SHARE
flag
the grid

Holoholo Girl


Going Back to Cali


May 03, 2007
The only journey is the one within.



– Rainer Maria Rilke







She asked what time I'd be home. And I told her, underestimating by

about an hour, as is my way. She figured I needed the time to stop by

an In-N-Out on my way into town, and I didn't correct her. It was a

familiar, somewhat seedy feeling.

Here I was, an adult on vacation in Southern California, yet I was

sneaking away from my mom's house to visit an old high school fling.

Some things never change, I guess. It was weird to see SK—he looked

exactly the same as he did 19 years ago…

The desert has developed a lot over the past few years I've been

camping out on Maui. Casinos have apparently sprung out of sagebrush.

My Indian-muraled high school has been whitewashed and now has a

security fence. There's a Starbucks where my favorite

liquor-store-to-fish-for-wine-coolers used to be. But for the most part

in Palm Springs, people are just as old or gay—never both—as I remember

and everybody still drives those Jaguars and convertible Bentleys.

I spent the next couple days catching up with mom, as we tooled

around the desert, looking for shoes and the proper martini: hers—Ketel

One straight up, chilled, with a frosted strawberry at Shame on the

Moon; mine—vodka with mottled strawberries and basil, drizzled with

aged balsamic vinegar at Bing Crosby's.

I also met up with a Desert Sun reporter/Re:Generator

magazine editor who had a ticket to sell for Coachella Festival. I

didn't realize it when I planned my vacation, but all my current

favorite bands—Peeping Tom, Peaches, Noisettes, Amy Winehouse, Rufus

Wainwright, etc.—were going to be playing on the one day I'd finally

get to check out this huge fry-fest so I was stoked.

One night after dinner with the folks, I went to the bar at The

Parker—a hip, upscale hotel that used to be Merv Griffin's classic

resort but in the past few years has been redesigned and was enjoying a

fastidious following of the nouveau riche and Hollywood elite. As I

walked in, the first thing I noticed was a neon sign that read "Drugs"

hanging over a mantel surrounded by cushy love seats. Next to that, a

larger lounge area seemingly lined in fur and sueded-tweed couches in

half-circles with fluffy sequined pillows, futuristic lamps skewed in

different directions and spiderwebby colored yarn art covered walls

like graffiti—very Dr. Seuss meets Barbarella.

Various palms were placed beside leather stools and white hexagonal

tables with gold trim, as the sound of ice clinking in glasses and

drunken smooches by kids too rich for their own good filtered through

the room of sheepskin chairs and hanging bassinet orbs with hookah

shaped lights, and a fire pit that glowed hazily in the center…

Although I enjoyed the luxe surroundings, I craved more amiable

company. And I got it—at Hair of the Dog in downtown Palm Springs.

Surely there can't be a dive bar in Palm Springs, you say! Ah, but the

dive bars are sweetest in the places you least suspect them, my

friends.

It was a jovial joint, due in large part to a boisterous group of

jarheads from the base in Twentynine Palms. After watching them down

their umpteenth round of Jagermeister shots, and being introduced to

"Matt" just as many times, I thought it best to leave before things got

really ugly.

It was then that I noticed "Billy" to my right, pouring out some of

his beer directly onto the bar. He looked at me and smiled drunkenly.

He was a big, tall man but suddenly to me he looked like a sad, little

boy.

"I went crazy a couple days ago," he said, with a slight Southern twang. "No, really, I literally lost my mind."



He went on to tell me that he, along with the other guys in the bar,

had just come back from an eight-month stint in Iraq—where he was

initially told he wouldn't be going, as he was "just a civilian" in the

National Guard. He was angry, incredulous and a bit traumatized by the

whole experience.

"I saw my friends die," he said. "And a couple days ago, my best

friend was killed. He was a good guy, a really good guy…" Billy poured

some more of his beer out on the bar. "I'm just a construction worker!"

he said. "This wasn't supposed to happen!"

I stayed a few more minutes, poured out some of my beer in honor of

Billy's friends, introduced my new comrades to the "Duck Fart," then

slipped out to make a quick call back home.

"I'm not re-enlisting," said the boyfriend, even before hellos were exchanged.



"You have no idea how happy that makes me," I said.



Samantha Campos wants to know what the hell happened to the dinosaurs in Cabazon. MTW

print
Print
email
Email Link
Comment
Feedback
share
Share
Reader Feedback Submission
Use this form to submit Reader Feedback.
* required value
Your Name*

Town

Email (not shown on website)

Subject

Comment*

Verification*


Calendar Search
Event
calendar icon
Zip Code Proximity
of
Entertainment and lifestyle news for Maui, Hawaii and the surrounding Islands. Maui Time Weekly is Mauis only independent and locally owned newspaper. Mail this link to a friend
Web Analytics