The Moth - The Moth Radio Hour: In a World...
Episode Date: December 24, 2024In this hour, windows into new or unfamiliar worlds. Behind the scenes at a haunted attraction, back of house at a Portland restaurant, and the thrills of Christian puppetry. This episode is ...hosted by Moth Director Chloe Salmon. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media.Storytellers:Amir Baghdadchi takes on a frightening new gig.Michael Maina realizes he's in over his head at his first job after medical school.Katy Strange desperately wants to join her church's Christian puppet team. Jenny Nguyen pursues her dream of becoming a chef, from kitchens in Portland to Vietnam, and back. Podcast # 899
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["The Moth Radio Hour"]
From PRX, this is The Moth Radio Hour.
I'm your host, Chloe Salmon.
To me, the most beautiful thing about stories is a simple thing.
The storyteller extends their hand and says,
I have something to show you. And the listener takes their hand and says, thank you, I'll come and see.
And suddenly you can be in a whole new world with a generous guide by your side.
So in this episode, four stories that take place in peculiar, And suddenly you can be in a whole new world with a generous guide by your side.
So in this episode, four stories that take place in peculiar, mysterious, and wondrous
new worlds.
First up is Amir Bagdachi, who gives us behind-the-scenes look at what goes into creating a Halloween
haunting.
He told it at a StorySlam in Ann Arbor, where we partner with Michigan Public.
Here's Amir, live at the Moth.
All right, Amir.
Okay, listen, this is going to be educational.
Look, I don't know if you know this, but children are the future, okay?
And we have to teach them, we owe it to them to teach them facts, to teach them history.
Which is why when I was invited to dress up as a mummy and frighten some suburban school
kids on a haunted hayride, I put my foot down.
I was like, one, if you consult the ancient Egyptian papyri, chasing tractors is not something
a mummy would be into.
Quite the opposite, the papyri are pretty straight about this.
And two, you know, a haunted hay rod gives these kids
a distorted sense of farm life, right?
And it's hard enough getting our young people
into agriculture, right?
Now they're gonna think on top of blizzards
and beetles and droughts, there's the undead to worry about.
No thanks, Pa, I'm going into social media, right?
I don't blame you, Jaden, I don't blame you.
But my friend said there'd be some compensation
and the job I had previously was cooking at a Chili's
and I just felt that my resume needed something
a little more impressive, right?
They'd be like a haunted hair item.
That's walking and moaning, very nice, very nice.
So I go to my friend's house to get the costume going.
And this costume consisted of three things.
Some underwear, some bandages,
and there was no third thing.
Just underwear and bandages.
And for a second I thought, you know,
should I wear shoes?
Should I have a phone?
Should I have a wallet?
But the papyri are pretty straight.
Mummies did not have those things, right?
So it's just that.
And it was a dark night a few nights before Halloween.
And I was driven deep into one of those
endless winding subdivisions and dropped off.
And they told me, you know, they said,
okay, just wait by this mailbox.
And when the tractor comes up pulling the kids,
jump out and scare them.
They go, okay.
So I'm just waiting there, just trying to act casual.
It's just not easy, because remember,
it's not even Halloween yet, right?
On Halloween, you can be like, hey look, honey,
there's a mummy by our mailbox, hi!
But it's just a regular Tuesday, right?
I'm just trying to blend in like,
hey, just checking your mail, looks good.
It's not, it's not.
So then I see the tractor rumbling up the street
and there are the kids sitting on bales of straw
and they're in costume with lightsabers and magic wands
and nunchucks.
And I jump out and I start following them.
And I go,
Mwaaah!
And the kids shriek, okay?
Then I go,
I'm going to get you!
And the kids shriek.
And then I go,
I'm going to eat your face!
And the kids go quiet.
Like, I crossed a line there, and even I'm like,
eat your face.
Is that, where did that come from?
Is that okay?
Like, did I miss some sort of haunted hayride training
where we like brought up issues of heightened sensitivity?
Where did that come from in me?
And then it happened.
The tractor begins to pick up speed, but this one kid,
he was a pirate with a sword, goes,
there's the mummy, let's get him!
And the kid jumps off the moving tractor!
And one after another, the kids are jumping off, they're going, let's get him!
Into the pavement, picking themselves up, screaming and chasing after me.
And I just start running.
And up to this point, I had been trying to walk in a kind of historically authentic manner just kind of clump clump clump but at this point
you know papyri be damned I am booking right and it's gonna say like these
children they were not sweet kids but these children were out to kill and so
I'm just running like through over lawns stumbling through backyards and finally
I escaped at some little swampy bits in a cul-de-sac.
I'm muddy, and my bandages are tearing, and it hits me.
I have no idea where I am, right?
I've got no phone, no wallet.
And then, up the street, this door opens, a front door opens, and I see some kids.
And I just hurl myself out there going, hey, hey, stay away from me.
And the kids are like, mommy.
And I'm like, come on, just let me, I'm not going to eat your face.
And I realized, like, I can't ask for help in this costume.
Like I've got to change.
Which immediately a really important question.
Which of these things as a parent are you more afraid of?
A mummy roaming through the streets at night or a half naked middle aged weirdo just jamming
in his underpants?
And to be honest, it's a toss up.
The papyri are not conclusive here.
I went with just keeping the bandages.
And finally after wandering I limped and I found the Jeep
with my friend.
And it was parked with all these other minivans.
And the headlights were on, and the flashlights were out.
And like, hey, did you hear what happened?
Some of the kids jumped off the hayride, and they just ran
off. We don't even know where some of them are.
What could have made that happen?
And I was like, I have no idea.
That is awful.
I'm going to tell you what I'm going to do.
I'm going to get in the car right now and I'm just going to go because my work here
is basically done.
And a few days later I got the compensation and it turned out to be a gift certificate
for, I'm not making this up, for chilies, which is pretty scary, right?
Thanks. Which is pretty scary, right?
Thanks.
Oh.
Woo!
Applause
Woo!
Applause
Woo!
Applause
Woo!
That was Amir Bagdachi.
Amir is a Michigan based manager
for Grassroots Political Campaigns.
A believer that spin doctoring, like medical doctoring,
should be available to everyone,
he helps listeners talk their way out of tricky situations
on his podcast, Pickles with Amir Bagdachi.
Amir says that he's let himself be talked
into wearing costumes for even more events over the years,
though he has also doubled down on taking the roles
just a bit too seriously, so he's not always asked back.
To see some photos of Amir's Halloween costumes
over the years, head over to themoth.org.
Our next storyteller comes to us from the professional side
of the stethoscope and the medical world beyond it.
Michael Mayna told his story at a main stage
in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Here's Michael.
I had just finished my medical school and I was excited. I was passionate about sexual
and reproductive health rights. I was eager to take the next step, which was maternal
mortality. In Kenya, the area with the highest
maternal mortality is North Eastern. It's in the North Eastern part of the town called
Garisa. They have 641 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. In perspective, the SDG
target is 70 deaths per 100,000. That's almost nine times more.
I wanted to make a difference, and I felt I could do it.
I told my friends I want to do my internship in Garissa.
They all tried to dissuade me.
One said, it's not safe, there was a terrorist attack there.
I was like, 10 years ago, it's been safe since.
They tell me it's a hardship-arid area.
You'll struggle, but there's a hardship allowance.
More money for me.
One friend warned me, if the government decides
to pay you more money, you'll work for it hard.
I wasn't dissuaded and I followed my passion.
I went to Garissa.
I alighted the bus and was met with scorching heat.
I was sweating all over.
It was sandy and desert-like.
I went to the restaurant, had a good meal, I enjoyed the cuisine, had a drink and I talked
to the people around.
Lovely.
I love the culture.
I tried it at home.
But I was nervous about work.
My first day I got in, the medical officer who was overseeing
me welcomed me so warmly with open arms. He took me around for the ward round, showed
me each patient one by one. He explained everything and whenever I never knew a question, he patiently
explained it. I felt excited. At 11 AM, he left.
In the afternoon, 3 PM, I asked the nurse,
where's the doctor gone to?
She tells me he has been working as the only doctor
for three months in this department, Monday to Sunday,
8 AM to 8 AM.
My arrival signified his chance to rest.
Later that night, I called for a consult and he told me, "'Toke, you've been to school just like I've been to school.
"'I believe in you, just you'll find a way.'"
The next two weeks, I was working 20 hours a day on call,
baptism by fire.
I spent most of my time in hospital
and only interacted with the staff.
In particular, there was a cleaning lady named Zara.
She was always nice, she always smiled,
and we always made shit chat.
I went to my next rotation, which is maternity department.
Bath was a communal event.
Relatives were beside the bed.
So when you're trying to get intravenous access,
pricking and missing the vein,
they're all looking at you with bad eyes and asking,
did this doctor even go to school?
Our Kenya Medical Council gives you a logbook
that you need to fill in three months.
I saw so many emergencies, I filled it in two weeks.
Yeah, so at this point, my bedside manner, I had taken it aside.
I just wanted to clear the words.
Just looking at the charts, diagnosis,
they give birth, go home, go home, go home.
After my internship, I was absorbed to the hospital
and I was a medical officer in the maternity department.
Our consultant told me my responsibilities had increased. He told me everything good that happens in the maternity department. Our consultant told me my responsibilities had increased.
He told me everything good that happens in the world
is my doing, everything bad, my fault.
Pressure.
One weekend I was left alone to do a 72 hour shift.
My colleagues and consultants had traveled for a conference
and so they left the department in my hands. At the end of the shift I was so tired and went
and collapsed in bed. I then get a call from the hospital. I hung up immediately. I
get another call from the personal number of the nurse. She tells me, my call
we have an emergency and I say I'm not on call, call the doctor who's supposed
to cover. She tells me he's not back yet, he'll be late, he's in a bus. Please come,
run, please, thank you, before I can even argue. So I'm angry, cranky, I walk to the
ward frustrated and when I get in there, there's a huge commotion. I see nurses on one side arguing with relatives
on the other side.
I just want to tell everyone to shut up.
So I walk towards them, and as I'm walking,
I notice that the floor is wet.
I look down, pool of blood.
I look towards it and I see a trail towards the bed.
Snap into action, I go there. There's a very sick patient.
She's a pregnant lady whose deathly pale is being transfused two units of blood
at the same time, one on each arm. I take my speculum and examine. I have never
seen that much blood from a pregnant woman. I immediately say we have to go to theater and tell the nurses to give me the forms for
consent and a theater list.
As soon as her mother heard the word cesarean section, the patient's mother said, what do
you want to do to my daughter?
You want to take her there to butcher her?
I was tired so I ignored her and focused on the patient. I told her
her condition is placenta previa. So that means her placenta was between the head and
the cervix and she was inactive labor. So with each contraction, the head of the child
will push against the placenta causing more bleeding. And if it never stopped, her uterus
could even rupture and they'd both die.
I told them we had to go to theater
and we needed the consent.
At this point, the patient weakly raised her hand
and grabbed my lapgut.
She said, doctor, operation, no, no, no.
At this point, I was stunned.
I looked to the mother for help.
Maybe they never understood.
I told the mother, no matter how hard she pushes,
that baby isn't coming out.
And both the patient and her child will die.
The mother looked me straight in the eye and told me,
then we'll dig two graves and bury them.
I was shocked.
How can a mother say these things to her child?
At this point, I was just so frustrated.
I felt so hopeless.
I took off my gloves, threw them on the floor, and just stormed out.
By the time I was at the door, all the energy just seeped out of me.
Found myself sitting against the wall,
thinking about how bad a shift I had.
I was in the hospital for three days.
We've gotten a really sick patient,
and the only thing that was my part was getting consent
and taking the patient to theater.
The nurses had done the rest, but I couldn't do anything.
My hands were tied.
Patient autonomy, you have the right to accept or refuse and I can only respect it.
I felt so sad.
Just waiting to see the patient die.
I was on the brink of tears when I felt a tap.
This was Zara, the cleaning lady who was always my friend.
She looked at me and said, Doc, why are you crying? Wipe my eyes and say,
not crying. I explained the situation to her. She tells me that three years ago
she was in a similar situation, but she declined to go for a cesarean section. I
was shocked. Zara, you work in a hospital. You see patients go to theater, back to
the ward and home, safe and sound. Why would you refuse?
She told me that in her culture, it was a point of pride of a woman to give birth to
as many children and to give birth naturally, which she meant vaginally.
She said, there's no point living in a world where you're ostracized by your loved ones.
However, after someone talking to her, telling her that her body is different from others
and she only needs a C-section, she accepted.
I was just confused and she could read it on my face.
She asked me, Michael, do you want my help
in talking to them?
I thought it was a lost cause, do whatever you want.
She went and as opposed to my approach she said hi to
all the relatives including the patient. She talked to them softly and listened
to them without interrupting as they were protesting. She then talked more and
opened her shirt. She showed her the scar that she had and everyone's face
softened.
They then said a prayer together and she came back.
I was so nervous.
She told me, you can go sign your consent and take her to theater.
They've accepted.
At this point, it was a heavy burden off my shoulders.
I could finally walk.
We rushed the patient to theater and we had surgery.
It was successful.
So.
Four days later, in the next ward round,
with the consultant, I see the patient.
She's there, settling her child, both both healthy and we're about to discharge her
I did something I never did previously I
Stayed afterwards and went to our chat with her
She's told me how excited she was to see me and excited that we took good care of her plus Zara's compassion and
Willingness to listen. I asked her why she was against the CS,
the cesarean section, and she said,
she heard rumors that when you go to theater,
they take out your uterus.
Once you get a cesarean section,
you can't give birth again naturally or vaginally,
as she said.
And I dispelled the myths and we had a good conversation
about reproductive health.
Reflecting about that situation,
it was at our effort as
doctors or nurses that saved that life. It was Zara, her compassion, her love, her
willingness to listen and communicate. And having lost my bedside manner at the
time, I decided to regain my human approach in medicine. Listening, empathizing, loving, and caring for my patients.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. doctor who's committed to sexual and reproductive health rights and justice, especially in marginalized areas. He currently works in the accident and
emergency department at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi. When I
asked Michael about his favorite part of the job, he said, racking my mind about
what the hell is going on with the patient pathophysiologically, finding the
courage to perform difficult interventions and having my efforts pay off. Although Michael no longer works at
the hospital in the story, he does go back regularly to visit and of course to
catch up with Zara.
After the break, a young woman yearns for the spotlight in her church's puppeteering
troupe when the Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts
and presented by PRX.
This is The Moth Radio Hour from PRX.
I'm Chloe Salmon.
Whenever I come across someone who has a niche skill or background, I become the world's
nosiest woman and ask them lots of questions.
I want to know everything.
Our next storyteller gives us a peek
beyond a literal curtain to a stage
that I at least didn't even know existed.
Catherine Strange told this in Santa Barbara
where we partner with Casey Ardebian.
Here's Catherine live at the Moth.
When I was nine years old, the thing I wanted most in the world was to join
Missoula Montana's premier Christian puppet team. The first Presbyterian
Puppet Patrol or 1p3 if you're a fan. All of the coolest kids from church were part of 1p3.
You know, Jenna with the bouncy hair, Marlena who smelled like cigarettes, and
Todd who was a boy. But the puppet team director said I wasn't old enough and
there was no fooling her because she was my mom. After church while I waited for mom to drive me home,
I would watch 1P3 rehearse.
They would march their puppets through the stage to a cassette tape which said,
I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.
They were so cool.
They would perform like original skits about stuff like how awesome it is to obey your parents.
Or classic songs like, Get Hot, Stay Hot, Be on Fire for Jesus.
Or...
It was the 90s, it was the heyday of Christian puppetry.
It was the heyday of Christian puppetry. I begged my mom to let me join 1P3 early, but she said I would not be getting any special
treatment.
I would have to wait until I turned 10, just like everybody else.
But in the meantime, I could work on building up my shoulder muscles by seeing how long
I could hold a can of soup above my head.
The night before puppet performances, mom would stay up late to drink wine and make
props, and if I helped her, she would tell me stories about when she was a teenager on
a Christian puppet team.
See, my mom told me that being a Christian puppeteer was cool.
And I believed her.
Because when she talked about it, she got this look on her face like, oh, those were
the best days of my life.
And I think this kind of makes sense, right?
Like my mom's parents were like really strict kind of fundamentalist.
And so I think for my mom, doing puppets in the church basement
was basically her only freedom.
And she loved it, OK?
She got to make friends.
She got to show off how funny she was.
And I just wanted to be a part of that, all right?
I wanted to be the one to make my mom laugh or make her feel proud.
Because sometimes I could feel kind of invisible around my mom like she
would get really sad and her sadness got so big it just seemed like it pushed
everything and everyone else to the edges including me but puppeteer made
her happy and so I just knew that this was gonna be my chance to shine and for
her to really see me so when I turned 10 and I got to join 1P3 as a junior member,
I was stoked.
Plus, every August, we would drive for two days straight
to the International Festival of Christian Puppetry and Ventriloquism,
aka IFest, in Kankakee, Illinois.
And there, we could take workshops from Christian puppetry
celebrities like Todd Levenow and watch performances from the nation's top
Christian puppet teams. I bought a cute green alien puppet made by David
Panabecker.
David Pannebecker? Who studied puppet making under Kermit Love?
So Kermit Love, among many other things, is the creator of Big Bird, guys.
Yes, okay.
Anyway, I named my puppet Deedle.
The finale of every iFest was a performance by the Puppetry Dream Team.
These are the top 15 teenage Christian puppeteers of the United States and Canada.
You had to audition via videotape, and once you were selected, you had only one week to create an entire 45-minute puppet show from scratch.
I imagine one day I would be up on that
stage as a member of the puppetry dream team. It would be like the end of one of
those sports movies from the 80s where like everybody's cheering and my mom
stands up and she's like that's my girl. But for now I was still just a junior
puppet team member. Mom insisted that we master the five basic skills of
puppetry before getting
promoted. You know, entrances and exits, height and positioning, eye contact, believable movement
and lip synchronization, and I just wasn't there yet. I was back to practicing with a
can of soup.
1P3 booked a series of shows at local nursing homes, and these were really depressing and
nobody wanted to do them. But mom would not cancel.
So one day we have a gig and zero puppeteers have signed up.
And mom looks at me and she's like,
all right, we're going to make this happen, you and me.
And I'm terrified because I'm about to go from can of soup
to performing an entire show.
But I also thought that just maybe I could pull this off
and then wouldn't my mom and Todd and Jenna
be like super impressed?
The show starts off okay.
And then we get to Abbot and Costello's Who's On First.
This skit is eight minutes, which is a very long time to hold your arm in the air.
And I'm using this puppet. It kind of looks like an orange Muppet version of Dick Van Dyke.
Really big foam head, big padded chin. This makes him
extremely heavy. So about a minute into the skit my arm starts to sink and mom
nudges my elbow and she says get up there and then my fingers start to go
numb and I can barely get that puppets mouth to open and close. Mom is glaring
at my frozen sinking puppet. Through
gritted teeth she says, keep going. And I look at her and I
say, I can't and I start to cry. And this just makes her
angrier. She starts kicking the bottom of my shoe in time to the
lip sync I am screwing up. In this moment it feels like
my mom cares more about the performance than she does about me. This is not the
first time I've had this feeling. It is the first time puppets have been
involved because our lives often felt kind of like a performance like to our
church community we were this saintly family, but behind closed doors, mom was trying to outrun her depression
with puppets and white wine while I looked on helplessly.
We were both struggling and we could never talk about it.
In the stage that day, all I could do was keep going.
So I blinked back my tears, I finished the skit. I finished the show.
On the drive home, mom won't even look at me. But the next day she promoted me to senior
puppet team member. And I didn't know if that was her way of trying to apologize or if I
was being rewarded for pushing through the pain. All that I knew was that I could not
bear to fail her again.
So I decided I was gonna stop complaining and I was gonna work harder.
In seventh grade, I figured out that being a Christian puppeteer is not cool.
But I couldn't quit, I couldn't let down my mom or my team.
So I just started keeping that part of my life a secret from my school friends.
I worked very hard and I got very good at two things, puppetry and lying.
And by the time I was a senior in high school, I was the star of 1P3.
When mom suggested that I audition for the puppetry dream team at iFest, I knew it was
an honor, but one I wasn't sure I wanted.
Still, I sent in my audition tape, and when we found out, I made the team mom seem pleased.
But when I got to my first day of puppetry dream team rehearsals, I realized I had made
a huge mistake.
All of the other teenagers are ecstatic to be there.
They cannot wait to put on the official Dream Team polo shirt.
They never take their puppets off.
And I figured they were faking it, right?
So I tried to get them to admit, come on.
Christian puppetry is basically the most embarrassing hobby
imaginable, right?
And they just looked at me like they didn't know what I was talking about.
And I thought like, oh, they want to be here.
They're not just counting the days until they can leave for college
and then never ever ever do another puppet show again for the rest of their lives.
Our puppetry dream team performance was about a group of sentient school supplies that talked
and preached the gospel and performed thematically relevant Christian pop songs.
I had a minor role as a pencil.
Having alienated the rest of the teens, I did what I always do.
I stopped complaining, I worked hard, and the show went fine, I guess. And
as the final puppet exited the stage and a thousand people, including my mom, rose to
give us a standing ovation, I expected to feel proud. And I didn't. Because this person
up on stage, this wasn't the real me. This was the person I thought my mom wanted me to be. And a standing ovation
is nice, but it can't compare to being loved and accepted for who you really are.
A few weeks after iFest, it was time for me to leave for college, and as I'm trying to
cram like everything I own into a duffel bag, my mom walks into my room carrying Deedle,
the alien puppet that I had bought at iFest and performed with hundreds of times
because she thinks I need to pack him so I can take him
to Seattle, where I will continue being a Christian puppeteer
and maybe even start my own Christian puppet team.
And I look at her, and I can see what this means to her.
And I think, well, I could probably
hide him under the bed in my dorm room,
and I'll just tell her what she wants to hear.
But I don't want to pretend anymore.
So I look at her, and I say, Mom, I'm not taking any puppets to college.
I quit 1P3.
And she just says, you'll change your mind.
And that's it.
The next day I wake up in my dorm room and it's like the beginning of my new life.
I can go anywhere, I can do anything.
And if what I want is to go to a party
and drink a Mike's Hard Lemonade
and then sleep through church, nobody's gonna stop me.
Two months after I arrive,
I received my first and last care package.
Inside is a jar of peanut butter, a box of granola bars, and deedle the puppet.
And I'm angry because it feels like my mom is trying to force me to be a person I don't
want to be anymore.
But I also know that this is her way of connecting with me.
It's not what I need, but it's what she can do.
For my mom, the curtains of the puppet stage gave her safety so she could reveal her true
self.
But for me, those curtains were like a cage.
And I knew that I had a choice to make.
I could spend the rest of my life chasing my mom's approval,
or I could go my own way.
And that was really scary.
But you know what?
I had already done a lot of scary things.
I had mastered the five basics of puppetry.
I had performed for thousands of people.
I could hold a soup
can above my head indefinitely at this point. If I could work that hard
for something I didn't even really want, imagine what I could do with a dream.
Thank you.
Thank you. That was Catherine Strange.
She's a writer, activist, and mom living in Seattle.
If you'd like to hear more from her, you can subscribe to her weekly tongue-in-cheek
spirituality newsletter, Hair-A-Tick-Hair-After, on Substack.
When I asked Catherine if she had a puppeteering tip for any
unnamed Moth Radio Hour producers who are raring to give it a go, she said that
a key to realistic puppetry is to not move your fingers when you open and
close the puppets mouth. Instead, keep your fingers still and move your thumb
up and down. Go forth with that knowledge, future puppeteers.
You can find photos of Catherine and the rest of Wumpy 3 at themoth.org.
In a moment, a chef sharpens her skills
in kitchens from Portland to Vietnam.
When the Moth Radio Hour is produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and presented by PRX.
This is the Moth Radio Hour from PRX. I'm Chloe Sammon. In this episode, we've been listening to
stories that give us windows into unexpected worlds. Our final story comes to us from Jenny Nguyen. She told it at
the Herbst Theater in San Francisco. Here's Jenny live at the mall.
I was born and raised in Portland, Oregon. First-generation Vietnamese-American and generation Vietnamese American and an only child. Growing up my parents always
told me that assimilation, fitting in, were the key to achieving the American
dream. After all of these years I'm not entirely sure any of that is true.
Starting at a very young age I fell in love with sports.
Vietnamese girls don't play basketball they said. Then at the age of 17 I came
out to my family as a lesbian. Jenny you've always been a tomboy it's just a
phase they said. Then my first year away at college I was so disillusioned by the food that was served
in the dorms that I phoned home and asked mom for some of the recipes that she made
when I was growing up.
By the end of my first year away at college, I phoned home again, except this time it was
to tell them that their daughter no longer wanted to be a doctor.
I wanted to be a chef.
They weren't disappointed.
They were horrified.
This was when my dad gave me the best advice.
He said, why don't you find the worst job you can think of in your field, do it for
a year, and if you still want that to be your life, then go for
it.
So that's what I did.
About a week later, I got my very first kitchen job at the local Red Robin.
It was called the Friar Boy position.
That's not its technical name, but that's what we all called it. It was dirty, filthy, stinky, thankless work
and I was hooked. So I moved back to Portland and enrolled into culinary
school at the age of 22. While doing that full-time I also worked a couple part-time
jobs in downtown Portland at some fine dining restaurants, one of which was
this hip little Italian joint.
My first day, the owner of the restaurant, he invited me into his office and offered
me a line of Coke.
On day two, I must have did something to really piss the chef off, but he threw a pan right
at my face. I ducked and it hit the stainless steel wall beside me.
And by day three, I was about to learn my very first kitchen life lesson.
Chef had put his ribeye up in the window and I realized that I had missed time to the fried
onion garnish to go on top of it.
I felt the skin on my left forearm bubble and burn.
Chef had thrown a pan of hot oil at me this time, except I didn't see it coming, and he got me.
The woman who was training me at the time, she must have registered my blinding rage before I did because she took my shoulders and she squared them up to hers and inches
from my face Whisper yelled this wisdom, don't you fucking cry. If you cry they
win. You don't want them to win do you? Do you? I sucked the hot, wet tears back into my face,
and I dropped a metal cage around all of my soft parts right then.
I wanted to win.
And I wasn't going to let that asshole or anyone else stop me.
Now, this was right around the time I was reading Kitchen Confidential that asshole or anyone else stop me.
Now, this was right around the time I was reading Kitchen Confidential
and watching just about every gritty TV drama
and movie there was about chef life.
And it turns out that at its core,
all of it is pretty accurate.
But I was in love.
I was living this fiery life. I felt like I was living the dream,
working as a line cook in downtown. Sure, it meant starting off every day with a quad shot latte,
just so I could get amped. And then about halfway through my shift, until I was mopping the floor
and locking the doors, it was drink after shot shot after drink after drink. And I drank even more when I wasn't working.
One morning I woke up on the guest bedroom floor and my girlfriend she gave
me an ultimatum. She said, Jenny either the job goes or I do. She said I was an alcoholic and a workaholic but I didn't
really see it that way. I was in love with cooking. The tickets rolling in, me
and my boys in the trenches fighting through fire, hot oil, blood, sweat, a
hundred tiny battles every night.
And when the war finally subsided,
I just wanted to keep that high an adrenaline
of being on fire, being under fire, burning.
Even if that meant lighting myself on fire.
I did eventually leave, but I kept on cooking.
And I kept up with the lifestyle at every new restaurant.
And I kept on burning.
I was faced with so many challenges and I met them all head on.
And I defeated them. Sometimes it meant working five people's jobs at once.
Sometimes it meant choosing lust over love.
I felt like battle after battle
within those four stainless steel walls, it protected me. It gave me meaning through duty.
As if the sum of my actions equaled what it meant to be a chef. A lone wolf, driven by fire, desire, and living life on the fly.
Hell, I even fired this girl one time just for touching my chef's knife.
My journey was complete. I had become the asshole.
So after about ten years of working in kitchens, I finally earned my stripes as an executive
chef.
The title afforded me many luxuries like a 401k, pretty cush salary, and paid time off.
In the winter of 2015, I took the longest vacation I'd ever taken since I started working.
I decided to go to Vietnam with my parents.
It was my first time going, and their second time back
since fleeing in 75.
My favorite part about being in Vietnam were the markets.
The food markets, the night markets, the floating markets.
An entirety of its culture laid out, a feast
for the senses, spices every shade of the sunset, herbs and vegetables every hue of
the forest, friends, families, strangers, everyone coming out to meet, to mingle, to
drink, to laugh, and of course to eat.
On our very last night in Vietnam, we met a woman who invited us back to her family
home in Saigon for dinner.
She said she lived with 23 people, from her grandpa to her niece's nephews.
From the moment we stepped foot into her family's home, we were so warmly welcome.
It was like a familial embrace, like a family reunion, except these were all people we'd
never met before.
I remember as we made our way up to the fourth floor of this family's home, there on the
ground was a bamboo mat. And on the bamboo mat lay 30 to 40 dishes,
from grilled eggplant with nipmum and mint,
to fried whole fish, from pickled daikon,
to crushed Thai red chilies.
The entire room was damp with the smell of 1,000 ingredients
brought together just for us.
The din of children's laughter, the men boasting, the women exchanging recipes and
compliments, everybody handing dishes back and forth, back and forth. It was all so
overwhelming and so chaotic, but in its own way a type of magic. This feeling was
so different from the fiery life
that I was living back home.
To me, this felt as if I was stepping
to the edge of a river for the very first time.
And I started to wonder if I could just
step a little further in, if somehow it could fill me up.
I sat on the floor cross-legged, and I feasted.
Family poured in and out of the room,
sitting on couches, on the windowsills, some even
in the stairwell, everybody balancing bowls
of rice in their laps.
Here I was, a stranger in somebody's home, yet a home away from home, a wash in a culture,
and I just wished my entire body to become a sponge so that I could soak it all in.
Coming back home, I knew I needed to make some changes.
In Vietnam, it felt as if people spilled their emotions out onto the street, and the community,
they scooped it up and they shared it around.
And that made it feel like no one was ever really alone.
And when I got back, I didn't want
to feel alone anymore either.
But I didn't know what that meant,
and I didn't know how to get there.
But I put in my notice. After 15 years of
busting my ass working in kitchens, I quit my job. And then I picked up the
phone. I called friends, family. I started to talk to strangers. Slowly I lifted that
cage from around my soft parts and I found that by being open
and vulnerable, my heart actually grew bigger and stronger.
And with it, this sense of a community formed.
I wanted to hold on to this feeling, so I decided to build a place to grow it.
In April of last year, I opened a sports bar unlike any other called the Sports Bra. It's a place where people can come to gather, celebrate, and watch women's sports.
And when I walk through the sports bra, I get the same feeling I got when I walked the
markets in Vietnam.
Sing song of laughter, strangers sharing stories,
safety and company, community united by a common thread.
When I was developing the menu for the bra,
I knew I wanted it to feel familiar,
but I also knew I wanted to pay homage to everything
that came before.
At the top of the menu, you'll find mom's baby back ribs.
Now this is exactly the recipe that mom sent to me when I was away at college missing home.
It's my favorite dish that she makes.
In Vietnamese it's called thịt khá.
It turns out that my burning desire wasn't to be dangerously independent.
It was to be a part of something bigger, to be a part of a community.
I found that by stepping out of the fire and into the water,
it helped put out the parts of my life that were consuming me.
And at the sports bra, I see water everywhere and it
fills me up and there's plenty to share. Thank you.
Jenny Nguyen is the founder and CEO of The Sports Bra, which, as you now know, is the
world's first sports bar entirely dedicated to women's sports.
Born and raised in Portland, Oregon, she worked as a cook, then as an executive chef, putting
in over 15 years in kitchens before opening the bra in 2022.
If you're in Portland, check it out.
I've had the ribs she mentions at the end of her story, and wow.
Sometimes I dream of them.
I asked her if there's any advice she'd give to young chefs.
She said she'd tell them to learn as much as you can from the good and the bad.
From the people you aspire to be,
all the way to the people you despise.
That there are lessons in every moment
that will teach you who you are and who you aren't.
To see some photos of Jenny, the sports bra,
and that life-changing trip to Vietnam,
head over to themoth.org.
That's it for this episode.
Remember, behind every curtain can be something wondrous,
in every nook and niche, something unexpected.
Thank you to our storytellers for sharing with us,
and to you for listening.
I hope you'll join us next time.
This episode of the Moth Radio Hour was produced by me, Jay Allison, and Chloe Salmon, who
also hosted and directed
the stories in the show.
Co-producer is Vicki Merrick, associate producer Emily Couch.
The rest of the Moth's leadership team includes Sarah Haberman, Christina Norman, Sarah Austin-Giness,
Jennifer Hickson, Meg Bowles, Kate Tellers, Marina Cluchet, Leanne Gulley, Suzanne Rust, Brandon Grant, Sarah
Jane Johnson, and Aldi Casa.
The Moth Global Community Program is generously supported by the Gates Foundation.
Most stories are true, as remembered and affirmed by the storytellers.
Our theme music is by The Drift.
Other music in this hour are from Tom Waits, Eric Friedlander, Nigel
Kennedy, and Duke Levine. We receive funding from the National Endowment for
the Arts, the Moth Radio Hours produced by Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole,
Massachusetts, and presented by PRX. For more about our podcast, for information
on pitching us your own story, which we always hope you'll do,
and everything else, go to our website, TheMoth.org.