I'm her Hume Cronyn, she my Jessica Tandy

Tuesday, August 31, 2004

Neenah with pride

The story of Neenah, Wisconsin.

With a shout out to Dan Donahue, who like me, is a Brooklyn resident who left his heart in the Neenah-Menasha metro area. And also his stomach, which loves beer brats.

By the way, it was my friend Mark's idea to write this in a bikeride narrative style, so if it's really cheesy, the blame goes to him.

We start out from my house, on Yorkshire Road. It's the solar house, though you can't tell from the front. My parents designed it themselves in 1979. That's why we almost froze in the winter of 1982. There was only a woodburning stove and some panel heaters to keep it warm through a Wisconsin winter. I remember huddling together in front of the wood burning stove, cooking hot dogs on it, and thinking we were all going to die. An emergency furnace was soon installed. But it's a beautiful house on the inside, ask anyone. That's my dad outside, pacing around and muttering into a tiny dictaphone. From even a short distance, it's really hard to tell what he's doing. Which is why, in junior high, the girl across the street told her friends that my dad talked to the grass.

From here, we're heading down Bayview road, my favorite road in the whole town. One way, it's a five minute walk to the lake (longer if you're carrying a canoe on your shoulders). The other way, it's bordered by a lot of really beautiful old trees, and a boggy marsh, full of cattails and frogs, and sometimes deer. We used to run around in there a lot when I was a kid. The cattails are so dense, you could hide just inches away from whoever was it in a game, and they wouldn't see you. On the right is the oldest house in Neenah. First it was a mill, then a brothel, then at some point, my seventh grade English teacher moved into it. The boat launch and city pool are next. Then around what's called The Point, where the lighthouse is, and where a lot of people catch fish, which I expect are mutant fish, because the lake is full of all kinds of fertilizer runoff. My friends and I spent hours here at night when we were in high school, sitting on the swinging benches and, for reasons I cannot remember, smashing cream puffs and other pastries in each other's faces. As you ride around the rest of the point, the road forks. If you go straight, you go past the Bergstrom museum, which has the largest collection of paperweights in the world. We're very proud of that. If you curve to the right, you go into Riverside Park, which was a part of every Neenah kid's childhood. The park was the source of many family stories, including The Time a Squirrel Ate Our Peach Pie and The Time Your Brother Got Stung By a Bee. There's a giant metal rocket on the playground (rockets are the town mascot), which is where most of us made out with someone for the first time. The ladder to get onto it was recently taken down and it's been condemned due to rust. Poor old rocket. Now we're heading downtown. There's the harbor on the right. A lot of people in town have a sailboat. Here's the public library. My mom will give you a tour, if you want one. She helped plan and raise money for the library (it's only a few years old) and she loves it.

Further down are the foundaries. I've told many of you, sometimes multiple times, and usually when I've been drinking, about how most of the manhole covers in the world are from Neenah. It's a story I tell like an old man; I'm bursting with pride when I tell it and I talk about it over and over. And over the years, many of you have called me, also while drinking, to announce that you are standing next to a Neenah manhole cover in Brooklyn, or L.A., or Stockholm. Another thing of which we are immensely proud is that Kleenex is also made in Neenah. Some residents are very picky about the word Kleenex only applying to actual Kleenex. Anything else is just a tissue, and must never be called a Kleenex. I wrote to them a few months ago, pleading for a handout, because my class last year had more allergies than is humanly possible. They kindly sent me a giant case of free Kleenex. You might have noticed that we've passed about ten bars already. There are more bars than churches here, that's what people say around here. Some of them say it scornfully. Most say it like this: "There are more bars than churches here! Wooohooo!" A lot of the bars around here have a very established clientele, and don't want some nerd in a stereolab shirt drinking their Old Style. One of the bartenders told my friends and me this winter, "I think you'd be happier at the bar across the street." I said, really tough, "No, we're happy here. We like THIS place." So that earned us a sort of grudging respect, at least for a few minutes. I like the way they freeze their beer mugs.

Ok, now we're circling back to Commercial Street. There's sometimes a very odd older couple that takes walks in their pajamas, but I haven't seen them in a few years. That tobacco discount store used to be the Mr. Donut. It was the only 24 hour place in town. It was really gross. But we loved going there at night. But then the owners tried to burn it down for insurance money. They didn't succeed completely though, because here's the tobacco store.

Further down a ways are the grocery stores. We spent a lot of time just walking and chasing each other around them in high school (there aren't a lot of nighttime activities in Neenah). I was here earlier today, buying the ingredients for quesadillas. Which the man in the dairy department called kay-sah-dillas. Speaking of pronunciations, my Wisconsin accent has come back a bit again. That happens every time I come home. By the time I leave, I'm saying "yah" exclusively, and my more refined mother is curtly reminding me to say "yes" instead. Now we're headed back home, past the drive through restaurant that has good brats and also deep fried cheese curds. There's my elementary school, Coolidge Elementary. All the elementary schools here are named after undistinguished former presidents. And now it's only a two minute ride back to Yorkshire.

And that ends our tour of Neenah, Wisconsin. Please put your bike away in the garage.

*This update typed while listening to NPR.

Monday, August 30, 2004

I'll be your mirror

Or, What I Did This Weekend

We spent Saturday in Madison, WI, where my little brother lives, where I went to college, and one of the favorite cities of my whole family. We picked up my brother at his apartment. He was waiting on his rickety back porch, and crushed me in one of his hulking and enormous hugs. No one is sure how my brother turned out so towering and huge. My parents are both significantly shorter than him; my dad, as my mom points out, looks like a little thumb, now that he has started indulging his lifelong dream of shaving his head. My parents suspect some long ago giant of a relative is responsible for my brother's size, I think it's the hormone jacked-up milk we both drank all day when we were kids. We got back in the car and drove to Monty's Blue Plate Special, a sort of old timey diner, but because it's Madison, a lot of the food is vegetarian or vegan. In the car, my brother and I laid out the untouchable subjects of conversation: the need for haircuts, the fact that my brother's shoes are falling apart despite the undeniable truth that my dad gave him money to buy new shoes, sex, proper interview techniques, financial security, and the need for my brother to stop using an envelope wrapped in duct tape as a wallet. For their part, my parents request that we don't act like idiots.

The conversation topics greatly reduced, my brother and I are left hooting over favorite Mr. Show skits, while my parents lament over the Republican idiots (including a local car dealer with hokey commercials) in Wisconsin trying to beat their beloved Senator, Russ Feingold. But they quickly get sidetracked by my brother and I laughing uproariously and try to join the Mr. Show conversation. This occurred just as my brother, a little too loudly, I thought, for a family diner, said, "have you seen the cockring warehouse episode?" And I said, "Yeah, it's hilarious!" And then, simultaneously, "Any cock'lldooooooo!" The rest of the conversation, which will go down in R-rated family history, went like this:

Mom: What are you talking about?
Jon (my brother): Cockrings!
Me: (laughing) Shhhhh!
Mom: Cloth rings?
Jon: (whispering) No, cockrings!
Dad: (authoritatively to Mom) Hot...hot wings, like chicken.
Jon: (forehead hits table due to laughter) Cockrings!
Dad: (finally hearing right) Ohh! (chuckles)
Mom: Cockring? What is that?
(Siblings are unable to speak due to convulsing laughter)
Dad: (quietly) I'll tell you in the car!

The rest of the day was spent walking around favorite old bookstores and record shops and the student union, which has a terrace on a lake and is still one of my favorite places in the world. Jon had to leave for work, so we gather on the sidewalk outside my dad's favorite record store to say goodbye. My brother, who has always been wonderful, has somewhere along the line become a sweet and sensitive giant of a boy. He puts an arm around my shoulder and says goodbye in a kind voice that has been ridiculously deep since he spoke his first words, and I feel my eyes fill with tears, because I get to see him, and my parents, so rarely. My parents and I are smiling as we watch him walk away. On the way back to Neenah, we sing along together to the oldies station, my mom in her high warbling voice, my dad in his deep, booming voice, and me in a voice which is simply off-key. The sun is setting over the farm fields, and glistening on the tops of the trees, and the highway stretches on in front of us, full of potential.

*This update typed while listening to Stan Getz.

Thursday, August 26, 2004

Sylvia, enough's enough.

In Neenah, Wisconsin sometimes you find opportunities and sometimes they find you. Some of these activities were sent in by readers, others just came up.

Buy some cheese. Then, eat it in front of the cashier (well, at least some of it). Submitted by Kevin, who is abundant.

I got the cheese in question at a cheese shop in Oshkosh. It was fresh colby. I bought it, (and a piece of chocolate in the shape of Abe Lincoln), and then I tried to open the cheese. But I started to get nervous for some reason at that point, and I couldn't get it open. I twisted and tugged at the wrapping and was just about to try to bite it open when I looked up and saw the cashier was staring at me. "Do you want to open that?" she asked increduously. I said yeah. She motioned for me to hand it to her, and cut the top of the wrapper off with a pair of scissors. She handed it back and it was time for the big moment. I took a huge bite out of it. All I could think to say was "Mmmmm!" The cashier looked baffled. "I hope you enjoy it" she said. I ate another huge bite in the parking lot. That one was just because it was delicious cheese.

Go to a department store and try on the dumbest dresses they have. Submitted by Nicole.

I knew exactly where to go. There's a store at the mall with a fancy dress section, and a lot of the fancy dresses are sequined, gaudy messes. I headed up the escalator. The sale rack in the fancy dress section had some real doozies. I picked three to try on. One had a smattering of sequins down the sides. Another had a crazy belt that wrapped around it. The third looked like a hooker's outfit. After each dress, I came out to check myself out in the hallway mirrors. A nice, plump little lady came over to help me. I think her name was Linda. "Well isn't this darling on you!" she exclaimed. It was such a sweet, sad lie. I looked like Liberace. The second dress just looked wacky. The third dress, the slutty one, made me look busty, so I had to spend some extra time parading that one around and checking myself out. "To what kind of event would someone wear this?" I asked. "Oh, to a party...or some kind of mix and mingle" she said. "A mix and mingle of streetwalkers maybe!" I said. She laughed nervously and seemed kind of hurt. "I'm just kidding," I told her, feeling really guilty. "I love it." Two can play at this lying game, Linda.

Have lunch with a 103 year old birthday girl. This just came up randomly.

Louisa was celebrating her 103d birthday. I got to sit near her while she ate her chicken salad. She was feisty and funny and really sweet. She had the prettiest hands in the world. These are some excerpts from our conversation:

Louisa: I went to the doctor, because I'd been having these stomach aches. I asked him, "Doctor, what can I eat?" He said, "Louisa, you can eat whatever you want." I said, "Suppose I want a cocktail." He said, "go right ahead."
Louisa friend, who was only eighty something: What if he'd said no?
Louisa: I'dve had one anyway! Ha ha ha!
Me: What kind of cocktails do you like?
Louisa: I like martinis. And drinks made with brandy.

Me: What kind of games did you play when you were a girl?
Louisa: Our entertainment was up to us. It was our concern. We played kick the can (Brian Minter is the only person who didn't play it --ed.), we chased each other all around, we made dolls, oh, we had a lot of fun.
Me: The kids in my class like video games.
Louisa: Oh, I'd like to try those.

Louisa: Where do you live, dear?
Me: I live in New York. In Brooklyn.
Louisa: Oh, Brooklyn is where they have that giant field...what's it called?
Me: Prospect Park?
Louisa: No.
Me: Ebbets field, the old baseball field?
Louisa: No.
Me: I'm not sure.
Louisa: Well, you don't know that much about where you live, do you?

Invite the neighbors over for birthday cake. Submitted by me.

It's a surprise for my mom. The doorbell rings, and I rush to the kitchen to prepare the secret surprise cake. As my mom answers the door, my dad hisses, "what are we going to give them to drink?" We're out of wine in a box, which my parents love, but somehow they still make fun of my brother and me for drinking cheap, bad beer. But no one wants any beer tonight, though we did locate some; they just want to eat a lot of cake and make a lot of noise. One neighbor, who is moving to the town of Neenah, where you can have farm animals, offers to house a goat and some chickens for me. I love chickens. My mom shakes her head no, but I catch his eye and nod, grinning, while she's not looking. The neighbors tell a lot of funny stories about pets, and their kids, and how children have crazy names these days (Taylor or Dylan can be a boy OR a girl, that amazed them all) Then they all take off into the night, which is warm and lovely and loud with crickets.

Happy birthday, Marilyn Allen.

*This entry typed while listening to the dog snore.

Wednesday, August 25, 2004

You're my Coney Island Baby

Moments in literature...from the life of Bubblegum & Taffy. Thank you to Marilyn Allen for keeping excellent scrapbooks.

Age 6, first grade

My name is Sarah Allen. I am a girl. I live at 761 Yorkshire Road. I like animals.

Age 7, first grade (totally flipped out over the recent discovery of punctuation, which I STILL love).

One. day. John's tooth was feeling loose. When he ate. an apple. it came out!!! He put it under. his pillow!!!! The next day. there was a quarter. The End!!!!!

The Witches, by Sarah Allen, age 10.

For as long as I can remember, I had been a witch for Halloween. My Mom suggested I be a goblin or a pumpkin, or ANYTHING but a witch, but I wanted to be a witch again. My brother Jack and I set out to collect our candy. I walked slower than usual behind him and my Dad. All of a sudden I felt a boney finger tapping my shoulder. I turned around and discovered another witch! She looked just like me! She had a long green nose with warts that didn't pull off when I pulled them. "Trade places with me" she hissed. She grabbed my candy bag and jammed her broom into my hands. All of a sudden I shot into the air. I held on as best I could, but I almost feel off. I discovered I didn't really have to steer the broom. It just went by itself. Then the broom gently floated down next to a black cauldron. (Etc. etc. This story is longer than I thought. To summarize, I have a wild time being mistaken as the witch and she as me, and I'm left wondering, Good Lord, what will happen if I'm a goblin next year?! The End.)

There is no sign in the scrapbooks of my three chapter masterpiece from fifth grade, which featured such mature topics as a teenager that drank beer and was rude to her parents and then was brought back to living a wholesome life when she realized she had magical healing powers and wanted to help the world. It was called _The Healer_. I bet my mom threw it away when she saw there was beer drinking.

*This update typed while listening to the Brooklyn Doo Wop Collection (thanks to Sean Howe, Park Slope wireless internet thief).

Tuesday, August 24, 2004

And then we'll quietly grow old

Hearts are sunny and Miller Lite flows like ambrosia. In today's adventures...

BE A KID AGAIN. Recommended by Nicole Stoops.

What could be better?

#1: Spend time with (other) kids.

I spent the afternoon with an old friend I hadn't seen for more than 10 years, and her 3 year old son, Alec. He insisted on removing all his clothes for the whole day, and though I couldn't get away with that, I did follow the naked little monkey as he careened crazily around the driveway on his big wheel, with a bucket on his head. The bucket covered his whole head, and he kept bumping into walls and bushes. Have you ever talked to a three year old? They don't make any sense, and they're absolutely wonderful.

Alec: That's amazing!
Me: What's amazing?
Alec: The power! It's my power!
Me: Oh!
Alec: I can ride with that, I don't want to eat my sandwich.
Me: You should eat your sandwich so you're not hungry!
Alec: No! I'm a fish!

He asked me to dance with him, and we spun around in circles on the driveway, kicking our feet up at crazy angles. I laughed until it was hard to breathe.

#2: Run through the sprinkler.

I used to spend hours in the sprinkler. The art of the sprinkler is in anticipation. My favorite kind is the waving fan, where you can lie in the grass on one side of it, with your friend lying on the other side, and your stomach cramps up with nervousness while you're wating for the water to hit, even though you know exactly how great it's going to feel when it does. It was kind of a cloudy day, and not very warm, but I pulled the car over next to a sprinkler in someone else's yard, on the other side of town, and raced into it, holding my breath. It was freezing, the way sprinklers always are before you get used to them. I waited till the streams of water were spraying straight up again, and let it hit my forehead for a second before I jumped through to the other side again. A man came out from the house and stood on his stoop. He was wearing a Packers shirt, the unofficial uniform of the entire state (I wore mine yesterday). "Hi!" I shouted, gleefully, and sprinted back to the car. "Thanks!" I was screaming a lot louder than I had to. As I drove away, I checked for him in the rearview mirror. He was waving goodbye.

#3: Eat a popsicle.
When I was small, popsicles were a big part of the summer. Our favorites were banana, root beer and blue raspberry. I always had sticky hands from the dripping; popsicles melt fast in the summer. But today I was far away from the grocery store. And popsicles are so much more delicious when it's hot. There was a gas station by the lake having a brat fry, so I stopped for that instead. Bratwurst is serious business in Wisconsin. Neighbors have criticized my decision to live in New York, based on the relative unavailability of bratwurst there. Connoseurs marinate them overnight in beer. Some people insist on stuffing them with cheese. The meat section at the grocery store has a whole row dedicated to them (I've taken pictures of it). My personal favorite is a beer brat on a toasted bun with a lot of mustard. At the gas station, everyone was drunk, including the man grilling the brats. He tripped as he was handing me my brat, and dropped it in the dirt. "Holy balls!", he shouted. "I am WASTED!" He tried to get me to have a beer. I said I couldn't, I was driving. He said, inexplicably, "that didn't stop Jesus!" Before I had the chance to ask what he meant, a fight broke out by the beer cooler. One of the men involved suddenly keeled over like a tree falling over. It was something that everyone there, including me, had seen before. People in Wisconsin drink like champs.

*This update typed while listening to the dog chew his squeaking toy, until it drove me crazy and I had to hide it.

Sunday, August 22, 2004

I'm looking through you

Where we left off...

Dinner with Mr. Key never happened, as Mr. Key was AWOL, and I left for Wisconsin early. One of the last times I saw him before I left, someone had put an old excercise bike out on the curb for the Wednesday garbage pick-up. Mr. Key propped his cane against a pole, got on the bike and began pedaling serenely. He was still pedaling, a dreamy look on his face, when we walked by again. I look forward to taking Mr. Key to dinner when I get back to Brooklyn. It's his choice where we go. I'll take him anywhere he wants. Maybe we'll dress up a little; I'll wear lipstick and my hair back and he'll wear his best shoes. What will we talk about at dinner? If he'll tell me, I want to hear his story.

With Mr. Key nowhere to be found, I spent the time leading up to my departure on reading, and drinking outside and eating outside and on wandering and riding rollercoasters. Sean Howe and I spent part of an afternoon reading at Barnes and Noble, and started laughing uncontrollably in the cafe as we looked at the pile of ridiculous books I was paging through, all with titles like, _Letting Go When He Leaves_. Some friends I hadn't seen in a while dragged me out of the house and over to Coney Island, where the smell of funnel cake and salt air made me dizzy with the love of summer. I rode the Cyclone five times. And for the first time, I sat in the very front.

And now I'm home in Wisconsin, and it's such a familiar place in the summer that I can't believe I wasn't here last month, or last week. Everything is exactly the way it always is. I only see my family two or three times a year; when I do see them, I can't contain my happiness. I start acting silly. Really silly. This exchange with my Dad was typical of what happens every summer; someone always ends up having to tell me to cut it out.

Me: (singing) Who's walking down the streets of the city, smiling at everybody she sees...
Dad: (reading) Hmmph.
Me: Everyone knows it's WINDY! And Windy has starry eyes...(forgetting lyrics) and Windy has...thunder thighs, and Windy--
Dad: Sarah.
Me: (chanting) It's Windy! It's Windy! It's Windy outside! (picking up dog) And the dog loves the wind! And the wind loves the dog!
Dad: Sarah.
Me: Windy dog! And Windy dog has soft, soft fur, and Windy dog likes to chase birds, and Windy dog--
Dad: SARAH. Settle down and knock it off!

The dog and I walk down to the lake after dinner. The lake is murky and green and stinky and I've been swimming in it as long as I can remember. The smell of it is probably my favorite smell; when I was a kid, there were always little specks of algae in my hair from it. My clothes smelled like it. The air on the soccer fields down the street was heavy with it. Tonight, it was such a relief to see it and smell it that a little laughing sob escapes. Luckily there's no one there to hear it but the dog, and he's busy trying to eat cigarette butts. It feels like the lake looks different every time I see it. Sometimes it's still and green, sometimes gray and cloudy, sometimes it shimmers in the sun. Tonight, it's windy and the water is choppy and dark. Growing up, when we got hot, we would run all the way to the lake sometimes and just run right into it with our clothes, and then walk home dripping. I once left an old boyfriend standing squeamishly on this same little shore, next to the smelly fish skeleton that had dissuaded him from swimming, as I waded out to say hello to neighbors who drag their lawn chairs into the lake, and then sit in them, only their heads and their cans of Old Style out of the water. (They'll probably be in there tomorrow when I go swimming). I see some of these neighbors along my walk. They're out in their yards, and walking around, and fiddling with gardens. Some of them just stand at the end of their driveways, ready to talk to anyone who walks by. It's like a giant, midwestern receiving line. Everyone is still riding high from last night's Packer victory, though it's just a preseason game and doesn't mean anything. I stop to talk to the man who feeds the deer. I'm not sure if we ever met formally, or even who he is. His hands are old and rough and creased with a lifetime of ice fishing seasons and gardening."It's wonderful to see you," he says, and I say, "It's wonderful to see you too." And I mean it.

The Summer Adventure Project will continue tomorrow. Please send any suggestions to hoipollloi@yahoo.com. Submissions are always welcome.

*Typed while listening to my parents watch the Olympics. And the crickets outside.

Thursday, August 19, 2004

Let that show

First, I would like to apologize to Ida, for shouting at them multiple times to hurry up and start their encore last night. I haven't eaten much for more than a week, and things are a bit fuzzy. I'm not even sure where I am half the time. Second, it was very nice to see Aden play again, after a long, long absence. It always pleases me that former Senator Gramm produced such a nice, round-headed boy, who sings indie pop.

In yesterday's and today's adventures...

DO THREE NICE THINGS FOR OTHER PEOPLE, suggested by a very nice individual who has requested anonymity.

#1: I was staring at the menu at Uncle Louie G's, trying to decide if some of the new icie flavors would be good or not, when a little boy, about 8 or 9, walked up and ordered a scoop of ice cream. Uncle Louie can be misleadingly expensive, especially when you're a kid. He was a dollar short. He just stood staring at the teenage girl behind the counter with a look that said both, "I'm helpless to change this" and "I REALLY want this ice cream". i had a dollar. hell, i had SEVEN dollars. I stepped up. Smiling at the boy, I put four quarters on the counter. The boy turned to me. "Thank you very, very much," he said, with as much dignity as a British Duke. It was sweet. It made me giggle. "It was my pleasure," I told him. I watched him walk off, scooping up his ice cream in giant spoonfuls. I can't wait to meet my new third graders.

#2: There are little leagues of older people in this neighborhood, who spend hours a day on their stoops or in lawn chairs commiscerating. They're wonderful. One particular groups sits out on chairs talking about their children and grandchildren and if it will or won't rain. If you ask, they're glad to tell you about the old days in the neighborhood, when an apartment on Union street was $75 and the kids played stoop ball and everyone hated the Korean man who worked at one of the delis because he fiddled with the scales and cheated them out of money. They have a little frumpy dog, some mutty blend that probably includes Lhasa Apso. I've never seen that dog move. I wondered if it would like a walk. "I'll take your dog on a walk around the block, if you want" I told the lady. They all stared at me like I had asked them in Arabic. "You know, for a little excercise. I have to run an errand anyway." "That's nice, honey," she said finally. The dog, Albert, didn't even own a leash. "Maybe I should tie a string to his collar, so he won't run away?" I asked. "Oh, he won't run away. He'll just follow you." Which he did, when I called him, for about 20 feet. Then he turned around and looked balefully at his owners and the others in their lawn chairs. "Go on, go on! You'll be ok, give it a try!" they all urged, like parents trying to detach a five year old from their leg on the first day of kindergarten. Albert obeyed. He followed me around the corner and past the pizza place and up to the dry cleaners. And then he stopped. And sat. And wouldn't budge. "Come on Albert, baby, good boy!" I urged, showering him the terms of endearment. "Sweetie Pups, peach pie, dog, let's go." But Sweetie Pups had a different plan in mind. A kid on the corner tried to give him some potato chips to move, but he just moved to eat the chips and then sat down solidly again. Passers by smirked. Finally, I picked him up. He cuddled right in and licked my chin. It was a victory lick. "Damn dog", I muttered and staggered back to his corner, trying to avoid his breath. Around the corner from his street, I set him down. "No messing around now Albert, LET'S GO." The little cheater trotted right up to the senior league and jumped up on his owner's lap. "How was his walk," she crowed. "Good," I said. "It was good."

#3 This one hasn't happened yet. Tonight, I want to take Mr. Key out to dinner. Mr. Key, so-named because he was first spotted peeing on a truck in front of Key Food, is a familiar and elderly neighborhood sight. I'm not sure where he lives. He's outside in the neighborhood, all day, every day, and he always very sweetly says hello. If he'll let me, I'm going to let him choose the restaurant and treat him. If it works out, update to follow tomorrow.

*These adventures typed while listening to Donovan purr and a Joanna Newsom album.

Friday, August 13, 2004

Hello Hello Hi

This is something I tried on my recent driving tour of the south, which featured a whole lot of minor league baseball, cheap beer, good barbecue, great friends, tons of excellent music (especially Versus and The Positions), weird motels and what was probably the last time I will ever be expected to sing to the confederate flag (God Bless Kodak, Tennessee).

GREET STRANGERS IN REALLY WEIRD WAYS. Submitted by Jill, in San Francisco.
Jill, I have absolutely no idea who you are, but I really like your idea.

#1: In Kodak, TN

me: Yippee tie yie yo! Could I get a nachos, please?
teenage beverage girl: Whuuuut?
me: Can I get some nachos?
teenager: Uh, Ok.

#2: In Nashville, TN

me: Who put the bomp in the bomp shoo bomp shoo bomp? Would you like my extra coupon for a hot dog?
elderly gentleman: (Baffled silence)
me: I ordered these family pack tickets that come with free hot dog coupons, but well, I'm from Wisconsin originally, and I'm getting a bratwurst.
elderly gentleman: You want to give me your coupon?
me: Yep!
elderly gentleman: What was all that you said before?
me: bomp shoo bomp?
elderly gentleman: Yes. When you were going on like that.
me: That's how we say hello in New York.
elderly gentleman: I never did understand how they do things in New York!

#3: Back in Brooklyn

me: Cawwww! Cawwwww!
teenage boy: What the *&;#$% ?

Thursday, August 12, 2004

If you have gum, you have friends

Two sunny summer adventures about giving and getting.

#1: Follow someone around Manhattan. But don't tell let them know you're following them. Submitted by a fellow Metro Napper (see previous post).

Where we left off, I had just had an exhausting Metro Nap, a spicy Korean lunch, and was headed to the East Village. When I got to E. 7th Street, I picked out Morose Guy with a Jean Jacket and proceeded towander behind him down 7th toward the park. But almost immediately, he turned around and asked if I had a cigarette. Cover blown! No cigarettes, but I offered him a sprinkle of my freshly purchased Nerds candy (he requested grape). As he tossed them into his mouth one by one, he said, "I forgot how good this shit is!" I found a wall to lean on casually as I cased out other people to follow. Classy Older Woman was walking on Avenue A; I gave her 15 feet and then started walking behind her. Classy Older Woman walked quickly, for three or four blocks, then reached her car and started to get into it. For a thrilling moment, I considered hailing a cab, shouting, "follow that car!" and trailing her to wherever she was going next. But instead I stood in the street watching her drive away.
Next, I followed Enormous Bearded Gentleman into Odessa, which was a huge cheat; I was waiting for someone to go into Odessa so I could get a milkshake there. EBG joined a friend in a booth and I struck up a conversation about the importance of sweating with a man waiting for takeout food. I told him about my summer and asked if he had any suggestions of things to do. He said, "What you need to do, OK, is, I'm going to call my aunt, she lives right here in the neighborhood, and see if she needs help with anything." He borrowed my cellphone and stepped outside to make the call. He was gone for such a long time that I started to think I had just idioted myself out of my cellphone. But he came back. The aunt wanted me to come over. She lived only a few blocks away, between Avenues B and C. I rang her buzzer and she padded out in pink slippers and what my grandmother calls a housedress. When she saw me she crinkled up her eyes in a huge smile and started waving frantically before she'd even opened the door. "Hello! Hello! There you are!" she exclaimed. She had an accent (maybe Polish?). We started a slow descent upstairs. She stopped on one landing for a moment to exclaim, "your hair is very black!" Her apartment was small and clean and dim and though I didn't ask her, I had the feeling she'd lived there for decades. She brought me into the kitchen and pointed up to a lightbulb. "You can do that?" she asked. I said I could, no problem. I brought a chair over to the spot and she handed me an ancient lightbulb. I replaced the old bulb and when she flipped on the switch, only the dimmest light came out. "You need a brighter bulb!" I told her. She was unclear about what I meant. At least I think she was. "I'll be right back!" I promised her. That she understood. I ran out to a deli and bought a two pack of 100 watt bulbs. I'd propped the door open with a phonebook so she didn't have to walk down and up the stairs again. When I knocked, she took a minute to come to the door, and when she saw me she said, "Hello!" three more times. I climbed back up on the chair to change the bulb to a brighter one. She flipped the switch and 100 watts poured down on her. "Aaaaaaaaah! No, no, please!" she barked, squinting up at the light. Too much light. I put the dim bulb back in. There wasn't anything else that seemed to need doing in the apartment, though I did wash the two pans that were in the sink. Afterwards, she gave me a mug of milk. As I was leaving, she handed me a little paper bag and squeezed my hands. "Take it! Take it! I don't need!" she said. Which is how I ended up with three ancient maxi-pads.

#2: Leave a giant tip for someone. Submitted by Andrea, Park Slope resident and mother of Nicholas, 6 months old.

Stopping at a little sandwich place on third Avenue to get a drink, the staff was so sweet and pleasant that I decided this was the moment for the giant tip. I bought a fresh squeezed grapefruit juice and stuffed $14 into the tip cup. I wasn't sure if they had even seen me do it. I hoped they hadn't, in a way. There was an unexpected feeling of shame when I put it in, an almost patronizing feeling. They didn't know, after all, that $14 is a lot to me. I sat down inside to read the paper and drink my grapefruit juice. 20 minutes later, I realized two of them were standing next to the table, smiling down at me. "A nice thing for a nice thing" one of them said. Which is how I ended up with the beautiful little bouquet of wildflowers that's in the kitchen.