Yesterday morning we drove a few miles south to Echo Park,
Las Angeles. I’m not sure exactly what I was expecting but from stories my aunt
Kathe told me, who lived there some 20+ years ago, I was gearin up to be mugged
and beaten. As we drove to get coffee and walk around the lake my aunt shared
gruesome stories: beatings near the park, bodies in the lake…not pretty stuff. Those
who know my rebellious spirit know that this made the outing more intriguing. So
you can imagine my disappointment when we pulled up and there were no sirens,
no caution tape…nothin!
p.s. let me clarify something real quick: it’s not that I love
scary or unsafe places purely for that reason alone. It’s that I love places
people have disregarded and given up on, places that are dirty and grungy and daunting
on the outside but that have those hidden jewels; those beautiful, quirky, gritty, poetic places
that speak to pieces of your spirit. (Or maybe it’s cause I’m a sucker for
underdogs and places that go unnoticed remind me of teams that no one is
rooting for). I realize my explanation
doesn’t make it any safer for me to travel into places like this, but
understand that I don’t go out looking for trouble!
Anyways, so as we turned the corner off the main boulevard the
landscape drastically changed, there were cute little shops and artsy cafés.
The one we popped into had Seattle written all over it. (I’ll admit I even compared
it to Herkimer, so you know it was good!). Next to this fair trade coffee shop
was a tacky thrift shop with one piece denim outfits that I KNOW Macklemore
would be all about! People were wearing plaid and skinny jeans and had beards…it
was that, “I did shower I just want it to look like I didn’t” kinda swag that I
feel like Seattle has perfected.
As we walked down to Echo Park and around the little man-made
lake I felt as though I had been transported home and walking around Wrights
Park in Tacoma. There was the occasional drug dealer, a handful of homeless
youth and a man sitting on a bench that seemed to be having a fascinating
conversation with an invisible friend. BUT the park was also filled with
families! There was a group of people from what we gathered was a Quinceanera
celebration, couples in paddleboats on the lake, people picnicking and throwing
a frisbee on the grass. You couldn’t argue that there wasn’t life at that park
that day!
Although I was a little upset that it wasn’t the sketchy,
make your heart race kinda place I had envisioned, I loved that I felt at home
and I loved the message behind what I was seeing. Transformation. People movin into the neighborhood. Hope.
Still with ya girl! I hope you're taking pix along the way. You have a good eye for things that others don't see. Put with your writings, and you could publish a fun personal book (see CreateSpace.com). really cool.
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