Tuesday, January 31, 2012

The Dogma Church

This is the abandoned Roman Catholic church where the movie "Dogma" was filmed.  It's located in a gritty section of the East Liberty neighborhood of Pittsburgh.  I walked to this place from my apartment back in 2002, when I was living on Highland Avenue, just to check it out.  It's in even worse condition today.  Although East Liberty has experienced rapid gentrification since I lived there, this little pocket is still forlorn.  Much of the public housing that surrounds the old church is also sitting vacant.  But I happened to be back in the old neighborhood today.  
 The church stands in lovely dereliction, abandoned by the Italian immigrants who once made up the flock here.  Italians mostly fled the neighborhood in the 70s and 80s when the construction of various sports arenas in the Hill and North Side displaced African Americans to this part of town.  A few old diehards remain; they hang out at the barbershop on nearby Sheridan Avenue, speaking an odd patois mix of Italian and English, drinking bitter burned coffee, and cursing modern life.  During its life of service, the church was known as "Saints Peter and Paul Parish."  And although it would be an architectural gem in most cities, here in Pittsburgh, gorgeous churches are too plentiful.  For a poignant example, check out the unsentimental destruction of St. Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church.  In a town like this, it takes more than beauty to save a building from ruination.      
Hell, at this point, Alanis Morissette herself couldn't save this place. (Alanis played the part of God in the movie.) These are the sacred doors through which Ben Affleck and Matt Damon had to pass in order to gain eternal life.  I didn't get a photo of it, but the light passing through some the windows seemed to indicate that parts of the roof have collapsed.

If you're looking for a tiny brush with fame and glamour, take Penn Avenue east from downtown all the way up to East Liberty Boulevard. You'll see the twin towers rotting where they stand, almost stripped of shingles.  Against your better judgment, swing a left onto East Liberty Boulevard and left again onto Larimer Avenue, where the building stands.  The neighborhood is eerily open, as many lots are vacant; the structures have long since been torn down.  Local youths will stare and posture, but they're just showing off for their friends.  They won't hurt you.  The church purports to be protected by a "Guardian" security system.  Walk around, but don't try the doors; they used to stand ajar back when I first visited the place, but now they're apparently armed. ~ Sts. Peter and Paul Church, 130 Larimer Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15206-3128

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Dutch Fork Run, Washington County

Planned today's hike for half an hour last evening.  I'd hoped to explore virgin terrain in the otherwise familiar SGL #232 in Washington County, but it turned out to be a literal wash.  The terrain was soaked.  Dutch Fork run was swollen and impassable.  I ended up walking along a familiar route, caked in mud...  

I love the Pennsylvania Game Commission's website.  It's a sprawling site with maps, and tips, and info about native creatures, hunting seasons, online purchases, etc.  There's even stuff about native plants and bird watching.  I'm not even a hunter, but it's one of those sites where I could spend hours.  Unfortunately, the trail description on the PGC site didn't mention the fact that there are no bridges over the streams... Since this is primarily an equestrian trail, the absence of bridges does make sense.  I followed the stream a good distance in both directions looking for a fallen tree that spanned the creek, in order to shimmy across SBP style, but there was none.  This is the SGL #232's "internal road" from PA331 to the infamously creepy Dog Run Road, Washington County.  If you look closely at both photos, you'll see that the road passes straight through water, which is unusually high.  
The road from Dutch Fork Run to Dog Run passes through deep water.  

Important Bird Area

The sign on this tree in State Game Land #232 reads, "Important Bird Area."  And yet there are Bud Lite cans strewn on the ground all around the base of the tree.  If the birds that frequent this spot are so damn important, how come they're drinking Bud Lite, and don't they have lesser birds to clean up their messes?  Of course, to give the birds the benefit of the doubt, there are places in Washington County where drinking any beer more exotic than a Yuengling could get you killed.  

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Phantom City

Ghostly city of glowering skies and old bridges.  Steep city of rivers and hills, almost stately in its deer path logic, everything emanating from a single point where two rivers form a third.  The major streets are like rays of light spreading out away from the cone of land that is their source.  That triangle--the Point--is both the city's figurative and literal starting place.  In the mid-1700s, it was the site of the colonial fort and village.  Now it's a green riverside park in the shadow of the most sinister-looking towers.  

The skyline has an evil look to it, too many sharp peaks and angles, like the towers of Mordor or Isengard.  But, oh the lovely architecture in this dark city of gargoyles and stone angels.  The cavernous, ornate theaters and music halls with their lofty balconies and galleries.  The public squares and parks with their statues and fountains.   It's a city of sculptured cemeteries, where the dead repose in the gritty splendor of their elaborately sculpted tombs.  The rosettes, the flying buttresses sheltering the earthly remains of long-forgotten souls.  The glorious churches where the hour is always twilight.  The mansions of the robber barons of bygone days, standing all in rows along tree-lined streets.  The synagogues, and onion domes, and spires.  The curious antique stores, and dusty used bookstores, and gray-lit coffee shops where cats sleep on old "davenports."  The Arab, and Vietnamese, and Italian, and Central American supermarkets.  The museums, and universities, and hospitals.  It's an inimitable city of glories untold. There are cities more beautiful--though only few on this continent.  There are cities more chic and refined--though this one truly holds its own in terms of culture.  But I don't know any other American city with the same mysterious "noir" mystique as Pittsburgh.  Sometimes I think I'll just wander into its tangle of narrow streets and disappear from all the responsibilities of this life.

I think all things "Batman" are lame, but it's really no wonder the latest Batman movie was filmed in Pittsburgh.  It's a mysterious city with an old, jagged charm--a haunting kind of beauty that borders on the morbid.  I live in the dull outer orbit of this grand old city, but I venture here rarely.  Life just gets in the way.    

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

The Stifle Shed

The thought you didn't dare to speak: Where did it go?  After you denied it a place in the world, refused to add it to the discourse of the living, where did it go?  It came to this place.  Out past the furthest edges of the city, in a bleak landscape that no longer knows whose it is or what it's for, in gray out-lands that have been sold and resold so many times no one remembers.  It came here.  

You stifled it.  You smothered it.  You strangled it in the dark, worked like hell to keep it from the light.  But you can't kill it.  The best you can do is banish it to this place, where it will live out its days in the darkling silence of a roadside shed--which it shares with a band of raccoons.  It will pass its days here, where a sad, watery light sifts through square holes in the roof, and old straw litters the broken boards of the floor, where long-forgotten storm window panes are stacked high, never to be reclaimed.

Oh, but you better hope it never catches you strolling past its shed of a winter afternoon.  If it does, it will accost you like a Hessian mercenary.  Though you forced it past the frontiers of silence, it will rush from its shed, raccoons in tow.  It will repossess you with vengeance.  

Sunday, January 22, 2012

The River's Name

The river's name is Yearning.  The city's called Today, where smokestacks of necessity obscure the skies over duty's cluttered streets.  It's all you never hoped to be.  But the river's name is Yearning, and its westward flow is deep. 

Saturday, January 21, 2012

An Empire of Shadows

 This is the realm of dusk, a kingdom of dust.  This is an empire of shadows where the brightest possibilities never reach the light.  This is the twilight that settles over your thoughts in the moment just before sleep, a world of grays and browns.  You come here often but never can linger.  You glimpse it briefly, as if from the window of a train.  

Monday, January 16, 2012

The Grace of the World

When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and our children's lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water,
and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought of grief.
I come to the presence of still waters.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light.
For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.
~Wendell Berry

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Land of Rest

The snowy woods.  Its silence is otherworldly.  I don't know what takes other guys into the woods, but for me it's mostly the silence.  And the solitude.  And the possibility of discovery.  There's a profoundly spiritual calm that settles over me when I've been in the woods--especially in winter, but not uniquely.  It doesn't have to be beautiful woods.  It doesn't have to be a long trek.  All I need is silence, an absence of distractions, and eventually a reasonably comfortable place to sit.

Once on Bear Mountain--just north of New York City on the Hudson River--I made a long trek through the snow and came across two Asians meditating.  They sat still as stones and didn't even acknowledge my presence.  I thought I'd just chanced upon the dead bodies of two guys who were just too stuffy and proud to fall over.  I had never seen anyone meditating in the forest before.  Now I do it, and to my knowledge, no one has ever witnessed it.

The worst thing about doing your spiritual practices in the snowy woods is that by the time you get up and hike back to your car, your body is no longer in perpetually-warm hiker mode.  Meditating in the snow puts the body and the mind on autopilot.  You've essentially turned off the inner furnace for 20 minutes, and the hike back can be pretty damn cold.  And yet, I live for it.  That sylvan fix is the one thing that makes everything else in my life possible.   

The Promise of Silence

The promise of silence is nearly as lifegiving as the actual experience of silence.  But not quite.  This morning as I prepared to go to the woods, I could have sung for joy.  It's been such a long time, and though it's not my favorite season, there is nothing like the forest under the snow of winter.  The silence is profound.  The solitude is usually perfectly unbroken.  Today, winter made its second cameo appearance in the season that bears its name.  I've missed the true winter, and today was a gift.  On Tuesday, we'll return to the high 40s. 
Here at last, in the second photo, are the "snow and jaggers" for which this melancholy little piece of Internet real estate is named.  This is State Game Lands #203--up in the North Hills; it's the only SGL in Allegheny County.  Of course, it's still deer hunting season, but only flintlock.  I figure if some hunter would 'accidentally' shoot an orange-bedecked hiker with musket and ball, then Providence is just out to get that poor hiker, and if it's not some antique-firearm lover, it will be a slow-moving postal delivery truck with its four way flashers blinking, or a bizarre grease fire in his own damn kitchen.  In other words, it would be almost unheard of to catch a stray musket ball.  Musket shooting is far less haphazard than other rifles.  Besides, it's not like up in the North Country--where angry fat men stay in cabins and hunt drunk.  

SGL 203 is nothing to get excited about.  It's a patch of woods being encroached upon by suburban development and the soulless subdivisions of the damned.  But it did the trick.  When there's snow, you don't need a trail; you can just follow your own footprints back out.  So I bushwhacked into the woods far enough that there were no road noises to be heard.  I made it to the summit of some unnamed hill--or a hill whose name is long since forgotten, and there I found a good spot to sit on a fallen tree.  As always, I sat in perfect stillness, perfect silence...this time for ten minutes.  Ideally, a good contemplative spell will last a minimum of twenty minutes.  I think it takes the body and spirit at least that long to get the point: "Hey guys!  No talking.  No moving.  No intentional thinking.  We're shutting down.  Pass it on!"  But I was so starved for the purity of the winter woods that the trancelike state came upon me within the second minute, and it didn't dissipate until I began to feel the snow beneath me melting into wet spots against my skin.  

I know the trancelike state very well.  It's one of the greatest joys of my living, and nowhere is it easier to achieve than in the winter woods.  In scientific language, it's just endorphins.  In religious language, it's a Zen-like place past emotion and care.  It's my drug.  It's my substance of choice.  It's the thing that keeps me coming back to the woods for more.  I tried to tell some Scouts about this at a recent pack meeting that I was invited to attend, but I don't think anyone quite got it... 

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

The Tenth Day of Christmas

Alas, I've got Lyme's disease.  It struck in the form of swelling and intense pain in the knee on the morning of Christmas Eve, resulting in a wife-induced ER visit on Christmas night.  I suppose I should have expected it, given my lifestyle...

The snow has come at last, and it's more than welcome, although I sure hate having to shovel my driveway four--yes four!--times in a single day.  It is at last a thoroughly white Christmas, though not until the Tenth Day of Christmastide.  Traffic into the city today was slower than a scooter ride across the Rockies.


Monday, January 2, 2012

Tunnels

You start off believing that the rules are simple, that life is overseen by responsible grownups who know a lot more than you do, and they can be trusted.  And if the grownups don't always have your best interests at heart, then there's always a higher authority, perhaps even an all-knowing Deity, who will make everything okay in the end.  Things happen for a reason, and even if tragedy strikes, it's okay because Someone Somewhere knows why things had to go down the way they did.  

In time, your grownups disappoint you, or they demonstrate their fallibility, and the whole notion of a Supreme Being begins to have a suspiciously Santa-Claus-like ring to it.  The key is to trade certainty for hope.  Instead of "believing in" things, I've had to start simply "hoping for" things.  I've found that, in this way, I've been able to maintain a sense of wonder and awe alongside a healthy degree of skepticism.  

The things that I actually believe in are few, which can make life hard in my line of work.  I believe that life is good; love is real; and dreams are worth pursuing.  I believe that light will always dispel darkness, but only when it's time.  I believe that death is not the enemy.  

And yet, the things I hope for are many.  I hope that perfect love will finally cast out fear.  I hope that there is indeed a joy that outlives sorrow.  I hope that--somewhere, somehow--life will have the last word, in the end.  Hell, and since hopes don't have to make sense, I even dare to hope that I'll see my maternal grandmother somewhere on the other side of Mystery.  I can't quite believe it, but I do hope it, because she was the kindest, wisest adult I ever knew--until I became an adult myself, of course.  

In a way, you get your Supreme Being restored to you, but now instead of an all-knowing Parent, he or she is the deathless spirit of love, the force of life itself, the breath of life within us.  

The Quest for Illusions

 The old, familiar joy--at last--to feel the bracing cold of winter as I stride out into the Big World!  A dismal season of endless rain and 45 degree temps lingered far too long.  Although my recent outings have been largely limited to the local rail trails, due to hunting season, it was freeing and restorative to feel the cold wind searching my outer layers of clothing for even the tiniest point of entry.  Besides, one good thing about walking the rail trails in the winter is that you get to pass through the old rail-towns like the slow ghost of some long-ago steam engine.  The above scene of wintry desolation is the tired-out old borough of Imperial. I always thought it seemed like a dingy place from Route 30, but from the Montour Trail, it has charms.
 A part of me really hates life in the 'burbs.  Even though my career is far more successful here, and folks here tend to understand me a lot better than they did up North, on the whole I found life in the country more to my liking.  I've lived inside large cities before, and would do it again if I had to.  Every city has its own distinct spirit and style.  A fine city like Pittsburgh takes decades to discover and offers new adventures all the time.  But this indistinct place between city and country puzzles me.  Actually, I've been a little dysthymic ever since we moved down here a year and a half ago.  But there's a sad, forlorn loveliness to the worn-out landscape around the the edges of the former Montour Railroad.  
When I was a child, I trusted the eponymous "sylvan" hills that provide the backdrop for all of life in this part of Pennsylvania.   I knew that those hills were my native place, and believed that they would take me back and shelter me...if I asked them to.  Theirs was the power to take me in, give me refuge.  Somehow, I believed that if I could only wander up onto the steep, wooded hillsides at the edge of any town--Kittanning, Oil City, Franklin--then I could escape into a vast wilderness, as free and unencumbered as Grizzly Adams.  Now, of course, I know that most of those hills just have valleys with roads and buildings on the other side.  But my weekly hikes are still an old, old quest to maintain the illusion that there's fuller life, freer life, just around the bend and over the hill.  Much of life's happiness is in the ability to maintain healthy illusions.