we felt like the luckiest ones

We’ve been bouncing around this summer, making plans every weekend and counting down until the wedding. Now that it’s August, I can officially say that I’m getting married next month (!) and so we’re gearing up and winding down all at once.

This weekend we’re headed to Montana to see Sierra and Dan get married, and I cannot wait. SS was my freshman year roommate, and she’s been dealing with my crazy for 10 years now. Dan and I also met freshman year, and Dan and Sierra started dating early on, which was cool for me because we were all friends and it made my life easier.

In 2006, the spring of our sophomore year, I made Sierra go to the Kasteel Well with me, leaving Dan behind in Boston. Lucky for us, he wrote to both of us frequently to keep us company, and he came to visit us halfway through our stay. We were supposed to go to Berlin, but Dan’s flight was delayed so we end up going for the weekend to Rotterdam. I don’t really know why I had invited myself on this weekend trip with Sierra and her boyfriend who had come all the way across the ocean to see her, but it seemed reasonable at the time (plus, let’s be honest, Dan was half there to see yours truly.)

So we headed South to Rotterdam, and we got a last minute hostel, and we tried to figure out what there was to do in Rotterdam. Turned out, there wasn’t much. So, one of our days was spent visiting the Euromast and obviously making a snowman.

DSCF8223 DSCF8195 DSCF8184The photo above of us in a reflection is the only one of the three of us I have from that trip, but I’ll never forget how much fun we had, despite being poor, cold, off-plan, and probably hungry (and under caffeinated!)

A few years later in 2008, we traveled together for spring break, heading to Los Angeles to see Jeff and potentially see if I could live there (I decided I could.) Here’s another horribly bad-slash-amazing picture of the three of us. What are we doing?

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I am so excited to be celebrating these two nearly ten years after I read them the entire list of ingredients in my multivitamins, interrupting their first date and being the classic annoying freshman year roommate. Sierra and Dan are two of the bests, the reals, the forever-friends. Though we see each other only a couple times of year, if that, we don’t let that stand in the way of this truth: they are my family.

I can’t wait to watch you two get married this weekend – I am so lucky to have such a great two friends in this world who happen to also love each other. Let’s maybe try to get a better photo this weekend, yeah?

we were meant to be known

This is a birthday heavy week, you guys. In addition to my brother-in-law’s birthday on the 11, and Nikki’s on the 12, today is none other than Ms Corelyn’s birthday.

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I love this photo of us, because look at our faces! True love, you guys.

Corelyn is the only OTHER person that can boss me around like Nikki can. She’s reasonable (except when I need her to make a cake with me at midnight), she’s always game for anything (even after saying no, we cannot make more cookies, she’ll pull out the whisk and dive right in), and she is pretty much the best person to hang out with, whether in the kitchen or watching television or traipsing around Los Angeles (or the country.)

Sometimes, I think the only reason that GMS works is because Corelyn knows how to rein me in, refocus me, and because we genuinely, truly are best friends. If we liked each other even the SLIGHTEST bit less, GMS would fall apart at the seams.

We have been together through thick and thin, through good and bad, and we have spent the past nearly 5 years constantly emailing, texting, calling, Gchatting, and carrier pigeon-ing each other. We survived her move away, and back. She’s my person. When we’re not busy convincing people we’re not lesbians (running a blog together makes it hard to take photos, you guys, and we often end up looking longingly at each other) we’re hanging out in a crowd, probably talking to each other, or telling someone a story about each other.

This has become cheesier than I meant it to be, but I think that sometimes friendship love is the love that’s the most unsung: family is a given, and relationships depend on constant acts of love, but friends are beat up emotionally nearly on the regular, and are expected to just take it as part of the friendship, without much appreciation, gratitude, or, well, love.

S0, Corelyn, I love you. And I am sorry because you’re probably now crying. I am, too. I am so glad you were born into this world, where we could meet and become best friends, so that we could be known to this universe. I hope that today is the best day, and tomorrow is even better, and so on, infinity.

Truly, thank you, for being my best friend.

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just want to stay up high in the sky

Happy Wednesday, y’all. Tonight’s the full moon, so I am sitting around waiting for Jeff and Corelyn to arrive so we can go get pizza and watch Moonstruck.

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You guys, if you haven’t seen it, you’ve gotta watch it. It’s hysterical, it reminds me of everyone in my family, and it has all the best quotes in the world.

Here’s a peak into the movie. I laugh pretty much the entire time, because I know what’s coming and because it is so.freaking.funny. Not to mention, how cute was Nick Cage at 24? The answer is so very cute.

Anyways, this has brewing for months and months, where EVERY MONTH during the full moon I proclaim loudly that we should immediately go home, watch Moonstruck, and laugh our faces off. We’re always on our way to something, or somewhere, or it’s 11 pm when I finally realize the moon is full. So last month on the full moon, I made a date with Corelyn (who has never seen the movie) to watch it the next full moon, no matter what.

Well folks, that night is tonight, and we must do what’s expected.

I am off to watch Cher fall in love, hopelessly. (BRING ME THE BIG KNIFE.)

we come home

Last year, I wrote this essay for a submission to a magazine to go along with Mary’s beautiful photographs of our Christmas tree bonfire. Although we ended up getting published on a photography site (go Mary!) the essay wasn’t right for that format – so I am sharing it with you here, now, as we descend on the beach tomorrow for 2014’s bonfire.

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Living far away from home, you learn quickly that family is not just about blood. It comes in many shapes and forms, from people with whom you never expected to form such close bonds. When I moved to Southern California as a 22 year old, I took an adventurous leap forward: I had about $800, a boyfriend of less than two years, and hope. I followed him and his Hollywood dreams, steeling myself with the belief that I’d be able to find a home in the glamorous unknown that was Los Angeles.

Four years later, my hope proved true when that man took a leap of his own, in front of thirty of our friends, with a box, a ring, and the obvious question. We were at the ocean, our favorite place in the world, and as we watched the sun set over an orange sky, we were surrounded by our family – the kind that comes together as unconventionally as, say, a forest on a beach.

With origins in the Midwest, the Bible belt, New England, New Jersey, Sweden, and South America, and spanning cultural backgrounds from Italian to Cantonese; this is the family we rely on when we’re nearly 2,000 miles from the nearest true kin. We’re each others’ emergency contacts, champions, advocates, and shoulders to cry on. We bake the birthday cakes, mourn the job losses, throw housewarming parties for the tiniest apartments, rush each other to the hospital, and ensure that no one ever goes without champagne when we are promoted, get engaged, or close on our first home.

Like all families, we have traditions – from pumpkin carving to easter egg dyeing, yearly ski trips, Oscar screenings, and an annual gift exchange that, because of our New England roots, we refer to as a Yankee Swap. And, come January every year, we do the impossible: we head to our favorite home-away-from-home, the ocean, and we burn forty-some-odd Christmas trees to celebrate the new year.

Beaches are one of nature’s democratic forums. All kinds of people have flocked to them for centuries, to rest, to play, to enjoy the sun: to live and to breathe. The beach brings people together, as does another of our favorite pastimes: eating. When we gather at the State Beach, we bring snacks, marshmallows, chips, knives, cups, plates, tables, chocolate, lemonade, and always, always music.

Gathering around a bonfire once every January, we get to celebrate the new, put the old to rest, and as a family, we celebrate each other. We step outside our day to day, and have ourselves a good old fashioned party. The musicians of the group take song requests, the cooks make sure no one goes hungry, the writers tell us about the worlds they’ve been working on, and the photographers capture every moment; the sunsets, the s’mores, the moment when everyone hears that song that just came on and breaks into the chorus, belting out every word; the silence as the first tree goes up and we all stand in wonderment at the light coming from the branches and twigs.

This LA family, we are kindred spirits. We are a patchwork quilt of the world, and we love each other fiercely. Our family reunion to start the new year is another tradition in a long year of traditions that strengthens and sustains us.

This year, we headed to the State Beach, a place where hundreds gather every day, but where once every January, we congregate at the same spot, on the same day, on an unspoken sacred ground. It’s the place where we’ve celebrated friends gained and friends that have moved on, where we celebrate birthdays past, and now, where I’ll always be reminded of him on a knee in the sand. In a way, we came home. We burned the year’s loot, smiling in the warmth of the fire, watching the old disintegrate and preparing ourselves for the next year. We reminisced about the year past, and we talked of our hopes for 2013.

As we watched the trees going up one by one, we knew that we had everything we needed right there: a beautiful, unconventional, special family that come what may, will be here next year, in the same spot as always, burning Christmas trees. Our forest on the beach came together the same way we did; unexpectedly, perfectly.