GAS WORKS PARK

I could feel it in my legs: restless like my mind. They needed to run. Once back from work, I swiftly changed outfits and dashed out of my apartment, chasing what remained of fleeting daylight; chasing solace. Right foot hitting pavement, followed by the left, they found rhythm, and my legs glided in momentum. I […]

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TWO YEARS LATER

Today marks two years living in Seattle. I still struggle talking about moving here—the why, the how; my impressions and experiences. The gray rainy winters are as capricious as the city’s luminous summers. The politics are as liberal and nuanced as you can believe. Social tensions are as insidious as found in any rapidly developing

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NATIONAL COMING OUT DAY

For me, being out means learning to be comfortable in my own skin. Learning to love my skin. Learning to love my identity. Learning to make my identity my own. Learning from mistakes. Learning to take chances. Learning to unlearn behavior from the closet. Learning to be me; the best that I can be. For

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TIME

There are weeks where time escapes me; slips through the cracks between my fingers as I try to hold it. Gravity is unforgiving. Perhaps this is a normal part of life—an inevitable part of life I stubbornly wish to believe is short lived; that time will proliferate with age and experience like a redemptive reward.

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WAIKIKI, HAWAII

I. I’m back in Seattle, thinking about Honolulu, where lounge chairs on balconies litter the sky, rows stacked above each other in towers rivaling the height of surrounding mountains. What is it about this place, a place for weddings and honeymoons; romances new and seasoned? What is it about this place that merits years of

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