Posts tagged ‘summer’

August 18, 2008

Peculiar Behavior In and Around Parks

Last week, I was having lunch in Bryant Park. For those of you who don’t live here, Bryant Park is the large park in the middle of the working week part of town, at the back of the research library. There are several terraces all around the perimeter of a large lawn, and these terraces have a lot of little green, metal tables and folding chairs, and during lunchtime (or just after work) during the week, every single inch of space is occupied with businesspeople eating street meat and soba and pizza slices and overpriced panini, and with tourists licking ice cream cones and pointing their cameras everywhere.

At any rate, I was sitting at a table I’d managed to grab, and I heard a giant, crashing sound. I looked up just in time to see a giant tree branch crashing down from above. A man, woman and young boy scattered as it broke across a garbage can. The boy immediately grabbed his shoulder and opened his mouth in shock, then closed it again. None of this was funny. But what happened next was hilarious.

Immediately, a park security guard came over with a walkie-talkie and three men in plain clothes. They rushed up, faces full of concern, and began to interview everyone at the scene. They examined the pieces of the branch, where they’d broken into bits and fallen to either side of the trashcan. They interviewed everyone at the scene, except for the boy, who was still holding his shoulder and silently opening and closing his mouth like a goldfish. I assume he was trying not to cry (he was about 13). A guy came along with a giant dolly to wheel away the wreckage. Many people who’d been witnesses came up to offer their testimony. The boy’s mother retold the tale over and over, with large, explanatory gestures, and she and the security guard spent much time determining at exactly what point the branch had collided with the trashcan, and scrutinizing the trashcan at the spot in question. A tourist with a digital camera was enlisted to take numerous photographs of the scene. Everybody got on cell phones, and began to explain what had happened to various people who hadn’t been there, but might need to know. Apparently, if a tree falls in Bryant Park, the situation will be handled.

Speaking of interesting things I’ve observed recently, on Saturday, I was walking around Prospect Park, and I found myself behind two women who were swinging a little girl between them. The little girl told one of the women that it was her turn now, and she took the place of the little girl, and leapt into the air, to feign being swinged.

‘Whooo!’ she said. ‘I almost got off the ground there.’

The next day, Sunday, I was walking in the Village, and I passed a little boy and a man, with another man between them, all holding hands. The man leapt into the air, as if being swung by the other man and the boy.

‘Whooo!’ he said. ‘I got a little height there.’

It was weird.

June 22, 2008

I’ve Been…Smiling

Summer is the time to reevaluate how my face is coming along. This year’s scrutiny (coming after a full year of life in NYC) brought to light a couple of problems:

1. I need to wear sunscreen every, single day from now until I’m dead; and

2. I need to stop going around with a permanent, furious scowl.

I’m getting mad lines, and one thing I do not want is to be one of these old women (or old men, for that matter – I shouldn’t just say women) whose faces have settled into a permanent expression, directed at everything and everybody, that says nothing so much as, ‘What on Earth! The nerve of you, walking around with your whorish face and your young pants!’ (Or, in the case of old men, ‘Goddamn you, with your stupid face and pants.’)

My fear of ending up hopelessly trapped behind a mask of outraged tragedy, regardless of whatever I’m actually thinking or feeling, is why I’m not as hard on people who get Botox as most of my fellow anti-vanity/age-defying-treatments feminists. People always say it robs you of expression – but so does a permanent bitchface, and the bitchface has the added disadvantage of making other people take an immediate dislike of you. When I get old, I want my wrinkles to be of the ‘Life is hilarious!!! I look like a well-fed pug dog!’ variety. But for that, you have to have an ear-to-ear grin all your life, and I rarely smile, because I hate everything.

All of which is a long explanation for why I decided, upon coming back from vacation this past Sunday, to make a concerted effort to go around with a gentle smile on my face. Other young women do this – the problem is, because they’re only doing a lips-closed slight smile with their faces frozen above the nose, it usually comes off looking like a self-satisfied, judgmental smirk, but at least it keeps the scowl lines at bay.

So, starting Monday, I’ve been walking around smiling everywhere. Which, incidentally, provides an amusing clash of context, because I’m still an angry commuter. I still speedwalk, tailgate, step on people’s heels and cut them off, but now I do all that with a beatific smile on my face, as though my body and my head are unaware of each other’s activities.

And I’ve noticed something – something that I remember from way back in the distant past, something that eventually made me feel so annoyed and hassled that I began to develop the permanent scowl I’m now trying to eradicate…

Smiling makes you approachable. This week, I have given oh, so many directions. I have had to duck a frightening amount of attempted eye contact. And I have even been asked by children to retrieve errant sport balls that had gone into the street. But the climax of all of this occurred on Wednesday.

On Wednesday, I was taking the 6 train downtown, when a girl who was disembarking paused to lean into my face and exclaim, waving her hands and grinning, ‘Are you in loooove???’

‘What?’ I said.

‘You look like you’re in love! You’re just smiling and laughing to yourself, and I thought – there’s something great going on with her!!’

Now, from time to time, I’ve had various unsolicited comments and questions directed at me by strangers. They include: ‘Damn, girl. I ain’t hurtin’ you;’ ‘Are you okay?’;’ ‘Calm down, bitch;’ and ‘Excuuuuse me.’

But never, ever, in my entire life has anybody ever asked me what I was so happy about. I guess there’s some truth to ‘smile and the world smiles with you.’

No matter what you’re really thinking.

me

Is this looooove???

May 30, 2008

The Warm Weather Has Brought Them All Out

Two yards over from us, right outside my window, there’s a family with 24 children. Now that the weather’s nice, the children are let out of the house at about 9:00 a.m. and they remain outside until midnight…or even later. Now, I’m pretty outspoken about the fact that I don’t much care for children, but even if you think the little darlings are presh, you would probably agree with me that these particular children blow. I mean, they are just the worst freaking children ever. Imagine 24 little banshees setting up an inarticulate, piercing scream, and then maintaining that scream for fifteen hours a day, seven days a week, and you will begin to have some idea of the constant soundtrack that has accompanied my waking and would-be sleeping hours for the past several weeks.

And on top of that, the guys who live next door (in between us and the children) have also ventured out into their back yard. Which is fine. Except that they (and their friends) are of that breed of partiers who think the only way to enjoy socializing is to get drunk and scream. Back when I had a social life, I was in the ‘get drunk and lay around’ or ‘get drunk and vehemently discuss politics’ or ‘get drunk and laugh hysterically at everything everybody says’ social circles, and I have never understood the ‘get drunk and scream’ set. I mean, what are they even doing? What are they talking about? You know who I mean, right? Those who go “wooooooooooooooooooo!” over and over? What is that? If any wooers are reading this, seriously, explain to me why this happens, and why it is fun, and how it is even remotely tolerable for the people you are with. Why do woooooers have friends at all? They’re always surrounded by crowds. To me, the whole point of getting drunk in a backyard is to let it all go, to relax, to chill, to stare at each other and laugh at nothing, and let the wind blow through the chimes. I usually feel like screaming “wooooooooooooooooooooooo” when I’m at my most sober and parachuting from a plane. Not at 3 a.m., when I’ve had enough alcohol to knock out a horse.

Memorial Day eve, the guys next door at about 10 or so got out a guitar, and started screaming the lyrics to some songs. You’d expect drunk people to have a relatively short attention span for this kind of thing, right? No. They did the entire songs, and they kept it up, in unison and just screaming, for a full hour. And of course, since the kids were still outdoors, they started trying to scream over the drunk guys, and the drunk guys wouldn’t be upstaged by a bunch of children. Escalate, escalate. And the women attending the dude party crowed with forced laughter, trying to convince themselves they were included.

This is a bit of a tangent, but frankly, I just don’t comprehend the general jubilance that most people seem to be brimming over with at all times. It seems to take so little to make other people happy. One more damn, stupid Friday night with the same people drinking the same beer and talking about the same nonsense, and people go “woooooooo!!!!!” for sheer joy. I’ve never gotten that much joy out of a mere party, even if it was one of the (few) parties that actually turned out to be really fun. A party can be pleasant or it can be dull, but it’s rarely a portal to ecstasy (unless you’re on it). But most people are positively stoked all the time about nothing. These are the people who are so thrilled to be drinking and going “wooooooooooooo” that they will keep it up until the sun rises, and do it all over again the very next night. Even in my most hard-partying period, I either had to stir up some interesting shit (read: make out with somebody), or I was pretty much over it by 2:00.  The only times in my actual life that I’ve felt such joy I could have screamed “woooooooo” for hours were the times when someone had just given me an award.

Which explains a lot about me, and now that I write that, I guess it’s not that it takes so little to make other people happy, but rather, that it takes so much to make me happy. Perhaps I should examine that.

(On even more of a tangent, I have a theory that this is how potheads get started: they’re formerly active people who one day realized that if they just deadened enough brain cells, they’d actually become able to tolerate the crushing boredom of sitting around living rooms with their friends, watching a movie that everyone has already seen three times. Woooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)

Anyway, back to the subject at hand, I don’t actually mind the next-door guys as much as the children, because the guys next door so far (knock on wood) have gotten quiet once it hits 11:30 or so (also, a couple of them are attractive). But the kids are out there screaming all hours. Children are officially more obnoxious than drunk twenty-something hipsters.

Speaking of children ruining things for everybody else, I believe I’ve mentioned before that I find the increasingly crowded running track to be another drawback of summer. I usually run about 11:00 a.m. on weekdays, and it’s a pretty good time to go. Yesterday, however, there was a nursery school on the track. Some childcare workers had taken a whole gaggle of kindergarten-aged children onto the track, where of course, the kids were all over. I was running past, and a little girl waddled right into my path; I swerved to avoid her, and she somehow managed to leap over a whole lane and get in my way again, at which point, I pretty much knocked her over. “Hey! Hey!” I barked, trying to warn her, but she was in her own world. The childcare worker, to her credit, yelled at the little girl instead of me – what I don’t understand is, this track is right in between a giant, grassy park, and a big playground. Given those other, clearly more appropriate and desirable options, why the hell would they bring the kids onto the crowded running track?

The city’s got me feeling so hassled this week that I’m even feeling crowded in my own bedroom, what with all the backyard hoopla. I feel overrun – wherever I am standing, someone will undoubtedly suddenly need to be standing right there. If I find a deserted area, five minutes after I get there, four people will come sit on my damn lap. Hey, New York: why don’t you all let me know wherever it is that you’re not going to need to be, and I will go there?

And yes, I realize that the answer to this question is “anywhere else on the planet other than NYC.” Sigh.

May 26, 2008

I’ve Been Exploring: McCarren Park Kite Festival

Last summer, I saw nothing of New York. This summer I’m trying to go on at least a brief walkabout every nice weekend. I bring my camera with me and make strangers uncomfortable by pointing it around with the flash off. When I was backpacking, all I did was wander around and look at things and take photos. I should really explore New York City the same as I did Phnom Penh, or Luang Prabang. Because who knows how long I’ll be here.

The weekend before last, I took some pictures just around my neighborhood here, Greenpoint. I live near McCarren Park, which is a shitty little park, really, but in the summer it (like all parks) becomes a festival of happiness, as everybody sacks out on the grass to soak up sun while they can, and wonder why they don’t just move to a nicer city. (Do I sound a little down on NYC lately?)

Greenpoint is the second largest Polish community in the States (after Chicago), and a lot of the signage and stuff around here is in Polish, which is sometimes fun. For example, this sign is on my block…

Wedel to urok, wedel to smak!

Wedel to urok, wedel to smak!

I don’t know what Wedel to urok, wedel to smak! means, and I don’t want to, because what I’ve decided it means is much more fun.

Every weekend in McCarren Park, there is a farmer’s market:

A farmer's market.

A farmer’s market.

Where you can buy honey, among other things:

Many honey.

Many honey.

Younger people lie on the grass, and look chill and fashionable:

Crowded park.

You know you want to lie with us.

And older people sit on the benches, and look pissed and disapproving:

We are older than other people here.

We think you should sit up and put more clothes on.

Some people are very happy to be in the park:

We are so happy!

We are so happy!

While other people think the park’s happy to see them:

coolsmaller

We are so cool.

The park can be peaceful:

Less crowded park.

Or there might be a parade:

Don't react to the parade.

Let’s not react to the parade.

This particular day, there was a kite festival:

Kites!

Kites! And families!

There were many kites:

Another shot of kites. And some dude.

Kites! And some dude!

And clowns performing:

Clowns!

The clowns were not as funny as this little girl is making them seem:

A hilarious show.

You SLAY me!

And of course, there are children in the park:

Horrid little children.

Horrid little children. See? Even their moms look sick of them.

Look at them, trying to be all wide-eyed and endearing. Posers.

Well, that’s all for the park, but I did want to mention that later that night, as I was waiting for the L to come home, I saw this couple indulging in shameless subway PDA:

Subways are romantic!

The romance of the subway!

As you can see, most people ignored them, but I was disgusted, as was this random guy standing behind me:

Gross!

Gross!

…Hey…wait a second. Isn’t that…the same guy?!?!

But how…? But what…?

My mind is officially blown.

April 25, 2008

Spring Is Here: A Runner’s Lament

Summer is just around the corner. Normally at this time of year, my seasonal anger (which starts to build in late September and reaches its peak in the dead month of February) melts as the sun rises. This year is different, however, because this year is the first year I’ve managed to run outdoors throughout the entire winter. New York is mild enough; in Chicago, I could never make it much past mid-October. Anyway, because of this, for the first time the warming weather has actually had some negative effects in my life: there are people about now. When I go running in the park of a morning (or afternoon), there are people all over the paths. People meandering back and forth, people with dogs, people with babies, people with yoga mats and ice cream cones and no sense of purpose or direction. People, in short, who are In The Way.

They are even in the way on the running track, which blows my mind. While I may hate it, I understand how some people arrive at the conclusion that sidewalks are an appropriate place to list vaguely back and forth while staring at the sky with your thumb up your ass, but surely an actual running track is the one place in New York where even the most placid and directionless fool would realize people are meant to move about in an orderly, brisk, purposeful fashion. But yet, the track in Greenpoint is clogged with people (and their freaking children) wandering all over the place, completely oblivious to the lanes and the many runners moving with a momentum that makes it difficult to swerve and stop at a moment’s notice. There are people who appear as though this one half-hearted lollop around a track is the first time they’ve gotten off a couch since they hit puberty. There are old people who wheel around and stop in the lane and gawk at you when you run up behind them, as though they’re horribly offended you would do something so blatant and aggressive as run on a running track, when they are out for their morning waddle. There are even (I swear to God) hulking teenage boys riding little girls’ bikes the wrong way around the track. And incidentally, every single time I’ve observed any soccer player from the field in the middle of the track crossing after some errant ball, I’ve never once seen one of them look both ways and wait for runners to pass. Nope, they just stroll right on across without looking up and let the joggers either stop short, jerk to the sides or plow straight into them.

So much for the running track. There are also two parks where I run every day, and both of them have been lately ruined by the Brooklyn Park Service’s yearly spring maintenance. In Park No. 1, they are busily cutting the branches off all the trees; to avoid killing people with the falling limbs, they helpfully tape off the portion of the walk that they’ll be working on that day, except that they usually only remember to tape off one side of it, so that you’ll be running along and suddenly you’re clotheslined by a length of police tape appearing seemingly out of nowhere, just before a giant tree comes crashing down behind you. And the air is thick with sawdust. In Park No. 2, they have repaved the running track with an insanely thick, pillowy bed of uneven wood shavings, which is about as easy to run through as a Chuck E. Cheese ball pit.

I can’t wait till fall.

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