Category Archives: Gay Mid-Life: Musings

Notes from Ground Zero – 9/11 20 Years Gone

September 11, 2021 – Twenty years later and I’m sure all of us remember where we were, what we were doing, how we felt when the terrorist attacks began.

I was living in San Francisco

That year I was also suffering from insomnia, probably related mostly to work stress. Whatever the reason, I got up early every day, 5 or 5:30. First thing I always did was put the coffee on, then immediately switch on my desktop computer to the home page which for me, at the time, was Yahoo News.

9/11 Memorial and new World Trade Center building, NY

I remember seeing a blurb about a plane crashing into one of the WTC towers. I assumed it was a small plane, pilot error kind of thing, initially didn’t give it much thought. Once the coffee was ready and I refreshed the page, the blurb got progressively bigger on that flickering screen and I decided to turn on my television.

I saw the crash of the second plane into the WTC live on TV as millions of others did and the rest of the day is kind of a blur. Eventually, I rode my bike into work down in SOMA, but probably didn’t do much.

Flight 93

I was familiar with United Flight 93. It was a great flight if you were on a business trip coming back from New York because the non-stop got into San Francisco mid-morning and you still had practically the whole day. I’d taken it a number of times, and had a reservation on that very flight two weeks later on September 25, 2001. Of course, that ended up being cancelled as well as the entire trip it was for.

Thinking about the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, I remembered that I wrote out my impressions of visiting Ground Zero in December, 2001, almost three months after the attacks but long before the site had been “cleaned” entirely.

I was in New York for the convention that had been postponed from September. I mainly wrote these for family members (hence the reference to SF and to Milwaukee, where I grew up).

What I heard, what I saw, what I felt, what it was like.

Notes on Ground Zero, December 2001

Took C Train subway down 8th Avenue which stopped at Chambers St. downtown. When we walked up the stairs to street level, first thing I noticed was muddy grey dust all over and that kind of smell in the air you often smell at a construction site (concrete?). Also, there was a burning smell you sometimes got a whiff of.  It was a gray day but very warm for Dec. 2, probably mid-50s, probably warmer than SF.

I followed the crowd down the block and we made a right turn down Broadway. On the right you could see the cranes and an immense (I would say, 6 or 7 stories high) pile of rubble that had a lot of girders and steel twisted in circles, like pretzels. I think this was the 47-story building that collapsed late in the afternoon of September 11.

Walking further, I got stuck in the Sunday crowd, which was stopped at an intersection where a large wooden barrier had been erected, like the kind that normally surrounds a construction site. On the barrier were signs, pictures, notes, banners from elementary school children, flowers, incense, baseball caps, ribbons, balloons, candles and other memorial-type items. The crowd there was alternately reading the memorials and trying to take pictures of the devastation beyond, or taking pictures posing with the police officers who were guarding access to the WTC site.

Mark Bingham was an SF gay man aboard Flight 93 who was one of the passengers who fought back and thwarted the terrorists’ plan for that flight.

That barrier was adjacent to the building used as a staging area for the rescue/recovery volunteers, so I was able to see them reporting for work or leaving, or getting food and coffee. Lots of people with disposable coffee cups. The sidewalks downtown there are not as wide as some other areas of Manhattan, so there was a lot of pedestrian gridlock. There was a general quietness to the people, not really a hush, but you could overhear parents telling their kids what had happened here, describing the two buildings that were destroyed, and other conversations were about September 11 and what was remembered about that morning.

I walked past Trinity Church which was intact and no longer looked even dusty. Looking in the other direction down Wall Street, I could see the NY Stock Exchange just a block or so away. It is remarkable that it reopened just a few days after the attacks, as it is about 4 blocks away from Ground Zero and these are short, very old streets/blocks and I imagine that the ubiquity of huge stone/brick buildings shielded that area from raining debris.

I walked west on the street adjacent to Trinity Church, and several of these east-west streets are now ripped up for subway repair, as the tunnels under the WTC collapsed and all have to be rebuilt. So these streets were covered with enormous timbers, which is what I remember from Metrorail construction along Wilshire Boulevard and Vermont Ave. in L.A. when they were building the subway there. Also, there were a number of rat poison bait-contraptions placed against buildings. I imagine that many downtown rats were displaced by the destruction, and I wonder if being a rat was an advantage that day, if scurrying about in the dark below ground was a ticket to survival. (OK, I am kind of weird, but you know that already.)

From that vantage point, you were mostly free of the crowds and the strollers, because the access was over wooden planks and loose asphalt and harder to get to. I could see fire department hoses shooting streams of water onto the pile of rubble mentioned earlier – not sure if the buildings are still on fire, but I can’t imagine why they would be watering it if not. Some windows in that collapsed building were intact.

Of the WTC itself, all I could see from behind police barriers was that section of the façade still standing which you see in all the news photos. It’s about 3 or 4 stories high and appears to be a corner of one of the buildings – I think south tower. I believe they are going to preserve it as part of a memorial which is why it is still standing.

My final vantage point was from an overpass-type area on West Street (the street that eventually runs along the Hudson River) looking north (so my walk was almost in a circle) and from there I saw the rubble trucks leaving the destruction zone. They were like huge dump trucks and were stopped at the checkpoint and washed down. (Perhaps to get the dust off? So much dust..) I also saw an ambulance leave with lights flashing, no siren, wondering if it was carrying body parts or what. What else would be there almost 3 months after the fact?

What you don’t see on the news is the circle of devastation around the WTC. There is a big hole there, as those two buildings are just gone, but there are enormous structures adjacent, probably bigger than almost any buildings in Milwaukee or SF, that have enormous gashes in them, corners knocked off, evidence of fire, and windows blown out. These have been vacated and reminded me of red-tagging after an earthquake. The circle beyond those buildings is lesser damage, with a number of skyscrapers actually being covered in what looks like tarps – I expect that is so windows and other loose stuff doesn’t rain down into the street. Beyond that, you have the street level, and all the shops that would normally be there – pizza joints, dry cleaners, groceries, hair salons, etc. just shuttered and closed. There is dust everywhere, and those streets are very quiet.

My last view of this was from the Rainbow Room on the 65th Floor of Rockefeller Center, where I went with (note: my aunt, who died in 2013 at 92) Joan Arnold for a drink (well, mineral water!) before dinner. From uptown there you could see what looked like a hole in the ground with light rising up from a pit. They work on cleaning up 24 hours a day. I think they have still only recovered a few hundred bodies out of about 3,000.

New York around Rockefeller Center and the Dolby office and my hotel (both on 55th Street near 5th Avenue) seemed mostly normal to me. The big stores have their Christmas windows in, the shoppers were out, and the lights were festive. The skaters and the tree at RC were just as I remember them from other times there at this time of year.

The saddest thing for me to see in NY this trip were the fire station houses you would walk past, all having memorials outside of them and pictures of the firefighters from that station who died that day. These were everywhere and unavoidable. Yet at the same time, there was the usual sirens and careening through the streets of fire and police trucks, the only difference being that the vehicles now fly big American flags.

I was glad to see it, happy to be back in NY, happy to fly again. I can already tell that people are starting to let their guard down a little, which I don’t think bodes well, but you have to live your life too, and it makes no sense to go about worrying about things you cannot control.

  • Jim Arnold, 2001.
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I Stopped Bathing During the Pandemic

Dirty Bird! Dirty Birdie. The Closet Unwashed. No matter what you call it, I became one of those who stopped bathing during the pandemic — at least on a regular schedule.

So, naturally I was thrilled to see features here and there that I was not the only one. In fact, I was sharing my (either) lazy or filthy habits with the rich and famous.

The pandemic lockdowns started in March 2020, which is still a winter month. I live in Los Angeles, and this is always strange to admit, but it’s often chilly indoors during the winter because our homes are not built for colder weather.

So in any March, I’m walking around my apartment and not terribly interested in getting naked for any reason, the last of which is usually to take a shower. I’ll admit it, I’m a wuss, and would rather be cozy and warm than squeaky clean. At least in winter.

But also – or should I say butt also – things have changed over the years which I think make my baseline cleanliness stronger. To wit:

I Don’t Work Out Everyday Anymore

Used to be a jogger. Those days are long gone. I don’t even go to the gym every day (and of course during pandemic we could not anyway, since they were closed) so I don’t sweat profusely and constantly like I did in my youth.

I used to do this running thing almost every day. Those days are long gone. So not as much sweating.

I’m Around Fewer People

For years I’ve been a writer, and worked freelance, and then I had a part time job which had only a couple of other employees, who were often not physically close to me. And I live alone. Now I’m mostly retired. So I guess that means there’s fewer people to annoy with whatever B.O. I might exude.

I worked mostly alone in this antiques warehouse and there was rarely anyone to offend.
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I Have a Bidet Now

This kind of coincided with the lockdowns in Spring 2020 (and the resulting TP shortage!) though I’d been thinking about it for a while. So I’m clean down there, like cleaner than I’ve ever been in that particular spot and I highly recommend it.

I Don’t Smell Bad

I don’t normally use deodorant and haven’t for years. Reason? Almost always my body does not produce awful odors. At least that I can detect. Would I be able to discern on my own whether or not I was rank? I think so. I hope so. By way of anecdotal evidence, no one has ever told me I stink. (At least not in that sense.) I’m going to assume they would if I did.

Finally, it’s just not necessary to bathe so much, and our daily shower is a modern innovation. For all of human history prior to the intro of indoor plumbing (which has only been around 100-150 years) people did not bathe constantly and somehow survived.

For someone prone to skin disturbances (like psoriasis and other dermatitis-type deals), dry skin — which you get from too much soap and water on you – is something to avoid. I can say that it’s helped me, particularly in the winter months, to have fewer outbreaks.

So what is my showering frequency? There was a point during the worst of the lockdown where I’d actually forget and have to log it in my diary and may have gone a couple of weeks (but no more) without a shower.

Now, I’d say I take a shower for sure once a week, often more, say, if I’m going to have some kind of social encounter. But honestly it’s no more frequent than that.

I don’t pay a separate water bill where I live but once again, California is in severe drought and I’m happy to help in a really small way by being that dirty bird.

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Gym Membership vs. Home Gym

While it may not be exactly earth shattering, one of the lingering questions of the pandemic (for me, anyway) has been whether or not to continue a gym membership or to lean into the home gym idea.

With my memberships (I have two which overlap: 24-Hour Fitness and Gold’s Gym) both expiring within a couple of months from now, I had to make some kind of decision soon.

I’m happy to report I’ve made a decision, and that in itself feels good: For now, I’ll be all in on the Home Gym.

Why Home Gym?

What factors influenced my decision?

Convenience. That’s a big one. During the pandemic, I discovered that I was apt to be more consistent with my workouts at home than I ever was with jaunts to the physical gym in the Before Times.

Having my equipment, such as it was – a chin-up bar, a dip bar, mats, and a slew of exercise bands at my side or in the next room was a tremendously easier slog than the alternative.

Not pretty but it is practical – dip bar, in the hallway. Also my exercise bands.

Also, in the categories of what you might call “accessories” are items like exercise attire and tunes for atmosphere. At home, I didn’t have to dress in anything special (or anything at all!) and I got to listen to my own iTunes playlists. Again, with the “equipment” – there was never a wait. It was all, always available.

The Alternative – going to the gym – involved this, at least for me: costuming for the gym; corralling hydration; driving (and fighting traffic) to gym (or biking, each is about a mile from my home, in different directions); parking. Once you entered and locked up your car keys and what have you, you’d find your first exercise and inevitably the apparatus would be in use by another. So you wait or do something else on your list and come back to that exercise later. Which I didn’t like, and found stressful, both the anticipation of the crowd and then trying to remember what I had done and still needed to do for my routine, which always followed a specific order. Which I didn’t/don’t like to deviate from.

Again, it’s functional, and it’s always there. I suppose I could make myself do a pull up every time I went down this hallway!
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So, correctly, you could also add Control to my influence factors alongside Convenience and Consistency. What about other c-words, like Cost, and of course, Cruising?

Let’s talk Cost – some of it seems to be merely absorbed into the overall Jim budget – when pandemic arrived, I already had the chin bar and various mats, as well as all the electronics for music and (exercise) videos. I bought the dip bar thing and the slew of primo exercise bands from Amazon (yes, I am guilty – like all of you) which maybe cost a total of around $150? Whatever it was, it wasn’t much. I’ll talk about the new investment vs. the cost of gym membership in the next section.

As far as Cruising — well to be honest, at 66 years, this is not the priority it once was, where the gym was actually one of the best places in town to meet guys. I’m sure it sill is, for some – but also back then (I’m talking about the 80s, 90s mostly) there weren’t smart phones. Today, practically everyone, it seems, connects with their smart phone between sets, either texting or finding music or Instagramming – or something else which I haven’t yet imagined. What used to happen between sets, kids, is that people used to majorly check each other out and IDK, perhaps even say “hi” to each other. I don’t see that happening much from my own observation but I have noticed the love affair with smart phones only increasing over the years.

What I Bought for the Home Gym

Which brings me to the investment I have made into more equipment.

First, I live in a one bedroom apartment and am going to put the Gym in a corner of my bedroom, so there isn’t much space. Second, I do many things for fitness, many of which are outside aerobic activities, including walking, hiking and biking – so resistance training is only a part of my exercise routine, not the major part. I’m not looking to increase muscle size as much as I am to tone and remain strong enough to avoid the injuries one can face from normal aging.

Bowflex adjustable dumbbells I’m trying.

So, I’m starting out conservatively with the new stuff. I’ve purchased a solid weight bench (needed for many dumbbell exercises) and a pair of adjustable dumbbells (which apparently go from 5 lbs. to about 50 lbs. apiece). The cost for both came to about $700, including shipping and tax. I normally spend about $400 a year on a gym membership here in the L.A. area, so to “break even” I’ll have to commit to the home gym idea for nearly two years.

Sturdy Rogue Fitness bench – it looks very solid, no?

It doesn’t seem like that would be an issue – I’ve already done 14 months out of necessity. But we’ll see – I could miss the traffic, the parking, the crowds, the unusable equipment, the shitty music on the PA system, the inconsiderate mask-averse patrons and be dying to go back to the gym. Who knows? I’ll report back and let you know how it’s going.

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Sexy in the Eye of the Beholder

I saw this, thought it was lovely, so I wanted to share it:

“When gay men accept their own aging bodies and learn to lust after the changing bodies of the men around them, they grow up. When gay men cast off their manufactured youth fetish and celebrate essential, healthy, and whole masculine aging (manliness in all its imperfect manifestations), they discover new sexual possibilities, new ways of imaging and creating themselves, a whole new world where gay liberation becomes a limitless journey and not a restricted destination.”

(This is from “The Ephebe is Dead – Long Live the Bear” by David Greig in The Bear Book II ed. by Les Wright, 2001.)

American culture in general suffers from youth worship, and American gay culture even more so, if that’s possible. Even in 2021 it’s rare to see a photo of anyone over the age of 40 (and certainly no advertising) in any LGBT publication. Life doesn’t end at 35, it never did and it’s really important to remember that, even when the larger culture screams “youth” incessantly.

One of the things about the above quote that rings most true is the notion of a “manufactured youth fetish” – we’re told, mostly by advertisers, to lust after youth and thinness/hairlessness because that’s all we’re shown. The reality is oh, so much broader. Sexy is indeed in the eye of the beholder.

So let’s celebrate our age – whatever it happens to be – as vital, masculine and sexy in its own unique expression.

Here’s some photos of the blogger, from teenage hippie to masked senior citizen. I felt sexy (well, at least a little bit!) in every photo. I hope that continues.

(Here are some great essays from Damon Jacobs on the power of aging and the wisdom that can come from that.)

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Five Things I Did in 1996 That I Don’t Do in 2021

Life has changed in the past 25 years. There’s probably dozens of things I did in 1996 – the year I took the Wanderslut 1996 road trip – that I don’t do in 2021.

Off the top, here are five of these things:

When Cameras Were . . . Cameras

I have a bunch of photos from that road trip. Without exception, I took them with a real camera. I’m painfully aware of this because every time I want to illustrate something from that trip, I have to scan an old print because they’re not digital.

A primitive selfie of the blogger taken in NOLA in 1996. Used the timer on the camera.

I still have a great camera that takes awesome photos, but the truth is I don’t use it that much. Like most people, I suppose, I use the path of least resistance, which, of course, is my smart phone. It’s also a great camera.

I No Longer Go To To The Gym Every Day

For as long as I can remember, there’s been the gay “gym requirement.” The expectation that any interest by an attractive male in one’s direction was directly proportionate to the time one spent in the gym.

This is ridiculous, not to mention exhausting. Yet I dutifully followed this “requirement” for decades. Eventually, age catches up with everything. Also, I discovered I enjoyed other forms of exercise more than lifting weights (including hiking, biking, yoga) – especially things I could do out in the fresh air and sun.

I had bigger muscles back in the ’90s. I miss them, but I don’t want to go to the gym as much, I really don’t.

Since the pandemic began and the subsequent addition of workout equipment for my home, I often wonder what the point is in going to the actual gym, even a few times a week, still having to deal with crowds, waits, traffic and parking. I could so easily set up a mini-gym in a corner of my apartment for comparatively little investment.

Stay tuned on that! But in 1996, really, I went. I showed up. Every. Single. Day.

No Longer Read Actual Printed Magazines

I used to have a bunch of subscriptions – Premiere, GQ, Out, Time, Daily Variety, Hollywood Reporter, Spy – and more – that dovetailed with my work in public relations/publicity. I loved reading the mags and thumbing through them.

Honestly I never thought I’d be one to prefer the screen to actual paper, like so many futurists predicted. I swore I’d resist. I did, for awhile. But inevitably, the convenience and immediacy of digital was a lure I couldn’t resist.

For those that survived, I still read them online, of course. I do miss turning the pages and discovering something, though.

I Don’t Go To The Video Store

If you can even find one! It’s another loss, for sure, because there was always the chance of a great discovery which is not as likely to happen with algorithm-mediated browsing on sites like Netflix.

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What the algorithms fail at is the human possibility of discovering a totally new interest – something you see from the corner of your eye that you think you might like – randomly, not based on any previous behavior. So we’ve lost that.

Actually, I’m not even sure you could find “Boys in the Sand” in a VHS store. I finally got it on DVD!

I miss the Friday night ritual of going (with my boyfriend at the time) to the various video stores to stock up on regular movies as well as gay porn for the weekend. Now I scroll Netflix, HBO, Amazon, GayHotMovies, what have you, alone in my living room.

It’s certainly more convenient, but I’m not sure I’d call it better.

I Don’t Drink Copious Amounts of Diet Root Beer

When I got sober and stopped drinking any kind of alcohol in 1990, my “drink of choice” became diet root beer, which I had always liked because of the flavor and the fact that generally it never contained caffeine.

Ya, not exactly a health food.

It had to be diet because of the sugar and calories. I was going to be sober but I was not going to be fat.

I drank root beer by itself on ice. I drank it with meals. I especially drank it during hot weather to quench my thirst after exercise.

Eventually I came to realize that, in fact, diet root beer is mostly artificially flavored and is actually a chemical stew steeped in carbonation. I was convinced it also made urination more frequent and urgent, which I did not need as I got older.

So now I mostly drink water. Sometimes flavored seltzer-type waters, but usually flat water from the tap. Refrigerated. It hasn’t killed me yet.

I Don’t IRC Chat

Ok, I guess that’s 6 things. But back in ’96 I adored online chatting and the IRC (Internet Relay Chat) protocol conjured up way more interesting guys than America Online could ever hope to.

The thing I liked about it was that it was truly international – I could set up dates with guys from Europe and Brazil which actually then happened in real time and real life. Maybe it was my first sense of how the Internet would really open up the world for me and actually expand my interactions with humans rather than limit them.

Truthfully IRC is no match for apps like Facebook and Twitter. I believe it’s still available, however, and works on PCs (I use a Mac laptop). I used it daily in 1996.

What’s on your list of 5 things you used to do in 1996 but no longer do in 2021?

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I Went Hiking in the Silver Lake Hills Today

It’s a beautiful summer Saturday and I was invited for a hilly walk with my friend Michael. I hadn’t seen him in person (had seen him in Zoom) since before the pandemic so it was really nice to be with another human being!

Gorgeous morning, gorgeous neighborhood and superb company! Could not have asked for more. It’s such a beautiful area, I can really see why I liked living there for so long (from 1984-1994 and again from 2006-2010). It’s really easy to see why it’s so popular.

Enjoy the photos!

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How I Lost My Obsession Over Working in Hollywood

My obsession over working in Hollywood began when I was a kid. We were a family in love with the movies. My father, a film scholar and critic, wrote about them and taught them. As kids, we went to double features (that was still a thing in the 1960s) on Saturdays for as long as I could remember. Oscar Night was treated with the same reverence as any Catholic Holy Day of Obligation.

The impetus for my road trip chronicled in Wanderslut 1996 was a layoff from a Hollywood job. At the time, it seemed like the end of the world.

No!! Has this happened to you, too?

It was the reason I moved to Los Angeles. Officially it was for film school, but that was really just a ruse to find a job in the business. And find it I did.

The job I lost was as a Communications Manager (public relations function) at one of the Big Studios. About a year later I traded up and went to work for a well-known entertainment technology company as PR Director. I’d call this Hollywood-Adjacent, though the company had its influence everywhere in this small town.

I eventually left that company for personal reasons (cancer and its existential aftermath!). After that, I worked sporadically as a background actor (read “extra”).

But the obsession I’d had over working in Hollywood was gone. I think these are among the key reasons:

Hollywood Treats You Like Shit

No, really, they do. They can – or at least they can get away with it – because there’s a line of 500 young aspirants waiting around the corner for you. Just waiting for you to abandon your job so they can take it.

Just like me, other movie obsessed people from around the world who had the same dream and moved to LA.

Damaged Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Damaged. Likely toxic.

Even though I did end up working for a couple of “screamers,” as they’re affectionately known, I wasn’t ever abused physically or sexually, as so many were. It was more like the ghastly lack of support and training. And, at least at the yeoman levels, salaries were mediocre and there was not much chance of advancement anywhere unless you really sucked up or got lucky.

Other Industries Treat You Better

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Specifically, at least for me, the Tech Sector. I worked this job at the intersection of technology and entertainment, and they were heavily influenced (as well as located near) by Silicon Valley and its values.

Photo of Jim Arnold for his blog entry on Hollywood Obsession.
Top of the World! Or, at least, top of San Francisco when I worked in tech/entertainment.

Which, at least at the time (late 1990s-early 2000s) including loads of inservice training, yearly salary surveys (to make sure you were being paid in line with the location and sector), generous profit sharing and even, in my case and at this company, stock options.

Plus respect – and I’m not sure how to put a price tag on that.

I Aged Out of the Glamour

If you can even call it that – but that is a draw, an attraction, and it does have its day. I met and worked with many “stars.” I went to so many parties in the hills I started yawning at the invites. Somewhere there is a photo of me at a party on a yacht in Cannes harbor.

Jim Arnold (blogger) in front of the Casa de Liberace in Palm Springs, CA
Yes, glamour is a thing.

For me, these things were nice to experience, but ultimately shallow. I was never an extrovert, which really helps if you want to be successful in this milieu. At heart I’m a basically quiet person, and I value solitude and the wilderness much more than I do the glitz and noise (which you get a lot of in entertainment public relations).

One day I woke up and realized I didn’t care about any of it anymore. A chasm then opens up in front of you, demanding an answer to the question, “OK, what’s next?”

(more on that in future posts)

Jim Arnold in a nightshirt holding a cereal box, wondering what to do.
Where does one go when the thrill is done gone?

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Five Common Myths About Solo Travel

Honestly, I think of one or another of these common myths regarding solo travel just about every time I’m set to leave on a trip!

I firmly believe that if we don’t take risks in our lives, we’re just stuck on an endless and monotonous treadmill. It’s best to address these myths head-on:

Solo Travel is Dangerous

Crossing the street is dangerous – if you don’t look both ways before you do. I think that while it’s true there is some vulnerability to solo travelers on the road, most of it is mitigated by common sense and trusting your instincts.

Solo trip through Flagstaff, AZ in the winter.

Say you turn a corner in a strange city at night and suddenly you’re thrust into the darkness of little to no streetlights. Common sense tells you that it’s safer to go back to the light.

Likewise, if your driving route takes you over a mountain pass and the weather report forecasts a couple of feet of snow, you should probably listen to the experts and go another way.

How often has your gut told you that there’s something off with a person or a situation? Listen to that inner wisdom! It’s there for a reason.

Solo Travel is Expensive

“Two can live as cheaply as one.” A corollary might be that “two can travel as cheaply as one.” Certainly sharing gas and motel fees on a road trip are cheaper if spread among two or more people.

I suppose glitter pants are expensive? But I really don’t know.

I would argue, however, that you’re bound to save money when you’re on your own. At the very least, you’re only going to pay for exactly what you want. When you travel with others, often you’ll do something on their agenda that you would not likely choose if alone, and thus not pay for it.

So what I’d say is that it probably evens out – solo travel is more expensive in some realms, but you save in others by focusing on yourself and your interests.

It’s not necessarily cheaper, but it’s not wildly more expensive, either.

Solo Travel is Lonely

Being alone is not the same thing as being lonely. While I have had “blue” moments on solo road trips or other travel adventures, they’ve been transitory.

Gritting my teeth, not lonely, I’m not. . .
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Feeling alone has always been more than balanced out by meeting strangers and discovering what these new people add to my life-in-the-moment. It could be a sex hookup (as in my almost-memoir, Wanderslut 1996). It could be a motherly waitress in an empty diner on a rainy night. It could be an enthusiastic college-aged tour guide in a museum. It could be a bunch of friendly guys on a dance floor.

Honestly, isn’t that why we venture out alone anyway? To find some answers – which so often come in the form of new people.

When I was a kid I really internalized the parental advice “don’t speak to strangers.” I think the opposite should be advice for adults: “Don’t NOT speak to strangers!”

Solo Travel is Not Fun

“How am I gonna have any fun if my friends aren’t around?”

It’s all about the definition of “fun.” If you limit the definition of fun things to what you are used to doing with friends, relatives, acquaintances, etc., then you’re already handicapping yourself.

Empty expanse outside the Milwaukee Art Museum during a cold, cloudy winter day.

Solo travel requires you to get out of your comfort zone and go for the possibility of what might be: Going for a spiritually uplifting hike in the red rocks of Sedona. Taking in a movie on the spur of the moment as the only patron in the theater. Eating lunch at a hole-in-the-wall diner (that your friends would die rather than go to) because it just looks interesting to you.

These few examples are part of a world of experience – fun experience – that you will only know if you push yourself.

People Will Think You’re a Loser

This actually speaks to your own insecurities (or MY own insecurities) more than anything else. (Maybe it’s only my common myth about solo travel!)

I went to school with a young woman whose last name was Campellone (pronounced “camp-alone”). When one of our teachers asked her, during a roll call, if she enjoyed that – camping alone – she replied with (I’m sure a well-rehearsed) “I have no choice.”

It doesn’t feel like anything is lost here.

I remembered that because it was so funny. But that’s the fear – you’re only on this trip by yourself because everyone you know hates you and doesn’t want to travel with you.

The truth is that people will admire you and your “bravery” for venturing out on your own. This goes for the people you meet while on the road as well as the friends and relatives back home, who will often say things like “I could never do that, go on a trip by myself, I wouldn’t know where to begin.”

It takes a certain strength to blaze a trail and solo travelers should congratulate themselves every time they do it.

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Here’s the List of Republicans Who Voted to Overturn Our Election

I’m not sure what to call these people. They voted to overturn the free and fair elections of November 3, 2020, in many cases even the elections where they themselves won, because they didn’t like the outcome at the top of the ticket.

Image of the American Flag to illustrate Jim Arnold's blog entry on the Republicans Who Voted to Overturn Our Election.
We will prevail over the Republican Insurrectionists.

Elections certified by all 50 states and the District of Columbia, and verified by the Electoral College. But again – they didn’t like the outcome.

Traitors is probably the wrong word, only because it has such a specific and narrow definition. Insurrectionists is closer, but that’s cumbersome. Complicit coup plotters? Haters of democracy? I’ll let you be the judge of what word to use to describe these people.

None of these people belongs in representative government. ever again. My fervent hope is that they are all voted out when next they come up for renewal. In the meantime, feel free to shame – and share widely.

Senate Republicans Who Hate Democracy:

Tommy Tuberbille, AL

Rick Scott, FL

Roger Marshall, KS

John Kennedy, LA

Cindy Hyde-Smith, MS

Josh Hawley, MO

Ted Cruz, TX

Cynthia Lummis, WY

Republican House Reps Who Hate Democracy:

Robert Aderholt, AL

Mo Brooks, AL

Jerry Carl, AL

Barry Moore, AL

Gary Palmer, AL

Mike Rogers, AL

Andy Biggs, AZ

Paul Gosar, AZ

Debbie Lesko, AZ

David Schweikert, AZ

Rick Crawford, AR

Ken Calvert, CA

Mike Garcia, CA

Darrell Issa, CA

Doug LaMalfa, CA

Kevin McCarthy, CA

Devin Nunes, CA

Jay Obernolte, CA

Lauren Boebert, CO

Doug Lamborn, CO

Kat Cammack, FL

Mario Diaz-Balart, FL

Byron Donalds, FL

Neal Dunn, FL

Scott Franklin, FL

Matt Gaetz, FL

Carlos Gimenez, FL

Brian Mast, FL

Bill Posey, FL

John Rutherford, FL

Greg Steube, FL

Daniel Webster, FL

Rick Allen, GA

Earl (Buddy) Carter, GA

Andrew Clyde, GA

Marjorie Taylor Greene, GA

Jody Hice, GA

Barry Loudermilk, GA

Ross Fulcher, ID

Mike Bost, IL

Mary Miller, IL

Jim Baird, IN

Jim Banks, IN

Greg Pence, IN

Jackie Walorski, IN

Ron Estes, KS

Jacob LaTurner, KS

Tracey Mann, KS

Harold Rogers, KY

Garret Graves, LA

Clay Higgins, LA

Mike Johnson, LA

Steve Scalise, LA

Andy Harris, MD

Jack Bergman, MI

Lisa McClain, MI

Tim Walberg, MI

Michelle Fischbach, MN

Jim Hagedorn, MN

Michael Guest, MS

Trent Kelly, MS

Steven Palazzo, MS

Sam Graves, MO

Vicky Hartzler, MO

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Billy Long, MO

Blaine Luetkemeyer, MO

Jason Smith, MO

Matt Rosendale, MT

Dan Bishop, NC

Ted Budd, NC

Madison Cawthorn, NC

Virginia Foxx, NC

Richard Hudson, NC

George Murphy, NC

David Rouzer, NC

Jeff Van Drew, NJ

Yvette Herrell, NM

Chris Jacobs, NY

Nicole Malliotakis, NY

Elise Stefanik, NY

Lee Zeldin, NY

Adrian Smith, NE

Steve Chabot, OH

Warren Davidson, OH

Bob Gibbs, OH

Bill Johnson, OH

Jim Jordan, OH

Stephanie Bice, OK

Tom Cole, OK

Kevin Hern, OK

Frank Lucas, OK

Markwayne Mullin, OK

Cliff Bentz, OR

John Joyce, PA

Fred Keller, PA

Mike Kelly, PA

Daniel Meuser, PA

Scott Perry, PA

Guy Reschenthaler, PA

Lloyd Smucker, PA

Glenn Thompson, PA

Jeff Duncan, SC

Ralph Norman, SC

Tom Rice, SC

William Timmons, SC

Joe Wilson, SC

Tim Burchett, TN

Scott DesJarlais, TN

Chuck Fleischmann, TN

Mark Green, TN

Diana Harshbarger, TN

David Kustoff, TN

John Rose, TN

Jodey Arrington, TX

Brian Babin, TX

Michael Burgess, TX

John Carter, TX

Michael Cloud, TX

Pat Fallon, TX

Louie Gohmert, TX

Lance Gooden, TX

Ronny Jackson, TX

Troy Nehls, TX

August Pfluger, TX

Pete Sessions, TX

Beth Van Duyne, TX

Randy Weber, TX

Roger Williams, TX

Ron Wright, TX

Burgess Owens, UT

Christ Stewart, UT

Ben Cline, VA

Bob Good, VA

Morgan Griffith, VA

Robert Wittman, VA

Carol Miller, WV

Alexander Mooney, WV

Scott Fitzgerald, WI

Tom Tiffany, WI

As stated before, please feel free to shame and share widely.

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Bisbee, The Gayest Small Town in Arizona

The first time I happened upon “Gay Bisbee” was really by accident. I was a tourist visiting Tombstone on a road trip. Bisbee is just down the highway a bit, really the last little city on the road that leads to the Mexican border.

Photo of downtown Bisbee, Arizona, by Jim Arnold used to illustrate his blog post on Bisbee - the gayest small town in AZ.
Shot of Bisbee, Arizona – taken in the ’90s on one of the blogger’s road trips.

I knew nothing about it but it had a weird and quirky name, so I had to see it. It’s small old mining town set in a valley, with houses dotting the hills above the main drag, which features a lot of turn-of-the-century era (the 20th century) brick buildings. The population is around 5,000.

Bisbee in the Past

Bisbee’s original claim to fame was mining. The Copper Queen mine (now closed, except for tours) was one of the biggest mining operations in Arizona for the period of the 1880s till WWII. The town of Bisbee grew up around it, hence the preponderance of architecture from that era, not only public buildings, but houses as well.

The population has been twice what it is now when the mines were active. So what happens when there’s an infrastructure for a larger town, but the people have left? Well, that brings us to:

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Bisbee Today

It always starts with those artists, now doesn’t it? Kidding, but no. Really. Artists almost always need inexpensive living and studio space, and what better location could there be than an old mining town that has lots of vacancy and low prices? That’s a bit of what happened in the 1970s to Bisbee, and the galleries followed that, the coffeeshops and B&Bs followed that, then it was attractive to Boomers retiring . . . and you can guess the rest.

Photo of downtown Bisbee, Arizona, by Jim Arnold used to illustrate his blog post on Bisbee - the gayest small town in AZ.
Shot of Bisbee, Arizona – taken in the ’90s on one of the blogger’s road trips. Lots of houses and other buildings are perched on the hillsides surrounding the old town.

“Gay Bisbee” got its rep as a gay-friendly place by passing Arizona’s first same-sex civil union ordinance, back in the days before marriage equality. The town was already quite diverse and progressive – and continues that way. A bit of bright blue in a bright red state (which is increasingly becoming “purpler” and will no doubt become reliably blue in the future).

Bisbee in the Future

Boomer and other retirees? I imagine that trend will continue. With the popularity of AirBnb, the area will only get more popular as a tourist and getaway destination, a fairly easy drive from both Phoenix and Tucson and even El Paso. For myself, I look forward to spending more time there in those quiet, peaceful desert hills.

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