Tour Whore, November 11, 2012
Poly-Metro-Amorous
by Cameryn Moore
“Whatâs your ideal living environment, like, your perfect city?”
My Alabama host looks at me expectantly. She doesnât have renters in her house right now, which is why she was able to host me, and I think she might be missing the regular human company a little, because she wants to talk. She likes people, something she repeatedly mentioned when describing what she likes about her perfect city—New York City. She loves that Iâve traveled so much, she wants to hear all about it, and she wants to make me choose.
I stall a little. I like a lot of the cities that I go to, I say. One of the things that touring has given me is an appreciation for a bunch of different regions and cities that I would never have visited before. I tell her I could make it work living in any number of cities.
“No, no,” she interrupts, “when you say ‘make it workâ, that sounds like you are settling. What do you really want?”
I am polyamorous with 34 different cities in North America.
What I really want? I want the freedom to go among them. I want to stay in touch with a fairly large number of friends and fans all over the place, to roll up into another city and vaguely remember how to get to the billet that Iâve had three years in a row. I want to keep discovering my coffee shops, and grocery stores, and thrift stores, and secret parking spots. Choosing just one, as my forever stopping spot, that would be upsetting.
I am polyamorous with 34 different cities in North America.
In every city Iâve been in, I can see why people live there. It might take a bit of time for me to find that, but I always do, and because of that, I would go there again. In ALL of those cities, I have met queers and artists and artistic queers and kinksters and theatergoers and good-food-eaters and radical fire-juggling punks and journalists and musicians (obviously these categories overlap sometimes), and they have given me an inside look at the reasons why living there is good. Hell, those people are some of the reasons why living there is good, and those people are everywhere. Why would I cut myself off from all of that?
I donât mean Iâm equally committed to all of the cities where Iâve performed in the past three years. No. There are definitely some cities where I would hang out for two or three days, maybe a week, max, places where Iâve never gotten to poster and promote long enough, or get to know my producers and their friends well enough, and I want to. Indianapolis. Minneapolis. Vancouver. Ann Arbor. Chicago. Iâll be back, my sweets. I promise. Not for longer than a week, but Iâll be back.
Edinburgh. Atlanta. Orlando. Tulsa. Amsterdam. Lawrence, KS. Louisville. Peterborough, ON.
There are other cities that have a deeper claim on me, where I would gladly linger, where I do linger, when I can, because some combination of weather and architecture and audiences and coffee and people and food, some combination of all that feels really, really good. I have a few choice loves like that: New Orleans. Montréal. Austin. New York. I donât need to stay there forever. I love what they have, I love what they offer, and what I can do while Iâm there. But I donât need to stay all the time. I have other places to go, and those cities understand. Hell, those cities have lots of other people in their lives, too. Theyâre getting their needs met, as amazing cities. Theyâre getting appreciated. The cities know. I can move on, and Iâll be back.
And you know what?
There are places I havenât even BEEN yet, that I am sure I will fall in love with a little bit, Iâm sure, because it is in my nature to get attached, just a little bit. Edinburgh. Atlanta. Orlando. Tulsa. Amsterdam. Lawrence, KS. Louisville. Peterborough, ON. I donât know what those places are like, really, but Iâll travel through next year or the year after, Iâll drive into town at sunset and leave in the shimmering silver dawn, and in between those times Iâll meet people and Iâll perform in some quirky little venue to folks who know where the best local food is, and Iâm sure I can make it work.
So my ideal place to live isnât a physical place. Itâs a mental place that I want to occupy everywhere I go. The nature of it changes, depending on where I am, physically. Itâs vast and dark and endless sometimes, out there in New Mexico at night, full of stars and rushing bright lights of semis and I can drive topless there because the hot night wind feels good against my bare tits. Sometimes itâs loud and crowded and bustling, the New York City that my host was raving about, I love that place too, I love knowing that I will find bagels on this block and a great coin purse in the storefront next door and some random awesome person on the next block, and all those possibilities are packed in tight. Sometimes itâs vibrant and quirky and in another language, itâs Montréal, full of graffiti-covered alleys and high cheekbones and gourmet shit everywhere, only itâs not gourmet because people there are soaking in it, and creative folks whom I know and love.
My perfect city is anywhere I can go and get what I need and give what I can, and I arrive there and I leave there, and I know that I can come back again and get more of it. The more I tour, the more I know that perfect city is right there, the next dot on the map, itâs waiting for me, and I am ready for it.
camerynmoore.com
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