Archive for the ‘I love New York’ Category

Then and Now

September 11th, 2011 by Suzanne | No Comments | Filed in Asshole idiots, I love New York, other rants, sadness

I was not planning to attend any of the memorials or activities offered to “remember” or “honor” September 11, 2001. That day has been used in so many ways that it is almost meaningless. When I think about how much worse off we are now than we were then, it infuriates me. The gap between the rich and the poor has exploded. The Republicans (and yes, I blame them 100%) used Sept. 11 as a way to divide our nation rather than unite it. As the New York Times wrote two days ago:

“Richard D. Land, president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, which is the public policy arm of the Southern Baptist Convention, said in an interview that the planned ceremony only proved that New York was the “epicenter of secularism,” out of step with the rest of America.

New Yorkers, you see, aren’t real Americans. Real Americans, it seems, embrace religion – their own religion, of course – above everyone else and have no respect for the beliefs of others. And yes, that is exactly what so many elected officials are pushing these days. Well fuck it. If that’s what a real American is, then I am proud not to be one.

So, no, I wasn’t planning anything special today. But when I went outside this morning to go to the gym, there was a patch of super blue sky sticking out of the clouds when I looked north up Amsterdam Ave. The first thing I always think about whenever I think about that day ten years ago was how amazing the sky was. It was the truest of sky blue skies. When I looked at that piece of super blue sky, I thought about walking home from work that morning, next to a freakishly quiet West Side Highway, with no traffic save for the occasional emergency vehicles.

Then, as I approached the gym, I heard bagpipes and drums. Under even regular circumstances, bagpipes are about the most mournful sounding instruments on the planet. These bagpipes seemed to be coming from 77th Street, where I knew there was a firehouse. The bagpipes took control of my legs, and I walked past the gym and up the block, following the sound. The street was blocked off and a small crowd had assembled. The firemen were outside in their dress uniforms. As I approached, the music had quieted and they began ringing a bell and reading names. I am pretty sure they were the names of the fireman who died from that station.

I stood on the pavement with an assortment of Upper West Siders, listening. Some of us were in gym clothes, some on bikes, some with dogs. Tourists from the hotel across the street from the firehouse spilled out of the hotel. We listened. I watched the firemen as they struggled to maintain composure. Two women near me, in heels and classy dresses, cried. My throat became itchy with my own unreleased tears.

The names were read – a blessedly short, but tragic, list – and the bagpipes played “Amazing Grace.” The firemen dissipated, shaking hands and embracing one another. The small crowd broke apart, too, and we went back to our regular lives. I headed to the gym, two people stopped into the fancy cupcake bakery that did not exist ten years ago, and the dog walkers walked their dogs.

Ten years ago, our lives were supposed to have changed. We take a few seconds to comment on it, and then we go about our business. Life, for better or worse, goes on in the city – a city that I am proud to call home, and one that, to me, represents the best of what America has to offer people from every walk of life, even if it is not perfect.

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Irene, You Ruined My Weekend, Damn You*

August 26th, 2011 by Suzanne | 2 Comments | Filed in Damn, fuck, I love New York, mortification

My friend Dr. P’s birthday is today. (Happy birthday!) My friend Caitlin’s birthday is tomorrow. We had parties planned up the wazoo for both days. We had brunch plans with some friends from London. Now, I am stuck spending the weekend holed up with Husband. (Terrible, I know. When I “complained” to him about this, e told me that I better stock up on books. If the power doesn’t go out, I’m going to submit short works to lit magazines. If it does go out, I will work on writing until the battery on my laptop dies.)

I’m very curious to see if this turns out to be an insane storm or if elected officials are overreacting because they massively fucked up during a snowstorm in December that paralyzed the city. Coney Island, Brighton Beach, the Rockaways, and other beach areas in Brooklyn and Queens are being completely evacuated. The entire public transportation system is being shut down at noon on Sat. (Never has that been done before.) This means that no one will be able to get to work on Saturday unless they live within walking distance, which means no stores or restaurants or anything will be open. It’s going to be interesting.

In 1999, the city freaked out when Hurricane Floyd headed our way. Then nothing happened. part of me hopes nothing will happen, but then I’ll be mad that we spent all this money preparing for the storm and disrupted so many businesses and people’s work schedules. I can only imagine how much this is going to hurt them in an economic environment that already is causing so much hardship.

Unrelated to Irene, but equally horrifying, I realized that the woman who cleans our apartment must think we are total sickos. First there was the veiny dildo on my nightstand. Then last night, I realized that she folded a blanket we keep in the living room (for watching TV or when guests sleep over) and placed it dead center on the giant stuffed penis, which she placed on top of a folded up pack and play. I will not be surprised if she demands a raise.

*No cheesy jokes about rocking like a hurricane or coming on Irene!

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The Hipster

August 13th, 2011 by Suzanne | 1 Comment | Filed in Asshole idiots, Damn, fun trips, hilarity, I love New York, Off the (Beaten) Subway Track, oh happy day, random, What is wrong with people?

For the last few years, I’ve meant to head out to Ft. Tilden, a former military base turned park in the Far Rockaways section of Queens.  A friend at work highly recommended it.  I finally semi-made it there today with Husband and some friends. 

Since my preferred method of travel, subway and/or bus, would have taken us about 2 hours, we decided to drive.  The park website had car directions, but when we arrived, we learned there was no parking without a permit in the summer.  Then, after ditching Augustus Gloop (our car) at the parking lot for neighboring Jacob Riis and walking along the concrete boardwalk back to Ft. Tilden park, we learned you cannot have a picnic there without a permit halfway through our picnic.  (The ranger let us finish, though.)

As came back from the trash after cleaning up, I passed by a woman sitting under a tree to my right.

“Hey hipster!  Go to the beach,” she hissed.

I looked behind me to see who she was talking to.  There was no one there.  I looked to my left.  Also no one there.  I looked back at her.  She had a straw hat pulled over her face so I could not see who she was looking at.

“Hey hipster!” She hissed again.  “Go to the beach!”

I realized that she was directing her comment to me.  This made me want to laugh, as I am about as close to a hipster as Snooki to a Greek scholar.  I wondered if she thought of all white people as hipsters, although I thought she was white, too.  She hissed at me a third time.  Then I felt awkward and weirded out.

The day was not a total bust, though.  After having our picnic rushed, not being able to use the hiking trail with the cool wood stairs, and being called a hipster, we headed over to the nearby Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge.  It was gorgeous and not even the osprey circling the air seemed to mind our presence.  Or maybe birds of prey like fake hipsters.

Good Boy!

July 22nd, 2011 by Suzanne | 1 Comment | Filed in family, hilarity, I love New York

Yesterday Dana and Ryan took Marcus on the city bus to meet me near my office for lunch. On the way down, Dana asked Marcus if he wanted a snack. She had a baggie of “Scooby Snack” Graham Crackers. Each cookie is shaped like a little bone.

Marcus said yes, so Dana pulled out the baggie and handed him a cookie. An older woman sitting near them on the bus gasped.

“Excuse but how can you give dog biscuits to your son?” she asked.

“Um, these are graham crackers,” Dana told her.

“Oh,” the woman said and blushed. Then she started laughing out of embarrassment.

Later, a they recounted the tale, Ryan said that they should have asked her what the problem was, as kids in Iowa eat dog biscuits all the time. We all laughed.

Then, hours later, on the bus on the way home from dinner, Marcus looked at Dana and asked her if he could eat a doggie bone.

My stomach hurt when I finished laughing.

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There Goes the Neighborhood

June 24th, 2011 by Suzanne | 1 Comment | Filed in Damn, fuck, I love New York

As I passed by the local sex shop on my way home from work yesterday, I looked over to see what interesting little costume they had in the window. It was empty. The store was gone. I was devastated.

I rarely went into this store, and the two or three times I did, once I couldn’t find what I wanted. I still thought it served a valuable need in the neighborhood. It was a reminder that people of all classes have sexual urges.

Like when my diner closed a few weeks ago because the building was being torn down for luxury condos, I feel sad that this neighborhood has gone from gentrified to luxurified to the point where there’s only super expensive shit or chain stores. I am certain that the local sex shop will be replaced with some hideous children’s clothing boutique or a yoga studio or something like that since that is what has come into basically every empty store (or it will just sit empty, which is another problem). Bah.

What Just Happened?

June 12th, 2011 by Suzanne | 3 Comments | Filed in I love New York, random, What is wrong with people?

Earlier this afternoon, Dr. H, Dr. P, and I were walking down Columbus Avenue. We just passed Lincoln Center and I was telling the good doctors about how my building needs its boiler replaced.

“That sounds expensive,” Dr. P said.

“Yeah, it is not going to be pretty,” I replied.

Dr. H had wandered off to toward the curb, where a small black Honda SUV was pulled to the side. The passenger window was rolled down. Dr. P and I stopped walking.

“What’s she doing?” Dr. P asked.

“Giving directions?” I guessed.

A few seconds later, Dr. H rejoined us. She was frowning slightly. “That was weird,” she said. “I heard a woman’s voice saying, ‘Excuse me, excuse me,’ so I went over the the car, thinking that she needed directions. But when I approached the window, she asked me if we were New Yorkers.”

“What?” Dr. P and I said.

“Yeah, she asked if we were New Yorkers. I said, ‘Yes, we are New Yorkers. Are you lost? Can I help you find something?’ Then she said no, giggled, and pulled away.”

Paula and I concurred that was very weird. “Was someone in the car with her?” I asked.

“No, she was a small Asian woman who was alone.”

We shook our heads and continued to walk. You never really know what will happen in New York.

Tattling

June 6th, 2011 by Suzanne | 1 Comment | Filed in Asshole idiots, evil, fuck, I love New York, other rants, What is wrong with people?

Dr. H and I were walking up 8th Avenue, chatting about the high and low points of “The Hangover Part II,” which we had just seen. As we crossed 42nd Street, a bus shot in front of us. It had made a reckless left turn and almost plowed through a crowd of people.

“HEY! WHAT THE FUCK?!?!?” I yelled.

“What are you fucking doing?” screamed the guy next to me.

All five of the people who were nearly mowed down made similar comments. The bus driver never even looked at us. It was scary.

As he sped west on 42nd, I made a mental note of the phone number written on the back door. (It’s 201.945.0556, in case anyone is interested.) Once I was safely on the sidewalk, I fished out my phone and tried calling the bus company to complain about their lunatic employee, but – shocking! – no one answered. Dr. H and I discussed how upsetting it was to nearly be run over and how little the driver cared.

A block later, I noticed two cops standing on the sidewalk.

“Maybe I should mention it to them,” I said to Dr. H.

“What good would that do?” she replied.

“None, but I want to anyway.” I thought I would feel better if I vented. And these happened to be super cute po-po. I felt that it might soothe my raw nerves to chat up some nice looking dudes. As expected, there was nothing they could do, but they weren’t surprised. They knew exactly what I meant.

When we walked away from the cops, Dr. H and I chatted about how hot they were. It made us giggle a lot and feel better.

Sad, I know.

The Small Things

May 27th, 2011 by Suzanne | 2 Comments | Filed in I love New York, random, warm fuzzy

An email was sent out at work at 1 pm announcing that the office would close at 3 pm in honor of Memorial Day weekend. “Hot diggity!” I thought to myself. “Hopefully my 2:30 will wrap up quickly and I shall be sailing promptly.”

At 4:30, I packed my shit up as fast as I could before someone asked me to do anything else and ran the fuck out. Since my new office is on Broadway, I’ve been walking home through the evil space known as Times Square. There was no way I would do that during a holiday weekend unless I wanted to get into a fistfight with someone, so I headed over toward 9th Ave. At my previous job, I used to walk home up 9th Avenue, and I always enjoyed it. There are much more interesting stores to peruse as I walk than the crap along the main tourist drag of Broadway in midtown.

When I arrived at the corner of 38th and 9th, I realized that my favorite deli was a block or two in other direction. It is my favorite deli because they have an excellent selection of calorie free Coke products and at a price that can’t be beat – only $1.50 for a 20 oz. bottle! I debated walking out of my way, but it was pretty hot and I figured that I should just stop elsewhere. Lots of places sell Diet Coke with Lime.

Hence a block later when I noticed a filthy looking bodega, I stopped in. I found my beverage of choice (which I should not drink anyway because of acid reflux, but I was hot and aggravated and did not care) and went to pay. It was $1.65, which is still a good deal. I pulled out my wallet.

As I counted out change, a strapping guy popped into the store and grabbed a single pack of PopTarts. He held it up and the counter guy said, “A dollar fifty.” Out of the corner of my eye, I could see the young man’s face fall. “OK,” I’ll get something else,” he said and put it back. I noticed he had a dollar bill in his hand. I could not help but think of how many times all I wanted was a motherfucking pack of PopTarts or a granola bar or a candy bar or something and I was just a little short. I looked at my wallet.

“Hey,” I said. “I’ll take care of it.”

He turned to me in surprise. I smiled. “It’s on me.” I meant to pay for the whole thing, but he put his dollar bill down, thanked me, and took off.

I felt a lot better about the world.

Pushing Ourselves

May 9th, 2011 by Suzanne | 2 Comments | Filed in Asshole idiots, I love New York

The Great Saunter took place this past Saturday. It is a loosely organized walk mostly around the perimeter of Manhattan. The total walk length, depending on the source, is 30 or 32 miles.

For the past three years, Husband and I have wanted to participate in the event. We love walking, and we love Manhattan, so ambling about seemed like a perfect way to spend a day. We were out of town or otherwise occupied for the previous two walks, but we signed up and showed up this year.

The walk officially began at South Street Seaport at 7:30 am, but some people with shpiles began walking around 7:20. Husband and I followed a group at 7:26. I turned my GPS watch on about ten minutes later. That is also when I ate my first snack of many.

It was a day of sunshine and carbohydrates, beautiful parks and crappy pavement, blisters and knee pain. Husband sat down a little before the tenth mile and changed his socks for the first time. The pair he wore were stuck to many blisters. At the eleventh mile, we ate Gu and commented on how much it tasted like frosting. By mile twelve, Husband had a barely noticeable limp. I began to worry about him. My feet hurt a little, but mostly I just wanted more Gatorade than I packed.

The halfway point (over 15 miles) was the flagpole at Inwood Hill Park, and we rested for a while. By this point, I had consumed two small bags of PopChips, a granola bar, a Clif bar, a packet of Gu, and 45 ounces of Gatorade. Husband had a granola bar and water. At the rest stop, I ate some cheddar crackers. I think Husband ate a Luna Bar.

The point is, he was physically falling apart and I was stuffing my face. I encouraged him to take the subway home, but he wanted to soldier on. He was determined to finish the walk, although he could barely walk five minutes without needing to rest. He said he would feel like a failure if he quit at that point.

Five miles later (during which we passed the most gorgeous park I have ever seen in NYC – Swindler Cove Garden along Harlem River Drive), we came to a subway station and I practically forced him to go home. He had walked about twenty miles, at least half of which he was in pain. I told him the only failure he faced at this point was seriously hurting himself for no good reason. He agreed, got on the subway, and I stopped at a convenience store for another 32 ounces of Gatorade.

I sauntered alone for another three or so miles. When I hit 93rd Street, I felt a sharp pain in the sole of my right foot. Blister! I thought about the half marathon I am training for, how a blister would fuck up my runs, and I exited the walk at 87th Street. I’d done a little less than 24.5 miles at that point and was quite proud of myself.

Here’s the part that makes no sense: instead of taking a cab home, I took the bus. That would have been mostly fine, except that I ran for the bus when I saw it pull up to the stop. Then when I got off the bus, I walked another 1/2 mile home. At this point, I developed a nasty callus blister on my right foot. If I had just called it quits for real, I would have been mostly unharmed.

Instead, like Husband, I pushed myself too hard and am hobbling around. Lessons: Quit while you’re ahead; there’s can be way too much of a good thing; pride goeth before a fall; etc.

Repenting

April 21st, 2011 by Suzanne | 3 Comments | Filed in Damn, evil, fuck, hilarity, I love New York, Jewishness, mortification

That little joke I made yesterday (but somehow did not publish to my blog until a few minutes ago) about eating lobster rolls over Passover? I am definitely sorry. It was not funny to joke about endangering my soul, although I am not going to lie: I really, really wanted a lobster roll for dinner. (Instead, I ate a crisp bread sandwich of herbed turkey and cheddar – not exactly kosher for Passover, either, I know – and plain microwave popcorn.)

Now that I have semi-repented for my sacrilegious ways, I hope that the plagues will stop raining down on me. Last week I developed an annoying rash which continues to annoy me (the allergist thought it was a mild case of hives). Husband and I were forced to kill to water bugs/roaches on Sunday. This morning the third plague revealed itself.

I swore that I saw something dash from the kitchen pantry under the stove while I made breakfast, but was not sure if it was a shadow, a figment of my imagination, or something small with multiple legs. Regardless, it would not hurt to put out more MaxForce insect killer, I decided. When I opened the pantry door, I was surprised to see shredded parts of a bag of pita chips on the ground.

“That’s odd,” I thought as Maurice the Brain Hamster began running faster on the wheel that powers my brain. “Roaches don’t tear things up…”

Right. As I picked up the bag of pita chips (something that does not belong in my home over Passover anyway), I surprised the little gray mouse nibbling on a chip behind it. We both screamed (OK, I screamed loud enough for both of us), and he/she ran out of the pantry under the stove while I stood in place screaming.

The irony of this Passover plague saga is two-fold. First, if I had cleaned out the chametz, the mouse would not be eating it. I suspect the mouse would starve to death because matzah and other pre-packaged Passover foods are gross. Second, when Husband and I attended a lovely Seder on Monday night, someone shared a story of finding a mouse stuck on a glue trap in her apartment and how awful it was. Of course I thought that I was glad that I never had had to deal with mice. Of course.

I don’t even want to know what comes next.

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