Tag: Austin

  • S2E5: Postcards from Texas

    S2E5: Postcards from Texas

    Postcards from Texas is available for preorder

    Preorder one, or all three, of the Cuttlefish chapbooks for summer 2023: ⁠⁠https://cuttlefishbooks.wixsite.com/home/2023-summer-book-launch⁠⁠

    If you preorder my book or the entire bundle, send me your address and I’ll mail you a thank-you postcard!

    You can also read my interview with fellow Cuttlefish author Lenard D. Moore at my personal blog: ⁠https://allysonwhipple.com/2023/08/09/chapbook-interview-lenard-d-moore/⁠

    Community Open Mic Airs August 30th

    Due to changes in the Spotify for Podcasters interface, there are now two options for sending your work:

    1. Record your haiku and email the file to me at allyson@allysonwhipple.com
    2. Send a voice message through Spotify (requires an account): ⁠⁠⁠https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/culinarysaijiki/message⁠⁠⁠

    You only need to choose one of the above options.

    New Deadline: Monday, August 28th at 11:59 pm CST.

    Theme: Transitions

    Details:

    • Remember to mention food in some way
    • You are welcome to record up to three (3) haiku
    • Please say your name before your haiku
    • Please read each haiku twice
    • Please keep your haiku family-friendly

    Now on Apple Podcasts!

    The wait is over! If Apple Podcasts is your listening platform of choice, find the show here: ⁠⁠https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-culinary-saijiki/id1632986084⁠⁠

    On the Blog

    An overview of one of my source texts, Sam Hamill’s The Sound of Water: ⁠https://culinarysaijiki.com/2023/08/09/source-text-the-sound-of-water/⁠

    Join the Conversation

    This season, I am welcoming both podcast guests and guest bloggers. If you’re interested in joining one or both, visit ⁠⁠⁠https://culinarysaijiki.com/join-the-conversation/ ⁠⁠⁠for details.

    Support the Project

    Buy me a coffee at ⁠⁠https://www.buymeacoffee.com/culinarysaijiki⁠⁠. You can also help by sharing this podcast with anyone who you think might appreciate it.

    Theme Music

    “J’attendrai” by Django Reinhardt, performing at Cleveland Music Hall, 1939. This recording is in the public domain. Hear the whole song at ⁠⁠https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/show/6045⁠⁠.

  • Short Time Gone

    Short Time Gone

    Part 1

    Some months ago, an acquaintance messaged me on Facebook asking if I’d ever published a blog or social media post about why I’d decided to leave Texas. She was considering leaving the state, and wanted to know what had compelled me to move away from a place I clearly loved so much, a place I believed I’d live for the rest of my life. I outlined some of the reasons why I decided to return to the Midwest, and made a note to actually write a full blog post about it.

    Ultimately, although I love Texas deeply and will always consider it home, over the past few years, it became apparent that I was not going to be able to live the life I wanted, especially if I stayed in Austin. 1,000-square-foot 1960s bungalows in my neighborhood were selling for a million dollars, and they weren’t even in great shape. There was no way John and I would ever be able to afford the kind of home we wanted if we stayed. Nor was trying to buy a house in another city really an option. Neither of us cares for Dallas. After growing up in a remote rural area, John had no interest in moving to a small town farther west. I adore Houston, but given the way hurricane season seems to be getting worse every year, buying property anywhere on or adjacent to the Gulf Coast does not seem like a wise investment. We both think the Panhandle is depressing. That pretty much leaves San Antonio, and while we both like that city, neither of us loved it enough to resign from our jobs and totally start over. 

    Then there’s the issue of infrastructure. The 2021 Snowpocalypse, which left virtually the entire state without power or water, was a contributing factor in our decision to leave. Before that, I hadn’t even known that Texas was on its own power grid (though I wasn’t surprised when I found out). Since then, there do not appear to have been any serious improvements to ERCOT. Austin also faced another crippling ice storm this past January, barely two years after the Snowpocalypse. Between that, Gulf Coast hurricanes, and the desertification of the Hill Country, it doesn’t feel like Texas is a safe place to live in the era of climate change. 

    While Texas politics had a small impact on our decision, it was not the biggest factor. I mean, I moved to Missouri. It’s barely a step up. Saint Louis is an amazing city, but like Austin was 15 years ago, it’s a blue dot in a sea of red. But with cost of living being a factor, we were likely to end up in a red state anyway. Illinois is just 15 minutes across the river from our house, but our cost of living expenses would have a dramatic increase. Our options for housing would have been more limited. As it relates to Texas, politics was only a factor in the sense that it was clear that the state government is clearly unwilling to do anything to ensure its citizens are protected from weather disasters. Saint Louis has some of the oldest and well-maintained water and highway infrastructure. It’s not perfect, but it can handle a blizzard. 

    I wanted to be able to buy a house with my partner. I wanted to live in a place where I was less likely to lose access to water and power in winter. I wanted to be in a place where I was well-positioned to have access to fresh water in the event of the desertification of the western portion of the country, as well as the potential for a serious environmental apocalypse in my lifetime. Even if there had been a mutually agreeable city in which we could have afforded our dream home, I would have been forever fearing the next big weather event. 

    Part 2

    Coffee at my favorite burrito place

    My friend sent me the initial question sometime in August of 2022. We’re now into 2023, and I’m just now getting around to being able to put these thoughts down. As I type this, I’m actually on a plane flying from Austin to St. Louis, after a brief trip for a Pilates training. It’s the second time I’ve been back since moving; I was in Texas for the first part of my Level 3 teacher training in January. Both times, I’ve mainly been there to work, and haven’t done much socializing, or even let many people know that I’m in town. It’s honestly been painful to return, and with an intense training schedule, I don’t have much bandwidth for going out after. However, advanced teacher trainings in my Pilates program are few and far between; Texas is one of the only states where you can find them. So if I wanted to complete my advanced certification, it was inevitable that I’d be back, even if I wasn’t emotionally ready to return. However, I’m glad I got a few visits in before actually attempting to write this post. Each time I’m back in Austin, I’m caught between the competing feelings of How could I leave? and Thank goodness I left. As difficult as it is to hold both of those emotions at the same time, it’s provided useful reflection.

    When I try to get from the airport into town without getting stuck on a toll road, I’m glad I left.

    But I feel the sun and see the sky, and my heart aches to return.

    When I try to find parking pretty much anywhere, I’m glad I left. 

    But I have breakfast or dinner with a friend, and something in me begs to stay forever.

    When I see that places I used to love have gone out of business since the last time i was here, I’m glad Ieft. 

    But I go for an early morning hike before my flight home, and I wonder how I ever could have imagined being anywhere else.

    When I see the downtown skyline, which now boasts some buildings that really should belong to Marvel villains, I’m glad I left. 

    But I smell mountain laurel and see bluebonnets and feel like this is my true home. 

    What it boils down to was that I had to reconcile two kinds of love: the place where I wanted to spend the rest of my days, and the person with whom I wanted to spend the rest of my days. 

    Now, to be clear: if I had truly insisted on staying in Texas forever, John would have stayed with me. He would never have made me choose. 

    But it’s also true that he wanted to leave. And the day he suggested we consider moving to Saint Louis, I readily agreed, and threw myself into the process of starting over. Because once I have made a decision, I will go all-in. 

    In the romantic break-ups I’ve experienced, before the inevitable end, there was always a period in which I was struggling to reconcile who the person actually had become during our time together, versus who they used to be or who they might have been when we first got together. On this second trip to Austin, I realized that’s what I’d been doing with Texas before making the decision to leave. 

    When I came to Austin in 2008, it was a particular kind of place: cheap, with decent job prospects, and great weather. As I explored more of the state as a whole, I fell further in love with the varied geography and culture. I loved being able to drive to Mexico. 

    But Austin became more expensive and libertarian. The deep flaws in local and state infrastructure came to light. I still adored the west Texas landscape. I was still enchanted by Big Thicket. I still loved the friends I’d made. 

    But let’s face it, there were still things I loved about ex-friends and ex-romantic partners even though those relationships were also clearly not going to work out. 

    It was never really a choice between the place and the person. It was about recognizing that I could love this place with every single atom of my body, and still know that I couldn’t have the life I wanted if I stayed.

    There are no easy conclusions. I will return to this topic again. For now, the plane is about to descend at Lambert International Airport. John will pick me up. We will take 170 to South City. I will keep my eyes open for the Arch, the sight of which tells me I am home. And yet I will still be yearning for my other home.

    After tacos with one of my best friends
  • Episode 4: Christine Wenk-Harrison: One-Jam Harvest

    Episode 4: Christine Wenk-Harrison: One-Jam Harvest

    August 31 Open Mic To participate in the August 31st open mic bonus episode, click this link: https://anchor.fm/culinarysaijiki/message

    Guidelines:

    • Each poet is limited to two haiku
    • Before reading your haiku, please say your name or pen name and, if comfortable, where you’re writing from
    • Please read each haiku twice
    • Haiku should mention food, and connect to the transitional aspect of seasons, with an emphasis on autumn
    • Submissions that do not follow these guidelines will be disqualified

    In Gratitude Thanks to the anonymous doner who bought me three coffees this weekend! They donated after I sent the podcast to be mixed and edited, so I couldn’t thank them at the top of the episode, but I will for the next one!

    I forgot to mention in the intro, but this month, project supporters will get a recipe for Christine’s Mango Trio Pie. 

    You can support the project at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/culinarysaijiki

    More work by Christine Wenk-Harrison Three haiku at Miriam’s Well: https://miriamswell.wordpress.com/2020/11/29/3-haiku-by-christine-wenk-harrison-from-100-thousand-poets-for-change-reading/

    Christine’s “Hill Country Tastes” column from November 18, 2011: https://northshorebeacon.com/hill-country-tastes-by-christine-wenkharrison-p272-135.htm Christine’s “Hill Country Tastes” column from October 10, 2012: https://northshorebeacon.com/celebrating-german-day-the-old-way-p936-135.htm

    On the blog Visit https://culinarysaijiki.com/ for long-form essays and commentary on food haiku. The most recent post is about debatable food season words. Please join the conversation and offer your insight!

    Join the conversation I’m excited about the requests coming in to join the podcast! If you want to record a conversation, go to the form on the website: https://culinarysaijiki.com/join-the-conversation/

  • Episode 3: Claire Vogel Camargo: My Best Burger

    Episode 3: Claire Vogel Camargo: My Best Burger

    A burger with bacon, cheese, lettuce, and onion, with a side of sweet potato tater tots
    A burger and sweet potato tater tots from The Shack restaurant

    In my penultimate Austin recording, I sat down with Claire Vogel Camargo at her home in Austin, Texas. We met after my final meeting with the Austin Haiku Study group. Claire and I talked at length about how food connects us to family, and her haiku brought up memories that led to fund stories and digressions. I hope you enjoy our rambling, free-form conversation. 

    More of Claire’s work

    Support the podcast

    • I need help with sound editing for episode 4! If you know of any sound editors who have room in their schedules, please send them my way!
    • I would like a dedicated theme song and transition sound for the podcast. If you know of anyone who would like to compose, please let me know. Or, if you know how to navigate the overwhelming amount of public domain content and want to help, reach out!
    • Help me pay for sound editing and music through Buy Me a Coffee at: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/culinarysaijiki

    Join the conversation

    To be part of the Culinary Saijiki podcast, head over to the website and fill out the form here: https://culinarysaijiki.com/join-the-conversation/

    Read the saijiki

    For long-form essays about food, the seasons, and haiku, visit https://culinarysaijiki.com/

  • Episode 1: Agnes Eva Savich: The Redemption of the Pear

    Episode 1: Agnes Eva Savich: The Redemption of the Pear

    Welcome to the first episode of The Culinary Saijiki podcast! I talk with Agnes Eva Savich, leader of the Austin Haiku Study Group (among other things) about eight of her haiku. Along the way, we discuss holidays, motherhood, fruit, and the fun of Haiku North America conferences.

    Agnes’ blog: https://agnesevasavich.wordpress.com/

    For long-form essays and haiku commentary, visit the blog at https://culinarysaijiki.com/blog/.

    If you would like to be part of the podcast, visit this URL for details: https://culinarysaijiki.com/join-the-conversation/

    To support this project, buy me a coffee! Link: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/culinarysaijiki

  • January Retrospective

    2015 started off with some great opportunities for writing, reading, and sharing work.

    AWR January 2015
    The Austin Writers Roulette group

    First, I again had the honor of being a featured poet at the monthly Austin Writers Roulette show. The January theme was “Redemption,” and host Teresa Roberson once again rocked a thematic outfit. I performed three short, silly poems about feeling guilty for irrational things. We had a wide range of poems and stories, some honest and haunting. There were so many brave authors sharing vulnerable but inspiring work.

    ITWOW
    Having fun in Waco

    Despite living only about 90 minutes from Waco, the only time I’ve spent there has been driving through it. But Waco poet Jenuine Poetess, founder of In The Words of Womyn, invited me up for ITWOW’s birthday celebration/daylong writing retreat. I arrived in time for the afternoon potluck where there was amazing food. After two workshops that brought forth some incredible work from all participants, I got to hang out, eat delicious Vietnamese food, and then participate in a reading/open mic, as well as a silent auction. I made some excellent new friends, and found out that Waco has its charms.

  • Find Me in February

    February is already shaping up to be a busy month! If you want to come hear me read, I’ll be at the following venues:

    February 7th: Expressions
    Baha’i Faith Center
    Theme: For the Love Of!
    Note: None of the poets at this event will be reading original work. We will be reading the work of deceased poets, and celebrating their lives
    Doors at 6:00 p.m., reading starts at 7:00
    Admission Free, but please contribute to the potluck or bring canned good donations for Poets Pantry

    February 8th: Austin Writers Roulette
    Stompin’ Grounds
    Theme: Bad Date Night
    This is one of the rare instances where I’ll be reading nonfiction rather than poetry.
    4:00 p.m.
    Admission Free, but $5 donations encouraged to help us pay rent for the venue.

    February 13th: V-Day Erotica Reading
    BookWoman
    I’ll be hosting this event, and featuring Jasmaine Cash, Faylita Hicks, Denise Hudson, and Cindy Huyser.
    Free