Posts tagged ‘NYC life’

November 11, 2008

Public Displays Of Private Affairs

Listen up, New Yorkers who live in high-rise apartment buildings: just because you cannot see into the windows of surrounding buildings does not mean that you are not lit up like Christmas to people across the way. If you do exercise videos in the buff toward the back of your apartment…oh, man, can I still see you. Without even trying. In fact, it’s very hard not to see you. And I’m sure other people can see you, too, and are probably not as polite about looking away as I am.

Seriously, last night, as I was looking at this woman (and trying to stop looking at her), a naked old man totally ran back and forth in the apartment under hers. I am not even joking, I swear. What is with these people? Being filthy rich and having an enormous apartment in Soho must make you want to turn on all the lights and pace nakedly back and forth before the windows. How can they not realize they’re visible? I’m never leaving any curtains open ever again.

My last year in Chicago, I lived in a fourth-floor studio with big windows facing out over a parking lot, which was ringed by distant apartment buildings. I couldn’t directly see any other people in their apartments, and so I breezily concluded that no one could see me, and lived for a year without curtains. I now wonder how many of my activities ended up photographed and posted on the internet.

I have become more conscious of curtains lately, as there is currently a giant gang of men working construction in my backyard, and continually bringing buckets of rubble up from under the house, right in front of my street-level windows. From what I can tell, the crew consists of a pair of Hispanic men, exactly the same height, one with facial hair and one without, who both wear hoodies and are involved in a continual fireman’s ladder of excavating rubble buckets from whatever is going on in the backyard, and one gangly, furious-looking Polish man who stands around smoking and glaring at the other two. Plus, my landlord, who shows up from time to time to conduct an endless lecture in deafening, emphatic Polish. I’m frankly at a loss to imagine what he could find to discuss at such length. I’ve never talked so much at a stretch in my life, and he ,shows up to orate at least twice a day. So, that’s the entire cast of characters as I’ve spotted them, but it sounds like there must be at least fifteen additional people working back there. I can’t tell for sure, because shortly after all this work began, the back door into our garden apartment (and our main source of natural light) was nailed shut from the outside and then covered over in thick black plastic, momentarily confusing me one morning into thinking I’d slept straight through the day. So whatever’s going on back there is a mystery to me.

Every time I enter or exit my apartment, the workers stop whatever they are doing (emerging with a bucket from just under my bedroom, or standing atop the enormous economy-size dumpster that’s been permanently installed in the street outside my window) and stare at me until I’ve passed. It’s really uncomfortable, and my initial impulse was to ignore them steadily, but that was uncomfortable as well, because I was forced to do so multiple times a day. And I felt like a bitch, since they are working on my apartment. So, at one point, as I passed one of the twins (the one with the facial hair), I said hello.

‘Heeeyyy, babyyy,’ he replied. Fine. Bitchface and steady refusal of eye contact it is, then.

Given this environment, I’m newly interested in the opacity of my curtains. When I lived in the back of the apartment, I had no curtains at all for the better part of a year. Then, summer came, and there were boys in the next yard. I bought a $.99 shower curtain, and then realized it was transparent, so I bought another one, and between the two of them, I felt fairly private. Then, I moved to the front of the apartment, with windows right on the busy sidewalk. I bought some nice curtains this time, and spent a good bit of time with a friend, taking turns with one of us standing on the sidewalk and the other positioning herself directly in front and behind my various lamps, dancing around and removing clothing, and I came away from these experiments fairly confident that my activities weren’t particularly observable from the street.

The other windows in the apartment, however, were not crash-tested. Until the back door was papered over, the guys in the back yard used to watch us as we made coffee in the mornings, as if we were some sort of mildly interesting zoo animals. I don’t miss the company, although I’m sorry for the loss of light. Additionally, there’s a little window in our shower that gives onto the backyard, but it’s frosted and marbled. Still, it’s a little disconcerting to bathe with several men carrying on a conversation just on the other side of the glass. And one of my roommates hung a scrim of washrags over the frosted glass, which immediately made me paranoid that perhaps the window was transparent after all, and I’d given everyone a show with that first morning’s shower.

During the day, I work in a cubicle with giant windows, and the immediate view is of the skyscraper opposite. It is close enough for me to see everyone across working, and even to tell if there is text or pictures on their computer screens. I sit with my back to the windows, though, and occasionally I forget that I don’t really have any privacy, especially after dark. I have yet to catch the eye of someone in the building opposite, but I’m conscious of them there behind me, and I’ll often wonder if I’m being watched and turn around to see.

This afternoon, for example, I realized I had a little boogie, and dealt with it in the usual way. But then, I wheeled around guiltily to see if anyone in the building opposite had witnessed this. And directly opposite was a man standing right up in the window, wearing a yarmulke and bowing repeatedly over his little book (the Torah? I don’t know from Judaism). To either side of him, his coworkers worked on, unawares. Now, that’s not particularly embarrassing, but…it’s private, yeah? Later, I turned around again, and he was plastered against the window, staring at me, or someone or something in my building. What do you do if you make eye contact with someone in an opposite building? Do you wave? Or does that puncture the polite fiction that, as we all go on about our private businesses in bright and framing windows, we are unseen?

September 24, 2007

Dear MTA:

Dear administrators of MTA’s “Poetry in Motion” series:

I write to commend you on your selection of a stanza from Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass for your “Poetry in Motion” series, which features various poems reprinted on the overhead panels of MTA subway trains. I can think of no more appropriate bit of poesy to brighten the subway journeys of commuting New Yorkers than:

“If you, passing, meet me and desire to speak to me,
why should you not speak to me?
And why should I not speak to you?”

Clearly, this stanza is perfect for transit poetry, because what New Yorker does not wish to be more frequently addressed by strangers on the subway? In further celebration of this poem, I offer the following pastiche that more accurately reflects my unique perspective (that of a young woman who often travels by subway very late at night):

“If you, passing, find me attractive and desire to harass me endlessly,
why should you not harass me endlessly?
For what can I possibly do about it?”

Thanks again, “Poetry in Motion” – I look forward to more great selections in future!

Sincerely,
Elizabeth,
Transit customer

August 8, 2007

NYC Despises Summer

I had always heard that New Yorkers prefer to leave the city in the summer, and as my first summer here approached, various friends of mine (musicians, as it happens) began worrying about not getting into some festival somewhere far away for the season, which they seemed to think was like not getting a date to prom. I had assumed that this was because all the rich and fabulous “summer” elsewhere, leaving only the unwashed masses behind to melt on the pavement. But as this blistering August grinds on, I now realize that everyone’s so frantic to bail because summer drives New Yorkers (a population teetering on the brink of sanity at the best of times) completely stark, staring mad.

I love summer, and heat makes me happy, and while it’s undoubtedly relentlessly hot and sweaty here, and while the subways are certainly far from pleasant at this time of year, and while it’s impossible to make any money at all waiting tables at Lincoln Center when all the theatres are dark. . .still, with the pretty, shiny sunshine everywhere, and the pretty, floaty sundresses I am able to wear every day without so much as toting a hoodie, I am far, far happier and more even-tempered than in other seasons.

Not so everyone else. Everyone else is freaking pissed. Everyone else is sweaty and angry and spoiling for a fight. Here is the story of my day so far:

I left the apartment. I walked to the subway. The train came right as I came down the stairs, and so I ran onto it, behind a woman who glared at me for pushing in behind her even though she’d just pushed on behind someone else, and in front of a man who snorted at me for not getting out of his way as he tried to push on behind me. Every single passenger in the car was sweaty, smelly and had a huge puss on his or her face. The train started up. The train stopped. And stood there for a long time. The woman who’d glared at me earlier shouted something at me about the train being stopped. I couldn’t hear her because I had my headphones on (if it weren’t for my ipod, I don’t think I could live here), so she threw up her hands and scowled. The train finally started up again and stopped at 1st Ave. A kid held the doors open for his friends. Some MTA workers on the train yelled at him for it. He yelled back that he wasn’t going to wait in a boiling hot tunnel for 10 more minutes. They got into a full-out brawl. The train stopped again. And stood there for a long time. The brawl continued. I turned up my ipod. Everyone around me directed their anger my way. I turned it down. The train stood there. The conductor came out of the booth and everyone glared at her. She asked the MTA workers what to do, because the tunnel signals weren’t working, and they stopped screaming at the kid long enough to tell her just to go ahead anyway. Everyone glared at her harder. The train started up again and stopped at 3rd Ave, where I exited.

I tried to return some shoes at DSW. I dealt with a clerk, who wanted to kill me, and then with a manager, who wanted to kill the clerk and me, but not before torturing the crap out of both of us. The clerk felt the same way about the manager. I left them clenching their fists at each other, and I still have the shoes.

I bought a salad at Whole Foods. The cashier hated me. I bought a banana from a fruit vendor. He really, really hated me.

I walked past a homeless person, who stared pointedly at my chest and screamed (and I quote), ‘Oh, give me a fucking break!’

And now I’m indoors once again. I’m afraid to go back out. I’m not a mild and patient person – in fact, I frequently go around in a constant state of low-boiling rage – but New York at plus-90 degrees is too aggressive even for me. I don’t want to be here anymore. I want to be somewhere where people can handle sunshine, where they realize that oppressive heat is supposed to lull you, to make you mellow and placid, to knock you flat into your hammock, where you will lounge until the sun sets, too blissed out to bother with feeding yourself, much less coming to blows over trifles.

I want to go back to Southeast Asia.

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