"When so I ponder, here apart, what shallow boons suffice my heart, what dust-bound trivia capture me,
I marvel at my normalcy."--Dorothy Parker
Showing posts with label nyc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nyc. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

graduation

It wasn't until I was removing a scrap of Ogilvie plaid and my grandmother's brooch from Greta's shoulder the night before the movers came that I realized what this move really is. I had been thinking of it as a little break from New York, a chance to explore Europe with our kids and buy us a little time to save up to combine apartments with the neighbors'. But as I contemplated which room in our house in The Hague the dress form should inhabit, I realized that never again would she be shoved into a living room because there was nowhere else to put her. She may not always have her own room, as she will have in the absurdly large house that awaits us now, but with this move we are graduating from young couplehood and early parenthood, the stages when a cozy apartment was our preferred footprint. We and most of our friends now have children, multiple children, in fact, and things like a dining room or the ability to stomp without disturbing the people downstairs no longer feel like luxuries, but necessities. I would like to think we have not graduated from city life entirely, but this form of it, definitely.















With the end of the school year, we have been celebrating other graduations, as well. Violet turned in her kindergarten smock to the school director and sang:

Start spreadin' the news 
I'm leaving today
I want to be a part of it
First grade, first grade!

In the fall, lunch will be in the cafeteria with the big kids, and she will do her schoolwork in a desk. She is sad about leaving her friends here, of course, especially after the backyard movie nights and playdates with favorite friends that coincided with the end of school, but I have been impressed with how completely she understands what we are doing and that she is up for the adventure.

Townes is no longer a baby, but has the cutest little waddle of a run, a keen sense of comedy, and a word for whatever he wants to communicate, which is mostly "fun!" "play!" "bite" "thanks!" and his own name and those of the people he loves. Steve is eating barbecue in South Africa and negotiating with Saudis. I just finished my first (and maybe only) residential interior design gig and am working on a book or two. It's a whole new world out there, for all of us.
 
 And now that we have said our goodbyes, had our last milkshake and pretzel at Cafe Sabarsky and buns at Bauhaus, and done our last load of communal laundry, off we go. Our furniture is on a slow boat to the Netherlands, and our car is packed for a cross-country road trip. I'll post along the way. Goodnight, New York City! We love you!
 

Thursday, August 30, 2012

summer in the city


We have been blessed in the last few years to have excellent, I mean really wonderful, neighbors. We all moved in as child-free couples, and over the past six years have added a dozen children to our building family, meaning that our boundaries are starting to spread to Connecticut and beyond. So, between our summer trips we were looking to get in lots of neighbor time, hoping to make the most of proximity while we have it.


Tracy arranged for music classes in the playroom. Sara suggested a walk down Park Avenue to check out the public art installation of Niki de Saint Phalle's sculptures.


I may have suggested a stop at Dylan's Candy Bar.


During all that screaming good fun, I tried not to think about the changes that are coming. I love these ladies and their babies.

Check out Sara's website!

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

ten years

That first August was unbearably hot. I arrived with one suitcase and a round-trip airline ticket, convinced it was nothing but a graduation trip. I did pack a few resumes in my carry-on, though, just in case. On the first evening of my visit, looking across the Hudson from New Jersey to Manhattan, I was struck with a sudden conviction that the metropolis that lay before me was to be my new home and, at the same moment, besieged by an intense revulsion at the very thought. I pictured hoardes of type-A workers in miniature, scurrying around shadowy, litter-strewn sidewalks and streets and up and down subway stairs, like rodents. For several nights afterward, I lay awake in bed at my friend Laura's apartment in Hoboken as summer thunderstorms beat outside the window, listening to Norah Jones on my iPod to distract myself from the nervousness that constricted my midsection like a corset, convinced it could not all work out, and not sure I wanted it to. I prayed desperately for aid and wisdom, though exactly what I wanted them for was a bit unclear.

When my friend Dodge called a few days into my visit to say that the girl who had been subletting his Upper East Side apartment had bailed, and did I want to stay there until he found someone else, Laura and I took a bus into the city to see the place. From the street we pushed through a pair of ugly brown doors and went directly to the stairs, alongside of which sat a collection of large plastic trash bins. It was a long climb to the fourth floor. Once we were actually inside the apartment, having gained access using a set of malfitted keys I had picked up from a friend of the friend who was "officially" renting the place, it was only slightly less discouraging. The high ceilings, marble fireplace, and large bedroom were less noticeable than the layers of grime covering the walls and window frames and the dust floating in the dim afternoon sunlight. The closets were full of Dodge's old stuff, which I would later ship to him via Media Mail in a dozen large boxes, and the toilet wouldn't flush without repairs.  When I sank onto the mustard leather Mission-style armchair in the corner--a street find, I later learned--it exhaled with a distinct scent of age and rot that I can still smell when I picture it. Laura, who had been in the city for a year before marrying and relocating to Hoboken, asked me how much the rent would be.

"$1,050," I answered, the number sounding impossibly large.

"Take it," Laura said emphatically.

I cancelled my return flight. Later that same week, an internship fell into place when I, the newly-minted Humanities graduate, mentioned to an acquaintance that I was looking to go into public relations, not knowing he worked for a corporate PR firm. My acquaintance proved to be a scoundrel and a liar, who blamed me for his many mistakes and took credit for my few successes, but the internship paid almost enough to cover the rent, and kept me in the city long enough to decide that I could make a life for myself here.

Those first six months were like standing in front of a screaming jet engine, trying to resist being sucked in. I would wake at six a.m. and put on one of my two new suits, purchased with credit card debt, or one of the couple of dresses I had packed in my suitcase and that had, until then, been worn only for church and wedding receptions. Outside, invigorated by the cool morning air and youthful ambition, I walked with a purposeful stride toward the subway. A block or two from the 77th Street Station, what had been a few straggling pedestrians grew into a teeming mass of similarly attired professionals, until at last we descended the stairs in a crush, passing through turnstiles and onto the six train, pressing ever closer until we formed a single, sweaty block that swayed together with the motion of the train. A long day's work, then home again the way I had come. By the time I walked in the door at eight p.m. I was so tired that I would collapse onto the couch and fall asleep, often waking the following morning still in my clothes. And then I would do it all over again. At the end of the month I would put my meager earnings with some of the money my parents were loaning me on a monthly basis into an unmarked envelope and walk to an old barber shop a few blocks away, where I would say I had something for Tony. I would hold out the envelope and someone would slide it under the cash register. I never asked questions. Neither did they.

Every Tuesday after work I would buy a whole rotisserie chicken at Dallas BBQ, a box of oats, and a head of lettuce at Citarella, from which I would glean a week's worth of breakfasts and dinners. Lunch was pizza-by-the-slice, unless by some good fortune there had been a meeting with clients at work, which meant catering leftovers. I also met a few kind men who were happy to provide a young intern with a decent meal out in exchange for conversation and a moderately pretty face to look at across the table. Without them I may have starved. Saturdays I would go to the Metropolitan Museum to sketch or walk down Madison Avenue looking in shop windows, and in the evenings, if I didn't have a date, I would work on the apartment, eking what little cleanliness and order I could out of the outrageously neglected space. I would listen to old BBC comedies on the little television that had come with the apartment and, standing on an old metal filing cabinet, wash walls or paint trim until it looked halfway decent. It did occur to me occasionally to wonder, if I were to fall and fatally injure myself, how long it would be before someone noticed I was missing. Weeks, I reckoned.

In early October my parents came to visit, bringing the remainder of my useful belongings and hoping to reassure themselves of my well-being. We drove upstate to visit my grandparents, who were temporarily serving as missionaries there. It was a welcome escape, if only for a weekend. We walked through woods of intense green and breathed clean air, and I felt bathed in the warmth of familial affection. When my parents had to return me to the city, my father stood at my apartment door for a long time with a hand resting on the knob, looking extremely reluctant to leave. My mother later confessed that she had cried for days afterward. My own feelings of loneliness and confusion about why I was staying were palpable. Nightly prayers were fervent and accompanied by tears.

The difficulties began to ease. I found a roommate to cover half the rent and began to make friends, including the one I would eventually marry. A more established female colleague took me under her wing and taught me how to properly hail a cab and gave me useful encouragement when the jerk who had gotten me the internship began to undermine my efforts to turn it into a real job. I found five hundred dollars on my first solo cab ride and the driver insisted that I keep it, as cash could not be turned in to the lost and found. Steve and I moved from friendship to dating. And by the time I went home for Christmas, there were still plenty of questions--would our relationship succeed, what would I do next, now that my internship had finished and I was no longer interested in PR--but whether or not I would stay in New York was not one of them. I had found my place in the world.

Monday, October 31, 2011

spoooky season


We spent all of October getting in the mood for the holiday today, beginning with our purchase of Goodnight Goon, A Petrifying Parody after Violet begged for it on three separate visits to the bookstore, and continuing with multiple viewings of It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown and The Adventures of Ichabod (narrated by Bing Crosby). Violet and her daddy carved a pumpkin, we have been dancing non-stop to The Addams Family theme song, and on Saturday we trick-or-treated and played holiday-themed games at our church's autumn social.

The most memorable, mind-altering, dare I say breathtaking experience, however, was The Great Jack 'O Lantern Blaze in Hudson Valley, which their website(hudsonvalley.org) calls, "A land art installation informed by artists such as Michael Heizer, Robert Smithson, Donald Judd, and Andy Goldsworthy." They aren't kidding. More than 4,000 intricately carved pumpkins lit up the gardens of Van Cortlandt Manor, an historic house that once belonged to one of New York's most prominent families.


Our mouths were agape at life-sized dinosaurs made up entirely of pumpkins in one vignette, and delicate, lacy Celtic configurations in another. There were fish, butterflies, and of course, spooky ghosts and goblins.


The kids were into it, though, truth be told, no pumpkin could be as fascinating to them as the cheap holiday trinkets in the gift shop. Light sabers, anyone?


Happy Halloween!

Thursday, October 20, 2011

last gasp of summer


As life speeds up in anticipation of a new baby, I am falling further and further behind in my record keeping of the present.  However, this Indian summer has lasted a long, long time in New York, so I don't feel too badly presenting our end of summer memories now, a month after school has started.  This particular outing was to Victoria Gardens in Central Park, the perfect place for a gaggle of children to take advantage of warm weather and one another's company, and the chance to vamp for Sara's camera (sarablackburn.com).

tracy taking the kids for a spin...

the girls of 305...

practicing my newborn skills on baby Brodie...

one of these things is not like the others (he doesn't seem to mind)...

sara & tracy doing crowd control...

best friends...

violet goes victorian...

last look...

Sunday, September 4, 2011

on the high line


It may sound strange to non-Manhattanites, but I was daunted by the idea of August in the city with a child, especially with her daddy (and evening wrestling buddy) out of town on business for much of the month and my belly expanding daily.  As luck would have it, our favorite neighborhood friends were also here, and it turned out to be non-stop fun:  daily trips to the playground, gymnastics camp with Elsa, play dates, and outings like this one, which turned into an impromptu Chelsea Market picnic on the High Line, a recently opened park on what used to be derelict train tracks in the Meatpacking District.  Our friend Sara Blackburn (sarablackburn.com) provided the photography, as usual.