A photo( and occasional sketch) diary to monitor my culture shock from my move from a West Coast urban city to a beautiful and very small rural community in The Great North West. ***Click on pics for larger image. Updated every week, if we're lucky.***

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

11. 97 degrees Indoors

It's 97 degrees in our apartment. Que is now working full time. I'm afraid I'll get heat stroke so I decide to venture out and see the air conditioned parts of town.

I go shopping at the local [sic]Safestway food market. Besides the lack of produce varieties and the endlesss throngs of tan, gay men in bicycle shorts chatting each other up in the aisles, the store is almost identical to my old neighborhood S'way food market in San Francisco. Even the layout for the natural food section is in the exact same spot. I practically jump for joy when I see that they sell lemongrass. (The closet big town with aThai restaurant is a two hour drive into another state)

Most of the grocery shoppers seem to be truckdrivers or dudes on their lunch break from the lumber mill. I feel a bit uncomfortable from the unsolicited attention in the bread isle. I look down at my casual California style summer clothes--a brightly colored bare shouldered t-shirt, clam diggers and sandals. In retrospect I realize that I am probably showing a lot more than they are used to seeing from the average local woman in El Big.

Click on above image to see lack of anything green.
***
Later that night, Que and I try to decide to try Mountain Bear's Pizza for dinner.The mushrooms are canned but the pizza is delicious. The place fills up with lumber mill workers with their enormous families. The men wear filthy overalls and caps and the women wear toe-to-ankle tent dresses. Que comments on how young they seem. We play a guessing game and try to figure out which families belongs to which church...

After dinner, we drive 10 minutes north to the sprawling part of town. I have my first mega superstore Val*mart shopping experience. It's much trashier than I expect. We shop for curtains, clothes hangers and an air conditioner. Everything is shockingly inexpensive. I beg Que to buy me the Val*mart emerald...

Again, I take note on how the local folk seem to enjoy staring at us...

A talking/ singing deer head.

Decorations on the wall above the Hunting/ Fishing License counter. This deer cannot sing "I Heard It Through The Grape Vine".
I feel my culture shock taking root.

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