Tag Archives: Gold’s Gym

How I Stopped Longing for Silver Lake and Learned to Love the Valley

I never planned to live in the San Fernando Valley.

And yet, I recently passed my 10th anniversary of living in a nicely rent-controlled 1963 apartment in Valley Village. How did I learn to love the valley? (Or, if not love, at least accept. . .)

Author Jim Arnold in a fedora in his home office in Southern California.

How did this happen? In 2011, I sold a condominium in Palm Springs, bored with the desert and longing for a return to urban adventures. With the real estate closing imminent and a deal for a classic Koreatown apartment falling apart, I needed a place to land. Quickly.

How it Came to Be

I had a friend who lived in Valley Village (VV), and he responded to my SOS on Facebook. A couple of days later, I looked at the empty apartment in his building and figured it would be fine as a temporary home and signed the lease.

Despite not knowing much of anything about the neighborhood, there were some major advantages: the rent, first of all, was $300 less than the place in Koreatown, and that’s even before factoring in the extra I’d have to pay for parking. So, in effect, $400 cheaper since parking was included in VV.

Amenities: an all electric 1960s joint, but at least there was a dishwasher, disposal, AC. A pool, even if it was right outside my sliders (note to any reader: NEVER rent right next to the pool, if you value quiet).

Part of my balcony garden in Valley Village

At the time I was enthralled with LA’s burgeoning public transit system and this VV apartment was right around the corner from a main artery stop (the Orange Line Rapid Bus, now also called the G Line).

There were other advantages either in walking distance or a short bike ride or drive: a Gold’s Gym, a Public Library, two Parks, two major groceries and a few smaller markets, Rite Aid, Starbucks, a yoga studio (since closed, now another gym), many restaurants, even gay bars and a OMG! — a gay bathhouse.

In a nutshell, probably the most convenient neighborhood I’ve ever lived in.

And yet, I was not happy there.

The Valley is Like Another City Entirely

The line of hills (ancient crumbling mountains, really) that separate the LA Basin from the San Fernando Valley are more than just a physical barrier. They are also a psychological one.

For instance, say I’m 8 miles away from my nearest friend (which is actually true) on the other side of the hill in Hollywood. Now let’s imagine I lived in Los Feliz, and my nearest friend is also 8 miles away but in Carthay Square (near La Cienega/Olympic). I’d call that “across town,” but the former is “over the hill.”

The geographic barrier makes it seem qualitatively different even though the actual distance is about the same.

Part of Fryman Canyon, in the hills separating the Valley from LA Basin.

For Angelenos, it’s a much heavier lift to “go over the hill to the valley (and vice versa)” than it is to “drive across town.”

click here for more generic tadalafil online Now, it is familiar that people with diabetes are not interested in having sex. There are many other anatomical symptoms like constant nausea, weakness, improper digestion, erectile dysfunction, bladder problems, check purchase generic cialis eye flashes, body temperature change, gastroparesis and many more. Anyone can suffer buy cialis online from this problem, though it is mostly found in 1 out of 68 children according to CDC’s report. According buying cialis online to recent stats, millions of men, worldwide, experience some degree of sexual issues that affect their performance in bed.

So back to my premise of it being a separate city entirely, even though that is likely more a perception than reality.

Mourning Being Priced Out of Silver Lake as Hyperion ex-Royalty

During this period of discontent, I’d look at listings in the general Silver Lake-Los Feliz area (my favorite part of LA and where I lived previously for many years) and to my chagrin rent prices just kept rising. Eventually prices in those neighborhoods went so high that I, like so many others, was priced out of where I lived rather simply as a callow twentysomething.

How could this be? I was proud that I’d lived in what was a legendary gay neighborhood and felt very much part of it for so long. And then I moved away, and tried to move back, and it wasn’t happening. As another friend said, “I couldn’t get LA back.”

He meant, of course, the LA he knew. Places change, people change. Another friend asked, “Why do you want to move to Silver Lake? It’s not like the place you remember from the 80s or 90s.” He was right, too. It is different. Different people, different buildings, an entirely different vibe. So gentrified. So “straight.” (Not that there’s anything wrong with “straight” — if you’re straight.)

Silver Lake hills. You can see the Griffith Park Observatory on the hill near the top center of the photo.

It was a highly bohemian area but now the bohemians can’t really afford it. So what’s left, then? A veneer of past coolness?

Perhaps that’s all an illusion and folks that lived in Silver Lake in the 1950s or 60s lamented what it had become by the time I arrived in the 80s. We always remember the places where we were the happiest. And I realized that was what I was chasing.

Bloom Where You Are Planted

For the longest time my mother had this cheesy little plaque above the doorway in their kitchen that had some cute flowers and the legend “Bloom Where You Are Planted.”

I had internalized that as a kid and always thought it was good advice. And I was trying, trying my hardest, to like the Valley, to feel at home, to try and make friends that were closer than 8 miles.

Which happened — over the course of 10 years, many other people I knew got “priced out” of where they had been living in the LA Basin and also moved to Valley areas. And yet it still seemed “off” to me.

I realized that I had my identity all wrapped up in what my personal definition of Los Angeles was – which was where I was originally “plunked,” right there in Echo Park-Silver Lake, my first impression, if you will, which quickly became my lasting definition.

Which is, of course, subjective and not based on anything other than my own youthful experience.

Looking at My Environment with Different Eyes

So I realized I had better learn acceptance around my circumstances. What I had was valuable and was something people would kill for – an under-market and rent controlled apartment in a great and hugely convenient neighborhood.

I saw the advantages of all that convenience and other things I came to appreciate: less traffic, wider streets, flat bike lanes, the diversity I loved about LA, quirky locations, unique businesses.

Living with a multitude of schools that made mid-afternoon traffic more of a nightmare than was usual even for LA. Getting used to all the kids around. They’re the future, right? Better get used to it.

Now it’s an easy truce. I’ve lived here longer than any place in my entire life. It’s my neighborhood, now. And I’m grateful. Maybe I am learning to love the valley – most days, anyway.

Share

Please make it stop: Five Most Overrated Exercises You Can Stop Doing Now

Well, you looked.

Well, you looked.

I really did enjoy this little piece on the Five Most Overrated Exercises — usually with things like this I feel there’s not much good information on weight training, but this one is spot on.

Maybe we’ll see an end to people doing those odd static plank positions in the gym – which I only remember seeing fairly recently (perhaps creeping out of the yoga studio?).

I’ve known for a long time that quad extensions weren’t the best exercise, that they are non-effective as well as bad for your knees so it’s nice to get some validation on that. Also with the traditional crunch – I don’t know about you, but after 30 years of doing these, it feels like abs-olutely nothing is going on down there! Best to make the movement more challenging.

As the article says, you can injure your shoulders doing bench presses from the same flat angle all the time. I’ve done that. I’ve also noticed most people doing hanging exercises of any kind have really bad form. Isn’t it great to know we no longer have to concern ourselves with these? What do you think?

daddyhunt_folsom250x70

 

 

Some local fitness links I like:

InYoga Studio (Valley Village)

Gold’s Gym Hollywood

Bodybuilder’s Gym (Silver Lake)


External Massage Internal massage isn’t cheap cialis india the only voice. Erectile dysfunction is the most devensec.com viagra sans prescription irritating and embarrassing sexual problems that most men like to hid from others. Erectile Dysfunction Treatment Partners sometimes opt for continuing the relationship and to resign them to the situation, hence it further deprives them of sexual intimacy over the long run, though developing an adequate transportation system there could take levitra sale decades. After therapy you may need other complementary treatments to potentiate the effect of decompression like heat compresses or cold compresses to alleviate pain symptoms (as a result of therapeutic decompression or because of the therapy itself), therapy by ultrasound waves that provide warmth to inflamed tissues with deeper penetration and promote regeneration and healing at cellular level or transcutaneous electrical stimulation and other similar therapies for. on line cialis view this link

Share

Kudos: Gold’s Gym Franchises Splitting With Parent Company Over CEO’s Donation To American Crossroads

link to: Gold’s Gym Franchises Splitting With Parent Company Over CEO’s Donation To American Crossroads.

Did he get your attention? Thought So.

I wanted to acknowledge Don Dickerson and Gold’s in San Francisco for doing this, to cutting their ties with the franchiser over this action. It’s going to be a giant – and expensive – headache for them, I’m sure, but the ethical solution requires making the switch.

Most things like this get hot for a split second and then fizzle (gay boycott of Target, anyone?) so I hope Gold’s SF sticks to their decision. I was a member of those gyms when I lived there, and went to the SOMA location on Brannan Street almost every work day (conveniently, I worked right across the street!). On weekends I’d go to the Castro location closer to my home. I never got bored at Gold’s – there was so much equipment at the Brannan Street location in particular – that I could always do something different and the workouts never got stale.
vardenafil cost What you a cyclist do to limit the irritation. Caverta: caverta works in the same way as other prescriptions, your medicinal services supplier may need to alter the levitra uk measurement they are taking. Once this contention is cialis samples in canada done away with, males can resume proper functioning of their reproductive organ during intercourse.Production of cGMP enzyme results in relaxed and widened veins that carry adequate volume of blood towards the genitals. One such source is herbs and herbal medicine. buy sildenafil no prescription
I also want to qualify my statements about San Francisco from an earlier snarkier post, where I mentioned that it was the most provincial place in the world and that I didn’t like living there.

It’s true, those years were not the happiest in my life but the City is certainly not responsible for that, I am. I always just think of two things – Cold and Cancer. I was always cold there, and I got cancer there. Again, not the City’s fault.

Things I did love about SF (besides my wonderful cousin Mary!): you don’t need a car. There’s bountiful public transport options, it’s fairly good for bikes (except the hills) and it’s basically so small you can probably walk wherever you’re going anyway. It’s got a real downtown where everyone works and that people dress up for and go down to on weekend nights. It’s a hot center of tech innovation and is filled with really, really smart people. It’s also close to Sonoma County (woods and wine country!).

So there. I’ve said some nice things about San Francisco. Oh, and congratulations, I understand you won a game of some kind.

Share