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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 2016)
GRAB BAG book shelf • glimpse • wildlife • pop culture • words • q&a COLUMBIA BAR Hangover Cure By RYAN HUME Photo by Matt Love Oregon Youth Authority North Coast Correctional Facility in Warrenton houses a continually rotating population of up to 50 young inmates between the ages of 14 and 21. A G LIMPSE I NSIDE An occasional feature by MATT LOVE North Coast Correctional Facility I sat in the back of the room and waited for the poetry slam to begin at the Oregon Youth Authority North Coast Correc- tional Facility in Warrenton. Ten boys from the Klaskanine unit volunteered to perform their works in front of peers and staff in a judged competition. I had been invited by the principal of the facility’s high school, South Jetty, and having staged many poetry slams in my teaching career, instantly agreed. A spoken word performer named Madgesdiq, (real name An- toine Stoudamire), from Portland hosted the event and warmed up the room with a hypnotic piece called “Time.” Just moments before the show started, he told me he works with youth to, “help them understand the power of writing and the inspiration to heal.” That about sums up my entire teaching philosophy, and I felt that in meeting Madgesdiq I’d met a brother in writing. The slam unfolded. I jotted down some lines: • I’m drowning in shallow water, as shallow as it comes. • Set me free from the crystal curse. • I remember those nights with no purpose. • I want a rose to grow from the concrete. • I lay in the devil’s playground, but I don’t play. • Black babies turn to black holes. • My life is a picture, but not big enough to paint. • I never learn from mistakes; it’s why my life isn’t a piece of cake. The students’ English teacher even got up and threw it down hard, a powerful woman’s blunt call for respect from men, in- cluding the young men sitting in a circle right in front of her. They listened. Heads nodded. I was watching what poetry had be- come for these incarcerated young men and what it should be for all high school English students but so rarely is. Why is that? The slam concluded. Two boys tied, and they went back up and spontaneously riffed to decide the title. One scored higher, but both were declared winners and won a new pair of Nikes. I had to leave, but not before I wrote these lines: I thought I’d see posturing, I didn’t see a pose. I thought I’d hear clichés fire and roar I heard nothing but original metaphors. Matt Love is the author/editor of 14 books about Oregon and teaches at Astoria High School. His books are available through bookstores or nestuccaspitpress.com relief that sounds both satisfying and maybe even a little restorative. It should be noted that Angostura bitters, while easy to digest, contain a scant amount of alcohol, and, of course, the healing properties of sausage gravy are already well known throughout the land. If you ended last year right (or very, What you’ll need: very wrong), chances are you started A big pile of biscuits and the new one with a less-than-stellar at- titude, a vampire-like sensitivity to light gravy* 4-5 dashes of Angostura and a queasy noxious feeling spilling from every pore. This is no way to stick cocktail bitters Soda water to your resolutions. Ice Of course, the best way to avoid a hangover is to skip Directions: overindulging in the Add bitters to first place. And as for a soda water and ice. cure? Well, really, the Stir, and enjoy with jury is still out on that your biscuits and one, but who better to ask for gravy. a recommendation than the bar manager of a restaurant that —Recipe courtesy of serves brunch? (Oh, brunch: that Matt Lessnau, bar manager, slow, casual crawl back toward Pickled Fish, Long Beach, civility after a night out.) Washington Matt Lessnau, of the Pickled Fish in Long Beach, Washington, *Pickled Fish does a skipped over two popular no- unique spin on the stan- tions of hangover treatment — Submitted image dard biscuit and gravy by spik- the hair of the dog and exercise — but combined two others — the ing their gravy with fennel sausage and greasy breakfast and the fizzy drink — harissa, which is a garlicky North African to come up with a recipe for hangover chile paste. Open 7am Daily! Regional selection of beers, wines and vintage cocktails available. 243 11th Street, Astoria, OR 97103 503-325-1787 Join us on a 7-week journey where parents and their children work together to strengthen the family unit. Thursday Evenings February 4th-March 17th, 6:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. Broadway Middle School 1120 Broadway St., Seaside, OR. Nightly Raffle Prizes Free Dinner from 5:30-6 & childcare for younger siblings provided. To register or for more information, contact: Northwest Parenting (503)325-8673 x 2 $25 per family - Scholarships A vailable This class sponsored by P O SITIV E D ISCIPL IN E S TRATEG IES Beneficial for parents & caregivers with children ages 5-10 Looking for ways to increase cooperation, ease hassles and reduce misbehavior? Thursday, January 21st 6:15-7:30 p.m.* Astoria Elementary School www.AstoriaCoffeeHouse.com We cater your event! Weekly Specials: 5-8 PM Sushi & Martinis Mondays Taco & Margarita Thursdays (3 Buck Tacos) Strengthen your relationship as a family! This one-time FREE workshop will provide you with skills and tools including logical consequences, avoiding power struggles and how to build healthy self-esteem. S E R V I N G B R E A K FA S T, LUNCH & SUPPER European Style Coffeehouse by day, intimate bistro offering neo-regional cuisine by night. STRENGTHENING Families PROGRAM for parents/caregivers and youth 10-1 4 Follow & “Like” us on Facebook *Arrive between 6:15-6:30 to sign children into free childcare and enjoy refreshments. Program begins at 6:30. Se habla español January 14, 2016 | coastweekend.com | 19