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an everyday life

Tag Archives: Travel

Viva Las Vegas

22 Sunday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, Life at Home

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Las Vegas, Travel, Weddings

The wedding festivities are over.  And with thirteen others–a nice mix of family and friends– we celebrated the new Mr. and Mrs. Diaz with wine and a plate of our favorite pasta at Battista’s Hole in the Wall, a homey Italian eatery just behind the main Las Vegas Strip.  Against a backdrop of photos of famous personalities hung with familial pride, we toasted the newlyweds – and the entire room of patrons clapped their hands as they shared our joy.       

 

The wedding was simple.  The spoken vows will not be simple to live.  Kate was a beautiful bride, her sister Kara a beautiful Matron of Honor.  These two who use to fight like alley cats now stand by one another through the thicks and thins of life. Celebrating a sister’s marriage and new life is the best kind of thick.   

 

The wedding chapels on the Strip are well used.  Out comes one couple and in goes another.  It’s like this, not just with weddings, but with everything that happens here –the shows, the slots, the restaurants.  We enjoyed two out of three. 

 

A few hours after our arrival and before the show began, we snagged a couple of tickets to catch Jay Leno’s stand-up comedy routine at the Mirage.  He was there just two nights, so I guess Lady Luck shines on more than gamblers.  While waiting for Jay, we walked around a bit and found that one of the casino hotels was home to eight award winning James Beard chefs.  We enjoyed brunch at one on Saturday, a cozy French restaurant called Bouchon.  It reminded me of Paris or New Orleans, a far cry from the noise of the Strip. It was good to run away for a while.     

 

The entire atmosphere of the Strip over stimulates the senses, blinding humanity to one another.  People live in their own little worlds of friends, the slots or in a haze of alcohol.  They often forget to look where they are going.  I was bumped into several times.  I felt like a piece of furniture.

 

Newlyweds may not have eyes for everyone but they do have eyes for one another.  It’s universal, in and out of Vegas.  When love is brand spanking new, it shines brighter than all the neon lights flashing in Las Vegas.  With vows freshly spoken off their tongues, newlyweds know that married life is a relationship that matters more than whatever else the Strip is selling. 

 

A former pastor of mine was fond of repeating a saying of Sister Elizabeth Molina, which expressed this sentiment more succinctly:.  “Life is relationships.  Everything else is just moving furniture.”  If Kate and Glen can follow this bit of wisdom, their marriage will live and thrive.  Viva los Diaz.  Long live Mr. and Mrs. Diaz.    

Rocky Road

21 Saturday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, Life at Home, Soul Care, The Great Outdoors

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Soul Care, Travel

There is great diversity in the land between OKC and Las Vegas, in elevation and contours, in color and vegetation.   Words can’t express the raw beauty I tried to ingest as we travled the curvy road that led through the Painted Desert and Petrified Forrest.  Some things must be experienced to be appreciated.    

 

Just outside of Albuquerque, massive rock formations hug the northern edge of I-40.  It’s a long hug.  Mile after mile, these flat-top crew cut fashioned rocks huddle close together – if a football team, they could offer some fine coach an impenetrable defense on the I-40 line of scrimmage; Coach Knute Rockne comes to mind, though no longer on this side of eternity.       

 

Ever so often, I-40 intersects with old Route 66.  Sometimes a road sign points out where the road once lived.  We saw one such grave marker in the Painted Desert.  A trail of naked utility poles have dug in their heals where the vital artery once coursed as it connected civilization through a desert wilderness.  Do these grieivng poles realize they have outlived their use to society?            

 

By comparison, a row of thriving vintage motels still exist along a bustling section of Route 66 in Flagstfaff.  They don’t shine as they once did, but are still bright enough to reawaken long buried childhood memories of a different road trip along this same stretch of road.   

 

I was five years old in the summer of 1961.  With six others tucked too snug in my parent’s ’56 Chevy, we were taking Route 66 to Los Angeles.  It must have looked like we’d just driven off the pages of The Grapes of Wrath, as our packed car balanced a bulging full luggage rack on top and a canteen strapped to its front grill.  The Chevy was prone to overheat–and once it did, it wouldn’t go any further until granted a little rest to let off some steam.  

 

Maybe a steaming radiator stopped our little Chevy in the Painted Desert and Petrified Forest back then.  Or maybe it was a premeditated rest stop.  Whichever, I don’t recall the log shaped rocks beyond the edge of the road holding my five year old interest.  But my appreciation for anything that defies time has grown with age.  The ancient mesas are no exception.  

 

With the gift of hindsight, I see the mesas do not hug the road after all.  It’s the other way around.  Because the mesas I saw two days ago are not so different from those I saw in 1961.  Time passes and so do cars and the roads they travel.  But the rocks live on, because they have a touch of eternity in them.  Are these rocks a signpost beside the road to point traffic from here to eternity?        

Salt & Pepper

20 Friday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, Life at Home

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Big Tex Steakhouse, Travel

Our two poodles, Max and Maddie, are often greeted as ‘Salt’ and ‘Pepper’ by strangers they meet.  Maddie is cream, Max is black, so I guess folks just naturally think table condiments when they see our two gorgeous poodles walking side by side.  But if they were salt and pepper shakers, they’d be fancy ones.

 

You can tell how fancy a restaurant is by how they dispense salt and pepper. If it comes in small paper packages, you know you’re in a fast food place – if served in plastic white and gray shakers on the tabletop, it’s still quick food, but served on plates rather than wrapped in paper.  It might be a “mom and pop” or a greasy spoon with its own daily blue plate special.  Then there are those who fancy themselves a step above local yokel diners, who serve their seasonings in real glass table dispensers, like Big Tex Steakhouse, the place we ate at in Amarillo – it’s been around a while and plans to stick around a whole lot longer.  Glass dispensers belly permanence.

 

At the top of the food chain are those restaurants that prefer to bestow freshly cracked pepper with a pepper mill handled by your server.  “Fresh cracked pepper for your salad, madam?”  While my Cooks Illustrated magazine assures that freshly cracked pepper is superior to the almost tasteless ground pepper, I sometimes wonder whether a restaurant serves its pepper this way for taste or because it’s a way of displaying good taste—a way of putting on airs – a kind of humble bragging rights, if you will.

 

Big Tex Steakhouse is a place for bestowing humble bragging rights on those who risk their wallets and their gullets.  Those who eat a steak the size of a four and a half pound roast with all the trimming in sixty minutes can put their name on a chalkboard out front.  They do their frenzied eating on an elevated spot in the middle of the restaurant to spark the table talk of nearby diners.  If they eat it in an hour, it’s free.  Otherwise, out come their wallets.   

 

My son Kyle once won bragging rights at Big Tex, though not for eating steak.   He was with a bunch of young Boy Scouts who were trying to dare each other into eating the jalapeno pepper always served alongside the steak.  Tired of all their talking, Kyle bet the table he could down the pepper without drinking water for five minutes.  But they’d have to pay him a dollar each when he succeeded.  He quickly popped that bad boy in his mouth and acted like it was all in a day’s work for an almost Eagle Scout.  He impressed those young Scouts by adopting an air of calm, while all the time, a raging fire sweltered inside his mouth.  Long after the boys paid up, Kyle continued to pay for his bit of fancy as endless glasses of water could not quench the long after-burn of pepper juice.  But I wonder.  What about salt?      

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