From a Nice Hotel on a White Sandy Beach

Blog

So that’s what humidity feels lile.

We’re hovering somewhere in the mid-90%’s here in Playa del Carmen, about 20 minutes from Cancun and it’s quite a wake up call for a spoiled Angeleno like me. Yesterday we jaunted out to Tulum and landed at El Paraiso resort. Despite some ominous looking clouds and a few sprinkles early in the day, we managed to pull together an incredibly relaxing day in the white sands. I don’t know when/if I’ll be able to upload my photos from my good camera throughout the trip, but here’s what the beach in Tulum looks like:

Tom and I caught a ride back to Playa del Carmen with two French girls and one local girl. When we got back, we all grabbed some Italian food and enjoyed a great meal with jokes shared in at least 4 languages.

Notes from the Road: June 20, 2013

Blog

En route to Mexico City with Tom. What lies ahead is what we are prepare to encounter. I’m traveling light. If it weren’t for my camera, I would have made it into 25 liters. The bags are a Tom Bihn Synapse 25 and the Red Oxx Gator. If I can venture near the indestructibleness of the bags I carry, I may survive this trip. It’ll be 4 days in the D.F., then onto Playa del Carmen, near Cancun. After 9 days of beach-ing, we’ll head to Cuba for another 9 days. This is the plan and the tickets are already booked, if not the accommodations.

The essentials are packed, as light as possibly, along with some digital luxuries:
• 3 pairs of socks
• 1 pair of Nikes
• 1 pair of SanuksRed Oxx Gator with Tom Bihn Synapse 25

• 1 pair of pants
• 1 pair of board shorts
• 3 pairs of underwear (2 ExOfficio, 1 Hanes)
• 1 light jacket
• 1 pair of detachable sleeves
• Canon SL-1 body
• 18-55mm kit lens
• 50mm f/1.8
• 2 extra batteries
• Flash drive
• Samsung Galaxy S3
• Travel USB converter
• Dr. Bronner’s
• Gold Bond
• Lavender oil
• Dodgers hat
• Water bottle
• Elk jerky
• Honey Stingers Organic Chews
• Playing cards
• Paracord
• Mini clamps
• Carabiners
• Flashlight
• Sunglasses

The journey has already begun in earnest. Since last Sunday, I have already driven over 2,500 miles. I expect by the end of the summer, I will have gone some 15,000 miles. I will have taken some 5,000 pictures and perhaps made the acquaintance of an equal number of unique human souls.

We will board our flight in Los Angeles, after a 3-day stop in Las Vegas. This was the one last chance to relax in the simple bliss of the world at our fingertips. Here, in a few steps we can travel from Paris to Rome, from a pirate ship to a knight’s castle. If one questions the irrelevance of time, one hasn’t spent three days in this glittering pot of wasted dreams and punchdrunk fantasy. The clocks on the wall may be accurate, if not irrelevant.

The buffet at Planet Hollywood turns from breakfast to lunch in one fluid motion. Our stomachs prepare to encounter another time of day with the quiet fortitude required to get its money’s worth. Smoked salmon turns to chicken cordon bleu and hash browns magically reform as french fries.

We escape Nevada with our wallets in tact and I prepare with quiet focus for the trip to Mexico City, Playa del Carmen and then onto Cuba.

We pack into the airport and grab a sandwich at the La Brea Bakery satellite in the Tom Bradley terminal. The famous locales of Los Angeles are transcendent of geographic space; you can eat Pink’s in Las Vegas (or Nathan’s, for that matter).

On the flight over, I’m sitting between a man in his mid-40’s and a young girl no older than 10 who seems endeared to me in a way somewhere between brother and schoolyard crush. She nudges me from sleep to play cards or tell me about the pool her family has in Guatemala.

The man is named Clay Gunn, from Chico, CA. Clay is heading down to Cancun to try and pick up a spot in the Mexican baseball league. A lifetime playing catcher, he’s moved up to the mound for the season. He tells me that for the past few seasons, he’s been swinging into Mexico halfway through the season as fatigue and injuries begin to shorten the roster. He’ll arrange a contract, a place to live, he’s sure of it. The man seems to know what he’s doing.

The vibe is good, the airline serves us a free drink, and then another before the ice has begun to melt. Clay had nearly missed his flight when he fell into conversation with a woman he could barely believe existed. He described that connection, the one that makes your head spin with possibilities and fights back against the belief that humanity is forsaken and we’ll never meet anyone worth sending our heart through the wringer again. Or that’s my interpretation. I promise to let Clay know about my time in Mexico City, to let him know whether or not it’s too dangerous to travel in, as he’s heard.

Tom at Cashier

The flight lands without much excitement, and we deplane. Wiggle our way through customs, but first a bathroom break. I meet back up with Tom and he tells me that an older gentleman passed out at the bottom of the elevator and had already been whisked away by paramedics.

We enter Mexico proper as the sun sets, exchange some money and grab a cab from the airport to our hostel, Mundo Joven Catedral. It’s a well-maintained spot in Zocalo, the City Center, replete with rooftop bar, overpriced café and fully functional wifi. A 20-minute cab ride, a short check-in and we settle in for the long road ahead.

Zocalo is the Center

The Big Life Update

Blog

For those of you who have been kept abreast of the blessed managerie that my life has become, and for others on the outskirts of the chaotic endeavors I’ve become accustomed to, I say HELLO!

wesley at strawberry music festival

It seems normal to write in a blog an apology for being busy. Truly, there’s no need to apologize. I’ve been keeping lists (thank you Wunderlist), staying organized and keeping an incredible amount of things on my plate. The amazing thing about saying YES is the never ending heaps that continue to pile up in front of me.

Just right now, looking about my computer desktop, there are:

  • 5 windows of flights from Cancun to LA. I can close those as I’ve already booked it. That’s me getting back from Cuba in mid-July, just in time for Lightning in a Bottle
  • Some content I was collating from last year’s Toyota Racing Dream Build Challenge
  • A half-written list that would be good for McSweeney’s called “If Last.fm Actually Tracked EVERYTHING That I Hear”
  • Some css for a project that needs to get done quickly
  • A list of stupid celebrity band names that I keep hearing (“Com Truise, Kill Smith, Trill Murray…and so on and so forth)
  • Then there’s the Browser windows… a pinterest board of things for traveling with, three accounts worth of Google Calendars, duffle bags to buy, sandals to buy, lasers that look fun, graduate programs…

Anyway, there’s a lot going on, you can tell. It’s a blessing, not a curse. And truly, it’s been a blessed year, and it’s only going to get better. It’s incredibly how much of synchronicity happens out of hard work. It pays off big time. The run-down on things I’ve been up to lately:

  • Working full-time at Gardner Automotive Communications, where I run the day-to-day business of social media strategy, web and graphic design, among many other things. I also blog a bit on our new website.
  • Teaching at University Synagogue up in LA for my second year. This year, I had a class of 6th graders for Jewish Studies where our curriculum revolved around Prophets, Israel, Values and the History of Jews in America. I also had a class of 8th-9th graders once a week that I taught 3 different sections: Being Jewish on the Internet, Jewish Music, and Yiddish Culture. I also squeezed out an occasional song session for the school.
  • Working at and going to festivals. We kicked it off with this year’s Lucidity Festival in Santa Ynez, our second year. It was incredible, there are so many stories and lessons I have learned from this truly inspiring community that I couldn’t begin to write them here. Short story is that I help put together the ticketing and gate procedures and manage logistics of getting people in and situated. Then I made it out to Coachella for Weekend 2. For Memorial Day, I just wrapped it up volunteering as an artist liaison at Strawberry, which was my first time actually working at my home festival.
  • I’m also consulting on some other projects, including almost a year and a half working with marketing and branding over at Brainard Strategy.

Woah. It’s hard to get all of that down in ink.

crazy

So what next? Well, I moved home from Los Angeles to Huntington Beach at the end of March to shore up some loose ends before the journey continues. I’ve decided to carefully wrap up some of my current business for the time being and take a bit of a walkabout for the summer as I explore some options including graduate schools. Here’s a quick run-down of my current itinerary:

  • June 9-21: LA->Colorado->LA. I’ll be volunteering with the Sonic Bloom festival in Georgetown, Colorado.
  • June 21-July 9: LA->Mexico City->Playa Del Carmen->Cuba->LA. I’ll be exploring, taking lots of pictures, and delivering donations to the Jewish community in Cuba
  • July 11-15: Volunteering with the Lightning in a Bottle festival in Temecula, California. My mom is coming to this too!
  • July 16-August 6: LA->Bay Area->Oregon->Washington->Vancouver, BC: Sauntering my way up to British Columbia. Visiting friends, getting into trouble, probably drinking a lot of microbrews.
  • August 7-12: Shambhala Music Festival in British Columbia. I’m just attending this one, since I can’t volunteer (darn Canadian work visas)!
  • August 20somethingth: Burning Man. Bye, bye, birginity.

Once that leg of the journey is up, I’ll be making my way through the South to check out some cool town and some cool grad schools and visit some cool friends that I miss very very much. Tentative idea of that trip is:

  • Tuscon, AZ (visiting Alex & Aliza?!) but really I’d rather be dead in California than alive in Arizona
  • Austin, TX (checking out UT)
  • New Orleans, LA (checking out Tulane)
  • Nashville, TN (checking out Vanderbilt)
  • Knoxville, TN (visiting Rick & Shelby!)
  • Durham, NC (checking out Duke)
  • Asheville, NC (visiting Avi & Liat!)
  • Maybe if I’m not broke by this point, I can swing up to New England and back across the mid-west. There is a good chance I will be broke by this point, though.

5 Ways Geo-Tagging Your Emotions Could Change the World

Blog

There’s a product out of Japan that’s a hilariously sillyawesome accessory: wearable cat ears controlled by your emotions. Released to some fanfare and cat-ching the attention of a lot of media outlets, the practical applications of such a piece seemed limited beyond purveyors of outlandish fashion trends (see: Burners), neuroscientists attempting to explain their passion to the masses, and perhaps, Weeaboos.

But with the release of the Necomimi Tail, NeuroSky and the manufacturer of Necomimi ears and tails are also releasing an in-production social sharing network of geo-located emotional data. Here, the folks at Neurogadget.com explain it, briefly:

As for the tech side, once again a NeuroSky headset is used in the device, just as it was the case with the Necomimi. The tail is connected via bluetooth with the headset to read the user’s brainwave activity and to detect their emotional state. The data is then transmitted to the tail that will react according to the given input.

What sort of practical applications might come from this sort of technology? As it gets cheaper and more reliable (many EEG headsets sell for under $100 now), we are only limited by our imagination. The emerging field of emotional data mapping has many practical applications. Through Twitter, we are able to track the popular zeitgeist. In 2010, we learned that that network even provides one of the best measures of daily stock market returns. I have a friend who is using the Hollywood Stock Exchange as a means to measure and develop alternative forms of funding film projects.

  1. Mapping Public Space in a New Dimension (and in real time!)
    You think that the days of Flashmobs were over? How about a HappinessMob where you check out where the happiest spots around town are? As shown in the video, if you’re in an elevated stress state, you could quickly discover a place of respite. As we live in ever-more condensed urbanism, we have to be smart about our space.
  2. Adding Happiness or Positivity ratings to Social Network Profiles
    Imagine reading an incredibly negative Yelp review, visiting the author’s profile and discovering that they spend most of their day unhappy or bored. Then imagine following someone on FourSquare whose real-world discoveries have put him/her in the Top 10 list of residual happiness for others. As we continue to finetune our social networks to meet our personal needs and goals, I believe that positivity quantification will be an important measure for the next few years.
  3. Help You Find the Most Peaceful Commute
    What if we had a ThinkUp of positive-thinking early adopters and took to the roads, creating a mobile community of happy drivers who love to share the road?This idea comes naturally to any Angeleno. For many newcomers to LA, the experience of Traffic (with a capital T, because we’re on a first name basis) can be harrowing. It can be an emotional rollercoaster, resulting in drivers wondering “What did I do wrong to deserve such a fate?” Of course, as much as the laws of traffic congestion are a cold, unfeeling amalgam of factors beyond whether someone is a good or bad person, we still seek ways of getting from A to B in peace. A geotagged emotional map could find the most relaxing and peaceful commutes, quantifying otherwise difficult factors such as scenery, road-sharing, and, of course, reliability/speed.
  4. Reaching Beyond Words
    There are many among us who lack the ability to communicate emotions through a shared language. It’s why I’m a huge advocate for the arts (dance, especially) as a primary method of emotional conversation between people. This is less about geo-tagging than it is about one-on-one interactions, though. There is a substantial amount of research to be done about applications for emotional mapping and Autism. Other applications could include babies, those suffering from PTSD, or even animals. The ability to take an emotion, quantify it and express it in a nonverbal form is truly fascinating!
  5. Thought Police
    I’d be remiss if I didn’t consider the 1984 of it all. Police could track outbreaks of panic or fear, reacting instantly to significant changes in mass emotion. Hell, they could even see a sudden gathering of very happy people in a small residential neighborhood at 2:30AM might indicate an out of control house party. Can an emotion like rage, prior to getting into a car accident, be one day admissible in court as evidence?Only the future knows…

Take Up Space, Make a Difference

Blog

I tend to pace a bit the first night I move into s omewhere new. From time to time,  I’ll even walk the perimeters of a hotel room, or a lobby of a restaurant. It’s a natural instinct for some, to walk into a situation and want to know as much about it as possible.

So I survey. Take note. Space it out. I draw maps in my head, floorplans, and count bathroom stalls and note trash routes. It’s not a matter of having everything pre-planned, but of the curiosity of the forces that put together any given concert, the temperature of a crowd or, academically speaking, the zeitgeist. My notes, they don’t make much sense to others but they are capable of conveying appreciation of all that I’m surrounded by.

If you’re like me, you enjoy learning and writing about people, studying cycles, predicting and being surprised by results. Then doing hands-on work to truly affect the outcome. At Lightning in a Bottle, we built an extra-large backstage for Shpongle. I ask my students to go into beast mode to help their parents when they have an important task ahead of them. I only ask from myself that I learn and ask questions, and educate when appropriate.

I’m a talker. I have to listen twice as hard.

To know, to understand is to build appreciation for. Comprehend all of the work that’s gone into you experiencing your surroundings at any given moment. There is, in the sheer magnitude of the smallest lived experience so much effort. Can you remember a time where watching something something come together and work properly and efficiently was amazing just because you watched it get built?

Working with kids helps you understand this process and responsibility. So many people have a hand in shaping a life that will one day, soon, become the next round of fresh ideas. We treat children carefully, give them opportunities to succeed and foster creativity. At some point, we stop offering that support. Sink or swim becomes the theme.

For any musician, teacher or group leader to watch Pete Seeger teach songs to an entire auditorium full of people from another country is a lesson in humility. He is truly in command of this crowd.

For Os Mutantes to write such inventive psychadelic music under a cultural dicatorship and perform in public. Complete courage. (You can Google ‘Os Mutantes’ to learn about one of their more inventive/risque album covers)