Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Family Heritage

At some point in the late 18th century, a young German named John Leonard Dekle arrived in Savannah, Georgia. John had several children, many of which survived to adulthood and created their own children, including William Grissom Dekle. William married Bethany Hollingsworth, whose Quaker family had come to the New World from Ireland and had fought in the Revolutionary War. But the Hollingsworth line is another branch of this tree for another time. William became the first sheriff of Thomas County, Georgia, and had several children himself, furthering the Dekle line, and branching off in its own various directions, including William Grissom Dekle, Jr. Junior fought in the Civil War, fighting for Georgia in the Confederate Army. He died in battle and was buried in an unmarked grave on the field. When his wife later died in 1911, she was buried in an unmarked grave in honor of her husband. For any history buffs (I had a teacher in middle school who was into Civil War reenactments, for example), details about the battle in which William Jr. died in can be found on this website.

Fortunately, this particular branch of the Dekle line didn't die with William; he was a father prior to the Civil War, and his children lived on, including Thomas Henry Dekle. Thomas married Susan Elizabeth Wilder, who was born on December 27th. Interestingly, my mom would eventually become Susan Elizabeth Wise, with the exact same initials. I too have the initials SEW, although obviously my S stands for Sarah. My birthday, however, is December 29th. But this is once again sidetracking; it's not even of particular significance, I just find it interesting. Thomas and Susan had their share of children as well, producing James Orin Dekle. James married Zelma Lee Perry, and they had a handful of children, including James Orin Dekle, Jr, in 1910, better known as J.O.

By now, I'm sure you've realized that at some point this lineage will change from Dekle to Wise and I'll throw myself in. Indeed, J.O. was my great-grandfather, whose eldest daughter is my grandmother, whose only daughter is my mother.

Although different generations moved around the South, they primarily remained in Georgia for several generations. J.O. was in the army, and as a result the family lived in numerous locations. But eventually, he returned to Savannah. When people ask why I'm in Savannah for graduate school, there are only two answers: 1) because SCAD is a good art school, and 2) because my family is from here, and it's a beautiful place. If I'm going to be away from home, I may as well be in a place that has been home to my family for hundreds of years.

I work in the Lucas Theatre, which is celebrating its 90th birthday this December. A little old lady came in this evening, who couldn't have been any younger than 80, and struck up a conversation with my co-worker Sara and myself (yes, the two running the concessions stand tonight were Sarah-spelled-correctly and Sara-missing-an-h...although the lady chose to differentiate between us as Sarah-with-dark-brown-hair and Sara-with-light-brown-hair). She commented how she had been in Savannah all her life, and the more historic she got, so did the town. She praised SCAD for its contributions in renovating and rebuilding the community, and asked if we were SCAD students. Because we both are, she figured (correctly) that neither of us were from here. However, I informed her, my grandma and her family were from here.

So the lady asked what my family's name was, and I told her Dekle. She thought for a moment and said that sounded very familiar. She told me that she had known a girl when she was younger who had dated a man named Dekle. She couldn't recall what his first name was, but said that he was a very fine fellow.

The thing with the Dekle family line is that all Dekles in America can be traced back to the same common ancestor, that German immigrant John Leonard.

So this lady who had known a Dekle at some point, who dated but didn't marry her friend, would have been related to me in some way or another. I'd say it's a small world, but I've had enough interesting little connections such as this that they no longer surprise me.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Savannah Film Festival

The Savannah Film Festival is a pretty big deal here, bringing in a handful of big stars. This year, the honorees include Oliver Stone, Lily Tomlin, Ray Liotta, and James Marsden (there's one more but I don't recall - I don't know who she is). But in addition to these stars, other actors, directors, and industry bigwigs come to host events and present master classes.

I didn't know much about the film festival, so I pieced together information as I was able via the website. This led to the happy discovery that Alec Baldwin was coming to town to present Stanley Kubrick's film Barry Lyndon. So on Sunday, Margo and I headed over to the Lucas Theatre (where I work) to sit through a three hour movie, followed by a Q&A session. The experience itself was very fun; the movie was well done (of course it was; it's Kubrick), and Alec Baldwin was a delight.

By the time we got out, it was evening and it was getting dark. Margo and I popped into an art supply store so I could find prop mustaches (for a poster I was working on; the ones I found were made for Archie McPhee's in Seattle, which made me happy), and then across the street to Panera for dinner.

Remember the haunted CVS? Well, we passed by it on our way home. It was past 6:00 so it was closed, and it was dark. This was the night before Halloween, so I was telling Margo how silly I thought it was that the ghost was still haunting it in search for her baby, who is long dead by now too. As we approached the CVS, we heard a baby crying; I busted up laughing. That kid really had a set of lungs. We were followed by wailing for a while.

Anyway, the Film Festival continues this week and through the weekend. Margo and I have tickets for another film this weekend, one starring Jason Segel and Ed Helm. Looking forward to it!

Monday, October 31, 2011

I Heart Parkland

Facebook is exploding with posts about a lockdown drill at PLU. I haven't heard what happened to cause the lockdown, but naturally it was the cue for everyone to start stereotyping Parkland. Nothing offends me more, nothing makes my blood boil quicker, than these bigoted and closed-minded attacks on my beloved hometown.

I have lived in Parkland for nearly 20 years. Two decades, growing up in an area that is supposedly "the ghetto", and I have never been in a dangerous situation. I have never feared for my safety. I have never been a victim of any form of crime. I don't do anything special. I'm not lucky. I use common sense and intelligence. And ultimately, Parkland is just your standard urban community. There's crime, there's danger - but usually for people who cause it, who are in the wrong place. There aren't very many innocent bystanders involved.

So many students come to PLU from gated white communities or from small towns. A girl in my communication class freshman year explained that her hometown had one streetlight - and that was fairly new. That's not uncommon among the student body. In short, these students aren't used to reading about drug busts or shootings or bank robberies in their local news. Well kids, welcome to Pugetropolis, where the population is much greater, and much more diverse. You wouldn't let crime deter you from visiting New York or LA would you? There's far more crime in either of those places than in Tacoma, and certainly far more than Parkland.

Security at PLU is minimal compared to other universities; the reason is because it's not needed. The campus is so safe, the students have no clue what a protected little bubble it is that they live in.

When an incident happens near the campus, any school will take the precautionary measure of calling for a lockdown drill. This isn't because the students or the school are in imminent danger; it's because any school campus is a prominent destination and an obvious place to go hide. In the two (count them...only two) lockdowns I have experienced in my two decades in Parkland, there was no threat to the school. Both times, the incident was happening several blocks away and the school authorities simply decided to be cautious. Students were never in any danger.

The response that students have toward the local community is one born out of ignorance, misconceptions, and flat-out privileged bigotry. The entire world isn't the protective bubble or gated community that you grew up in. Just because an area is more urban and therefore is home to some of the lower ranks in society doesn't make that area - or it's entire population - "ghetto", "dangerous", or any of the other contemptuous stereotypes you wish to affix.

What appalls me is the fact that PLU as a whole perpetuates this stereotype, shutting itself off from Parkland, instead of embracing Parkland and working to improve the community. Sadly, it's not limited to only students. During my time as a student at PLU, I heard members of the faculty and staff make derogatory comments on the local area on numerous occasions. Any time I counter argued, or pointed out that I'm from there, the reply was always "well, you have to admit it's pretty bad."

No. I do not. Because the fact is, it isn't. I will admit Parkland isn't perfect. Of course it isn't. But is that any reason to condemn an area that I love? Of course not.

Parkland is a place where I could walk to school as a child; there's a neighborly aspect in play, where locals allow the children to cut through their yards as shortcuts to school, to friends' houses, to playfields. Parkland is a place that offers numerous activities to its youth, from the Spanaway-Parkland Youth Association sports leagues to the Sprinker Recreation Building.
Parkland is a place full of churches, full of families that have grown up together for generations. Parkland is a place full of daycares run out of homes, where the kids running around may be charges of the daycare, children of the owner, or friends. I had a safe, happy, and healthy childhood in the heart of Parkland.

It makes me sick to see the unofficial reaction PLU has anytime something occurs in Parkland (or Lakewood or Tacoma, for the matter. For some reason, Puyallup gets ignored). PLU was built in Parkland because it's a beautiful location. Parkland grew up around PLU. For decades, there was a sense of community, love, and support between the two. The growing rift takes several steps backward. PLU isn't any better than Parkland; Parkland helped make PLU. And any student who has the nerve to look down upon Parkland and her inhabitants is a much lower person than any member of the community.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Halloween

One year back in elementary school, I decided to be Princess Jasmine from Aladdin for Halloween. My mom made all of my costumes back then, so I had a one-of-a-kind Princess Jasmine outfit, much more accurate and interesting than any store-bought version. I loved the costume, and couldn't wait to wear it to go trick-or-treating around my grandparents' neighborhood. Princess Jasmine, it's well known, wore flowy pants and a bikini-style top, leaving her arms and midriff bare.

When the evening rolled around, however, my mom made me wear a light pink turtleneck underneath my costume. Mortified, I pointed out that Jasmine never had to wear a turtleneck under her outfit! Readily prepared for this exact protest, my mom responded that Princess Jasmine didn't live in Western Washington in October. Guess I had overlooked the fact that a middle-eastern princess isn't properly equipped for a crisp autumn evening in Tacoma, where temperatures average in the 50s or 60s.

Now, it's Halloween weekend in Savannah, and the past two days have seen 80 degree weather. Maybe if I had tried to go as Princess Jasmine over here, I would have been more successful.

As a side note, I have been numerous Disney princesses as a kid. I've been Snow White, Jasmine, Esmeralda, and Pocahontas. Notice how only one princess was white? And yet people like to argue that Disney isn't very diverse. Could have fooled me!

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Bite Update!

Well, I've been treating my foot religiously for the last week, and it's clearing up slowly but surely. Guess that's all I've got to say about that (as Forrest Gump would say), on account of the fact that you probably don't want to read a description of my bug bite foot rash.

Speaking of Forrest Gump, I worked Saturday at the Lucas Theatre. We had no customers to speak of whatsoever, but one of the on-duty cops was hanging out with us at the concession stand talking about movies he's worked on the set of here in Savannah, including Forrest Gump. He said he was there the day they shot the feather scene - they spent hours just going up and down with the crane tracing the movement of the feather. When I got home that evening, guess what was showing on TBS? Yup, Forrest Gump.

The next day, I went to dinner with Margo, and we decided to take the duckies to Chippewa Square, where the bench scenes of Forrest Gump were filmed. So I got a nice picture of Chazz and Ginger waiting for the bus - there's no bench there, that was brought in for the movie. And no bus runs there; traffic actually runs the opposite direction, so the street had to be closed down for the movie.

This weekend is far less exciting; I'm spending it working on homework and preparing pieces to submit to the SCAD Art Museum for its grand reopening. I'll update on that piece of information later in the week.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Guide to Southern Bugs

When I first arrived in Savannah, I would regularly see these strange bugs all over the city. They hang out in pairs, and appear to attach to each other at the butt and then fly off together. I find them disgusting and creepy, and they have an annoying propensity to fly into peoples' faces, but somebody from Florida informed me (and another student from New Jersey who was commenting on the strange, gross bugs) that these are called Love Bugs. My initial reaction was along the lines of "really? Love bugs is a real thing?" and apparently, the answer is yes. I haven't seen them recently, which indicates that they probably are gone for the winter. Fine by me.

Then of course, there's chiggers, or mites. It's not an uncommon sight to watch tourists ooh and ahh over the Spanish moss hanging in the trees all over Savannah. One evening, I watched an elderly couple stop to admire the Spanish moss, even stuffing it into the lady's bag. According to Margo, an acquaintance I made thanks to her grandma's connection to PLU and Trinity, collecting Spanish moss in such a way is a surefire way to inflict a chigger problem upon oneself.

Savannah is also home to cockroaches, which I have never seen in person before, and some sort of large, hideously ugly beetle which I noticed one day outside the dorm. It was utterly repulsive, and I'm thankful I've only seen one such creature. I also frequently see dragon flies flittering about which I enjoy, as they always make me think of home. The dragon fly is, afterall, the state bug of Washington.

These bugs and I were happily coexisting until last Thursday, when I woke up with a bug bite on my foot. Coming from such a mild locale, where the worst thing we have to worry about are irritating mosquitoes or the occasional (harmless) spider bite, I initially considered the bite to be a simple annoyance and ignored it. I did look online for home remedies to relieve itching, which led me to treating the bite with an ice pack and aloe vera lotion (in lieu of calamine lotion).

Unfortunately for me, something odd bit me, or the climate and I don't get along, or my immune system simply isn't quite on par these days. Whatever the cause, the past week has been a rather frustrating adventure for me. Within a couple days, my bug bite grew to the size of a nickel; no cause for alarm, but clearly not a standard mosquito bite reaction. By Sunday, I had developed a faint bullseye rash around the bite. It still didn't look that bad, but I decided it was time to see a doctor (and make a trip to the pharmacy for calamine lotion). So Monday, in I tramped to the student health clinic during walk-in hours to see the nurse, who took a look and said the bite was healing fine, and the rash was probably an irritation from my shoe, as the bite was located on the side of my foot. She suggested I buy over the counter hydrocortizone cream to treat the rash.

Between mid-terms and the inconvenient hours of the local haunted CVS, I didn't acquire the hydrocortizone cream until Wednesday, when I had to make a trip to CVS for some school supplies in order to complete my mid-term. Naturally, it was just my luck that in this time period, my rash decided to get worse: bumps started popping up around the inner circle of the bullseye, and the outer ring was spreading.

This leads us up to today, when I decided it was time to see the doctor again. Unfortunately, the student clinic at SCAD is appointment-only on Friday, and they're closed all weekend. Instead, they directed me to the urgent care clinic. I attempted to find a general practitioner in the historic downtown area, but to no prevail. There aren't many options to begin with, and getting in without an appointment is impossible. So SCAD res life called a taxi for me.

Oh, if only my adventures ended with a smooth ride and a quick diagnoses. But I think we're far enough into this story to know that it's not going to, aren't we?

The taxi driver was a caricature; every negative southern stereotype rolled up into this odd man. He showed me a picture of his (now dead) 10-foot rattle snake, griped about every driver on the road, and complained about Obama. The ride itself was complicated, as traffic reached a stand-still and we were stuck sitting with no end in sight. Turned out, a tree had fallen across the street and nobody could go anywhere until the cops and tree-removal service managed to work through the traffic and remove the tree. 45 minutes later, I arrived at the urgent care clinic, where I got to wait for just over 2 hours before finally being seen. By this point, I hadn't eaten in 6 hours, and was operating on 4 hours of sleep. The more I had to wait, the crankier I was getting, and the more eager I was to finish up and go back to the dorm.

The doctor took a look, said it looked like a bad rash and prescribed a steroid cream and an antibiotic to avoid infection. Of course, with the haunted CVS being the only pharmacy within walking distance, and the amount of time I spent waiting for everything, it was closed by the time I returned to the dorm (this time driven back by a Russian taxi driver who kept wanting to take me to Oglethorpe Mall, instead of Oglethorpe Ave...about 15 minutes apart).

So this brings us to tonight, where I'm stuck with a blistery rash that is irritated by every single pair of shoes I owe. I don't know what caused the problem, whether is was some sort of venom in the bug which bit me, or an underlying problem that was simply aggravated by the bug bite. I've certainly been a very good girl and haven't touched my foot - even when the itching was driving me absolutely mad. Hopefully, things will go back to the way they were the first month here: with the bugs and me ignoring each other.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Most Haunted City in America

Well, I've been told on more than one occasion now that Savannah is the most haunted city in America. My dorm, Oglethorpe House, is supposed to be the most haunted dormitory at SCAD. Although with the amount of noise perpetually around this place, anything could be attributed to a ghost. I've heard extremely noisy footsteps overhead at 5:00 AM which may seem odd, until you remember that college kids never sleep (why else would I hear anything at 5:00 AM myself?). But whether you believe in ghosts or not, my floor seems to be off limits to the spirits; according to a website that tracks all of the O-house ghost stories, nothing exciting seems to happen on the 2nd floor. We do have a devil shower though; it seems to mutually hate me. Every time I turn the water on, the second I turn my back from the shower I find my scrub lying on the floor of the tub, requiring me to reach in to the scalding-hot water to pick it up. I have never actually witnessed the scrub fall; maybe I should keep my eye on it and play a game of wills with it. Oh, how I hate our evil shower (apparently, there's a ghost who messes with the faucets in the showers; guess we don't get along very well).

Anyway, the real inspiration for this ghostly post is the CVS on Bull Street. It's the only pharmacy within walking distance of the dorm. Conveniently located, it has the WORST hours. While most of the city will stay open into the evening, the CVS closes at 6:00 PM. Sorry folks; no prescriptions, no bathroom needs, no last-minute supplies in the evenings. Coming from a place where drug stores stay open until at least midnight if not 24 hour, this highly irks me. Two sources have explained to me the reasoning for the 6:00 PM closing time: The CVS is highly haunted, and the employees flat out refuse to work after dark. I've never heard such a reason for a business to close outside of a movie or TV show!

So I did some research into the subject, and sure enough plenty of sources explain the story behind the haunted CVS. Apparently, the CVS stands on the site of an 18th-century jail which housed the first woman to be hung in Georgia. The woman was pregnant, which post-poned her imminent execution (sounds like something out of Chicago or Raising Hope to me), and now in death she searches through the CVS every night for her baby. Has nobody informed the ghost that her baby is long dead too? According to another source, this CVS is the only store in the country to close so early. Eerie!

As Halloween approaches, this city is gearing up to celebrate; it's a very big deal, here in America's most haunted city. While many businesses close around dark, the various tours around Savannah - especially the ghost tours - continue well into the evening. I once saw a horse-carriage tour going at 11:00 PM when only the bars were open.

Living downtown is host to some other odd occurrences; yesterday morning around 6:00 AM, Erica and I heard a loud crash somewhere outside. I don't think too much of loud noises, being familiar with military base noises (and there's a base near here, too). But this one prompted Erica to loudly ask "WHAT was THAT?!" which then piqued my interest as something out of the ordinary. Almost instantly with the crashing sound, my iPhone buzzed twice - which I took to mean I had received a text (at a very odd time...). A few moments later, as we were still puzzling over the source of the sound, every device in the room buzzed back to life; Pete again buzzed twice, the computers hummed to life, and the printers very noisily turned on. Pete's initial buzzes were an indication that power had been cut, and the later symphony was the power returning. Our theory is that somebody drove into a power source; although they must not have done too much damage, because we really only had a glorified power blip. One of the printers, however, obnoxiously needed the last word and proceeded to throw out random noises for the next few minutes. I mean, really.

Tonight, I'm going down to the river (River Street, that is) for dinner with Margo and to experience a place which serves alcoholic smoothies; mmmm sounds fun! :) My only other foray so far down to River Street was last weekend, briefly, but it had a very charming, old feeling about it. Tomorrow, I think I'm going to hunt down the square and the bench where Forrest Gump sat telling his story to any person waiting for the bus willing to listen, and take some pictures of Chazz and Ginger recreating a scene (not a hard task; they'll sit on the bench).

Monday, September 19, 2011

Relying on Shuttles Sucks

Getting around SCAD without a car means I either have to walk everywhere or rely on SCAD's free shuttle service, open to students. Each shuttle line has it's own color, and runs in a loop. The bus never comes the opposite direction, it just sticks to its route until it comes back to whatever stop you are looking for.

I discovered on my first day of classes that the red route is the most popular route; it goes by all of the Freshman courses, making it difficult for the upperclassmen to get on the shuttle. Therefore, multiple red buses run during the day. I ride the blue route to get to my classes, which are all in the same building. It's also one of the shortest routes, which makes it a fairly quick ride.

SCAD offers a mobile ap, called TransLoc (this ap actually services numerous universities; when you download the ap, you select your school and it shows the shuttles and routes available to you). TransLoc shows you where you are, where the buses are and what direction they are heading, and what time the next shuttle is expected to arrive at your stop. This would be such a useful tool, if only it was reliable. Unfortunately, it frequently will change expected arrival times, turning wait time at a stop into interminable lengths.

This is especially bad on weekends when riding the shopping shuttle, which takes students from Turner (a dorm) to O-House (my dorm) to Target to Best Buy to the Oglethorpe Mall back to Target (and then back to Turner for a loop). The entire route takes about one hour to go one direction. If you catch the shuttle at the first Target stop, you can expect to be on the bus for another hour until you get back to the dorms. So one 10 minute shopping trip requires you to wait for nearly an hour until a shuttle comes back around, and you can expect your entire trip to take you 3 hours. Not exactly efficient.

That's all for this week's blog post; I have homework and I'm watching Hell's Kitchen. Guess that's the extent of my multitasking for the evening.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Becoming a Southern Belle

Per Becky's suggestion, I am going to revamp this blog in accordance to my latest adventure, which involves a trip across the country to Savannah, Georgia in order to attend graduate school at the Savannah College of Art and Design. After many trials and tribulations (or so it seemed) to get some internet in my dorm room, I am now set up on a brand new computer, in an air conditioned room, in the heart of historic downtown Savannah (one of the oldest, most historic, and self-claimed most haunted cities in America).

Thus far, my time in Georgia has mostly involved complaining about the heat and asking the students who agree with me where they're from (usually places like Chicago, but one guy from New Mexico said the heat was bad for him because of the humidity; he's used to a dry heat. One guy was from Arkansas, but has been in Savannah long enough to be accustomed).

I've had a few minor culture shocks; I expected I might be the liberal whackjob from Pugetropolis, and I was appalled to learn that recycling doesn't matter much. What?! At PLU, we separated our recyclables; glass, plastic, paper, cardboard. Not to mention composting and all that fun jazz.
More shocking was learning that NONE of the grocery stores I am accustomed to exist in most of the US; including QFC, Safeway, Albertson's, and Fred Meyer. Every store I thought of, the other students said "nope, never heard of it". So where do people buy food around here? Kroger, I guess. I didn't know Kroger stores existed; that's the generic store brand at our grocery stores. Well, at least it's semi familiar.

So far, I've been surrounded primarily by undergraduates. No surprise there; I am living in a residence hall, afterall. But that's okay; this experience is so new to me, I almost feel as lost and freaked out as all the 18 year old freshmen. And as far as graduate students go, I am a bit of a baby, what with being fresh out of my undergrad program.

I'm learning that while many stores exist here in Savannah which would help keep me in comfort, they are not easy to get to. At all. Hopefully, I succeed eventually in learning the transit system. Everyone here rides bikes, but I'm broke and have no bike. Walking it is! Which is fine around downtown, just less so if I want to shop at Target.

Classes start tomorrow (or, in the case of my lovely schedule, Tuesday). Hopefully I'll start to brave the heat and explore this city shortly. Until then, expect numerous complaints about the ungodly heat (which the locals keep telling me is beautiful right now, because it's cooling off. I'm sorry, but 90 is not beautiful. Ever).