Saturday, May 19, 2012

Urban Experience of Young Mothers in LA


Urban Experience of Young Mothers in LA
By Trixia Cruz

Flipping through channels one day I came across a show on MTV called “Teen Mom”. As I started watching I thought to myself, “What the f***, what is this? Are they advertising teen pregnancy?” Later, I started noticing peoples’ obsession with watching reality TV, and I listened in on people talking about certain moms on the show. “Did you hear what Leah said to blah blah last night?! Oh my god! I can’t believe she would do that” or “ Yeah, I hate her, she’s too much of a drama queen, do you see how she treats her baby daddy?!” I was intrigued by what I thought was a ridiculous obsession with reality TV, but over time I began to grow a curiosity of my own, of course not with the show, just life experiences in general, and I wanted to focus on young mothers in the city of Los Angeles.
For this research assignment I wanted to center on an aspect of urban life that was seen as a problem, and if you talk to enough people they will tell you that teen pregnancy is on the rise for a variety of different reasons. I wanted to look at this problem from an experiential point of view, and I wanted to obtain a direct perspective from the population itself. I concentrated my efforts on mainly trying to figure out what set young mothers apart from much older and presumed ready mothers. I asked questions that were based on financial and social aspects of their life; attempting to draw a parallel between any particular stereotypes and misconceptions the general population may have about women having kids at such a young age. Which generalizations proved to be true, and to what extent?
            Initially I thought the main issue was the lack of access to birth control, however there was no conclusive data that could point to that being the case. I found that an equal amount, if not more mothers, had gotten pregnant on some type of birth control. This was peculiar in the sense that the overall purpose of birth control is to prevent unexpected pregnancies. However, I believe my group was not large enough and my data was focused on unexpected pregnancies, therefore creating this bias. My focus was then shifted to the unique experiences of each particular teen mom and their dealings with unpredicted pregnancies, and how their lives changed thereafter.
I mainly conducted my research by setting up various interviews with a number of young mothers living in the Los Angeles area. I went to various parks, bus stops and many public venues trying to observe young mothers, searching for any particular patterns. However, this turned out to be quite problematic because it was difficult to differentiate mother from sister, or assume the age of a women and if their children was even their own. So that plan was rendered useless, and instead I decided to visit a health care facility that was somehow related to my research topic. I was not allowed to take pictures of the facility, so instead I simply observed what young women in the waiting room were doing, and experienced first-hand what society thinks on the issue of youth pregnancy.
The interviewing process in my opinion was the best part because I felt that I provided a much-needed ear for these young women. Many of their stories were very similar and very different at the same time. I heard them tell me tales of courage and bravery and listened as they described their fear and excitement in having a child. I would hear them tell me the struggles they had to overcome and I would sit in admiration as I heard them express to me their profound love for their children. Something’s you tend to hear all the time, and to some extent was even seen in the show Teen Mom, however they were all a bit different.
As I rolled along in my project I felt my original question kept changing and evolving to accommodate the variety of information I was receiving from the mothers. I tried to find different mothers with different circumstances to try and broaden up my range as much as possible. This included finding variances, such as familial relationships, the number of children, age ranges, access to birth control, relationships with the child’s father, etc.  
The mothers I spoke to were very much open to answering my questions and were even enthusiastic about sharing their stories with me. I explained to them that I wanted them to be as honest as they possibly could with me because I wanted to have their words on paper, as opposed to my own with my own personal biases or anyone else’s for that matter.
            I began my research by setting up an appointment with two young women. We met at a small plaza in Alhambra near a Starbucks where we bought cold frappuccino’s and warm sweet bread.  The same location was used for another mother I interviewed simply because it was a convenient half way point for all of us. In total I interviewed 5 women, and the rest were done via e-mail or through facebook. During these interviews, I felt the impression that motherhood was somewhat of a pleasant burden. That in the end, everything turned out wonderfully.
“Just because you are a young mom that doesn’t make you a bad mom. People give you the ‘stink eye’ when they see that you’re a young mom,” says Ruby, a 24 year old mother from Montebello. “This isn’t something that’s just recently became an issue, it’s been happening for a while now. It just seems as though now it’s become something bad,” says Caitlin another mother from El Sereno. I thought about all the other stereotypes I heard about young mom’s, things such as: “children raising children, can’t keep their legs closed, easy lays, they just want the attention, they only got pregnant so their boyfriend would stay with them”, and so on. Caitlin went on to talk about her experience being a single mom for a while. She originally hails from New Mexico where she lived in homeless shelters for a while, and moved from place to place. She explained that before getting pregnant she was a party girl. She never really wanted children to begin with. As a party girl and an alcoholic, she discovered she was pregnant and believed the results to be incorrect, or maybe the box was broken. She thought if she drank more water, it would change the results. For her, a pregnancy was not allowed, not even possible.  It was especially hard because at the time she had two boyfriends, the child could be any one of theirs. In contrast, she says her life is much more relaxed now that she has a supportive and excellent husband and father to her child. When I caught up with her recently, she mentioned that she has got a job as a medical assistant working for a spinal surgeon and that her little family couldn’t be happier.
            Ruby had her daughter Esmeralda at 17 with her current husband. Like many young moms, the moment she found out she was pregnant was frightening, but not as much as telling her parents. When she found out she was pregnant, she would go behind her parents’ backs and ditch school to go to the clinic and get check ups. When telling her parents, they gave her the “vas a ver” speech, so she ran away and went to go live with Ricardo (her current husband). She didn’t have contact with her parents for 2 months after that, and she felt that she had disappointed them, especially since she had a strict mother. When she did confront them, she arrived with the child in her arms. Ruby remembers her mother bursting into tears and telling her, “You should have stayed.”
In any circumstance, being bombarded with constant stereotypes is a battle in and of itself, but to deal with that and in many cases no help from families, or being a single parent is enough to drive anyone nuts, but many of these women manage to survive and thrive. Many times these mothers would be pushed into a situation where they would try and make the best of it and make sacrifices.
While conducting my research, people would always ask me, “Why are you looking for young mothers? Why are you interviewing people?” and I would explain to them that it was part of a project I was working on for one of my classes. It was interesting that I would always get the same response from everyone who asked me. The conversations would always end with, “Your too young to have children. Don’t even think about it until your older and prepared to have a kid of your own, finish school and get a career.” Why was everyone so concerned with my age being the biggest factor in becoming a mother? That got me wondering if there was an age when women are ready to become mothers, and what exactly does everyone mean by “ready”? Did they mean financially ready or mentally ready?
“No, you’re never ready to become a mom,” says Lucia a 23 year old mother from Pasadena, “I mean, financially – yes, I guess. But there is never an age where you are ready.” Lucia currently has two children with her husband, and plans to have more in the near future. One of the biggest stereotypes she has had to face as a young mother has been that she only got married because she was already pregnant, and to her family, having a child out of wedlock is extremely shameful. This was not true in her case, “My husband had already asked me to marry him by the time we realized we were pregnant, I just hadn’t told my parents yet. A couple day’s later we found out we were pregnant, I guess this is where my parents and everyone else assumes we only got married for that reason.”
“Is there any challenges you face because you’re a young mom, besides these generalizations?” She asked, “No, not really. I do have a fear though, and I think this has something with me being so anxious. I get so sad when I think about my daughter being alone in this world,” for some clarification, we were talking about living in Los Angeles, and whether there was any difference from city to city when it came to being a young mother. She expressed to me her fear of earthquakes and tornadoes, and her fears when she was living in Texas. “I don’t know why, but I can just picture my baby girl just standing alone, not knowing where I am…(there is slight pause) like she can’t find me because I’m gone (there is another silence). I can see her so lost like she needs mom...(her voice cracks and she begins to tear up). I freeze up, a little choked up myself, and tell her it’s okay, and then I quickly change the topic.
Lucia wasn’t the only one who expressed to me that you’re never really ready to become a mother. Many of the mother’s kept talking to me about this “click” or “maternal instinct” you get when you become a mom, and even when your pregnant. I had the opportunity to interview a young woman who was expecting. She was two weeks away from giving birth when I interviewed her. I wanted to speak with her again after the delivery but unfortunately we could not accommodate our busy schedules by the time this project was to be presented.
“What is your biggest fear, or biggest anxiety about becoming a mom?” I asked.
“I think they’re financial issues, I just want to be able to support our son and be stable. Also, time scheduling, my husband and I work different hours and I go to school also so I want to make sure someone is looking after our son.” She also explained that her biggest issue has been that people always come up to her and ask her age and if she is married. She looks young, and gets a little annoyed with always having to explain that she had been dating her husband for eight months before they got married and then waited before they got pregnant. It was unexpected to hear that her biggest anxiety were financial issues, my assumption would have been something more along the lines about being a good mother. However, I think this would be my own fear.
In addition to the four interviews I had with the young mommies, I went around facebook posting random questions here and there and messaging mothers whom unfortunately I could not schedule time for. Many times, I would get responses right away, and other times it would take weeks for them to get back to my messages. However, most of the information I discovered was very similar to what I had discovered in the interviews. Age seemed to the biggest factor in young mother stereotypes. Through facebook I asked around for relationships between real life and show’s like Teen Mom. My responses were mainly even, in terms of similarities and differences between both.
In addition, I visited a planned parenthood near my house. I, alongside many other young women, use it regularly for various reproductive health reasons. I walked in there twice, the first time to pick up a packet of condoms, and the second to pick up a packet of “plan b” pills. The purpose of these two visits was to determine how convenient it was to pick up contraceptives, and whether it was an invasive process.
The following is an account of the first time I went in to pick up a pack of condoms, and how effortless it proved to be: I was expecting to be bombarded with dirty looks or scoffs, and maybe even given a handful of sex pamphlets, outlining the dangers of STD’s. I took out my ID just in case they asked for it. I wondered if I would be forever marked as the “dirty girl”, in their database who just went in for a pack of condoms. I was in and out of there in less than a minute, no questions asked.

The cool breeze did not seem to have any effect,
Sweat still rolled down my brow, and my heartbeat quickened,
I opened the door and there were strangers all around,
Strange faces with familiar expressions, I could tell we were all here for the same reasons.
 Reluctantly I approached the woman sitting behind the thick glass
Her fingers tapped hastily on her keyboard and slowly she lifted her eyes
“Hi, do you have an appointment?”
“No, I’m here to pick up condoms, I was told I could get them for free?”
She spun around, and picked up a brown paper bag, a small package.
“Here you go.”
“That’s it?”
She smiles, “That’s it.”

            My second trip was a little different. I went in to ask for emergency contraceptives. They did not just simply hand them to me like they did with condoms. Instead they asked for my ID and my medical insurance card, they were checking my record to see if I qualified to receive them. While sitting in the lobby, I noticed the faces of the girls and what they were doing. I could not differentiate if some women were mothers or not. Most women were on their phones or reading magazines that were provided in the lobby. The lobby itself was small, and chairs were packed in together. There was no TV screen, and it was hard not to let your eyes wander since there was no point of focus. There was a couple sitting in the corner. The women leaned against the guy’s shoulders and their hands were interlocked. I got the impression that she was uneasy and maybe even a little scared. Another women appeared with the door open and she called my name. She pulled me behind the doors and explained to me everything I needed to know about the pill. Altogether, the entire visit took about 20 minutes.
            The Planned Parenthood I visited made me think of the public space that was provided to young women who needed the services provided here. I noticed that the windows were tinted, so no one could peek in and see who was in the clinic. It was also peculiar to see that they had a sign on the lobby that clearly said not to use cell phones in the lobby, yet many girls still used them. I thought about George Simmel’s article, “The Metropolis and Mental Life,” and the bombardment people deal with in the cities. People can grow aggressive when dealing with so much information being thrown at them all at once. I thought of the tinted windows as a way this institution protected their patients from those who would judge them. I thought about ways in which mothers dealt with the pressures of society. In public they are expected to be the ideal mother. They are expected to know how to control their children, and if they can’t they are thought to be incapable. Motherly duties such as diaper changes and breast-feeding are given designated areas away from any public eyes or judgment.  
            I also thought about public space that was utilized by mothers and how they communicated within it. What choices they made when faced with a multitude of options? This I could relate to another piece of literature, Michel de Certeau’s: “The Practice of Everyday Life”.  What qualitative data could we observe when we see the way the young mother walk through the city? A young mother takes a journey through life with her new child at such a young age. Being judged, being criticized, or perhaps even admired as she walks the streets. When she uses the restroom does she reapply her make-up or does she simply just change her child’s diaper?
            Stating that everyone is unique and having their own story to tell is an obvious answer to my question. More importantly, I have discovered that their uniqueness and different circumstances are not what set them apart, but bring them together as an urban group. Even more interesting is that I have found no profound distinction between an older and a younger mother. The experiences speak for themselves as being heroic tales of motherhood.

Friday, May 18, 2012

Venice Beach


Mariah Fonseca
Skate Park Separation (Venice Beach)
Venice Beach is a very beautiful place to visit on a hot sunny day. Gathering with people and heading out to the city of Venice. It is a place where you can see a diverse of people. To many people around other cities it’s known as a popular tourist attraction when you visit California. But yet it is a home to the locals who have been living there all their life; so for them it is a different story I think. Venice is known to having much different type of activities and interactions going around the whole beach area to the board walk when you first step in. For instance: on the board walk you see all the creative people who are selling their art, to the hippies singing and selling the bracelets and charms, the henna tattoo shops, for the smokers wanting to look for medical cards, people giving out demos of their music to get a shot of fame, heading out to the water, and the skate park where my research begins.
    For my research question I want to get more in depth with the observations and understand meant of is there a separation between the locals and the tourist. Mainly around the perimeter of the skate park; from the people who skate, lean against the rail, and in the sitting area of the skate rink. I been to Venice for the twenty years of my life and never did I realize that my research question topic was something important. Even if it is not to other people or even to the ones who care. Christina and I first started out with this observation; but as we got in further with this project she seem to found a different concept. But yet still both stood under the whole Venice Skate Park area. We made a first visit together and the last two we did our own thing. I personally can not specify who and who is a local from a tourist. Just because somebody is taking pictures or standing looking at the skaters does not mean they are tourist from out of town. You can not automatically judge people by the movement they show in public. During my three visits to skate rink; I would sit in the area where all the skater kids hung out plus by the rail where people watch. Around the perimeter it is a circle area and in the middle you have plants right in the middle, next to it was another place sit and by that is the rink where everyone skates that looks like an empty pool. As I sat down, I try to make sure people could not notice I was looking at them. I did not want people to think me as a creepy person; but as I sat I got the stares that made me feel like, “Who Are You!!”  Then it became relevant to ask myself again is there a disconnection from locals and the tourist.
      Since Venice is not field where we can discover on race; you see multiple races including all different type of rages. This may or not be a topic society my take consideration how urban culture takes part towards the skate park. Figuring out this research project was not the simplest task.  I had my doubts in the beginning but as soon as I made my first visit. I knew that I would enjoy this topic.
     My main focus of collecting the data I got from all three of visits was basically; keeping time movements and observing the different behaviors. Reflecting back to the exercise we did on campus looking around and keeping a time frame of all the interactions happening on campus. My first visit with Christina we had been there for at least an hour and a half at the skate park. As she wrote down all the interactions she was observing jotting notes down. I was in charge of taking down the map design. I color coordinate with different colors; for which people are skating, hanging around the rail, and people sitting down. How many were in big groups if some by themselves, even the different paths people who take I map down with colors. The first visit we took to Venice was a little on the rough side. Not because we did not do any work; mainly because we were still unsure about exactly what you expecting for. The last two visits to Venice I would spend about two to three hours sitting down taking notes trying I ask myself questions about my topic. For instance, do people make you feel like your outsider? Do the locals have their own way of talking compare to tourist?  Have their ever been any dilemmas between tourist and locals? All my notes that I took are mostly all over the place in my notebook. I wrote key words to help me remind myself about things I observed. Knowing that people always have one image of skaters: long hair, skinny pants, tight shirts, and ugly shoes. In my notes you see hippies, cholo’s, hipsters, old school, girls, it’s just a variety.  
          For all my interviews the total was five; I had ask about ten but five people had said no thank you which was fine. So with my five interviews I had talk to three girls and two guys. The age range is from seventeen to twenty-five. My second trip to Venice I had three interviews, two of them were short only last fifteen to twenty minutes since they had  other stuff planed. With the other three interviews they last about thirty to thirty-five minutes. Sad but surely my people who I interview did not feel comfortable of me taking pictures of them. They did not think it was necessary to do so; which I respect their choice. But I can describe how their tone of voice, how they dress, and what they look like. So I think you are going to be able to imagine the people I interview. 
    For my last trip to Venice I wanted to do something a little different; finally to make myself part of my field work. So what I did as an experiment I actually try to learn how to skate. I took one of my friends to teach me how to skate. I did not want to be alone trying to teach myself I probably would of fell on the floor. I wanted to see if people would look and stare even if some of the skating people would tell me something. The way I dress was somewhat how I just to dress in high school the tomboyish look. I wore tights a hoodie and some Jordan’s. So ten minutes into my lesson I had couple skater people give some advice. They would tell to put my balance a certain way and not to be scared to go with the flow. I started to move more towards the rails were some people were leaning just looking out. I wanted to see the reactions of the people if I would causes some attention; fortune I did because I fell straight on my butt and the skate board flew in the air. Surprising I heard this man shout to me “it’s ok just get back up” very thought full to do. After that incident it made me realize about my question; is there a separation between these locals and tourist. I did not think I was going to cross that interaction during my field work. For the fact I came in thinking people would be scared to speak for the rail area. They would have not known if someone could come up to them or give a dirty look.
     The skate is build like a big empty pool just with no water. As you can see at the bottom in the picture (figure #1) towards left side you have the skating part were the big empty pools are. Than on your right hand side you have these tall palm trees with a sitting area. One of my interviews was in this area; I spoke to this girl name Nicki. She consider the skate park to be her home somewhere she and her friends can get away from the world and do their thing and skate.  She mentions the environment is pretty pack at certain hours like when we get out of school. Around 3pm is when I and my friends hit the park straight from school. The way she spoke was such and La tone. The ways to explain it is by in such relax chill tone.  All around mid-way you have the rail were all the people watching can bet at.
(Figure #1)
Map of Skate Park


It is just a humongous space of concrete with flat areas and with dips that you can imagine it as a pool.
On my second trip to Venice I paid more attention to movement of people and the different groups in certain sections of the park. This brought me back to reading Setha Low, On the Plaza: The Politics of Public Space and Culture.  Low describes in her book, “Each plaza was observed by sector, and everything that occurred in that sector was recorded for a designated period time” (Low pg. 49). To help me with my observation and looking what interaction groups I can see. By the palm tree sitting area you can see in Figure #1. There was a group of boys and one girl sitting and standing. I can see these people would joke around amongst one another; taking off at times to skate and come back to take breaks. Off in the middle you see the sea of skaters going around in circles passing through ramps. Not only seeing skaters in the middle; you have people actually walking on the area where it’s flat; some tiring to avoid a collision.  The movement of their bodies swirling like snakes in a pace so quick. Now, I’m coming towards leaving the areas of the skate park my rail people who come and go just look. Being able to explain this group I think of it as circus. Odd for me to think of it such a sort of way; for the fact I picture it a show. All around you capture the people standing looking and not only is it the select few that do not skate; you see actually skaters themselves on the out boarder of the pits. Then we have the photographers who come and see what images they can take. Even people who may or not be locals or tourist at times with family.
     Final visit to Venice the day was nice not to hot or cold just the perfect temperature you need for the beach and not dying from the heat. I had been there no longer than two hours, so right before I was to get from my seat. I see more people walking towards the skate rink wondering what causes this interaction. There had been couple of little youngsters skating; aging from 6 to 8. Starting off young these little ones had the dedication to this sport just by watching them skate I felt like they were mini pros at heart. The skill level they had was probably up where the older skaters were; but not quiet there. So you see within the pit and rail people watching these kids’ skate cheering them one for a trick they did. For about good ten minutes the crowd was huge looking at them skate. So as I see this group from my seat I notice their being entertain by the skills. There are just so many interactions going on at this time; it was a diverse crowd. By this I was able see this can be a way locals and tourist connect with one another. You do not see a barrier between anyone all you see is happiness I guess. My other two trips this was the first time I got this attraction and was glad I did not leave. Not only events like this but there been major events at the skate park.
    Interviewing time 1:35 pm (girl skater)
   First trip I made to Venice I met a girl named Mia she was a pretty tomboyish girl. She was about 5’7, light skin, clear blue eyes and her hair was dark brown and slowly at the bottom it was fading into blonde. Apparently now that hair color has been because many of my friends have the exact style. I think it makes them look like hippies no clue why. I confronted her and mention about the project was assign to do for class. Mia mentioned that she was born in Venice, California but at the age of three her parents decided to move. But by the time she was nine her parents moved back since they themselves miss the beach. Her mom and dad both go surfing and her brother a skater so that is how she became a skater. Question: How do you feel about people coming to skate here that are not locals? Her response, “I think it’s cool I personally don’t have a problem. I met some people who happen to be close friends on mine; they buses it or skate all the way over here every single day. Just so we can all skate and hangout. Question: Do you see a border line were locals can be at and the tourist stay off in a certain section; is their certain groups spread around the skate park? Venice is known for being a tourism attraction. Ahhh, it depends yo only cause we got people that who are out of the ordinary like to watch and they come into the rink and sit. So it makes it feel weird since everyone notices them and you try to avoid them. In my head doesn’t occur if you’re a local or tourist; more like you creep me out keep my distance. Groups, sort of depending on the friends you come with. Like everyday my friends and I come near the palm tree around 4pm talk and skate. So we made that our section. In the morning on weekdays I’m in school not sure what people are here.
Interviewing time 11:50am-12:25pm
       Second trip I met Alex and Devon; only two guys out of my five interviews. Devon is 22 African-American but a caramel color, short faded hair cut, hazel eyes and 6’2. Alex is 22 Mexican-American, 5’11, short faded hair cut too, brown eyes and a little darker than Devon. Hanging out by the rails Devon had happen to pull up next to me taking pictures and his board on the ground. Question: Are you from the area? What do you make of this skate park? What is your opinion on tourism? I’m from playa vista area, but I come at least 3 times a week to skate and take pictures. He is photography major at long beach; so taking pictures whether it’s on the beach, board walk or skate park he snaps it. Skating/ pictures is what I live for so coming 3 times a week I’m at my 2nd home. I been coming since I was 16 years old with my best bud Alex. Now with school as a 5th year, I skate and help other skaters meet new people just trying to use networking skills. Tourism is great way of networking you got many people from different places, careers, and cultures mos def it’s great we have places like this. He went on how he met a guy visiting from New York who has connections with certain professional photographers. His job is to go look for students and talk about internships they can do for the company he works. Devon got the chance to go to New York this summer for the internship. 20 minutes pass his friend Alex comes by us all sweating for skating, wiping his sweat on his shirt to cool off. Question for him: What are some experiences have you had? Seeing a younger generation, do you contribute your knowledge? Is there a connection with tourist and locals?   Coming with my boy Devon one year they had a skating event for all ages a tournament. I enter it for fun plus you got a free shirt and bag, so why not. Devon just took photos that day. Legit thing was you had all peeps from different cities plus styles that represent their personality by looking. That brought out the skating community together. Didn’t matter what you were; if you had the passion to skate then you had a family event. To answer your question, this event had brought locals and tourist together.  You won’t see skaters look at one another like who are you, you don’t belong, all you saw was people giving each other props. (Props-you did something cool and interesting) I’m a psych major and I want to do counseling. So directing these kids of my experience is a great way for me to get practice. I come with an open mind many need more helps than others.
    After talking with these people noticing the behaviors, words, phrase and diversity gets me closer to answering my research question? Key words people use depended on the area you come from. For instance, “yo, trap, legit, sick, tight, dank, ratchet, and including vulgar language”. Seventeen to twenty-one are mainly the people who use this slang. Playa Vista, Venice, Pasadena and Torrance are where my five interview people come from.  The two 22 year old boys and one of the girls I did not mention who is 25 don’t really use those phrases much. The older they got their vocabulary change and more proper for people understand instead of slang. Couple of times slang word would spill. But some were tourist and locals I profiled it as a connection they have. All diversity has their own lingo as well since cities all around California have a diverse of people. Some people were friendly and others I notice had look on people they found strange perhaps. Looking back to question, and visiting the skate park after three trips; I feel I came to an end.
    Referring back some material in class we had been assigning to read. Mentioning before reading Setha Low, On the Plaza: The Politics of Public Space and Culture a section of her book she puts herself into the everyday plaza life. Taking the step of putting yourself in the life style she wanted to be involved with people. See the different point of view to the locals who come to the plaza. Low ended up having friendship and hanging out with occupants from the plaza. This how I found the connection to my project since I made the choice of interacting with my project. Not just by only sitting down, taking pictures, or observing. I wanted to put myself in those shoes; wondering how people would treat me. Since I failed at skating you must have balance and as a dancer I have balance just not for skating. Jane Jacobs’s article I read on, “Sidewalks” In the Death and Life of Great American Cities. Grasping from her article to my research project, I thought of how she mentions cities are meant to have full of strangers comparing to a suburb area or small town. Venice Skate Park is the exact way full of strangers not some you call a friend or an acquaintance since it’s a place a 100% you will can catch tourist coming from miles away. Jacob say’s, “Even residents who live near each other are strangers, and must be…” (pg 30). Coming back to my research question is there a separation between locals and tourist.  If locals member cannot tell distinct who is from Venice, which is impossible because not all people dress and act alike from that city. Maybe there is not separation coming in between to all the people who skate. I would think realistically two out ten people could be the ones who want to put the barrier around locals and tourist.
     Illuminating to the over my entire research project there is no right answer. I enjoy taking my trips down to Venice beach; besides relaxing a little I learn quite of few things. I have been to Venice beach many times over the last twenty years. It never occur for me think of separation amongst people. I knew seeing strangers, performs and vendors as typical Venice. Walking towards the skate park it’s such a different environment. Observing people doing their daily thing me just sitting I notice behaviors and groups. The youth now in L.A is incredible since you have all types in the section; as decades pass so does the youth. I think of them as a rubix cube, at first you the colors mix and match everywhere. Once you solve the puzzle does not matter where you come from because at the end you skate; your doing something to love. Discovering one reason why it could be possible of no separation between strangers. If I had more than three visits I could of answer my question; as now I’m in the middle of yes and no. 






Venice Beach Skate Park and Its Influence on Youth Skate Culture


Christina Blandon
Part I: Introduction
Venice Beach is one of the most well known beaches around Los Angeles. It is known for its unique culture which consists of street vendors, skaters, artist, musicians, street performers, locals, tourist, and residents. Its unique group of people attracts many tourists because it is a beach publicized in the media. Venice Beach has been a host for many films, TV shows, interviews and news report for a good amount of time now.  Venice Beach has also been my home beach for many years. Ever since I was a child I can recollect great memories from this beach, from summer fun in the sun with friends and families, or simply attending the many different events Venice Beach has to offer, such as the Hemp Festival or the AND 1 basketball tournament. This beach offers an array of different attractions, that once you start to explore it you’ll find a piece of home within it. As for me I have always been interested in the skate culture at Venice Beach and the liveliness happening within that space. I was please to have learned so much about the skate culture in Venice Beach.
My research question states as follows:  What attachments, if any, do spectators and skaters have to the park? And how do these attachments influence the unity or division of the Venice Beach community? In order to find the answer to this question I utilized 3 important methods. These 3 methods included 3 pages of field notes, 4 interviews, 2 movement maps and 2 behavioral inventories. With the help of these methods I was able to make remarkable discoveries about the skate culture in Venice Beach. 

Part II: Description of the Skate Park
 A digital map of the skate park in Venice Beach
In order to capture a sense of where the skate park is located within the Venice Beach boardwalk I have provided a map to help give you a visual aid as I begin to describe the skate park.
The Venice Beach skate park is located in the heart of the Venice boardwalk off to the side closest to the beach. The skate park seems rather clean, free from vandilization and typical tagging one may see along the boardwalk. As you approach the boardwalk you can’t help but stare at the beautiful scenery behind the skate park. The view of big palm trees captivate your eyes at first glance, and the scenery of the ocean waves thrusting against the ocean floor is quite refreshing. No wonder people like to skate here I thought to myself. As I stationed myself along the outskirts of the skate park I notice the structure of the park. The park is complete with smooth banks allowing skaters to pick up fast momentum to perform cool tricks. There is also a large pool (empty of course) that allows experienced skaters to enjoy a more challenging course instead of the rails. Another cool feature about the skate park is there large street section which includes sections with stair sets, ledges, rails, and boxes. Whether you are a professional skater or a beginner, the Venice Beach Skate Park provides a comfort for all types of skaters.
While I was there I could not help but notice all the action going on inside the skate park. People zipping through the park in their skateboards as if they were cars in the freeway. Like cars, the skaters have created a system in which they avoid crashing into one another. As I watched intently from a distant I could only see fast movements happening. I needed to go inside the actual skate park in order to capture all of the action. So after standing against the rail (which I call the spectator zone) I weaved my way into the area of the skaters. I want to take a second and describe that moment. I have been many times to the skate park but not once stepped in the actual skating area, it was intimidating at first, I felt like I didn’t belong because I was not affiliated with this culture. I as I walked into the area now dominated by male skaters, several heads turn to look at me; they looked at me with curious eyes. This is when I discovered that the skaters were very aware of who enters their particular space. However, I sat on a concrete bench and began to observe all of the activity going on inside the skate park. I could tell that there was a simple system going on between the skaters as they traveled in the skate park. I came to conclusion that in order to avoid traffic in the skate park, the skaters each took turns using the pool, rails, and or stairs. By forming this system skaters would be able to prevent possible injury from occurring. Like a car in a busy city filled with traffic, you hear lots of sounds coming from every direction. Since I was inside the skate park not outside against the rails, I was able to hear the activity amongst the skaters. I heard sounds of boards crashing on the cement floor, I heard several people conversation happening simultaneously, I heard children crying and people yelling. I was able to witness first handle the environment skaters typically are surrounded by. 

The Skaters

As I sat inside the concrete borders of the skate park I began to observe the skaters in an intimate manner. I began to see the strong attachment the skaters had with the skate park and surprisingly amongst other skaters in the park. This was my second time visiting the Venice Beach Skate Park while conducting my research. It was a Friday afternoon, the day was overcast. I looked down at my phone and it was exactly 1 o clock in the afternoon. I made my way inside the skate park as I did the previous time. Again curious heads looked my way, I am guessing because I was one of 4 girls inside the concrete boundaries of the skate park. I began taking notes and movement maps. As I carefully observed my surrounding I noticed that the skaters where not all alike. The skaters were very diverse and dressed differently. I also noticed different cliques within that lied within the skate park. I identified different types of skaters that make the skate park very unique. I identified the skater by how they dressed or by their physical appearance. I saw hippy skaters, snap back hats with skinny jeans and Vans shoes skaters, cholo looking skater, old skaters ( 30-60 years old) and hipster skaters.  I found it interesting that every skater was different. You could tell just by observing that although they were different by the clothes they wore, it did not matter because skating was what united them together. The longer I observed the skaters the better I understood their unity to the skate park. I interviewed Oscar Limas an 18 year old born and raised in Venice, California. Oscar provided me with an example of how his attachment to the skate park has made him protective of this space. When I asked him if there was some sort of separation between the skaters and other people around the skate park he replied:
OL: Oh yeahhh! For sure. (emphases on the for sure part).  
Me: Can you tell me where you see the separation most?
OL: Well mostly where we skate and hang out… Like on the side (points at spot where he hangs out, kind of a circled spot that has a concrete bench). Not a lot of people come to our area, I mean they can but they don’t… I think they feel scared or something I don’t know ( shurgs, emotion as if he doesn’t care). But its weird people just watch us skate and to us its just a normal thing we do… shit… we love it. At least most of us love it. But ya sometimes people come over to our spot, but unless there not acting a fool we don’t say nuthin
Oscar Limas who dressed with the snap back hats, and Van’s  and who talks with this swagger tone gives me the impression that most skaters who have been skating at the Venice Beach for many years before the creation of the new renovated skate park, now hold a strong sense of attachment to the Venice Beach Skate Park. This attachment means having a protective attitude towards what most local skaters would consider their second home.

 The Spectators


          The spectators are people who assign themselves to the edge of the skate park and stay within the outside boundaries of the skate park. The spectators consist of a diverse group of people from all walks of life. During my visits to the skate park I saw old men and women, children, teenagers, middle age people as well as people from different races and ethnicities. I found through my observation and through interviews that spectators do not obtain the same attachment that the skaters have with the skate park. Miriam Black a mother of two young children told me through a conduct interview that the skate park provides her a sense of happiness and joy because her children love watching the skaters do their cool tricks, “every time we come to Venice Beach and I’m with my children I must stop by the skate park… those munchkins make me, but it makes me happy when they are happy, so it’s worth it”. I have came to the conclusions that spectators hold temporary attachment to the skate park because of the feelings and visual aid the skaters and park provide them with.  The spectators are either gazing at the skaters following the skater as they travel from one side of the skate park to the other. Or some spectators are taking picture of the action. I discovered that the spectators are important factor in what makes the skate park what it is today.
 Collective Data and Discoveries
             Behavioral Inventory:
Skaters socializing
12
Actually skating
20
Spectators
25




I initially used movement mapping as a way to show that spectators and skaters were divided and that spectators had less of an attachment to the park. site. Through the movement maps I created, I discovered that my question was right; the maps indicated that skaters and spectators held different attachments within the skate park. While many of the skaters where isolated inside the skate park, spectators would stay along the edges of the skate park. The movement map clearly distinguishes the spectators from the skaters and shows that the spectators hold a temporary attachment to skate park. We can see that the skaters are attached to the inner part of the skate park, meanwhile the spectators stay outside of the park. The movement map I have provided above indicates that people watching (spectators, green) simply remain in the same common area, if you notice there are no greens actually entering the domain of the skateboarders. Why is that? I asked myself. I found this compelling because it seems that people stay in a place where they feel like they belong. If you are not there to skate you stand outside the skate park around the rails and simply observe as a spectator, if you skate you are inside the boarders of the skate park. This clearly indicates a separation between the spectators and the skaters not only physically, but culturally.
I found that the book On the Plaza written by Setha Low truly highlights a piece of my ethnography. In chapter 2 The Public Space and Culture, Low describes plazas as a public space representing culture by it architecture and from its artistic form of expressing. An example she provides us that demonstrates public space and culture and how it is changing is on page 35. She goes to explain that plazas are also centers of cultural expression and artistic display reflecting their changing designs and furnishing. And finally, plazas are settings for everyday urban life where daily interactions, economic exchange, and informal conversations occur, creating a socially meaningful place in the center of the city. Like the Venice Beach Skate Park this area of space creates a setting for everyday urban life. The skate park allows skaters and spectators alike to engages in informal conversations and cultural expression and with that it create the unique atmosphere that the Venice Beach Skate Park prides itself on.  

Reflections of the Skate Park
Through this project I have learned many things about my home beach and the skate culture that I never knew before. I realized through my data and analyzes that there are certain attachments that skaters and spectators have within the park. The people watching the skaters simply felt that they just wanted to witness the beauty of the beach and the skate park at the same time. The rails around the skate park were there for a purpose so people who want to watch the art of the skaters can watch from a distance without interfering with the skateboarders. The skater themselves used this public space as reflection of their culture and to some a reflection of their home. Remember, Venice Beach is a melting pot and if there is one thing that I could leave you with today, is embrace the many different cultures within this unique beach, you never know you might just fall in love with it.
In conclusion, I have learned that ethnography provides a sense of culture and importance in understanding public space, culture and people. The discoveries I found through this project where rewarding. Now I can walk with a better understanding of the skate culture in Venice Beach and hopefully you have to.

Images 
(Online sources)