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    <loc>https://www.theabandonedpost.work/work/heidispies</loc>
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    <lastmod>2022-02-17</lastmod>
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      <image:title>WORK - HEIDI'S PIES - The ancient pie oven does not appear to have a functioning thermometer, so Victor just sticks his hand in the oven to see if it feels hot enough. One of many fascinating, too-charming-to-be-true anecdotes about this age old establishment. Ol-timey, familiar restaurants like this seem to invoke so much emotion and nostalgia. Actually, that’s not true at all. They should invoke emotion, tug on our heart strings, make us want to stand up and support them, but I’m afraid they don’t. I love this pie place. I am almost sure I love it. I want to think that I love it, but there’s a strong chance that I don't care enough about it. If, like so many other wonderful, classically old places, it was forced to close for good, I would tell people I’m heartbroken, that I miss it more than they do, but I’m concerned that I would rapidly accelerate through predictable grieving stages and sadly forget about it before lunch time. What is it about this pie place? The pies here are amazing. It’s been open since 1970 and Victor, the perfectly aged, master pie baker has been here crafting pies since 1972. Victor oversaw the production of nearly 20,000 pies just during this past November. Depending on what version of my resume you look at, one of my degrees from some state schools, that I may or may not have attended, will verify my math skills when I conclude that at approximately $25/pie, Victor’s pastry aptitude is worth millions. I overheard the waitress, who’s also been employed here since the early 70’s, tell one of her customers that our photographer describes this place as timeless. Which can be a compliment or kind of insulting. Knowing him, he meant it as a compliment. The massive, vintage pie oven might be the coolest thing I’ve ever seen. It can bake 120 pies at a time. Victor expertly distributes and collects them through a narrow horizontal opening using what looks like a homemade, two pronged pitchfork. Large rotating planks do not stop spinning as Victor makes his calculations of timely removal. It’s unclear if they prefer this dinosaur oven, or if it’s just too big and cumbersome to replace. Again, the temperature gauges don’t appear to work; there’s even a torn note, taped over a switch on the oven that reads, “Don’t turn off,” that clearly has been punctured in order to turn off at one point or another. The regulars are like any other from a perfectly ancient diner. They appear as timeless as the restaurant. They seamlessly blend in with the vinyl upholstery and stain proof floral carpet. They often arrive too early for their country fried steak and eggs and way too early for their Yankee-Doodle Pot Roast, popular dishes from the “Seniors” menu. One can easily imagine this exact scenario playing out half a century ago in Omaha or El Paso; lots of polyester and silk neatly tucked into affordable denim. I’m teasing, but I have had both dishes and have no complaints. The food serves its purpose and you get what you expect, but the pies are the real star.</image:title>
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      <image:title>WORK - HEIDI'S PIES - Maybe I would have more of an emotional connection to Heidi’s if I actually ate pie. It’s not that I don't like it. I like the idea of it. I actually love the idea of pie. A coffee and slice of pie sounds great and confidently mature. If you know anything about me, you would know I’m in a rush to be 60. Sitting down at a freshly wiped counter and sipping black coffee from an old ceramic mug sounds like paradise. So what is it? What keeps me from going all in on a place like this? Heidi’s epitomizes my relationship with my hometown. I recently relocated back to San Mateo, California after being diagnosed with cancer and my wife got pregnant. Not exactly an exciting homecoming, but it was for the best. I had always been reluctant to move back here, I deliberately avoided it for years. I even moved to Raleigh, North Carolina for six years to avoid coming back and nothing against Raleigh, but yuck. I didn’t want to move home and see all the same old people and fall into the same old routine. But I had I forgotten one thing, the Bay Area is now expensive as fuck. All of the morons I thought I’d be trying to avoid, took their broke-asses to Marysville or Sparks. My hometown is now virtually unrecognizable, and now that I’m back, I kinda miss the old San Mateo. I thought I would hate coming home and running into a bunch of people I knew. But I think I hate not knowing anybody, even more. So coming back to Heidi’s to write this piece felt good. It gave me a sense of home. I have great memories of this place. I used to come here late at night after basketball games with my grandparents and even later at night after a high school party was prematurely dissolved. My dad even proposed to my mother in the damn parking lot. Our photographer was basically raised here, almost literally raised here. His mother was a waitress here and would put him in a car seat on the counter while he slept. I know, right? They shouldn’t have been so proud to share that story with me. Legendary Giants announcer, former second baseman and Heidi's regular, Duane Kuiper would give the waitress's kids baby giants uniforms back in the eighties. This place is as charming as San Mateo gets, so why haven’t I been here in 8 years? Even though I didn’t live here permanently, I was around the area quite often. I had plenty of chances to swing by. The only recent memory I have of this place is buying a pie when I was invited to someone's house for dinner. I do this so I can look like a genuine local, someone who effortlessly and altruistically supports our local legends. I’m fully aware that everyone else will bring wine or offensively over-frosted cupcakes from the new cupcakery downtown, and they’ll all notice when someone happily says, “oh cool, Joey brought a pie from Heidi’s!” And I’ll act like I do this all the time and give them a not so subtle look that says, “of course I did, I’m a local’s local. I can’t believe you brought those fucking cupcakes. I hope you rethink how good of a person you think you are”</image:title>
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      <image:title>WORK - HEIDI'S PIES - It’s up to us to keep these places going. The wave of young technical robotic transients are too busy with the latest fluffy cheesecake-cronut patisserie to support an old but not “old enough to be cool” place like Heidi’s. That is how I portray myself when I come over to your house with a famous banana cream pie, like I'm different. But the truth is I’m not. I'm just as shitty. I can’t wait to stand in a long ass line to try the new ramen place or see what this three dollar a cookie shop is all about. I’m a big fraud, it just took a pie shop to expose it. I hate what happened to this town. In my short adult life, the impossibly charming and legendary Bay Meadows race track closed after 74 years running. Our beloved Talbot’s Toyland closed after 66 years of operation. I am hoping places like Heidi’s doesn’t meet the same fate. Truth is, the techies did me a favor, I get to blame them for ruining things that I think I treasure, while realistically, my efforts to keep things the same, fall well short of how I like to portray.</image:title>
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      <image:title>WORK - HEIDI'S PIES</image:title>
      <image:caption>Legendary pie craftsmen, Victor. Possibly reflecting on 50 years of making pies at Heidi’s in San Mateo, California.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>WORK - HEIDI'S PIES</image:title>
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      <image:title>WORK - HEIDI'S PIES</image:title>
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    <loc>https://www.theabandonedpost.work/work/utahwithoutmykidney</loc>
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    <lastmod>2022-02-17</lastmod>
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      <image:title>WORK - UTAH WITHOUT MY KIDNEY - I have cancer. I’m growing tired of that declaration. I even hate writing it; not because it makes me sad but because I believe it’s beginning to define my personality and I feel there is little I can do about it. Every night and every morning I can't escape dreadful realities that today could be the day that things go from bad to worse and I could be wrapping this journey up very soon. I hear my infant daughter cry out in the night and I remind myself, “I need to get up and hold her while I still can." Raising my first child in my current state can be perceived as tragic, but I think maybe it's a gift for both of us. She gets all of me. I know that I could expire soon so I can commit to her in a way I probably wouldn't if I wasn't so frightfully aware of my mortality. I don't necessarily fear dying, but I do fear leaving her and my wife behind. Part of that fear is rooted in the fact that I think so highly of myself that I cannot imagine my wife and child living a particularly wonderful life without me around. I can vividly and fairly accurately picture all my family and friends painfully mourning me everyday for the rest of their lives; lots of tattoos with my portrait and probably my name will be drawn on my loved ones backs, arms and buttocks. I was everyone's favorite person before I was diagnosed with cancer, but now? Holy shit am I lovable. I can’t be the only one that feels this way. I sit and observe other patients while in a cancer ward waiting room filled with pious geriatrics that are desperately fighting to stay alive. Why are they fighting so hard? What is a sickly 80 year old fighting for? What can they possibly think they are still contributing to their family? It appears that our ego doesn't deteriorate like our bodies. No matter how old we get, we cannot shake our feelings of profound significance. Now I have a lot of favorite people but I am by far my most favorite. I think every thought I have is a gem, hence me writing a public journal, and why wouldn’t you want to read it? I am fucking awesome. That’s what makes saying goodbye so hard. I don't fear the afterlife. In fact, I think what happens to us after we die will be quite amazing and I look forward to that part. Again, the hardest part of imagining my departure is leaving my wife and kid. I believe I'll still be around in some type of obscure spirit, but I can't expect them to be constantly paying attention to signs to acknowledge my "presence". I would love to think that they would look forward to these moments, however I think hoping for that is selfish in a way. All of the grief suffered by missing someone as amazing as myself could drive a person crazy. My ego obviously hasn't aged either. What will really happen to my daughter if I pass away? Will some things be tough for her? Yes. Will she have feelings of sadness while watching other daughters hug and play with their father? Sure. Will she probably be sexually irresponsible with the wrong guy earlier than she should be because she is missing some fatherly guidance? Unfortunately that is probable. But I'm confident she can manage that stuff.</image:title>
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      <image:title>WORK - UTAH WITHOUT MY KIDNEY - I have a good family, an incredibly smart wife and my child will be raised properly with or without me. I don't foresee her becoming a meth kingpin or a truck stop prostitute in the future simply because I’m not around to tell her that those professions, while lucrative, are generally challenging walks of life. More than anything, I want to be around to teach my daughter to follow her passions. I would rather her play a harmonica on the street with a smile on her face than be in a classroom with a frown. Not that I want to raise some awful child that only does things that are fun, but I want her to realize that life isn't that serious. It’s fragile and should be enjoyed; I want her to have a life full of adventure not full of regret. I don’t want her to cry because she hooked up with an ugly guy or because her Mom hooked up with an ugly guy and that ugly guy was…her boyfriend before me. I fear I’m going to miss the little things; getting a technical foul called on me and getting ejected while coaching her basketball game, trying to do her hair for the first picture day after her mom inevitably leaves me or my first chance to say “the other girls are just jealous because you are so pretty.” All things I think that make a great father. Now there isn't a timeline on my death. I’m currently traveling to Utah every other week to take a "groundbreaking" drug. This pill won’t get rid of my cancer but I’m hoping it will dampen it's advances. So every other week, I fly to Salt Lake City and manage their little street car to my downtown hotel. It quickly became obvious that a "normal" Salt Lake City resident doesn't use this street car and it’s left for the crazies and undesirables. But a Salt Lake City crazy is a Starbucks manager in the Bay Area so I’m not really bothered. I normally check in the night before my appointment and since I’m in a drug trial, the drug company pays for my hotel. So I check into the nicest hotel in Salt Lake and watch Norbit for the 100th time as I fall to sleep. The next morning I get back on the street car to The Huntsman Cancer Institute. The Huntsman is a fancy cancer research and treatment facility. You can tell they're trying to make some type of "top 20" list. Every interaction is full of polite niceties like I’m gonna write a yelp review after I walk away. Some of the other cancer research centers I've been to can easily be confused with a downtown LA bus station. But the Huntsman is different. Everything feels deliberate and new. Every nurse is surprisingly cute. My Nurse practitioner smells like a Febreeze plugin and probably has a beautiful house adorned with cleverly unfunny artwork with quotes about wine or coffee. So every appointment, I’m dressed cuter than necessary and say something must be wrong with their scale because that can’t be my accurate weight.</image:title>
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      <image:title>WORK - UTAH WITHOUT MY KIDNEY - I never knew you could gain weight while battling cancer but I also never knew how babies came out of women, so it’s been a year of learning for me. For one of my appointments, my childhood friends and I even rented a van and made the drive from San Francisco to Utah, stopping at obscure towns along the way, dining at the finest Basque restaurants Nevada has to offer, stupidly laughing the whole time. I'm beginning to realize this seemingly sad, painful experience as a cancer patient isn't that bad. There's times I can even admit that I kinda like it. I appreciate how fragile things can be, I like how close I've become to my loved ones, I welcome my new perspectives. I'm even beginning to enjoy strange parts of this experience, being in the waiting room speculating about the diagnosis of the new patient next to me or overhearing the family that just got the tragic news experience the emotions of it all. They are about to go on a journey like no other. It will probably end terribly but the journey itself is special and can profoundly alter one's life in a positive way if managed correctly. Family and friends seem to expect a miracle considering how much traveling I have to do for this drug. Realistically, this is just a pause, that’s it, a pause. That’s all I can ask for is a pause and truthfully I’m lucky to have it. I’m lucky to live in the times I do. I have Kidney cancer and recently there has been great progress with my disease. In fact, a diagnosis of my cancer 5 years ago would most likely have been a death sentence within two years. There is no cure. So now I'm down to one kidney, and with each treatment I am kicking the can down the road and trying to buy more time in hopes that some very smart scientists and doctors find a way to get rid of my cancer. So a pause in the growth of my cancer is more than enough for me. I imagine myself as a bank teller and the cancer as a bank robber that came into the bank with a gun. I thought he was gonna storm in and blow my brains out right away. He still hasn't pulled the trigger, we have weathered that first intense standoff and we have calmed down and are now waiting out negotiations. I’ve even discovered a fondness in my capture and hope he can get us some pizzas soon. A strange part for me is, I don't look like I have cancer. Chemotherapy doesn’t work for my cancer so I don't experience the same side effects typically associated with people enduring cancer treatment. I don't get noticeably sick from the medicine which can lead to my diagnosis going unnoticed. I recently had a conversation with a cancer survivor who wanted to play the, “I had it worse” card. He said to me, “oh you’re so lucky you don’t have to go through chemo, chemo was terrible”.</image:title>
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      <image:title>WORK - UTAH WITHOUT MY KIDNEY - Sure, I’m lucky I don't have to feel the sickness from chemo treatment, but he was telling me this after almost 20 years of being cancer free. He was sick for a few months and hasn't had to deal with it since. I’d take that any day. Plus, losing weight and all my body hair would be a side effect that I would excitedly welcome. I feel like I’m never too sick to be a full part of a cancer community and never healthy enough to be with the survivors. Which doesn't really matter, I don't feel a need to belong to a community. But sometimes I feel so bad for myself, I just want people to see that I am sick and refrain from arguing about politics or freak out about a parking spot. Sometimes I want everyone to feel sorry for me. It’s weird because this whole process is a contradiction. I want to be strong and not have anyone worry but I also want compassion and understanding. Obviously counter intuitive but cancer patients often say, “This is the best thing that ever happened to me”. Strange to hear but this is hands down the best thing that ever happened to me. I see life in a way that only someone in my position can. I have gained an acutely calibrated radar of significant moments. The goofball who takes too long to order his coffee and holds up the line no longer deserves to hear what I think of his stupid coffee order. So how do I properly raise my daughter? Every time she falls asleep in my arms, I’m in tears. I don't want to be sad about dying and 20 years later still be sad about dying. I don't want every test she takes, every game she plays, every "first" she has to be this big ceremony for her because I’m not sure if I will see another. More likely than not, I’m going to die while she's very young and she’s going to be devastated. She will be the girl on the softball team with the dead father. So everyone is super nice to her and now she's eating ice cream with the rich family after the game because she showed hustle running to first. However, there is a shot that I'm able to kick the can far enough down the road to where she doesn't even really know I was ever sick. The worst part is thinking they discover a cure right after I die and I’m a day late and a dollar short. I would hate to be part of the last graduating class of cancer death before we discover a cure. There is a real shot that happens. Sounds terrible but it's almost comical.</image:title>
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      <image:title>WORK - UTAH WITHOUT MY KIDNEY - Despite this being something I view as a gift, depression inevitably creeps in. Suicidal thoughts work their way into my mind some days but are quickly squashed with the realization that this isn't that hard and I don't want people to confuse depression with quitting. I don't have it that bad, it’s just the thought of the nonstop battling that seems tiring. If all goes well I will be on some kind of treatment until my dying day. It’s hard not to feel sorry for myself, until someone much younger is wheeled into my oncology lobby. Being young there, you almost feel like the prettiest girl at the dance. You can feel everyone's eyes watching your every move. You can feel their hope for you, that you're strong enough to beat it. They look at you with encouraging and slightly jealous eyes. But you feel the sad parts of their journey, and their desperate worry for you. I can feel them worry that I might not make it to see my child grow up. No matter what happens I have loved my life. I have been blessed with a beautiful family, great friends, a wonderful wife and now a gorgeous daughter. If I die soon don't feel bad for me, I got to live 38 years as Joey, that’s way better than 95 years as someone else.</image:title>
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