My sister, Sonia, informed me at Christmas that a friend had managed to get inauguration tickets from her Congressperson so the two of them were planning to fly out and stay with us for several days in late January. Unfortunately, a few days beforehand, her friend's grandfather fell ill and she had to fly to Arizona instead. She called her Congressperson's office to see if Sonia could pick up her tickets, but they said no. Sonia decided to come anyway and just go with Josh and me (who didn't have tickets.)
Monday (Jan 19th) night we took the Metro to Josh's parents' house near Eastern Market, which is just a few blocks east of the Capitol building. The Metro was packed with people, as were all the bars and restaurants around Eastern Market. We had dinner with Josh's parents and then went to nearby tavern for dessert and warm coffee drinks. We didn't sleep much that night. We heard sirens, buses, revelers, and general traffic all night long -- and the coffee drinks probably didn't help much either.
We got up at 7 am the next day (Jan 20) and wolfed down some toast and a few sips of OJ (we didn't want to deal with port-a-johns in below-freezing weather) before bundling up and heading out on foot for the Mall. It was very cold outside (high: 31, low: 19), and the wind chill made it feel even colder. Because the parade route ran along the north side of the Mall, those who wanted to attend the inauguration ceremony were told to approach the Mall from the south. By the time we got near the Capitol, the streets were so crammed with people we could barely move. There were huge lines for the ticketed areas, and the streets were lined with buses, volunteers, vendors of Obama memorabilia, and law enforcement/military types. We kept walking and walking in search of an actual entrance onto the Mall, but it seemed to be completely fenced off. Here was the scene by the USDA building around 9 am:

It turned out they had already closed off the entire Mall by that point because there were so many people. We ended up walking all the way to the Washington Monument, which is about 1.2 miles from the Capitol, and made our way through the throngs to a spot on the hill right near the base of the monument. Here are Josh & I waiting for the ceremony to begin with part of the Monument in the background (Josh is wearing his "I'm gay for Obama" button):


After the ceremony was over, we realized there were nearly 2 million people between us and Josh's parents' house, so we turned around and headed in the opposite direction towards our house in Arlington. It was surreal walking down major DC streets with no cars but hordes of people. It felt like a scene from some epic, post-apocalyptic movie. We crossed the Potomac (which was frozen over) by walking right down the middle of the Roosevelt Bridge:

Before Sonia flew back to California, we paid a visit to the National Portrait Gallery to see the original Shepard Fairey "HOPE" poster, which is actually a collage of different types of colored and patterned paper. Very cool:

I'd like to see your inauguration pics!! Can you send me a file for the HOPE poster pic, please? Those photos from boston.com were phenomenal. What really got me was the picture of people gathered in front of a teeny TV in Nairobi to watch the inauguration in what could only have been the middle of the night.
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