Losing the Shimmer

I met up with a solo-practitioner last week to discuss how she started her own firm (let’s call her Lucy), but was able to keep it public-interest minded. Basically, if I can’t find a job working for a non-profit, I gotta find a way to make this whole attorney-thing work for me; a possibility is to start my own practice, but be able to keep it focused on low-income clients, while still making a living for myself (sounds almost like an extended oxymoron, huh?).

It was an extremely productive lunch meeting (I tried some sort of Thai coconut soup for the first time…something I would have never ordered myself, but actually enjoyed), but it also brought me back to a concept I brought up when I first started this blog: at what point do we stop pursuing our goals to pursue something more realistic?

Lucy worked for a big non profit law firm in Los Angeles about a year after law school, and I could see the shimmer in her eye when she talked about those days: everyone she worked with was empowered to change the world, and believed they could do it. There was a contagious excitement about the work they were doing, about helping people, about making it happen. Lucky worked with this non profit for about twenty years, until congressional regulations started restricting the kind of work they could do: no more personal injuries, no more class actions (these take away large sums of money from attorneys that actually want to get paid), no more funding if you’re helping illegal immigrants, etc. Lucy grew so frustrated because she felt she was no longer doing what she went to law school do to, so she decided to go out on her own.

Years later, sitting in a hole-in-the-wall Thai restaurant in Brea, she talks about how she just had to make the decision, and now she has to be a business person rather than a public-interest attorney: she’s gotta make money to pay for her elderly mothers 24-hour caregiver. I can tell from the shift in her tone, and the lack of shimmer in here eye, that she’s not overly excited about this: she has to network with attorneys (ick! ;] ), put her name out there to find new clients, and charge clients for her service. I know charging seems normal to most of you, but for a public interest attorney who is used to working in a firm that provides free services, it feels almost immoral to charge people. But it’s what she has to do now. She also wonders: how much impact was I really having, helping one person at a time? I certainly was no closer to saving the world when I first started, then twenty years later. I could tell this was something she had pondered before…her look became a little more distant, and I could see she was thinking of all the cases she had worked on in those twenty years and asking herself: did they really change anything?

I’m only two weeks into my unemployment (today is actually my two week anniversary!), but I’m already thinking about my alternatives if I can’t find a job soon with a non profit or public interest firm. I might have to go out on my own. I’m gonna have to charge my clients. I’m gonna have to find a way to compromise what my heart desires, and what our family needs. How can I do this without loosing my shimmer? It may sound pathetic, but I’m scared of losing my idealistic aspirations, I’m scared of realizing I can’t save the world.

Guatemala Update

A subject I have frequently written about is the Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala. I read a great article about it in the Washington Post today.

It was great to see the Washington Post write a long and thorough article on something that isn’t in the news much, and that no mainstream media has much of an interest for.

As usual with Guatemala, it’s depressing to see opposition to something that can actually help with the level of crime and impunity that exist within it. The CICIG has been facing opposition from various sectors since the very beginning, and I’m sure it will continue to face opposition for the remainder of its days. It just makes me sad.

It makes me sad because I read posts from my friend Isabel, who lives in Guatemala, and she talks about her frustrations with the crime and violence in Guatemala. People shut themselves in their house by 8pm. Their crime rate, as mentioned in the article, is three times that of Mexico. Three times. The crime rate of Mexico. Let that sink in for a bit.

So here’s an organization that is fighting corruption and crime, and trying to prosecute those before thought to be untouchable because of their political influence and/or wealth. But it has to fight to survive.

I hope the two year extension of the CICIG is granted, and I hope it continues to provide meaningful improvements to the government of Guatemala. I hope the people of Guatemala demand it, should anyone stand in the way.

Reminders and Memories

(Disclaimer: this blog is from my working days, certainly not recent!)

There was quite a bit of drama leading up to this moment, but to make a long story short: I was in the middle of driving an-hour-and-a-half from the office to a clients house to handle some stuff for work. At first I was furious that I was going to have to take the whole afternoon off from my busy office schedule to do this, but as I set my tunes and hit the freeway I realized how stupid I was for complaining: I was out of the office! It reminded me of how much I enjoyed being on the road when most people were stuck in an office, behind a desk. There’s something liberating about driving down a street at 10am, or 2pm, when the norms of society are yelling at your body: you shouldn’t be here!!!
This trip was also quite an experience for a few other reasons. For those who read this blog and don’t live anywhere near me, nor have ever lived anywhere near me (bless your hearts for reading), I live in a county that is sorely lacking in diversity, and it shows. This trip reminded me of the bubble that I live in. It was almost like crossing a border into another country. The streets are smaller, more people walking, different colored faces, people everywhere just trying to survive. It was good to be reminded.
When I got the the clients house it was almost like going back in time: I found myself in my great-aunt’s house, or my grandmother’s neighbors house in Guatemala: the plastic cover over the furniture and dining room table, the religious icons all over the house, the “recuerditos” from baptisms, weddings, and quinceneras all over the house, the clutter on the walls. There’s a certain “feeling” of hispanic homes that I had missed for a while, and I felt strangely comfortable in this strangers home.

Our Rollercoaster Life

Can’t say I didn’t see it coming. The office manager was in a prolonged meeting with the boss man yesterday afternoon, and over the last couple of weeks I knew what that meant: more people being let go. Un/fortunately for Jeff and I, I was one of the people that got oh-so-gently let go yesterday.

Before continuing, let me make one thing clear: I was laid off, not fired. There’s a subtle distinction there that I think is important to make :) The firm has come across some rough times and the boss man says he has to do what he has to do to keep the doors open. Be that as it may, it leaves me without a weekly check.
However, Jeff finally started working full time last Monday. Yep, last Monday. Which means we were both employed full time for a full week. Crazy timing, huh? I can confidently say that God has been testing us quite a bit lately, but He has never completely abandoned us. It seems that as soon as we get something right, like both of us finally working and looking forward to getting on our feet, something equally bad happens. And yet, it’s not terrible. It would’ve been terrible if I had lost my job and Jeff wasn’t working. THAT would’ve been shitty. At least He gives us a window so we can breath until we find the next unlocked door.
And yet, it’s still a blessing in disguise. Most of our friends know I wasn’t exactly thrilled with this job. I loved most of the people I worked with, but I wasn’t practicing in an area that made me happy. I knew it was temporary. I just wanted to leave when I was ready, not when someone else forced me to go. And yet, who’s to say I would ever take the time to look for the next step in my career if I wasn’t forced to? I now have the extra time to do oh-so-many things that I’ve been looking forward to. In no particular order:
  1. Find a job that makes me happy. Ideally in the public interest/non-profit sector. Maybe immigration, hopefully international development-related.
  2. Start going to the gym again. I was doing so good leading up to the Giacobbe’s wedding, and then I let life get in the way again.
  3. Working on my side projects: raising money for a sanitation project in Haiti, as well as Abby’s and my trip to Haiti.
  4. Work on the first pro-bono case I’ve picked up for KIND (I’ll be featuring them for this month’s Charity of the Month, so stay tuned).
  5. Work on our apartment, getting it clean and pretty.
  6. Build up my resume by volunteering with various projects and organizations.
  7. Catch up with friends and family that I haven’t been able to spend quality time with.
So yeah, it sucks to be unemployed again, especially when Jeff and I had gotten so excited about finally being financially stable enough to afford getting something for our friends and family (and ourselves) for Christmas. But all the cliches apply here: things happen for a reason, it’s for the best, there’s something better around the corner. Right?

October Charity of the Month: Corazon!

Tired. I was tired. It was 4:30 a.m., and I had already woken up in time to make coffee, make a couple sandwich’s, pack up my bright red cooler, and load it into my car in time to be at Nate’s house for the rendezvous. Have I mentioned this was on a Saturday?

Regardless of how tired I was when I started the day, or how extremely-beyond-exhausted I was when I finally got back home around 11pm, my trip to Tijuana (“TJ”) with Corazon was definitely worth it. Corazon was started 30 years ago, and their concept could not be more…well….obvious! What they offer is an “integrated program of community building, instruction, construction and repair projects, scholarships, and emergency and long-term assistance.” I went to TJ with the organization to help build a house, and found out the organization is actually involved in so much more than just building houses. It just makes so much sense, it’s actually pretty ridiculous. First of all, they don’t just give houses out, people have to earn them through a point system, wherein they earn points by performing community service projects, such as providing child care for neighborhood kids in the mornings (so their parents can go to work), helping in the afternoons and weekends with the tutoring center, or helping to lay concrete or roofing on a neighbors house. Second, their approach is wholistic. So it’s not just about building a house and letting them fend for themselves: it’s also about providing an education for their children so they have a better future, it’s about educating the parents to help them get ahead, it’s about educating the community. I absolutely love the idea of a whole community taking part in improving not only their own home, but of all their neighbors. IT’S FREAKIN’ BRILLIANT!

Anyhow, below are some pictures from the build I went to this past Saturday, which was an addition to an existing house (8 people living in one room) rather than a whole house build. Please check out Corazon’s site and see how you can be a part of this amazing organization, either financially or by donating your time. Take a day in the next few months, and join us to help a worthy family. If you come on enough projects, you can earn your blue shirt, which I definitely plan on doing!

Walking to our work site:


The house as it stood originally, with the foundation already lead for the addition:

Painting the exterior and interior of the walls:


Putting up the walls:

Marlene, one of the members of the house, working on her painting skills:

And Marlon, her twin brother, working on his carpentry skills:

Working on the roof:

Photo opportunity of our finished product along with the sponsors and all the family members:

TJ at night:


Wanna join us next time? Check it out.

Haiti on my Mind

It has been every since I returned from my trip earlier this year. I’m sure most of my friends and family are sick of hearing me talk about it, since I’m constantly either reading books on the country, or otherwise trying to stay a little up to date on what is still going on over there. Anyhow, the organization I went with just extended their project from January 15, 2011, to December, 2011. Which means….I want to go back.

I wish that my decision to go back, and the preparations following such a decision, could be seamless and easy. But as most things in this life, it has complications upon complications. Jeff will be starting a new job soon (yipee!!!), which means we should be able to get health insurance in about three months…which means we’d like to start thinking about expanding our little family. So I have to be very careful about planning my trip…I definitely can’t go if I’m pregnant, which means heading back sooner rather than later. This means I have less time to raise the funds to go (I’m thinking it’s going to be a little more difficult the second time around).

Thinking about this trip has also got my mind all jumbled up and thinking about so many other things…why do I really wanna go back? Is it just for me? Is it to help the people in Haiti, or just because it’s something different? I want to say it’s for altruistic reasons, but I know it’s because it’s something that makes ME happy. Which then makes me wonder if I should really be putting my family into a financially precarious situation just to do something I want to do. Wouldn’t my time be better spent at home, with my husband? On the other hand, I don’t want to regret not going back, when I feel it’s something I need to do for me. Once we start having kids, I can’t just drop everything and go to Haiti for two weeks.

Then I start to wonder if I unnecessarily complicate my life by wanting to do the things I want to do. I’m trying to make this career in the non profit arena (which hasn’t been happening for me so far) and constantly try to get involved in as many worthy activities as I can. What would I do with myself if I just focused on being a little more selfish…what if I went to college and law school just to make money and be financially stable, rather than wanting to “save the world”? What if I just spent the weekends picking up my home rather than organizing field trips to build a house in Mexico, or attending fundraisers? I wonder if my life would be just a little bit easier. But I also can’t think of what else I would want to do with my life.

Suggestions and prayers are always welcomed :)

Introducing: The Dip Corner!

Ok, so here’s the deal: whenever Jeff and I chose to get an appetizer when we eat out, we always go for whatever spinach-artichoke dip version they may have. There are times that we order it, and only after do we remember, hmmm, we didn’t really like this one last time. But since it’s our default, we always order it, regardless! So here comes my brilliant (um, lame?) idea: start a little section of this blog where I keep track of which ones we’ve tried, where, and a quick reminder as to what we thought of it. On the first couple I forgot to take a picture…but later entries will be better documented :) Hope this is helpful to some of you out there who enjoy spinach-artichoke dip as much as we do!

First victim: Lucille’s BBQName: Spinach and Cheese Dip
Price: $4.95 for a half order
Description: “spinach and artichokes blended with a creamy cheese sauce and served hot with fresh tortilla chips.”
Our thoughts: for a half order, the portion was of a good size. It was more cheesy than spinach-y, and it was a little watery for our taste. I’m thinking next time we’ll probably try a different appetizer…I mean, I guess at some point we should try to venture out of our comfort zone anyway.

Arcade Fire.

I begin with an apology, this entry might run a little long :)

I had the good fortune of attending the Arcade Fire show at the Shrine Auditorium last night. I remember Jeff buying one of their cd’s a while ago, and I was kind of indifferent about it. The real reason for me going was because I got to volunteer with Partners in Health, helping spread the word to fans of Arcade Fire, and trying to raise some funds. I thought it was a bonus to get to hear that band. Holy guacamole.

They’re amazing. They reminded me of Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros: there’s just soo many people on stage, playing all sorts of instruments, and they’re all genuinely excited and passionate about what they’re doing. It shows and it’s contagious. Anyhow, they played a song last night that I really liked, but since I’ve never really heard much of their stuff, I don’t know what song it is. I tried to find it on youtube so I could post it here, but I didn’t have any luck. Instead I found about six other videos that are uber amazing (I lowered the final count…).

Ok, this first one is “Wake Up” and it’s actually from the show I was at. It was their closing song, however, so I actually had to miss it because I was getting ready to annoy more people with donation requests :)

This next one is “Ready to Start.” I love the song, but I also love this video because it shows how talented and passionate all of these guys are.

This one’s just freakin cool:

This last one is called “Haiti.” One of the lead singers is actually from Haiti, so it puts the song in perspective a little bit. I’m actually gonna post the lyrics, because they’re a little difficult to understand, but the whole point of this song is the power of the lyrics:

Hait, mon pays,
wounded mother I’ll never see.
Ma famille set me free
Throw my ashes into the sea.

Mes cousins jamais nes
hantent les nuits de Duvalier
Rien n’arrete nos espirits.
Guns can’t kill what soldiers can’t see.

In the forest we are hiding,
unmarked graves where flowers grow.
Hear the soldires angry yelling,
in the river we will go.

Tous les morts-nes forment una armee,
soon we will reclaim the earth.
All the tears and all the bodies
bring about our second birth.

Haiti, never free,
n’aie pas peur de sonner l’alarme.
Tes enfants sont partis,
in those days their blood was still warm.

In the Name of Science

There were reports through all sorts of sources on Friday discussing an experiment by American Scientists in the 1940’s: the purpose was to test whether penicillin would prevent/cure syphilis. So, naturally, American scientists used individuals from a third world country (in this case, Guatemala) as guinea pigs: they used prostitutes to infect prisoners and people in insane asylums with syphilis, and later offered them penicillin to see if it would cure them. From what’s come to light thus far, it seems that the results were inconclusive. Meanwhile, 696 men and women were exposed to syphilis, and it is unclear whether all of them were cured.

One article does state the prisoners were unaware they were part of an experiment, although I do find it a little humorous (politically incorrect?) that they used prostitutes….I guess this is how they keep the prisoners from knowing they are getting infected with something…instead of an injection, let us bring women to sexually deprived prisoners and see if they’ll take the bait. I digress.
Although the new discovery of this research has brought to light questionable research methods, and has led to discussions about ethics in the research field, there’s another topic I find interesting: diplomatic apologies.
Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, as well as President Obama, have both offered apologies for what happened sixty years ago. As “Tom” states: “I suppose it bothers me a lot more because it was so recent. When people get all lathered up over something 300, 500, or 1000 years ago, I find myself saying the fog of history really does make it a perilous endeavor to pass fair judgment from afar. But for crying out loud, this is well within the remembered lifetimes of many citizens both here and there.”
This is where I start to over-analyze.
On the one hand, it seems only fair that someone should be held accountable for what happened, and that the people affected receive some sort of compensation for what was done to them (the government of Guatemala has already requested compensation for the victims).
On the other hand, how long can you hold an organization accountable for something that was done by prior administrations? I guess as a government, or any organization that has transitional leadership, they are always accountable for any actions done under their name, but it also strikes me as unfair to have to keep apologizing over and over again for something you had no control over (I’m taking this into a general context; the United States has only barely apologized for this incident). For example, Germany will always be made to feel like crap because of what Hitler did. I’m sure most Germans today are as disgusted with Hitler’s actions as everyone else, yet they will always be held responsible for what happened years ago. The Guatemalan government is accusing the United States of crimes against humanity, and is “reserving the right to denounce [the United States] in an international court.”
I think I agree with Tom that maybe these events are a little worse because they are fairly recent. I wonder if this news would have had less of an impact on news stories if it had happened 100 or 200 years ago, although I think both governments would still be playing the diplomatic dance and giving the “I’m sorry” and “I’m outraged” statements. I question how much of this is done to save face, and how much is because either party is really concerned with what happened.
Eh, I might not be making sense, and I’m definitely over analyzing, so I’ll leave it at this :)
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