Showing posts with label san francisco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label san francisco. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 April 2019

Growing and Changing Alongside San Francisco

“Alright folks you’ll need to make friends, introduce yourselves, and move towards the back of the bus!” the driver yells. I’m holding the black travel bag I got from Cal Academy between my feet. My green backpack still has a Golden Gate National Parks patch from when I used to live there.

I’m on the 28, a bus I rode every school day, twice a day, for two years. When I moved to Seattle last summer, I wondered why Seattle's buses had fancy cushioned seats. The seats on San Francisco buses are always hard plastic. Now, though, the seats in the front of the 28 have been replaced with flimsier pieces of plastic. This is not the bus I remember. But the need to press against strangers to let everyone on the bus is no different.

“Muh-rin. No MUH-rin. Yeah. I’ll take you there next week, you’ll love it,” a student from SF State says into his phone, “you’ve gotta get out of bed! Class starts in an hour!”

I’m visiting San Francisco during my spring break, which doesn’t align with their spring break, so daytime will be a lot of solo-exploring. I’m looking forward to it. I feel pulled towards my old neighborhood first, one of many places where I love walking alone. 


There are new signs on the lampposts documenting pedestrian deaths. The most recent one is on 20th and California, from February of this year. I walk to Bazaar Café to eat breakfast, hoping they still have the granola bowls I love. They don't. The café has new owners now, and the menu has drastically changed. They focus on music instead of art now. The brass instruments that used to hang from the windows are gone. The walls full of art are gone. The community bulletin board is gone. The wifi password is an incoherent set of numbers and letters from someone who just set up their first router. The one-room bathroom no longer has “lavatory” signs in a plethora of languages collected over the years, now it has one sign that says “whatever” under two dinosaurs. But the painted sign on the glass is still there. The bookshelf that used to hold books on loan from Green Apple is now lined with CDs and a sign that says "blast from the past: free! free! to a good home :)" I sift through them and grab copies of Bazaar Café’s Music Stew volumes 1 and 2, from 2000 and 2004 respectively. Maybe Bazaar is just returning to its roots. Maybe its focus on art and eclecticism was a departure from the norm.




My favorite dinosaur that sat on this ledge has been replaced? By a sibling?? 


Here's what it looked like two years ago:



A post shared by Grishma Singh (@grishmapolitan) on

I meander my way past Sutro, past the bakeries I always thought I would go to but never did (and still won’t today, anyway), and remember again that this city forged me into my fearless self. It is where I made some of the hardest decisions of my life, it is where I learned how much I love my career, it is a laundromat full of heartbreak and several cafés that are the opposite of heartbreak. It is where I dragged Connor up a hill, running, so I could show him my favorite sunset before the fog rolled in. It's where we realized we loved each other, on our 5th date.

You can’t love a city if you don’t have memories buried there. I know that. I’ve only been back for two hours, and already my heart feels full. Already I am remembering why I’m here. Already my eyes are tearing up at the messages from former students asking me in all caps when I’ll visit Gal. Already I’m excited to hug and laugh with friends I haven’t seen in months. Already I'm smiling thinking about feeling the salty breeze on Ocean Beach, where I'm headed next.


Stay close to anything that makes you glad that you’re alive. I know that. As it inevitably changes, as it inevitably evolves, stay close to it, so you can revel in its—and your—growth over time. Some things about me are the same from last year, but some things are different now. And I'm grateful to catch up with San Francisco as we both evolve into our older (maybe newer?) selves.

Monday, 2 May 2016

De Young Museum & Bouquets to Art

I've seen museums do special exhibits surrounding spring lots of times, from paintings of Victorian flowers to bird sculptures, but the de Young's homage to spring this year blew me away.

Each year, they have an exhibit/fundraiser called Bouquets to Art that lasts for five days. You can imagine how a five-day exhibit at a huge art museum in a giant city would get crowded, and it was, even in the middle of the day on a Wednesday. I've been in my share of crowded spaces before but it felt really overwhelming being around so many people intentionally huddling around such a tight space. I lasted 30 minutes before I had to get out of there, but I'm still glad I went!

Here is my favorite arrangement:


And a few others I liked:








Saturday, 26 September 2015

I Really Live Here?

I’ve been living in this apartment for only a week and already a woman is getting murdered across the street.

Or maybe she’s getting robbed, I can’t really tell. I tried to peek outside but couldn’t see anything (there are 2 streetlights on the entire street)

Should I call for help?

But what if I was imagining it? How embarrassing if the cops show up all the way here and there was nothing. I'll wait a little more and see if she screams again.

What if that was you, Grishma, what would you want someone to do? Would you want someone to wait for you to scream again?

The screaming stopped. She’s dead. She died. She might have lived had I called the police in time but now someone’s dead because I couldn’t call for help in time. I will live with this for the rest of my life. Grishma Singh, unhelpful coward.

I crawl onto to the pile of clothes I’ve been calling a mattress lately. My laptop sits on top of a cardboard box my dad used to mail me contact lenses. I open up my laptop and, for comfort (or maybe a night time routine at this point) watch one of the vlogs waiting on queue.

The blogger is staying at a treehouse for the first time, and I hear the same scream. She grew up in rural England, and while her boyfriend was freaking out, she calmly said, “Oh, it’s just a fox! For people who haven’t heard foxes before it can be very startling.”

Ooooh.

When I moved to San Francisco, no part of me could have guessed I’d live in a national park. My back yard is a forest and my front yard is a beach. It’s a nude beach, but we’ll get into that later. There are lots of foxes around at night, and now I know what they sound like.

They sound like screaming, terrified women.

Across the street this morning.

Sunday, 26 July 2015

(Not) Vacationing in San Francisco

I'm not in San Francisco on a vacation. I've moved here. I have a job here. I will, eventually, have a place to call home here. But my mind is having a hard time understanding this. It's 3pm and I'm wearing a light sweater. What the hell.

I'm spending tonight in one hostel, next week in another. I sent 20 or so emails to people looking for a tenant last night. I'm going to do that for many more days. Mr. sent me a carefully curated list of possible homes with an email template I can use to make the process faster and less stressful. I'm not anxious anymore.

Two nights ago, my last night in Phoenix, I was anxiously packing and repacking what I really wanted to take with me on this non-vacation. I was anxious that I haven't yet signed a lease. Bianca reminded me that I've spent much, much longer in entirely different countries with much, much less with me and I've been fine. This would be no different. Just a long vacation.

This morning, I carefully sketched a tiny map--how to get from the Powell station to my hostel; how to know when I've gone too far. Mr. laughed and reminded me that my phone can also do that. Oh right. I'm not in another country. I'm not on vacation.

But I did find an old church to hang out in front of all afternoon. Maybe a little on vacation.