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the feminist librarian

Category Archives: a sense of place

second anniversary: am I a bostonian yet?

06 Sunday Sep 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, domesticity, family

I realized a couple of weeks ago that Labor Day weekend would mark the second-year anniversary of my arrival in Boston to begin graduate school. The moment (so often the case in these situations) feels both much more recent than two years ago and also as if it happened in some far distant past-life. Not that the experience has been radically different from what I expected in any way, but it has felt like a more decisive, and more permanent, break from previous my previous existence than other relocations have been. So now that I’ve reached the 24-month mark, I think it’s appropriate to pause and reflect on whether or not I’ve made peace with my new place in the world.

I use the phrase “made peace with” deliberately, as I have never felt quite at home, full stop, in any one geographic place I’ve lived. I often react intensely to the landscape of a geographic place: the semester I lived in southern Oregon, for example, I fell in love with the contours of the Cascade mountains, but missed the vast openness of the great lakes acutely; during my year abroad at the University of Aberdeen, I chafed at the (to me) claustrophobia of big-city life, while I fell in love with the North Sea, just a stone’s throw from my room. When I am away from West Michigan, I feel the temporal displacement in my bones even though when I am there for long periods of time I grow restless and increasingly ready to depart again on the next adventure.

I knew when I left Michigan for Massachusetts in 2007 that I would miss my family grievously. Yet returning home is no longer possible in the way it once was, as the people of my generation scatter across the country and (myself among them) set up new homes, in new spaces. In short, it is no longer so easy to identify one single place as “home.

After two years here in Boston, I still find it difficult to think of myself as a Bostonian-with-a-capital-B, yet I do feel I have made peace with the city and with my graduate program (perhaps to a lesser extent than Boston itself — but then again, that’s how I always feel about educational programs). I am embarking upon my self-directed thesis work about which I feel passionate and am content with my work daylighting as a library assistant. My neighborhood feels like my neighborhood, and I have tentatively started to imagine what it would be like to live here for more than my student years. I have the sense that, when or if we leave, I will only then realize how fond I have become of its particular shops, parks, sidewalks, trees, sights, sounds, and smells.

Above all, I am fiercely protective of this life Hanna and I have forged together; a life that I hope with my entire being we will take with us regardless of where in time or space we eventually wash ashore. Meanwhile, Boston has been a damn good place to live, all things considered. School and work — along with the used bookstores and awesome coffee shops — keep me here for the time being. But life with Hanna is what makes it home.

*photograph by Hanna Clutterbuck, March 2008, Salem, MA.

Friday Photos: Pretty pots

05 Friday Jun 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, photos

Realize my photos have been North End heavy the last month or so, but we’ve been going down there a lot for various reasons. Anyway, I had my camera with me this afternoon finally got some photos of these pots outside the hardware store that I always think are quite lovely all stacked together.

Getting lost in Brookline

11 Monday May 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, domesticity

Yesterday’s non-Mother’s Day post was really about both my parents, not just my mum (people in comments were very impressed about the sharp knives). But I thought my dad deserved some attention too. So here’s my thought for the day on What I Owe My Dad. My dad loves getting lost (I’m sorry: exploring). He’s the one who showed me that the best way of getting to know a new place is just to start walking.

And in a city like Boston, I doubt you could live here long enough to be done finding new places to explore. Today, another gorgeous spring day, I decided to look for alternate routes home from work, rather than taking the usual major arteries of Commonwealth Avenue or Beacon Street. Commonwealth, particularly, can be a brutal trek in the summer and we always find the last mile or so an absolute drag. So I skipped off the main drag and wandered around the back neighborhoods of Brookline for a while. Here are a few pictures I snapped along the way.

(Click here for the larger version).

Turns out there’s a whole neighborhood of beautiful (if slightly delapidated) old houses, reminiscent of Heritage Hill in Grand Rapids (Mich.) and to a much lesser extent the neighborhood where I grew up (although the property values in Holland, Michigan, are likely much less than the property values around here!) There were lots of shaded sidewalks to wander down and a passing kitty who came over to check out my ankles.

I did actually have a destination in mind: the Clear Flour Bread bakery just off Commonwealth Ave, a five minute walk from our apartment (Larry: you’ll be pleased to know they sell dagger bread!). Now that the dinner Hanna made has settled, it’s off to unpack that Rustic Strawberry and Rhubarb Tart I bought for dessert.

Allston Mafia Buries Body in Pavement?

03 Sunday May 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, domesticity, humor, photos

This is the view out our front window at 6:05 this Sunday evening. We are uncertain what would compel the Boston/Allston city construction crews to begin jackhammering at 3pm on a Sunday afternoon as we were attempting to grade student exams/write thesis drafts in a responsible graduate students sort of manner, but strongly suspect foul play.

Earth Hour 2009

29 Sunday Mar 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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domesticity, fun, photos, politics

Last night, the city of Boston participated in Earth Hour 2009, a one-hour worldwide event in which people were encouraged to turn out their lights for one hour (8:30-9:30) in support of combating global warming. Hanna and I spent our hour of ecological friendliness playing scrabble by candlelight.


Hanna won infinity points for spelling “Ianto” on the board and thus won the game hands down.

Snow Duo

23 Tuesday Dec 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, fun, outdoors

The younglings in my neighborhood were busy today (a snow day for the Boston area schools) building snow people in every available space. I snapped a picture of this curbside parent-and-child snow family on my way home through the park tonight.

Kuumaa Kaakaota*

22 Monday Dec 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, fun

This mouth-watering round-up of cafes which serve hot chocolate in the Boston area is at the top of the “to do” list for Hanna and I in the first month of the new year . . . with a little extra time in our schedules, and likely cold temperatures demanding the regular ingestion of hot beverages . . . who could resist?

*”Hot chocolate” in Finnish . . . ‘Cause why not? Who can resist the endless fun to be had from Google Translate?

They said there would be snow . . .

20 Saturday Dec 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, outdoors

. . . and they did not tell a lie.

The snow is lovely this morning, and we managed to get Hanna off for her Christmas vacation with relatively little trouble. (I even got a ride to work out of the deal — which felt like a true luxury!) This morning, while Hanna trekked up to the rental car lot, I was sent out to procure hot beverages from the local Starbucks. I snapped a few pictures of the early morning snow on my walk.

Head over to Picasa for a larger slideshow.

"Everybody to Get from Street!"

19 Friday Dec 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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Tags

boston, humor

Unlike in Portland, Oregon, here in Boston we don’t even need snow to have a snow day — just the anticipation of snow is enough to declare a “snow emergency” here in the city. They are apparently trying to forestall the great snow debacle of 2007 in which the entire city shut down at once and traffic came to a stand-still. Coming from an area where this kind of snow fails to shut down the schools I have to admit I find the situation a little humorous. Still — it’ll give me some free time to help Hanna get packed for her vacation, and pick up those last few Christmas gifts.

Nighttime in Boston

29 Saturday Nov 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, photos

Sunday evening Hanna has yoga in the North End and I often tag along to sit and read or study in the Boston Beanstock Co. coffee shop. On our way to and from the T we cross the Rose Kennedy Greenway, which has these tiny little lights studding the sidewalk. Last week, I snapped a photograph. It’s not great quality, but you get the effect. I don’t think they’re constellations or anything, but it still reminds me of those night sky machines you can buy for bedroom ceilings :).

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