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yekdeli

yekdeli
Location
Lakewood, Colorado, USA
Birthday
September 26
Bio
History teacher, red-diaper baby, former Marine, a walking oxymoron. Yekdeli means "one heart" in Persian... it describes those of us my husband says weep for the whole world. We have "one heart" with humanity. Onward Rosinante --The monument in the profile photo is in Forest Park, IL and marks the grave of 8 labor activists, some of whom were convicted and hanged for their part in the Haymarket Riot. Those convicted were executed on November 11, 1887-- Long live labor...may we never forget...

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Salon.com
JULY 24, 2009 5:13PM

Illinoise

Rate: 8 Flag

 The heart is a bloom, it shoots up from the stony ground...--U2                                                                                     The heart is a bloom, it comes up through the stony ground...Ah, well...as my husband fondly says, it's time to "get the finger out", a lovely Irish idiom meaning, "get to work you lazy sod!' It has been elusive, that place where I want to write.  I do envy those of you who are draught horses and carry the heavy loads of the endeavor, I am such a flighty wisp in the place, but am drawn again and again to the finely crafted words of many here.  I want to be as brash as Beth Mann...she's so fucking hilarious!  I want to write poetry like Greg Corell, and I want to be as prolific as KOB...how the HELL does he do that...and I love Arthur James, who may never know how instrumental he was in getting me with his Wendell Berry post  (http://open.salon.com/blog/bebop-o  ) to a place...where I can write again.  There are so many more of you, so thanks...even to the cranks and contrarians whom I can't help reading just to get riled up!

 

This is the gist and the marrow of it.  We found ourselves, last summer, some of the early casualties of job cuts.  My husband is a solid materials physicist.  A highly specialized job title and calling.  I don't deign to understand it fully...lots of graphs of waves; nano this and that, and even some work on improving the qualities of materials used in human joint replacement.  (That one included lots of slicing up lamb knees and elbows...do lambs have elbows?...anyway...)  Suffice to say that jobs for this type of specialty do not grow on trees.

An interview at Idaho National Labs turned up nothing but a response that indicated that IF they had funds, they'd love to have him.  He subsequently went from there to upstate New York...no offer.  Virginia...too chancey....it involved drumming up government dollars as well as the science itself.   Finally, a possibility in Littleton, just next door to our home, but that dried up when one of the 2 proposed projects fell through, and they rescinded the job offer after 3 interviews.  

 Finally, he went to Peoria in June.  The big Orange Larvae itself...Caterpillar.  They of the ginormous, school-bus hued, earth movers.  He took a step down from "good science" as he puts it, and took a job as an engineer.  We were moving so fast the shock didn't hit till later.

 We set about putting things in order, as if that is possible in the face of chaos.  We took the time to go on a final glorious tour of our transcendent "house" of earth and sky.  The place where my spine grew stiff yet learned to sway.

  Red Rocks Amphitheatre

We went on the 2008 Ride the Rockies bike tour.  Our 4th time out doing this week-long tour of nearly 500 miles.  I'm just the pack mule, folks...and a good old pack mule I am.  I know how to pack and pitch our tent in dark, rain and freezing cold.  I know which food to pack in our little coolers.  Nuts, grapes, strawberries, raspberries, yogurt and some elk or deer jerky...sometimes other little treats.  I know how to be close enough to the porta jon to make it in the early morning quickly...but not to suffer the odiferous miasma accompanying said facilities. I can avoid the drunken young college riders, most of the time, and pick a perfect spot for our 15 hour home. I know how to take care of a tired cyclist at the end of a long (100 miles at times!) day in the saddle.  And WE know how to party at the end of these long days. 

Its also a lot of solo adventure for me and the canine companion, a sojourn driving over Colorado's most elevated spaces, to meet the man at the end of the day and see this...traveling gypsy caravan.  The towns, from Telluride and Durango and Salida  to Steamboat and Crested Butte...roll out the welcome mat and there is always ample beer (it's sponsored by New Belgium brewery of Ft. Collins), wine and lots of music in the often tiny town squares of these mountain communities.  

tour campsiteAnyway...that was my sojourn and farewell to my homeplace.

We arrived in Peoria after a truly long and tedious drive through Nebraska and Iowa on our house search...and I re-learned the meaning of humidity.  You must understand, we do not encounter this moist monstrosity in my high dry mountain mien.  Cranky and late we stumbled into town and hit the hotel.  As I wandered outside to get ice...I felt like I was moving through a wall...that there were even hands of moisture pushing at me.  It is a truly claustrophobic feeling when you aren't used to it.  

I began to cry and I asked my mister why we had to be here in this "foetid swamp"!?  I gotta be eloquent even when complaining, I guess...and that had us laughing again.  We didn't have much luck with our search for rental property...since our assigned "real estate" guide kept pushing us to buy, buy, buy.  We firmly shot that down, since we were selling our townhome in Colorado.   We looked at dumpy college rentals, duplexes with questionable neighbors (McCain/Palin  stickers...er...maybe!); overpriced mini McMansions with vaulted ceilings and granite kitchens,  and finally after 2 and a half days...she came up with a workable house.  It felt like an embrace.  It felt like a pat on the back of my slumping shoulders.  It felt like it could be a "home" of sorts.  It had real character!

Chillicothe house So, we rented it...and it is now what passes for home.  But that's jumping ahead a bit...let's back up to July in Colorado...

I have a job I love.  I am a teetcherlaydee.  It is more than a job, of course, it is an identity and a vocation.  A calling that came to me late after many years spent denying its voice.  And I had to leave my position after 8 years and after 14 solid years of teaching, try to figure out how to make my way in Illinois.  I have a lovely union rep and department chair, who said...if you don't want to leave, DON'T...and pointed me in the direction of a "leave of absence", which I didn't even know I was entitled to.  I am so lucky to have been granted such a leave, for 2 whole years...but I can't seem to feel like I am here  because of it...a part of my soul, and grit and handiwork reside in Colorado.  The safety net of a guarenteed position also means I am not to take a full time position with a school district during my leave.  So...I am in a quandary.  Do I "give up"...resign my Colorado job and push, full time to get back to teaching here...or bide my time, in hopes that hubby and I can make it back to Colorado by fall of 2010, when my leave will end?  I'm NOT a good gambler, but I wanna go home still, even though nearly a year has passed.

I got a substitute teaching license and went to the local small school district in our town of 6000 north of Peoria.  (Any Illinoisan's guess where we live?)  After a few subbing days...I got a call to fill in, long term...as  the part-time ESL (English as a Second Language)instructor.  Mind you, I am a high school Social Studies teacher, and my best qualification was working with a very diverse population of students in metro-Denver.  It was a challenge.  I had  four 3rd graders; a 4th grader; a 6th grader and an 8th grader...all Spanish speakers....lucky for me, since I do speak the language a bit and could "cheat" with some Spanish at times.  

But really, ESL is not the same thing as Bilingual education, and though everyone seems to think that you must speak the language of your pupils, that is not the case.  My experience as an ESL teacher was challenging, but really fun and fulfilling.  I loved the kids...really loved them. 

Alas...I was pink-slipped at year's end, since I am not ESL certified, and the district is held by law (NCLB particularly) to make every attempt to hire certified personnel. I told them I would work to get certified, looked into some courses, and hoped for the best.  

Two weeks ago, I got a call saying they hadn't found anyone more qualified, and they wanted to invite me back...only the formality of a School Board Meeting on the 28th would be necessary!  I was really happy...and allowed myself to breathe. 

But fate has kicked my hopeful ass again, and I got a tersely worded e-mail from the administrator who hires, saying that just after we had spoken...a certified instructor applied, and my job was again on hold.  

At this point, I really don't have a chance in hell.  I will take my Illinois state licensure tests in September for my high school Social Studies certification...but it looks like I will be subbing this year, with no sure income, and no outlet for my "teacherly" creativity.  

All of this has just been such a roller coaster ride.  I feel so utterly rootless, and since my husband is from Ireland...his roots are there.  A heavy rain could wash away our core.  A sort of ennui has set in for me, and I dunno who I am here.  

Mind you...this geographical uprooting had other accompanying crises.  My parents passed some time ago, and my siblings have all...to varying degree been hit very hard by the recession...the worst being a sister whose entire business went under and whose family is underwater right now compared to my hubby and I.  I have a brother in prison, a sister who is  a single mother, and another brother just laid off last month.   We'll prevail.

But this is why I haven't written.  I've met some good folks here in Illinois, though I still feel like an alien...much more than I did in Ireland or even Germany or Japan...perhaps because when I "visit" a place...I am moving always forward, whereas here...I don't know where forward is.

This big river to the east of me is a spectacular anchor of inertia to me....where my mountains helped me soar.  Strangely...as we left Colorado in August of last year...we were sent off in a rare torrential rainfall, which reappeared in September in Illinois to bring some very heavy flooding.

  after the flood

I am trying to find the beauty of Illinois....can you help me?

  Rock Island trail

The road ahead...

sign

And a little Illinoise courtesy of Sufjan Steven:

 

 

 

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Out to the ether from Illinoise
I like Sufjan Stevens. Embedding a YouTube video is really very easy:

1. Go to You Tube and locate your video.
2. To the right of the video there's a gray box.
3. At the bottom of the gray box you'll find the Embed information.
4. Copy everything in the embed box.
5. Now click on the edit button for your post
6. Click on the html button which will open another box.
7. Paste the information you copied from You Tube into the html edit box and click on Update in lower left corner. Voila! It's easy-peasy!
Geez, consonants...I am still not quite sure how I did that! Thanks. When the box opened, it was full of text and I couldn't figure how to get the link in the right place...but voila! Here it is!
There's the black soil. Parks near the rivers can be lovely. But as a rural/small-town Illinoisian by birth who fled as soon as I could, no, alas, I am sorry. I can't really help you. :-(

Hell, to us Peoria was a Big City. Chicago? Unimaginably far away (translation: 90 miles).

I hope your honey can get you back where your heart is. I feel the homesickness in this post and I'm sorry. :-(
Thanks Verbal, I appreciate your stopping by! And yes, the response from many in Peoria is "YOU MOVED HERE FROM COLORADO?" with incredulity? Or else...they have never traveled outside the state and have no clue what the wider world holds.

Starved Rock is sort of pretty in an overrun with people sort of way!!

Keeping my chin up and all that!
Illinois is a very different landscape for you. A flat landscape really opens things up; the horizon is wide and the sky stretches ... to nowhere, it seems. You're thrown back on yourself a bit more, I think. I'm convinced you'll discover beauty there.
yekdeli, good luck in your new environs!
I'm sure eventually you will learn to find the beauty of the area.

My wife and I are in the middle of a move now (though we are only moving 10 miles away)
consonants...actually, I'm right on the Illinois river, near lots of lush trees and not on the flat. It feels overgrown and swampy here. I had huge sky in Colorado and can drive few miles to get it here...but...it's that crispness in the air...fewer bugs too...I mean Illinois has more bugs than birds, I'm convinced!! I miss CLEAR running streams and water that tastes like it came from...a mountain, rather than the bottom of a river! Bitch bitch bitch, huh?

There are loverly days in fall here, though...the humidity breaks. And the divine has given me a break and cooled off this summer a LOT compared to last year...and sucked the air a bit dryer too!
MJ...I loved your comment over at Verbal's...I too have some of those "ignorant white people/closet racist" stories!

Good luck on your move!
And you know....a lack of decent music that didn't fall through an '80's time warp featuring John Mellancamp would be great! Thank god for the computer so I get INTERNET radio!
involuntary displacement, ouch, not the same as moving to something that you choose . . . and the humidity . . . and the flatness of the plains . . . and the zeitgeist of the heart of Nixon's Middle America

but

rivers hold promise, and that tree-lined dirt lane looks inviting, I bet there's some interesting local history, one good friend can make a big difference

good luck
Ouch, and double ouch! It's terribly hard to feel out of place in your home and even harder to feel that you left your vocation behind. Are there other subbing possibilities in other nearby districts? Private schools (certification usually not required)? At least if you could be in the classroom, you'd feel at home at work.

I hope something works out; as Verbal said, the homesickness is palpable, and very sad.
Thanks Roy...yep, time and tide wait for no one, gotta be where you are. The trail is the Rock Island trail that stretches along the old Rock Island Rail Line for 26 miles. It is a good bike path and nice place to walk the dog.

Fireflies, loads of flowers, a beautiful autumn...If I can just get over missing my mountains.

You are so right about a good friend. Have been finding that a true blessing.
Welcome Pilgrim...and yes, I'm going to register with a couple more districts and hope to maybe gather a tutorial position. Not a lot of private schools here. I did check Catholic schools...but they're as strapped for cash as anyone, no jobs there.

I think I will sub quite a bit. That's just so disruptive, as you sometimes don't know in advance. The better known I get, the more I'll "arrive" in the minds of teachers looking for a good sub.

Can't do more than part time anyway, or I void my leave...so am thinking to volunteer too!
Well. You are On the road again. A traveling. A sojourn.
You said lots ... This:`"cranky and late and hit the hotel."
... "Teetcherlaydee" :`bad tempered? irritable? I smile.
I smile? the lyrics "All things go" Ya know the coconuts?
They are rolling and a pounding inside my noggin skull?
I'm sorry you were "pink slipped." Life's a wild allegory.
Teachers form young minds. What a high noble calling.
My son went to Art College, Cornell, and loved a DC job.
He worked at the U.S. National Arboretum with Bonsai.
Uprooted? Nature led my son on an adventure. Great.

Michael helped planned the 5th World Bonsai Convention. He loved the botany vocation. He hated the commute. We live just south of the Mason Dixon Line. You can walk a small mountain and view PA, the Cumberland Valley, and see the Potomac River snake south and look into West Virginian. He's a country boy. He tried short-term substitute teaching at St. James, and two years in the public system. The public school system convinced him:`No Way! He was crankier than I'd ever known him to be. Suburbia? He liked the private education experience. I was pleasantly shocked when he wanted to do what I did to survive. Ya eek out an existence at the old time family truck patch, diversity garden/farm. He's way better at gardening than I was. At 9- years old I stuck a hoe in his hands.
Today he looked weary.
I said take a short nap.
La in dutch clovers.
I'd sneak off there.
`
rambling. I don't know? Life is a allegorical mystery. Only as we age can we see the beauty. Landscapes change. I sigh ... the homesick sense and yearn for old stomping grounds. By the way? There's a French acquaintance who has been a dance. His wife's been on broadway. He's from Dijon, France. Their family has been wandering forever? He can speak of merlot. cabernet, franc, vidal blanc and other grapes. He fills me in on devious lowdown scoops I'd dare not mention on a blog. Laborers behind back mocking, and the foolery in People's Life. He's never had money, and watches "well-to-do" throw money away to impress lobby peers. He works on a neighbors vineyard. He can tell of California Trees:`Sequoia, Eucalyptus, Cypress, and will mention that look similar to a Pig Tree-as he points to a odd-shaped Bonsai that has a shape that bends low to the grown. But, there is a standard Tree in the back lot that's rare/similar. I am saying:`The families unsettled journey has made them so wonderfully interesting. Gads. I'm at the chattering Cafe? But, the pleasant song is slow downloading.
Life? Those folk know the big name horn players.

... "the throngs of people coming and going"...
It's lightening bug season.
I love this:` -Edith Thomas
`
S/he held a firefly to the page, and read
Ten line of Homer by the light it shed.
Released, it went upon its shining way-
A wiser firefly? Ah! let sages say.
`
You and your family pick grapes?
Why this come to mind? O crank?
a stitch in time saves nine. Gads.
Yea! The You Tube is finished.
Replay! Thanks for sharing.
It's good and better to know.
I'll replay Sufjan Stevens.
Then send? Then Sleeps.
That was beautiful music.
Flowers? Forget me nots?
My thanks for the musics. etc.,
Can't blame you for feeling a bit out of place. Last fall was a lousy time to come out here. The flooding was just plain bizarro. It affected so many places that don't usually flood.

I've never lived in Peoria and it always felt a bit alien to me. For a little getaway, you might try Galena and Dubuque and SW Wisconsin - not quite as long a drive as Chicago and not quite as crowded as Starved Rock.

Good luck with the job situation. I hope you're able to get something that works for you.
I see the struggle in your post...knowing to be grateful, there are those worse off than you, yet feeling homeless, like a wandering gypsy, yet knowing where you feel at home. It's a quandry...reality vs. desire. And how to make your desires and realities meet. I lived in Oregon for 2 years while my former husband went to graduate school. It rained the entire time. It was a daily suffering...I was a fish out of water and I never got comfortable. The day we left to return to California was the day my life went from dark to light. It was as simple as that. I'm of no help here because I can't imagine living anywhere else. But I also know that it is our darkest times where we can learn the most, find the riches surely to be hidden in the mess. I hope you continue to find those riches and you and your husband find your way back to a home that works for both of you.
And you reminded me..I really want to do Ride the Rockies next year!
Arthur...God Bless your poetic soul...you get me in the heart every time. Thanks

bikepsychobabble--Yes! We have yet to hit Galena, but have been to the Chicago area a great deal as my husband races both road and cyclocross race series there and throughout the area. We've also been to the Quad Cities; Champaign-Urbana; Rockford; Iowa City' Kansas City; Kankakee and St. Louis for bike racing...He's also been to Wisconsin, though I didn't make it there yet...I hear Door County is gorgeous. thanks for the suggestions.

Mary--yeah...it is odd. I relate to your rain stories of Oregon...It rained for 2 months straight when we got here, and it's that bloody humidity that kills me too...even Ireland isn't "muggy" like that. Your photos of your backyard in Boulder where the OS group will meet just made me tear up too...Keep flashing me an occasional photo for my soul! Thanks!
yekDeli:

Your writing is superb. This piece imparts self-pity -- justly earned: leaving the Rockies ! gnash! cry of pain! -- as a necessary part of the story, without being self-pitying; that is, without abusing the reader. This requires a shrewd writer, a mature mind.

This post is inherently interesting to me -- so much of it is my story, coming from Montana to upstate NY -- but universal, certainly. America is restless for 300 years and counting, and our current upsurge of displacement is vivid here. I mean, the details are compelling: both of you professionals, the noble work of ESL (one of my oldest clients/8 yrs is head of a statewide ESL/adult ed org: hvcp.org), your husband a physicist in a category Americans used to OWN, damnit! and the haplessness, sheepishness, undeserved, that peeks from the edges of the job search here is what too many Americans are going through as they struggle to right themselves.

And you are honest, making this a Good Read, not a litany.

I can give you pertinent things, regarding Illinois, having lived in Denver, Boulder, Missoula:

1. The Rockies have magnificence, pines in the air, skies so clear they exquisitely hurt some vital part of us -- and very little lush green, less variety of fauna, a parsimonious fecundity. Plant a garden, perhaps? -- a little of everything -- to reap immediately the benefit of midwestern/eastern soils, and you can start saying "well at least we didn't have this along the divide".

2. The mountain west has dramatic wildlife and hardy people who appreciate the dramatic vistas. Back east I still feel claustrophobic at times, but I have come to appreciate the Inner focus opportunities that abound here: there are simply more cultural benefits in Illinois and New York. Go to the Field Museum, take in some Chicago Jazz, connect with well-educated people right away. I still love the spirit of Western folks, but if I moved back I would yearn for Good Discussions at the drop of every hat, here in the Hudson Valley.

Finally: write! Apron-wringing over our own work is inevitable, and I appreciate your kind words about my posts, but you have NOTHING to slouch about. Some perspective: what you admire in mine seems excessive, florid, to me, often, and I consciously strive at times to go spare, lean, sturdy. Or direct, at-your-elbow-on-a-trip-thru-the-plains, like yours is here.

Writing will bring the west to life for you; it has for me, and in ways that might ultimately matter more to you than if it were still right outside the door. The West is not just a place, it is a Place, and locating it in your heart might allow you to inhabit it more truly.

And your new house is a gem.
Look to those around you to share the beauty they know. Beautifully written post. Thank you.
Gotta be Bartonville. When my parents had that cleaning store in Peoria so many years ago after WWII, our seamstress was from Bartonville. She was really a family friend, and used to take me home with her some nights. Besides her professional work as a seamstress, she was also a wonderful cook and pastry maker. Edna? Agnes? Mildred? Gertrude? I can't remember her name. It was 60 years ago after all.

She had a youngteenage daughter who was crazy for the roller skating rink in Peoria (long gone, I assume), and who used me as an excuse to go there - I loved that rink too, but not for the same reasons.

Lazy, hazy, crazy days of summer. Hot and humid. And foetid too, in those days, it smelled of malt from the Hiram Walker plant and burning rubber from godknowswhere and the steel mills.

And we only had a small black electric fan that we all sat in front of to cool us off. I remember those days with whatever the opposite of nostalgia is. We went to the movies - "20 degrees cooler inside" - our only source of beating the summer heat and humidity outside of the park pool or the muddy bottomed lakes nearby.

The river can be beautiful - the mud is deliciously cool on your toes if you know where to climb down and put your feet in.

And there's always the lonesome whistle of the Union Pacific? as it passed through or got waved down to pick one or two passengers. We used to drive there to catch the train to Chicago - there was no direct train from Peoria.

Also, try Grandview Drive. And the drive through Detweiller Park is beautiful. Lots of memories.

(But I'm glad I live in Oak Park.)
Greg...thanks for stopping by. And as for your writing...it is NOT florid. It is stark at times in its observations and follows the BEST advice I ever received from a master and poet-friend of mine: "show--don't tell!" Yet it hits me at the core. That's it friend...YOU are a good writer! So there!!!

scupper--Thanks for coming to visit! I love reading your blog. Good advice...I sometimes look "up" when I should be looking "around", I think. All the best!
Dolly, we must have cross posted...! NOPE, not Bartonville...we're N. of Peoria...not south! But you know what...I am thinking, more and more that we need to have an ILLINOIS get together for OS'ers. There is: Yourself, me, Gary Justis in Bloomington; Chicago Guy (of course) and bikpsychobabble...and I would bet there are more...I just cannot think of them right now.

I remember reading your post on Peoria!

And yes...the train goes right by here...our little town bills itself as: "Where the River Meets the Rails". WOO-WOO! I found it very soothing in my first nights here because I grew up next to a train track in my hometown in Colorado.

...and at least we have central air...I cannot imagine how people lived in the days before it here. I never had it in Colorado, but nights tend to cool off so deliciously there!
OMGosh, I MEANT Chillicothe - not Bartonville at all. Bartonville is where the state insane asylum was located, we used to get threatened to be sent there if we acted up. And of course, it was the Santa Fe RR - must be gettin' old.
All along the mighty Illinois River, to the Calumet, the Mackinaw....Starved Rock, where the Mohawks pursued the Potowatomee as they made a stand upon the Rock.
History abounds throughout the circuit Lincoln used to travel.
Victorian life is still evident in the architecture that abounds in Quincy, Bloomington, your town, Peoria, Lasalle, and many more.

To the south, in Missouri, is the Katy Trail, that winds, sometimes at cliff's edge across 1/3 of the state.

And Chicago, a supreme wonder, is only 2,1/2 hours away. "City of the Big Shoulders."Home of Nelson Algreen, Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Sullivan, Studs Turkle........

I wish you the best... try Starved Rock on a weekday, the Lodge is wonderful, the trails spectacular.....
Gary...you are right of course. You put it so poetically. We've been to Starved Rock and walked the trails there. It is magnificent, in its own way...but still doesn't match the grandeur of my Rockies. Yes...I have to go back on a weekday and wander for a longer time. We went on a chilly, briskly windy spring day. I want to see it in Autumn!

As for the "City of Big Shoulders"...it is overwhelming...to both myself and my husband. We have been to the city proper 4 times now. I have seen the Chicago Institute of Art, which I adored, and need to see more of, since even the 3-4 hours we spent was not adequate. We went to Grant Park just last weekend, as my husband raced his bicycle in the Chicago Criterium. We walked the park for a long while and sauntered up and down Michigan Avenue. And on our very first trip to Chicago...back in October of last year...we went to Lincoln Park neighborhood, almost by accident, and ate at a lovely Italian restaurant...strolling idly by the Biograph theater, location of Dillinger's demise. History all around.

We have also spent many a weekend here in the land of Lincoln...just checking out the "Lincoln-abilia"...been to many a small town where he spoke...including tiny Toulon, where both Lincoln and Douglas spoke, but not together!

Thanks for stopping by here...I knew you Illinoisans (?) could give me a little perspective on the place!
Kiddo, after living in the Rockies, you'll be lucky to find beauty anywhere. We lived in Durango for three years, now I live in the fucking desert. When we moved to Durango, I thought I'd died and gone to heaven, suddenly, I think they figured out there was a mistake made somewhere and sent back to hell, where I live now.

I feel your pain, oh so well. It's hard not feel like you're mooving backwards when you live in place like that after the Rockies.
Hey Boomer, thanks for visiting...I need to update the blog, but am so swamped with work right now, I lack inspirations! Cheers!