Friend #21 - Jen
I’d been lured across the breezeway at the Mesa Arts Center
with the promise of cupcakes. A
decorated table displaying a full array of decadent cupcakes sat at the bottom
of the stairway. I slowly stalked the
full length of the table, eyeing the cupcakes, each one more delicious-looking
than the next and finally settled on a chocolate-on-chocolate number that made
me salivate. I picked it up and
immediately realized how difficult it was going to be to eat a cupcake gracefully.
Strategically thinking that I needed some type of support, I
meandered over to an area of tables, slowly dismembering the paper from around
the bottom of the cupcake. I had no
sooner taken a bite when I was suddenly sharing my table with a couple. Another couple came up right behind them. We all engaged in small talk but I was very consciously
aware of the woman to my left. She was
older than me, but confident and elegant in a way that I’ve always aspired to
be.
I didn’t get to talk to her much that evening as she was
busy talking to the mayor, but I did find out that she is running for Mesa City
Council…in my district! She was so
intriguing that I took a chance and asked her if she would like to be my new
friend for the week, since this is what I do now. And I was absolutely delighted when she said
yes!
We met back up in a quirky little coffee shop in downtown
Mesa. Jen was just as fashion-forward as
I remembered. She leaned back in a retro
cushioned chair and told me her first job was in fashion merchandising at
Goldwater’s Department store. She had
quit college for that job. It had been
her dream job. She hated it.
So in order to get away from the stress at Goldwater’s, Jen
started bass fishing. I cocked my
head. Bass fishing??? It was hard to envision someone so cosmopolitan
out on a lake, fishing. But Jen grew up
in Arizona in a time when this city was a lot more rural than it is today. Her family had fished growing up so she had
learned, too. She was spending a day on
the lake when someone suggested she enter a fishing tournament where she could
win money. It was just a little
backwards tournament but Jen actually won the grand prize of $500. It was such easy money that Jen started
entering more bass fishing tournaments.
And that original $500 wasn’t a fluke.
Jen was good at bass fishing…well, actually she was great at it. She began winning more and more tournaments.
After a while, people began to take notice that this
blonde-haired, blue-eyed, waif of a woman was winning…a lot. And once she secured her first bass fishing sponsorship,
she realized it would be tight but she could live on that money for a full
year. That’s when she quit her job at
Goldwater’s and began bass fishing full time.
She even landed herself on the cover of a bass fishing magazine. Some Japanese businessmen happened to be in Arizona
learning about American bass fishing when they saw Jen’s picture on the cover
of that magazine. She stood out because
she was so different than what a typical bass fisherman would look like. The Japanese businessmen were intrigued so they
asked her to come to compete in two bass fishing tournaments in Japan. It was an adventure and Jen was in her late
twenty’s, still young enough to appreciate such things, so she accepted their
invitation.
Her first tournament in Japan was at the base of Mt.
Fuji. It was a tough day for her on the
lake and Jen only came back with three tiny fish. She was devastated, thinking her new
Japanese benefactors were going to be disappointed. As it happened, it was a tough day on the
lake for everyone and Jen won the tournament!
In the next tournament, she placed in the top ten. Because she had done so well, the Japanese
asked her to stay in Japan for a full year.
It was exciting to be in a place so different from where she
came from, so Jen stayed. She met a
fantastic group of friends who were fascinated by Americana, and her, as an
extension of that fascination. In fact,
they liked her so much they began to ask Jen to consult on bass fishing
products, and when Jen’s year in Japan was up, she continued her consultations
long distance. Consulting paid enough
money that Jen no longer had to fish for a living. Jen’s close relationship with the Japanese
also led her to discover that the Japanese’s obsession with precision actually
meant they were manufacturing superior bass fishing lures. Jen then began manufacturing her own lures
that were made in Japan. She sold them
as a high-end product in American fishing shops. Everyone told her she was crazy…but her line
was a huge success.
By 2009, Jen began to feel like her life had become too
homogenized behind the walls of her gated community. The comings and goings were so mundane. Jen found herself craving simplicity and a
fresh start so she purchased a cozy, little bungalow in downtown Mesa. In an effort to meet her neighbors, Jen
created what she called “Jen’s Open House”.
Once a month, her home was open to anyone who wanted to come, but...you had to bring something.
It could be wine. Or art. Or another person. Jen’s old neighbors came from their gated
communities. Jen’s new neighbors ambled
down the street. And once a month, Jen’s
home became filled with art and laughter as a diverse group of people set aside
their differences and gathered together as a community. It was a place where an eighty-year-old
priest and a twenty-year-old tattoo artist could be found immersed in a lively
discussion on any number of topics.
It was through these evenings that Jen came to love the
diversity of her hometown. Her idea is
that a community is only sustainable if it is diverse. Change is a constant. What is new and considered “luxury” today
will not be that way forever. Overly
homogenized communities tend to fall into neglect after a few decades, but if a
community can continue to have enough low, middle and high income housing, that
community will be viable for years to come.
That is what she wants for Mesa.
That is where she sees the future.
Part of the reason Jen is so passionate about becoming a
member of the Mesa City Council is because she wants to keep the heart of Mesa
beating strong, stronger than it ever has before. And as I was sitting across from her, I was
so full of admiration for this beautiful, smart, conscientious woman who
succeeded in a man’s industry with grace, long before there was the cry of “me
too”. This isn’t a typical politician
who wants to hide behind closed doors.
This is a woman who wants to fight for the people in her community and
someone whose wisdom should be used to mold the foundation of the future.
It also just goes to show you that you never know who you are
going to meet over the unwrapping of a simple cupcake...so you might as well
just go for it.
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