During a recent visit to Seattle, a friend introduced me to a phenomenon with which I was previously unfamiliar: The Seattle Freeze. Most of you probably know what that is, but I'd never heard of it. Basically it means that it's hard to make friends in Seattle. The people are friendly enough; they just have enough fucking friends already and don't have time in their lives for any additions.
In Asheville, North Carolina, I've experienced a very different phenomenon. I'm going to go ahead and call it The Asheville Snuggle.
The people of Asheville have been unbelievably welcoming and lovely since my husband and I arrived a few weeks ago. New friends have offered us food, drinks, personal tours of the town, and invitations to countless outings. People on hiking trails stop to tell us about other wilderness areas we should explore. A young man bagging our groceries sprinted across the store to fetch us samples of food he thought we'd like. After showing us a potential rental, the landlady invited us over to her house for a beer. When a worker at the PODS warehouse saw our car was packed full, he offered to loan us his truck to get more stuff home. This afternoon, a neighbor knocked on our door and asked if we'd be okay with him filling in a hole in our driveway. Seriously. The list goes on and on.
This whole experience has been somewhat baffling to a Massachusite and a New Mexican, but definitely in a good way.
It feels kinda like this...except not scary or culty |
Thankfully, Craigslist offers many opportunities to escape from the feelings of depression and futility that accompany job searching. Here are some examples of the comic relief postings I've seen:
"I'm looking for three people."
I'm thinking you should try a little harder. Maybe step outside and look around. Craigslist seems like the wrong avenue to fill this need.
"Women to walk on a person."
Um...what? I mean, I could walk on you, but what the fuck?
"DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO MAKE A LOT OF MONEY???"
If history tells me anything, the answer to this one is a resounding NO.
"Seeking heroes!"
That one was for a sales position. Come on, now. I believe one needs to get killed in combat (even via friendly fire, mind you) to earn that coveted title.
"THIS IS NOT A SCAM!"
= surefire way to know something is a scam.
Riiiiiight. |
Immediate need - this evening. Banjo player 4 front porch entertainment.
One banjo player desired for live music during front porch sitting of 3 lovely ladies.$25-30 plus potential for tips.
- Chips included, canned Cheerwine, scenic lakefront view to be enjoyed.
- Not obligated, but possible make-out potential with 1-3 ladies for a cute enough, suave enough, debonaire enough, intriguing enough banjo player. Purely PG.
(This was a real posting - I swear.)
I'm thinkin' this is NOT what those ladies had in mind. |
As a long-time social service worker, it comes as no surprise that the kinds of jobs with which I'm most familiar have descriptions of about 20,000 words (detailing super-human responsibilities and expectations), require Master's Degrees and several years of experience, offer 2 weeks of vacation per year, and pay just above poverty wages. Because, really, doing that kind of work is reward enough in itself, right?
Um, yes. That's exactly right. |
Dear Asheville:
Please save me from the kind of work
for which I am most qualified.
Amen.