5/31/2011

the magic moments

Stitching together the magic moments into a string of delight that has turned into a giant spool of amazement we'll weave into a quilt to keep us warm on chilly nights.

5/27/2011

joy is found where your heart leads

"Joy is found where your heart leads. Go there." he said.

So, here I am.

where's my love?

LOVE IS WITHIN US ALL

LOVE IS WITHIN US ALL

All day long I'd been listening 
To the guests badmouth my family
Posturing for position in the pack
By trying to be the most callous
And clever in their put downs
Of my gay brother and my black sister
Whose competence they dismiss 

I bit my tongue as I cooked our meals
Stirring into the food the prayer
That it would not only fill our bellies 
But also help us open our hearts
And heal the illusion of separation
So that we might find value
In even the most despised parts of ourselves

After night finally fell I wept
Not for the underdogs who are unafraid to feel
But for the overdogs trapped in their minds
Which mistake force for strength
And dominance for power
Unaware that the wolf best at initiating play
Is the true leader

When I awoke in the morning
To a neighbor who had fallen calling for help
We all responded with our own form of competence
As they used their strength to carry him upstairs
I used my power to protect him with a blanket
And reassure him with lightheartedness
In his crisis of weakness and fear

Heading home in the light
Of the new rising sun
I found I was grateful
For the opportunity to serve
This world from the inside out
So that in knowing the pain of separation
I may heal into wholeness and open
The possibility that we might find
Our way home to the heart
Of God within us all


5/22/2011

proof #4

"There is no love; there are only proofs of love." Pierre Reverdy

love share: thank you and welcome

My, oh my! Love is floating in the air and LoveYou2.org has been the recent recipient of great "love share".  A heartfelt "Welcome!" to the newest love ambassadors. Here's a round up of the latest love sharing. I can't wait to hear how you share the love!

Ode Magazine writer and professional optimist Emily Aviles found an i love you, too sign and wrote Signs of Love. How fun that before I read the Ode article, one of my BFFs in another state called me because she had seen Emily's love share online.  The Ode community was incredibly responsive and the Signs of Love article was shared, tweeted and reposted.  It is terribly exciting to have this much exposure with such an enthusiastic and wide-reaching audience. Thank you, Emily, for pulling an i love you, too tab, snapping a photo and sharing the love.

Jodell Scott, realtor and Glen Park News contributor, featured the heART of the i love you, too campaign in Give Love, Get Love.  It's just a matter of time (and some paint) before my heART appears in new locations. I'm scouting locations now for a summer 2011 heART pop-up exhibition.  I love Jodell's dedication to the Glen Park community and her appreciation of the little things in life.

Inspired by "i love you because" Fridays (madlibs for you heart!), sfmusicchick blogged at Hipster Nation: I love you because .  She opens her piece, "I love you because you hold me when I am sad."  There are only certain people who will or can do this for us.  Likewise, we only allow certain people to see us in this vulnerable state.  What a beautiful intersection when the one who can hold finds the one who needs holding and they embrace.  My sister has done this for me.  Alyce, I love you because you got down on the floor and held me when I was sad.

I look forward to more signs of love and your creative love share. Thank you for helping me spread the i love you, too  message around the world and cyberworld!

i love you, too.

5/21/2011

if you give a girl your t-shirt

If you give a girl your t-shirt, she is going to sleep in it.

If you give a girl your t-shirt, she is going to sleep in it and as she falls asleep she'll think about you.

If she falls asleep thinking about you, chances are she is going to dream about you.

If you give a girl your t-shirt and she sleeps in it and dreams about you, it will make it incredibly hard to not think about you the next day.

If she dreams about you and thinks about you the entire next day, she'll probably want to see you again.

You should know these things, just in case you ever give a girl your t-shirt.


5/17/2011

agitprop: ideas worth sharing

Agitprop is a term that can be used to define the sharing of ideas that are useful or beneficial.

I can't remember how I first bumped into iwishthiswas.com but as they will, important and necessary ideas find us.  So, wishthiswas.com found me and I'd ordered my packet of vinyl stickers the same day we met.  How could I resist this fabulous idea of non-permanent stickers that offered the opportunity for political commentary, dreaming, humor and fun all in a packet mailed from New Orleans?

I've spent the last week being an agitpropster for iwishthiswas.com.  Heaps of fun. A few favorites:


I wish this was my cooking school for kids.  (Awesome corner location with windows on two sides, easy access for several neighborhood schools, good public transportation, nearby options for a community garden space.)

I wish this was an open air wood floor where we could dance barefoot to drums.  (Flash mob style dance classes at lunch and after work?)

I wish this was where I said "i love you, too". (Part shameless self promotion, part lovely dream, part agitprop action in a new part of town, part wanted to see this view.)

What ideas worth sharing have recently found you?

becoming agitprop

The word agitprop originated in Russia, - combination of the words 'agitation' and 'propaganda'.  Agitprop was utilized during the communist era to define the sharing of communist ideas through art, theater, music and writing.  At the time, the term propaganda did not have a negative connotation and was simply the 'dissemination of ideas.' Outside the political realm, agitprop was used as a term to describe the dissemination of beneficial knowledge. (Sources: wikipedia and merriam-websterdictionary)


I'm fascinated with how ideas are shared, what ideas stick, and other's ideas that captivate me.  Discovering historic or modern day pieces of art, writing, or theater as a agents of social change is thrilling.

The "i love you, too" message is agitprop.  While certainly simple, this concept may be completely radical or counter to the way someone perceives themselves or their place in this world. Agitprop "i love you, too" messages have created art and a variety of writings posted to the LoveYou2.org blog.  People all over the world have printed and hung "i love you, too" signs. Photos and stories have been submitted from Germany, the Dominican Republic, Samoa, Kenya, Pennsylvania, Houston, Washington DC, San Francisco, New York, San Diego and more!

Thank you for joining me in becoming agitprop and sharing beneficial knowledge.  Yes, love is louder.  Yes, I love you, too.

this is going to take some courage

To love is to be vulnerable. 

-C.S. Lewis

5/08/2011

Motherland

She taught me how to blow my nose, the best way to organize a grocery shopping list, to volunteer to clean up after a party, sewing skills 101, and how to say "I'm sorry" and mean it.  Because of her, I know that that glass really is half full. She taught me how to talk to strangers, to dress for the occasion, multitasking and excellent pranking.

I think of my mom daily because her influence in who I am, how I think, and the way I live is so great.

Over the last decade, I've slowly unwrapped a realization of the vastness of her love and learned, again and again, what a touchstone this love is. I'm not sure if over the years her love has become grander or if my ability to perceive her love has grown.  Natalie Merchant sings in Motherland:

Motherland cradle me
Close my eyes
Lullaby me to sleep
Keep me safe
Lie with me
Stay beside me
Don't go, don't you go

I know that place.  The Motherland.   If I every wonder, it just takes a phone call, an email or a text and she is there.

I love you, too, Mom.

5/05/2011

somewhere in between

Somewhere in between the tingling anticipation of endless love and a thousand disappointments is the dream I so enjoyed having about us.

5/01/2011

O te alofa - i love you, too from Samoa

They came in to our free dental clinic, bent with age, dirty, shaking from palsy and belligerent that we might turn them down for reason of money, social status, religion or race.  We didn't but we did find out that they did not speak English and we had no interpreter there right then.  Also they did not know how to read or fill out the information forms so I did that for them, skipping all the questions that I could not manage with my meager Samoan.  Took them back to the operatory.  She was worried about his modesty (in Samoa it is very rude to let the bottoms of your feet show and that is exactly what was happening with the way the chair was situated).  So I got a lavalava and put it over him -- all the way down over the soles of his feet, gave him a pat and a smile.  He lay back, trembling.  He had never been to a dentist before and the smell told me that he needed to be there. She gave me a long look and a shy smile.  Still there was wariness. The dentist said that there were two teeth that absolutely had to come out since the decay was pouring toxins into his body. Then the shot to numb his mouth.  The poor old fellow -- his palsy really got going!  As the teeth were being pulled, I stayed there and held his hand and his wife touched his shoulder. Done!! then her turn. By now the whole room reeked of decay.  Hmm -- not too bad but lots of plaque that soon got the attention of the ultrasonic scaler.  Pieces of that stuff came flying out.  Sure glad to have on a face mask.

As they leave, she stops me and tries to pay me with the equivalent of $2.00 US.  I refuse and she asks:  "Why you do dis?" My answer:  "O te alofa" (which means "my love to you")  She had tears in her eyes as she nodded and said quietly "Alofa" ("love"). Still old, still bent with age, still shaking and dirty but no longer belligerent.

O te alofa   or i love you, too.

Pronouncing Ferdinand



On April Fools Day I was awoken by the be-bop going off, and a dispatcher's voice over the loudspeaker sending us out on a resuscitation call. I automatically pulled on my pants and boots, and looked at my cell phone as I headed for the pole. It was 6:38, and I remembered I'd set the alarm for 6:46, to have just enough time to go up to the roof of the firehouse to see the sun rise at 6:54. Over the course of the 48 hour shift that was drawing to a close, I'd attempted to pray with tobacco, as do the Peruvian shamans I'd been doing ceremonies with over the previous few months. But like an alcoholic falling off the wagon by guzzling the communion wine, I'd quickly slipped from blowing the smoke out to summon the spirits, to inhaling it deeply for my own sensual gratification, as I used to do before quitting smoking five weeks before. That's the white man's way of smoking, I was told. Smoke like that, they say, and you'll learn to pray alright, praying for your life. I'd thrown away the pack of cigarettes the night before, but felt that I should do some kind of purification ceremony, to be able to forgive myself and start with a clean slate. Now I had to deal with someone else's crisis instead, I thought as I turned off the alarm so it wouldn't go off while we were on scene with a patient, and slid down the pole.

Once on the engine, the four of us rode out the door and down the hill in the morning twilight, towards the one commercial zone in our first-in district. No siren necessary at that hour, our red lights flashed across the sleeping house fronts. I was pulling on rubber gloves when the dispatcher informed us that CPR was in progress, and a paramedic captain was being sent along with ourselves and the ambulance. This was going to be a real call. I've been doing this work for twenty-three years, nineteen of them as a paramedic, so I've run my share of early morning calls on patients whose days of waking up in the morning are over. We pulled up to the block where there's a taqueria named after the musical instrument I played in high school, where we get lunch when morning drills or calls don't leave enough time to cook at the firehouse. The engine's dispatch computer screen specified to enter through the back from the parking lot around the corner, and the reporting party's phone was registered to a "Ferdinand". I thought of the children's book by that name about the gentle bull who would rather smell the flowers than fight, that I read to my son. I had never noticed the second floor apartments before on that block, above the shops. I thought about running into Jonathan Richman once when I came out of the corner store where I used to buy cigarettes, like a scene from Something About Mary, except he was carrying bags of take-out food instead of a guitar. I'd had the presence of mind to thank him for producing Vic Chesnutt's last album, Skitter on Takeoff,  before Vic took his own life the previous Christmas, and we shared a moment of sadness and loss, searching for redemption in his story of making the album in San Francisco. "That voice," he'd said, "we built the album around his voice." I told the EMT to grab the suction along with the O2 bag as I put the medical bag on my shoulder, pulled the heart monitor off the engine, and crunched across the gravel lot, up wooden stairs. There was an older lady in her bathrobe standing in the doorway with a pained expression on her face. "I can't roll him over," she said.

He was face down in the small bathroom, a skinny old man in his underwear. I grabbed his ankles and pulled him into the bedroom, rolling him over and checking his fingers and jaw for rigor, but they were still supple. His neck was still slightly warm as I checked for a carotid pulse, and I asked the woman if this was her husband. "I'm his ex-wife", she said, "but I come by to check on him, to make sure he's eating. We went out to see Hutch play at Westlake Joe's last night, and I spent the night." I asked if she'd heard him fall, and she said, "No, I just found him there, but he always gets up to fix coffee at 5:30 to 6 o'clock, and he started the coffee maker already." The EMT was hooking the ambu-bag up to the oxygen tank as I put the electrodes of the heart monitor on his chest, skipping the defibrillation pads as I saw where this was going. I had turned on the monitor and saw the expected flat line of asystole as the engine driver led the paramedic captain into the room. "What's the down time?" he asked. "At least half an hour, possibly an hour," I said as I shined a pen light into his eyes, finding his pupils fixed and dilated. The engine officer had taken the woman into the kitchen to find his medication bottles. "We don't have to work this," the paramedic captain said, and I agreed, "No, I don't believe we're going to change anything here." He looked at his watch, and said, "We'll call the pronouncement time 6:43." I ran a six second strip in each of the three leads, shaking the cables to produce some artifact, and turned off the monitor. I reached up and closed the old man's eyes.

When the wife came back into the room, we were putting a blanket over him. I said, "I'm sorry, ma'am, but there's nothing we can do to bring him back," and she put her hand over her open mouth. "When a person goes into cardiac arrest," I explained, "and their breathing and circulation stop, the body can survive about 3 or 4 minutes without oxygen. After that, the brain and heart cells begin to die, and it's irreversible at that point. He wouldn't have suffered, but I'm very sorry for your loss." She said, "He smoked 3 packs of cigarettes a day, and didn't take very good care of himself. It was bound to catch up to him sooner or later." I asked how old he was, and she said, "seventy-seven". I said, "That's pretty good, actually," thinking about a doctor I worked with once who said that a couple years of smoking probably wouldn't have any long term effect, but beyond that, it's going to shorten your life. Fifteen minutes per cigarette, I read somewhere.  "We just went out to hear music last night, with a friend of his from high school he hadn't seen in years. They played together in the jazz band and the stage band-- how am I gonna tell him?" she asked. "There'll be time for that," I said, emphasizing, "it's really good that you went and heard live music last night. I'm a musician, too, and that sounds like a really good last night to me." She repeated, "We saw Hutch play piano at Westlake Joe's-- he used to be Hutch's bass player when he had a band." I asked, "Was that his instrument, the bass?" and she replied, "Yes, the standup bass-- but he's been so weak lately that he hasn't been able to lift it up anymore."

The paramedic captain had cancelled the ambulance as they pulled up, and told us we could go back in service too, that he would stick around to write the patient care report and wait for the medical examiner. After putting the equipment back on the engine, I found him sitting at the kitchen table with the wife, explaining the process of the medical examiner coming to the scene, and being able to release the body to a funeral home if his doctor would be willing to sign a death certificate. "He hasn't seen a doctor in years," she said. "They may need to take Ferdinand to the county morgue then, initially," he said, "and further arrangements can be made from there." She said, "He went by Fred."  The EMT asked if there was anyone she needed to call, and she said, "Yes, I need to call our children." She brought the phone over to her, and was helping her to dial their oldest son, a minister up in Aberdeen, when I noticed her hands were shaking. "Do you have any medical problems?" I asked, and she admitted to diabetes, and not having eaten anything yet today. The EMT put the phone receiver back in its cradle and went over to the refrigerator to get her a glass of orange juice as I went back down to the engine for the glucometer, remembering when I saw the driver sitting behind the wheel that it was April Fools Day. There was a story in the paper a few weeks earlier about a man who called 911 up in Sonoma County when he found his wife unresponsive one morning, and began doing CPR on her. When the paramedics arrived, they found him dead on top of her, having had a heart attack himself. I flung open the passenger door and shouted, "Looks like we're gonna be doing CPR after all-- the wife just went down," but when he turned around wide-eyed, I couldn't keep a straight face.

Walking back into the house, I noticed the organ in the back hallway, under the jazz posters and pictures of Fred as a young man, playing bass in an Army uniform. It wasn't a B3, but it was a Hammond, the kind of organ I'd love to have at home, to play myself and for my three year old son to fool around with. When I got back in the kitchen she was on the phone, saying, "You've got to call your sister, because she's gonna say, 'You've got to do this and you've got to do that, and there's nothing that can be done!' " I pricked her finger to get a drop of blood to test her sugar level, and as the glucometer counted down I looked up at the pictures of the kids on the wall, the drawings and cards addressed, "To Grandpa, With Love". After making sure there was nothing else we could do to help, no more questions we could try to answer, I left her sitting there at the kitchen table with the paramedic captain who was writing on his clipboard. I said, "You know, this is a very unique event in the lives of you and your family here today, but we actually see this situation quite a bit. People die in the city every day, and it's saddest when they die alone, no family to even contact. You obviously loved Fred, and he had the love of your children and grandchildren, too, and his friends. That's what it's all about, really. Nobody gets out of this world alive, but being loved is the best we can hope for. And you went out last night to hear good music, besides." Going down the back stairs with the EMT, I mentioned the organ, and asked her if she thought it would be okay to ask the wife if she thought Fred would want a chance to be an organ donor after all. "That's just wrong," was all she said, but she was smiling.

Back at the fire station, I went straight up to the roof. I'm fortunate to work at the firehouse with the best view in San Francisco-- possibly the whole world. It was a crystal clear morning, the tall buildings of downtown and the Bay Bridge encircled by the bay with anchored freighters from the other side of the planet silhouetted against the shining water, the east bay hills and Mount Diablo on the horizon. I walked around the castle-like parapet, looking off to the hills of Twin Peaks and the Sutro Tower to the North, the Pacific Ocean to the west, and rows of condos to the south over the crest of our particular hill. The sun was now above them, and I raised my closed eyes to it, feeling its warmth. I lit some sage and blew out blessings to Father Sky, Mother Earth, all the creatures, all my beloved brothers, all my beloved sisters, the Ongwehonwe: those who live true to reality, all the parts of myself, and Great Spirit, the Creator, alive and well within each and every one of us. "As above, so below, as within, so without," I said. And then I spoke to Grandfather Fred for awhile, hoping I'd done right by him, and wishing him well.

I took my time getting home that day, more than usual. Stopping in Half Moon Bay, I had breakfast at at a cafe on Main Street. It was the first time I'd been there that the old man behind the grill didn't start singing, or go put a quarter in his own juke box As I was leaving, I looked at the songs in it for the first time, and found many favorites: good jazz, blues, soul, and early rock and roll. I decided to poke around in some shops, and when I went into an African import shop was hit with the incredible smell of the wood there, masks and furniture made from recycled railroad ties, hundred year old hardwood that's had many souls pass over it, over many seasons. I went into a bookshop to ask about a book on mountain lions I saw in the window, and the older female shopkeeper seemed to be in a bad mood. Or maybe that was just her personality, I thought, detecting a New York accent. She was preoccupied with her computer and scarcely looked up when she handed it to me. She seemed insulted when I'd asked if they were all used books, qualifying them as rare, out of print and signed first editions, books that she said nobody cares about anymore, preferring to read things on their computer or order books online. She then said she was sorry, but that she didn't have time to talk, that she was too busy trying to answer emails, and I walked back into the stacks.

I began to find book after book that I'd either been looking for, or would have been if I'd known it existed, or used to own and lost. I felt like I was in my grandparents' house, now long gone, looking at the collection of once familiar spines, and tears streamed down my face. I had accumulated quite a stack when I took a couple up to the counter, and joined in with a pretty cynical conversation the shopkeeper was having with another customer, about how messed up the world is. Before I knew it, the conversation had completely turned her mood around, and we both tried to coax the middle aged man out of his mind and into his heart. But romantic love was as far as his vision of love went, it seemed. He was the son of hippies, rebelling still against his parents' philosophy for personal reasons. But deep down he knew it was aligned with reality more than most-- it was his parents who hadn't been that well aligned with it. I finally said, "What's your bliss, your purpose here, what do you do?" And he said that he makes documentary films, and was currently making one about hospice work. He said he'd been able to interview Terence McKenna's partner, who was with him when he died, and described how she'd talked about how it was for her to have her lover dying, and all these people from all over the world who loved him too were coming to see him and say goodbye. 

When I brought the full stack of books up to the counter, the last vestiges of bitterness seemed to leave the shopkeeper, her faith in humanity renewed. She said she still needed to find a buyer for the store, though, because she needed to retire when she turned sixty-five, which was in just a few months. "Why retire?" I asked, and she said it was because her true calling was doing hospice work herself, and that's what she wanted to do with the time she had left. When I went out in search of an ATM to be able to pay in cash, I got sidetracked first by a sushi restaurant with incredible teak root burl chairs and benches, like one I had just bought a few days prior, and I began to suspect that I was having a transcendental experience. Seeing everything in a new light, noticing things that may have been there before, but weren't visible to me. In the courtyard where the illusive ATM was supposed to be, there was a man playing guitar, and it stopped me in my tracks again. I sat down as he sang Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah", a song that's always moved me deeply-- especially Jeff Buckley's version, both he and his father having died so tragically, much too soon for the rest of our sakes. When the song ended and he said he was taking a break, I went up to talk with him. I told him how I had pronounced a bass player dead that morning, and how good it was to hear that particular song. It turned out that he used to be a psych nurse at Saint Lukes Hospital, and I'd undoubtedly brought more than one patient to him over the years. He'd quit that gig, and now did hospice work. He said that he'd been doing that work since his own son died, that he'd taken care of him as he died, and that he'd slipped away in the bed right beneath him. Suddenly I remembered what one of the shamans had told me, that if I didn't live my purpose-- which seemed to include quitting smoking, among other things-- that my own son would die. I can't let that happen, I thought to myself. Just like you'll eventually either crash or get caught if you drive too fast for too long, I prayed that my brief fall off the smoking wagon wouldn't have irreversible consequences.

There's a phenomenon I've noticed that occurs when people die who we know, and love. It's that, for those of us who remain here in this world, there's a period when the veil is thinner, when doors are open, and there's an infusion of grace into our lives. I first noticed it when my own grandfather died, when I'd just become a paramedic. I've pronounced a lot of people dead in my time-- one every shift when I first started out, so that they called me, "El Muerto" back then. But as competent at minding the gate as I try to be, and as kind as I try to be with the survivors if the patient does cross over, my heart usually isn't all that open. One gets callouses, or one can't sustain this work for long. It's really hard maintaining an open heart when the tragedies just keep on coming. But sometimes, when we can somehow identify with someone who's died, it's different. Then synchronicity abounds, confirming that we're connected with the mystery beyond our understanding, with the whole of which we are a part. Separation is an illusion of the mind, after all. The brain with its hemispheres perceives reality in dualistic terms, a struggle of opposites. When we create with the mind, we may get what we want-- but we also get the opposite of what we want. Caught up in the mind, we struggle for understanding that will never come to us. As all the indigenous peoples of the world know, and all the religions in their purest forms teach, the heart is where it's at. The heart perceives the world in unity. In the empathic understanding that I am you and you are me, we can actually feel that there is but one Spirit in this world, moving through all of us and everything. And when we finally figure that out-- not with our minds, but with our hearts-- we grow up into maturity. At that point it's clear, that our most realized way of living is the path of compassion, of loving each other. For we are each other. But sooner or later, it seems, we slip back into not being able to love our self, to forgive our self, and therefore all others. 

So, in spite of a couple more transcendental experiences on the way home that made me feel like an angel, the grace began to fade. Ego began to get in the way. It was so good to make it home to my wife and son, and to have them agree to go hear some live music that night, as we hadn't done in far too long. Dan Bern was playing in town, at the same place where we'd heard him do an acoustic set when our son was just a few months old, falling asleep in his Baby Bjorn after the first few songs. But the band was starting too late for my son's current bedtime, and when I ran into the singer-songwriter whose band was going to be playing as he came out of the bathroom, I think I kind of freaked him out. I told him about pronouncing Fred dead that morning, that years ago I'd pronounced Boz Skagg's son dead of a heroin OD at the Royan Hotel, and when he said he was sorry the set was too late for us, I said, "Well, you're gonna be playing music for a long time to come, right?" He replied, "Well, yeah, I guess so, unless I start doing other things instead," in such a way that he may have thought I was the angel of death or something. I felt ashamed, and wished I hadn't said anything. The over exuberance at life that felt like grace that morning now seemed like only the effects of sleep deprivation.

After another day at home immersed in ordinary reality, I again headed back to the city to work a 24 hour shift. It was when I drove past the fence of the parking lot behind Fred's apartment that I noticed the signs for the first time. "i love you, too", the biggest one proclaimed, and there were white calla lilies in beer bottle vases attached to the chain link. I pulled over and walked across the street to take a closer look. "Good Morning, Sunshine", and, "hello again!" they said. "Love is Louder", and "Tell me what it is you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" I especially liked the one that read simply, "XOXO".  If they were on the fence the other morning when Fred died, I had looked right past them. Sometimes things remain invisible to us, until the precise moment when they can do the most good. And I needed that affirmation then. Grace had returned, confirming that I'm still connected, that I'm forgiven, that all my efforts at living and loving in this world are not for naught. I'm on the right track. I'm loved back, by the everything!  I noticed the, "Give Love, Get Love" sign, with the web address, "LoveYou2.org", and vowed to look it up. Finally, I read, "did it hurt when you fell from heaven?" Yes, yes it most certainly did. And it's a two way street: it feels so damn good to make it back up again.

MEDIC 833
San Francisco, California