Texas, check
It's the year of the
monkey, swinging through the branches of many trees. The year of extra space to
fill with reading, writing, geography tonic, general wellness. It starts in Austin at my third annual
MLA convention. I could have used a warmer jacket, but otherwise I brought
everything I needed and nothing more; I did not arrive late, did not get sick,
did not see everything and did not mind. The Texas sky was dark when I first saw it.
Our flight from Seattle, which sucked up the ripest part of the Wednesday,
finished by circling awhile over a carpet of spectacularly blushing sunset
clouds. On the ground it was a drizzly night. Through the fissure where the
plane met the gangway came enough air to let my nose know that we were in
a happy place: it was southern air.
Lots of people probably
want me to call Texas
"west" -- sorry, I'm not going to be able to call it anything but
"south". Not Dixie south, but
distinctly below 35° N latitude. That Austin air
was Los Angeles
air. Hold on, though. I made atmospheric associations with Southern California
throughout the visit, yep, and I also absorbed the significant differences
between Texas
and the West Coast, in food, fashion, hospitality, spatial conventions.
Latitude aside, LA certainly better resembles San Francisco ,
Portland , and Seattle
than it does Austin .
More on all these regional alignments later; for now I'm giving Austin a double southern tag.
The female three quarters of our English teacher team bunked in a room at the brand new Westin Austin downtown. I understand that this hotel counts among so many
affronts to old-school locals who've watched their kitschy quaint brick
buildings get bulldozed one after another through the last
decade, transformed into sleek cosmopolitan clichés. But if you can't fight the
21st Century, and you don't have a friend to stay with in Austin , stay here. The location, service,
design, and rooftop are all just right.
We asked the concierge for
help with our first priority: Tex-Mex and margaritas, within a few blocks. He
sent us to Manuel's on Congress, where the mole queso was the star of the show.
It was a warm enough night, no longer drizzly, and barely populated outside
when we emerged from dinner. We were treated to our first burst of live music
from the converted auto shop across the street from our hotel. It was Antone's,
"Austin 's
Home of the Blues," in its new location, as we'd later learn. We went up
to our room to regroup for a minute but by the time we got back down to
Antone's, at midnight, the band had wrapped up. The big room and its staff were
still inviting, though, so we stayed for an opening-night cap at the bar.
We slept late in the morning, connecting with work email and social media in pajamas, supposedly recalibrating two hours of jet lag. Jessica left the room first, to find real coffee and inspect the gym, and returned gushing about the rooftop pool deck. No proposed conference sessions lured us until late afternoon so we hit the streets, a bit overwhelmed by the choices, settling eventually at the Slake Cafe for heaping street-style tacos and bright salads with scrumptious
From the first night of our trip, anyone we queried about where to eat, wander, sit, shop, or hear music in
I was bait-and-switched
into joining an "intermediate" yoga class at 6pm with Jessica and her
Austin friend Yvonne.
We walked to the studio, called Practice, on East 6th Street , and as we tucked our
shoes under the bench in the anteroom Yvonne said, "This class will melt
your face off." Yeah, it was an up-tempo, strenuous pose-packed 75 minutes
that left me purged and triumphant. I had to discard my t-shirt halfway
through. It was not Hot Yoga, but it was pushing 80 degrees in the room,
because it was crammed with about 50 yogis. We'd arrived early enough to get me
a spot next to the door and the tower of cubbies where everyone stored their
gear. As the class filled up, so did the cubbies, and people trampled right
into my mat space to shove their stuff on top of each other's without pause. My
mat edge squished ever closer to the wall, Jessica's ever closer to mine, and
when class began there were at best two inches of floor between any two mats.
In all my various Seattle
studio experiences, latecomers would about-face and abandon the class before
setting up anywhere near that close to a classmate. The instructor had no room
to practice in here, she merely twined
through the bodies chanting commands. Wide leg inversions put every foot right
under a neighbors nose. And this shameless proximity was acceptance, was
empowering, pushed me through a face-melting workout. Austin anti-freeze.
Afterwards Yvonne took us across the street to dinner at the Creole-Italian flavored East Side Showroom; modern-gothic decor, flowing champagne, double risotto orders and salted caramel cake recommended by a white sweater server with a sexy accent. Then our gracious guide drove us the mile back to the hotel and on the way I got a first taste of the West 6th that some people had suggested avoiding. It was a familiar spring break party street, though less raucous than I'd expected. It's best feature, another Southern one in my mind, was the profusion of roof top decks. Most had iron railings reminiscent of
The MLA conference had the
serendipitous timing to coincide with Austin 's
Free Week, during which everyone enjoyed complimentary admission to all music
venues. Another lovely unheard of (at least to me) idea. Natalie was ready for
bed, so just Jessica and I would meet David at Antone's. Sadly our personal
clocks were still off, though, so it was past 11 by the time we got back out of
the hotel room and into the club, where we heard one song before
the band packed up, again. Free as it may have been, Thursday was not the new Friday here. Just as well
though to be in bed by midnight, ready to conference for real tomorrow.
Up earlier on Friday
morning, Jessica and I returned to the edge of East 6th for chocolate
croissants and coffee at the Easy Tiger Bakery. We ate standing at a narrow bar
since the creek-side patio wasn't open yet, and then, finally, went to the
conference center. The fist session was a dynamic Joan Didion Panel through
which I took a flurry of notes. At noon we had a lunch of leftovers back at the
hotel, and then split up. I spent the remaining light hours in windowless rooms
with Twain's Missouri ,
Louise Erdrich and Jhumpa Lahiri. Between sessions I watched a clique of
scholars in pink t-shirts make picket signs they'd carry to the Capitol that
evening in a march against Texas
gun culture.
At the end of the day,
with no small amount of text coordinating, I found Natalie in a swarming
hallway. Jessica was off to dinner at Yvonne's house, so we took a cab with
David to Z'Tejas. Happy hour included catfish beignets, grilled Ruby trout, and
a wonderfully deconstructed chop salad. The dessert special was Bavarian Cream
churros which I failed to order. Strong margaritas made us feel like going back
on foot, and just a few blocks from the restaurant, behold, here was a
full-blown Friday night on infamous 6th. Cheesy chain bars and whirling drink
signs galore, it was a little bit Universal City Walk, a bit more downtown
Vegas, and most of all, for sure, Beale
Street . Why had I not previously considered just
how many of our fine cities might have such a thoroughfare? I scanned the
crowds for evidence of a liberal open container policy. All I noted was a lot
of wobbly heels, and frat boys on stools outside every club calling "free
alcohol inside, Ladies," or some such enticement. But we were not the
ladies they were looking for; we were happy to keep on walking. David was
moving up the street at a brisk pace, waxing about the olden days of Austin , excited about the
reunion rock show he'd play in a few hours.
We freshened up at the
hotel and strolled to Beerland. On the way we passed a congregation of food
trucks surrounding a few big spool tables. These eateries were all over town,
scattered in groups of four or five, as opposed to Portland 's
dozens of trucks stacked into one industrial parking lot or Seattle 's single trucks tucked into busy gas
stations. This one at Red River and 7th was my
favorite so far, with folks enjoying pizza, hot dogs, hot wings, gyros, and
curry. One truck had its heat scale marked from "brown people spicy"
to "white people spicy." I wanted to come back later for the pizza.
Across the street, Beerland featured a mob out front on the smoking patio.
Inside it further distinguished itself from the commercial party scene a few
blocks away -- it was all beer bar band stage, stripped down and familiar, not
even a t-shirt for sale. David was holding court with his old Enduro band
members and Natalie and I carved out a spot near the pool table. Some tall
drunk kid tried hitting on Natalie. Jessica arrived, dropped off by Yvonne's
brother who had gone to a Bowie
birthday drag show at the Elysium Nightclub right next door. Two terrifically
different things happening in either half of the shared building, this was the
No Fucks vibe of the town. It was great cheering Enduro on, but how I wish now
that we'd hit that drag show afterward. Instead we strolled home to bed by
midnight again.
Each day I talked about
exploring South Congress, a river promenade, art museums, the UT Austin
campus... and each day I wound up a little further down East 6th Street. Call
this the day I accepted the patterns of my travel proclivity. Instead of
comprehensive surveys, I sink into single streets or neighborhoods (or regions,
cities, sides of islands) to achieve maximum familiarity in minimum time. I'm
struck by this spotlight on a key angle of my character: I choose depth over
breadth. On Saturday we chose a late breakfast at
Cisco's with custom-made migas, dollar bacon-egg tacos and divine biscuits.
Then we lingered at a charming gallery boutique called The Lion's Nest. Some of
us lingered so long in fact that others opted for another sidewalk sunbath, but
the wind was feisty, asserting that it was January in the South, too, and now's
when I started missing that winter jacket.
I never heard for sure
whether suitable coffee was found in Austin ,
but the Easy Tiger must have come the closest because we stopped in again, and
this time got to sit a spell on their benches down by the creek. There was less
wind down there, but we needed to keep moving soon enough. Next I got
sidetracked at the O. Henry historic house. With manuscripts under glass, the
only-known recording of the author's voice, turn of the (prior) century
furniture, first editions, and an expert docent, I considered this surprise
more than adequate literary professional development for the day. And so the
afternoon passed in the cozy Westin room where I read and Natalie and Jessica
caught up with their courses. Our only remaining obligations of the trip were
three 7:45pm facial appointments at the Milk and Honey spa.
On the way we tried to
find some dinner with David, anywhere on 2nd near the spa would do. The first
fun place we stumbled upon turned us down despite many empty tables in view.
Reservations, they said. We regrouped grumpily in the bar since the wind had
become prohibitive outside. At the other end of the block we tried Malaga , and again were
denied seats at any of the dozen plainly open tables. Reservations, they said.
I blamed MLA attendees, pesky specters I didn't feel like I'd really seen all
week. But instead of ruining our street karma by giving the host a piece of our
minds, we snuck up to the last four seats at the bar, and were rewarded with
wonderful Spanish tapas. Each small dish of garlicy, cheesy, crispy, green
goodness was tastier than the last, so we still had a perfect score on Austin food. It was lemon
curd beignets for dessert this time, a treat that couldn't possibly sound more
perfect to me, and again I failed to
order it. I believed we'd come back later for a box full, but the Milk and
Honey spa did its job too well. It was 10pm when we emerged from our plush
pampered cocoons into the bitter cold night. The Saturday streets were fuller
of people and music each block north we moved; a town-sized party surrounded
our hotel. But all we wanted was to bundle up in bed, where we put together a
quick picnic of snacks before calling it the earliest night of all.
Believe it or not I went
back to Practice at 9am Sunday morning for another 75 minutes of yoga. This
class, all about powerful bandhas, was half as crowded as the other one and
took a slower pace, though there were still some poses in which I compromised.
After a long savasana we made a quick change (so quick that Jessica left her
sneakers at the studio) and a coffee stop at Rio Rita's (is it a cafe or a
bar?) en route to our furthest point on East 6th: brunch at Gardiner. Right in
sync with the tone set by morning yoga, this place was a light-drenched
mid-century splendor. Two hours of fresh inspired dishes and grapefruit mimosas
later, we strolled back among the palms and agave, admiring the many layers of
street art, and re-learning a classic gentrification story as David -- who'd
run into his old mechanic, in his front yard, on the way to brunch -- explained
the two sides of the freeway and the racism of the road.
My prior night's facialist, Megan from
Even with our late Westin checkout, we were hanging around the lobby with over three hours to spare before our flight home. We got in a cab anyway, thank goodness; between Sunday gridlock and perhaps the longest security line I've endured in memory, we had just enough time to find airport dinner before boarding. I got some pizza, though no churros or lemon beignets; satisfaction remained my dominant mood nevertheless. We'd covered just enough ground that with the help of the grid layout I think I'll be able to navigate a downtown map any time in the future. Should a reason arise, I'll gladly spend another five days, preferably in spring or fall, finding tacos, pushing poses, and hearing bands, in







Gorgeous! Your words, a blanket. <3
ReplyDeleteYour crispest writing yet. Busting my buttons.
ReplyDeletePowerful encouragement, Peeps. Appreciated.
ReplyDelete