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My Hood

 I take my walk at about the same time every day. Early afternoon is usually enough to see if the sun will appear or if rain will accompany me. It’s 2 blocks to the main drag.  I turn right and walk past the clothing store with high-quality merchandise that few in this town can afford. They buy anyway. Literally, anyway they can. Two doors down is the music store that formerly was a boutique. COVID had its way with about half the businesses in my town. Only the 3 dive bars in the next block survived and Slims, the most favored of the trio even underwent a makeover of sorts. The facade was crumbling so the entire front entrance was closed for months. The loyal clientele easily found their way to the back entrance, so even the grizzled day drinkers who usually sip and smoke at the small sidewalk tables up front never missed a beat.

There is a daycare and martial arts gym next. The kids in the daycare always prompt a glance from me. It’s a bit like looking at puppies in a pet store window.  In the next block, I see book racks out on the sidewalk. They are in front of the small radical bookstore that always has timely window displays. This was once the location of a small neighborhood barber shop where one man, Wayne, cut hair for decades. The transformation from a mid-century barber shop to a business that specializes in hard-to-find political books, vinyl records, poetry, and posters is breathtaking. Fortunately, it has the look, feel, and sound of a shop where a little bell rings when you enter. 

Today there is something new on the sidewalk. A young man who looks to be 19 or 20 is sitting at a small table with a typewriter in front of him.  For a modest fee he will type out a poem for you. The aesthetic of a typewritten page is the lure. His typewriter is an old portable but looks solid and works fluidly. I stop and look. 

“I went through college with a typewriter,” I say. He smiles and makes a face that suggests that would be a challenge. We talk briefly about paper quality and erasures. I walk on.

I glance across the street and see the facade of another neighborhood restaurant bar.  The Wishing Well is ready for a movie scene.  Aside from the classic Chinese and American Foodpainted on the sign.  There is the faint neon outline of a wishing well. Not all the letters light up these days, but their following remains strong.  People in my hood don't need or demand fresh paint.  Tsay that Willy Nelson played at the Wishing Well sometime around 1953 when he was a DJ  in Vancouver, Wa.  I doubt he will be returning.



I continue walking. Past another coffee shop, another pizzeria, and what was once an old bank is now a kid-friendly coffee shop (yes another coffee shop) called Wonder World or something like it. The owner is a talented cartoonist and there is a joyful, if not chaotic vibe about the place because his life-size signs and characters decorate the area. Caffeine definitely thrives here.

I turn around and double back. Passing all I have previously traversed I step up onto the southbound block. Another changing of the guard as what was once a Starbucks and then two other restaurants is being formed into a Korean fusion eatery now. Next comes the Rockabilly Cafe. Someone’s dream comes to fruition. This small pop music-themed diner is just getting off the ground. I’ve yet to try it but soon will because I think it might be just the place I can donate my collectible “Always Elvis” wine bottle. It would look good on a shelf, especially if the poem by Col. Tom Parker is visible.



Mid-block is the shell of what was once The Man's shop. This was a real old-fashioned men's haberdashery run by a pair of brothers.  It had been in operation since the 1950s and had a big following as we;; as a great seamstress who could make anything fit right and look good.  Today the windows still have some Christmas boxes and wrappings scattered around and the entire store is filled with motor scooters.  It is soon to be a Vespa dealership.  No more will the younger of the two Man Shop brothers tell you everything you ever wanted and did not want to know about the Levi Strauss company and its iconic jeans.

I turn the corner and head up the block.  Soon I pass the Northside Barbershop.  It's my hipster Barbershop, where I can sip whiskey while I wait for either Cash or Dash to cut my hair.  It looks like something out of the 1890s, all wood and whiskey bottles.  They often play great music, too.  This is not my father's barbershop.  No Sports Illustrated or Argosy, or True magazines in sight.

I end near Beto's food truck.  Authentic Mexican cuisine is only a block away. He does a good business and I worry that this little gem will be a victim of the rampant crime that hits the little guy trying to make a living.

Comments

Charlie Becker said…
Love taking a little ramble thru your “hood” Bruce. So full of characters and period buildings....

I was a frequenter of Jowers workers clothing, for my railroad boots and flared cuff leather gloves. Think I got my woolin long handles at Jowers, made in Canada, the kind with the button up front, and drop seat. All wool... I can testify that wool-in long handles can change your life working in the cold. Got me thru many a winter working on the ground in the rail yards in Hood River.

I Like the St Johns Theater and Mt Tabor Cafe. You sound very well habituated, a denizen well adapted, an observer and lover of the characters in the hood. People striving, day to day, giving it a go...Humanity in the Hood...

Charlie...

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