The naked truth in a clothed world.


une maison dans les arbres.
October 26, 2007, 1:07 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

I have been feeling out of sorts lately, mainly due to the Mercury retrograde, but also due to the circumstances of my life right now. I am enrolled in classes at the University here. The only reason I’m in school right now is because it pleases my family. Last March I went to a music festival in Ft. Lauderdale and picked up two kids my age who were rainbow family. It was my first exposure to the rainbow family, the first time I ever heard about it, and it amazed me that I hadn’t heard of them before as I’ve been hanging around hippies and nomads my entire life- due to my father being a deadhead, listening to jam bands and hanging out on Siesta key. Their names were Wolf and Star. Wolff was a probably 7 feet tall- a giant with a guitar on his back and a big worn out backpack. Star was tiny, maybe 5 feet tall, with short blond dreadlocks with glass beads strewn on them. They smelled pretty bad- like they’d been camping out for weeks, but they had a lot of stories. They had hitchhiked to Florida all the way from Portland, Oregon–and after hearing about the city, I decided I needed to get there somehow.

I was still partially dependent on my parents, working as a barista at a coffee house and taking 18 credit hours in college when I decided it was imperative that I get to Portland as soon as possible no matter what. The only way that I could get out there was through a program at the university I attended that gave a small chance that I could attend a school in Portland for an exchange period at the same price of tuition as the school in Florida. It was perfect. I applied for the program, got all my letters of recommendation, kept my GPA up (I had a 3.97 at the end of the quarter) and waited. At the beginning of May, I got my acceptance letter from the University I’m attending now in Portland. 2 weeks later I started dancing, my plan of escape.

I am now 100% financially independent except for a portion of my tuition. I will be 100% independent if I don’t go to school. It’s really killing me. I don’t want to be in school right now, I want to be out experiencing life, traveling, not having plans, not being stressed, not having deadlines, jumping on trains and planes and buses, playing music with my boyfriend all around the world. Oh yeah and the ironic thing– my boyfriend is rainbow family, and most likely knows the kids I picked up and drove across the state. Everything happens for a reason, and the reason I’m in Portland was not to attend school- it was to meet important people and start a journey. The school part was just the loophole that allowed me to come here, and now that I’m here, I don’t need it anymore.

I’ve been thinking, and it almost seems as if attending University is futile at this point. I have never followed the rules. I have never flowed smoothly along with society. Attending a university after graduating high school is mainstream society’s norm. Getting a degree that has little to do with your future career is society’s norm. I know that whatever I end up doing for a living will be hard, weird, entrepreneurial, revolutionary journey– because I make my own rules. My jobs in the past have been pretty dull, besides the last two that are at completely opposite ends of the spectrum :cashier, retail, waitress, barista, environmental canvasser, daycare worker, stripper.

The reason for all this re-thinking is the re-trograde for sure, but also because I just read an amazing book. It’s called “Radical Simplicity” by Dan Price. The man flunked out of college, took a bunch of photographs for a magazine, started his own zine called “The Moonlight Chronicles”, rode a tricycle across the country, had 2 children, married his high school sweetheart, wrote a bunch of books and makes very enviable simple dwellings in nature. His book was called the Walden of our generation, and while I think that’s a very lofty title to aspire to, his life is definitely admirable. He currently lives in an underground dwelling like a hobbit hole, and has in the past lived in tents, tipis, cabins, and various other semi-permanent outdoor dwellings. He also tells you how to build a sweatlodge and explains how he adds sources of electricity and heat to his dwellings.

After reading his book, I am very very inspired to either a) buy a bus/van and live in it b) make a tipi and live in it c) build a treehouse and live in it. Or, a combination of all three. A bus can be a home while traveling, a tipi is portable and can be permanent, and a treehouse- would be heaven. I went to Powells the other day for FOUR hours straight and went through a stack of books 2 feet high on how to build treehouses and set up alternative energy sources. I think the ultimate alternative dwelling would be a treehouse that utilized photovoltaic panels up on the canopy that wired down the trunk of the tree and into the house, as well as collected water up near the canopy and used gravity to lead it down to the house for bathing and washing. For heating a treehouse… that would be tricky, but i think the best choice would be a wood stove that was installed correctly, in combination with solar heating.

Something like this, with rope bridges connecting a bunch of small treehouses is what I have in mind :

treehouse

So.. I’m going to make it happen. It would be cool to build a treehouse village in India, or a forest in Ireland-anywhere really green and not too cold.



Just call me Mrs. Caffarotti
October 24, 2007, 4:02 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Portland is by far the most beautifully weird city in the world. Even though I haven’t been to every city in the world, I think it’s safe to say that it’s true. I got on the #4 bus today to head back to campus from my boyfriends house in North Portland. We were stopping at various places along 3rd avenue downtown. Right around Couch St. I get off to catch the #8 bus. I get on, and go directly to my favorite seat–the back right of the bus. It’s the best seat because just like in a crowded classroom, you can see everyone and everything going on in front of you, and no one has their eyes on you.. except the professor. A man dressed in shambles with broken eyeglasses taped together at the joints looked at me and said “Mrs. Caffarotti!! You saved my life! Thank you thank you thank you (or something like that) !” I look at him, stare, pause.. and ask him blankly “Who is Mrs. Caffarotti”. He explained to me that she is the woman-doctor (as he referred to her) who saved his life when those bloody Russians poisoned him with rat poison. He advised me that the Russians put rat poison in Halloween candy to kill him last year and he had to get his stomach pumped, then described a pretty graphic scene involving blood, hospitals and tubes and the beautiful woman-doctor Mrs. Caffarotti who saved his life. I kept telling him I wasn’t her, but that’s a pretty cool story, but by the time he had finished rambling about the bloody Russians and the poisoned halloween candy his stop had come up and he left yelling “thank you for saving me life Mrs. Caffarotti have a good day!”.

A business man wearing a bluetooth device on his ear, dressed squarely carrying a briefcase got on and sat in the same place the distraught poisoned man sat. He looked at me, smiled, and said “you know.. some days the morphine just isn’t enough you know?”.

Strange, because this business man got on the bus after the crazy man got off, and never witnessed any of the insanity. It was a very strange thing. But then again, strange things are to be expected on rainy mornings in China town at busy bus stops. The other day an extremely pissed off backpacker/vagrant/nomad was crossing third avenueapproaching the intersection where Pioneer Square mall was, and proclaims loudly “Well would you look at that, a whole DAMN bus stop full of YUPPIES”. I look to my left and there is the definition of yuppy. I look to my right and there is a hippie old man holding a petition sign to make possession of under 1 oz of usable marijuana legal in Portland. The rest of the people at the bus stop were a conglomeration of crazy downtown people, yuppies, teenagers from Beaverton shopping at the mall, college students- definitely not 100 percent yuppy. I decided to talk to this dude, next to me, the target of the backpacker’s disdain.

He was holding a law book. He was wearing a suit. Carrying a briefcase. I say hello. He says hello. I find out he just graduated the university I’m going to, has his degree in Political Science, and guess what his FIRST job out of college is? Something along the lines of Executive Assistant to the City Commissioner of Transportation or something like that. Entry level job? I think not. Proof that it’s not necessarily WHAT you know, but WHO you know that determines what kind of job you get. I asked him what exactly he did, and he said he just had to make sure this guy was on time to appointments and he stayed on schedule.

Getting back on topic.. if there ever was one defined, you can call me Mrs. Caffarotti, because apparently I saved some dude in Portland from the grips of a Russian mafia induced rat poisoned halloween candy death.



Fuck the OLCC
October 23, 2007, 12:31 am
Filed under: Stripping

-that is all I have to say. First of all, I would just like to say that I am a non-smoking, non-drinking, vegan, buddhist-inspired STRIPPER- Is that enough of an oxymoron stereotype bashing phenomenon for you?

I got my start in Florida, at the Cheetah- a completely nude, air dancing, no contact, full liquor club where I learned the basics of dancing. I learned how to hustle- and very well, and from the best. Lola taught me everything I know about hustling- how to get the best customers, pick the right ones, how and when to ask for a dance, how to keep going once you get dances, how to wear a garter, how to accept tips– EVERYTHING. The Cheetah had no pole and no floorwork, there was just a long,narrow, 4 foot wide runway-like stage that we sauntered and pranced and cartwheeled (well.. not cartwheeled, but there was this one girl who did cartwheels into very illegal splits) down. We weren’t allowed to do floorowork and could only accept stage tip money by kneeling down with our legs closed and holding our garters open. It was very conservative and classy despite the nature of the business. I made 4,000 by the time I left for Portland and thought that I pretty much had this whole dancing thing “down”.

Until I got to Portland. I started at the Dolphin 2, I’m still there but I’ve been at a couple other clubs since just to check them out. The Dolphin 2 is out of the forty something clubs in Portland, the only one I will work at. It is the only one that does not cross my boundaries (couch dances and air dances only, no contact) and I can make money at. My highest night there thus far was 740. My lowest was 29. House fee is 20 if I get there before 8, and I tip out minimum 10 to the DJ and Bouncer each, plus a 20 cab fare home. If I get there on time, tip the minimum and don’t get a ride home, I automatically have to pay out 60 from what I made that night. This means that in order to take home even 100 dollars, I have to make at least 160, which translates to about 5 dances and 60 dollars in stage tips on a crappy night. For an average night where I take home around 250, I have to get 7-8 dances– not that difficult right? But it is.

Because of a little thing called the OLCC- the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. Because alcohol exists, and is prevalent in clubs, and is illegal if you’re not 21 (but it still advertised to an underage demographic, btw), I am not allowed on the floor at my club at all. If I step foot on the floor, where all the other dancers are allowed to prance around, show off, advertise themselves, chat up the customers, GET TIPPED FOR THEIR TIME, make conversation, HUSTLE AND ACTUALLY MAKE MONEY…….. I get yelled at.. not only once– but three times. Once by the idiot bouncer who never makes himself present, doesn’t smile and is never watching the couch dance room, then by the misogynistic manager on a power-trip, and third by the retired military pervert of a GM. So not only do they charge me the normal house fee and expect tip-outs for being assholes to me even though they KNOW it’s harder for me to make money and I don’t make as much as the other girls, but they are just plain mean. When I tell them I need to go up on stage more so I can get dances they tell me to go on the minor stage. The so-called “Minor stage” they are referring to is the unused end portion of the bar, which, ironically enough, is within 3 feet of all the alcohol bottles and I could easily grab one or take a sip of a drink off a tray that the waitresses place there if I wanted to. This stage they want me to DANCE on, is up to my waist when I’m wearing my 7 inch stripper heels, and covered in nice slippery polished granite. It’s also very narrow, about 2 feet by 4 feet, and positioned conveniently next to the entrance to the male restroom. You would think that this would be a good position for such a stage, but it’s not. On the way to the bathroom the drunken males are in a rush and don’t stop to say hello, and on the way out they’re in a hurry to get back to their table or want to go get more beer. Occasionally the “minor stage” concept DOES work and i’ll get someone who will tip me a couple ones or stop and chat and MAYBE get a dance, but usually, they just pass me by and make me feel like a decoration.

So during my 7 hour shift, I am up on stage about every 45 minutes assuming there’s 15 girls, 3 stages open and the stage sets are 7 minutes long with 2 minute intervals. I’m visible to the customers 7 times, for 7 minutes, I have 50 minutes in which I am to hustle them FROM THE STAGE. This is not all too easy. If I have 10 customers at my rack, and I don’t want to use the standard “wanna dance” line that usually gets a quick “no thanks” or the dreaded “maybe later”, I have to work the hustle into my stage set. Halfway through the first song I pick the guy who is the most in to me and tell him I would love to dance for him when I get off stage, at the end of my first song when I’m collecting tips I find the guys who seem pretty interested and go for a quick “i would love to dance for you” or “want to go play when I’m done dancing for you?”.. At the end of my second song, I go first for the guys I haven’t spoken to yet because they’re the most likely to walk away quickly and say “I can dance for you now”. The answers are going to be either “maybe later” (which means no because as a minor I can’t walk the floor to find them “later”), “why don’t you come sit down and have a drink first (which results in a lengthy Q&A period with a drunken person about why i’m under 18 and working in a bar and can’t sit down with him which just makes me more frustrated, but it’s okay because these customers are usual ly time wasters anyway), or no thanks. That’s how it goes- and it sucks.

I’m just at the end of my rope. I’m really frustrated with these rules and I will NOT resort to working in a filthy extras-ridden juice bar like Jiggles or Hotties, and I will not put up with making shit money at Stars Cabaret even though the management is a million times nicer and more fair to me.

So for now, I’m working at the Dolphin 2, Monday OR Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday, an OLCC-mandated minor, nineteen and naked.

Come see me. I’ll dance for you.



Leaving on a jetplane.
October 1, 2007, 2:13 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

So I’m finally doing it. We’re finally doing it. It’s actually happening. We’re actually going. My passport came in the mail today. It’s an absolutely awful picture, my face looks all shiny and I look Asian (not that that’s a bad thing, it’s just not how I normally look), but that’s besides the point. I have my passport! We’re leaving the country! We’re actually doing it- getting out of here and leaving for European hippie communes, rainbow family, making music on the streets and living the life nomadic. It’s pretty exciting, but also scary.

This means I need to get on the ball. I’ve worked maybe 5 days in September, MAYBE. My excuses are meaningless but are as follows : I went on a trip for a week, it was slow, I got fired from my club of choice and refuse to work with the misogynistic night manager which leaves me with only Mondays and Tuesdays, I haven’t gotten around to calling the Dolphin I, I’ve been sick, I hurt my shoulder, I needed spiritual healing, I’d rather stay home and cuddle with my boyfriend.

BUT NO MORE!!! From now on- I mean TODAY on, I am going to be a hard-working, confident, powerful, gorgeous, money-making machine. Sure, I have class three days a week from 11-6 so I can only work Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays, but I need to be doing that consistently. I always make excuses not to go in. I’m going in tonight at the D2, Wednesday at Stars, Saturday at Stars… I need to be making 1,000/week… not 200. If I work 3 nights a week and make an average of 350ish a night, I can make 1,000 a week/4,000/ month.. 8,000 by the time we leave for Europe. That would be perfect, therefore that is what I’m doing.

now to get to work…