:30 with Julia Michaels as the opener. My only experience with her is her song "Issues," which I don't much care for. But I really liked her live, and I liked her 90s-esque outfit. Not only is she a singer, she also wrote (or helped to write) many other pop songs, including Selena Gomez's "Bad Liar" and Justin Bieber's "Sorry," and she sang a medley of these songs written for other artists.

Then after another period of time with the DJ, it was P!nk's turn. She rose to fame when I was in junior high, a time when I thought I was too intelligent/sophisticated/nerdy to enjoy pop music. I think of P!nk as an older artist, but my dad had never heard of her.

I recognize P!nk's immense talent, but I don't usually get excited by her music. I never think, "I feel like listening to P!nk today," and I don't look forward to new singles. That's not to say I dislike her, I just don't get excited about her. I really have nothing to criticize about her, aside from her sailor's mouth. (Four and a half years ago, we had our front area remodeled, and the person doing the remodel said he didn't like P!nk's language. Then he was using the exact language he said he didn't like from her.🤷)

She made her stage debut by singing "Get the Party Started" while swinging from a mock chandelier. (That would seem more appropriate for Sia!)

Early in the concert, she sang a song called "Revenge," and before the song, she played a cartoon video of a fictional amusement park called Revengeland. The video showed cartoon characters getting tortured and mutilated. Apparently I don't do well with violence, because it made me physically ill, even though it was only animation. I had to sit down. (Some of that might have had to do with the unhealthy meal of J-Dawgs and Cadbury Chip Cookie that I had just eaten.) That diminished the momentum of my concert experience.

But she really is incredible. She sings just as well live as she does on recordings (unlike Katy Perry). Not only that, but while she's singing, she is dancing and doing all sorts of acrobatics. When I bought tickets, I got free copies of her new album, Beautiful Trauma. My favorite song from the album is "Secrets," and that was the best performance of the night. She had an acrobatic partner, and she was singing while she was swinging around in the air, even hanging upside down. It was spectacular. (You can see a video of it from another concert here.)

My sister said I looked bored the whole time. As I said, her music doesn't excite me that much, but it was a fun concert.

Then I had completely different experiences this weekend.

On Friday, I went to another mission reunion. I'm approaching ten years that I've been home, so these are increasingly less meaningful to me. It was with my second mission president, who I only had for five months. I tend to think this president doesn't remember me, because I was in the far-off area of the mission that whole time. But at the reunion, he said, "The first time I met you, you were much larger than you are now." And then he said, "I seem to remember, it was down in Lewiston, and you were wearing a suit coat that was four times too big." And that's exactly right! So he does remember me! Two of my companions were there, one of whom I hadn't seen since 2012.

I really enjoyed general conference this weekend, even though there weren't any earthshaking announcements, except for the temples. My biggest temple connection is Moses Lake, Washington. That was in my mission! I never served there, but I did have some exchanges and zone conferences there. Nearby Wenatchee would be prettier (I served in East Wenatchee), but I think Moses Lake has more members. (This week at This Is the Place, I had guests from Wenatchee and Spokane!) My grandparents served in Western Samoa, and I remember their mission address stuck to our fridge, in Pago Pago, American Samoa. So I feel a bit of a connection there. And I did visit Tooele (originally spelled Tuilla) last summer as part of my county seat tour, so I feel connected there, even though it could be seen as a rival county. I thought it was funny that President Nelson told people to be quiet during the announcements. I did notice in the last couple of conferences that the vocal reactions were much louder and longer than they used to be. (Before then, the only audible reaction I remember was Rome in 2008.)