There’s a pumpkin left over from Halloween that has been decomposing on my concrete runaway. It’s amazing to watch the rate of decomposition daily. There are many forces at work, many organisms that are taking advantage of the wonderful bounty of resources that this enormous pumpkin provides. The ants are here in droves, but there are flies, beetles, probably squirrels, who knows what else, working hard to consume this pumpkin.
I was watching the ants feast on it, and the thought struck me that they are inside of the most enormous food house ever. It would be like if my entire house were edible, and I were sitting inside of it and eating it, and hanging out. That’s what they’ve got, with this pumpkin. That’s pretty amazing when you think about it.
You also need to know that three days ago I ate the first ever vegetable that I have grown myself, which was some of this bok choy. Today I ate the second ever vegetable I grew myself, which was the radish. Neither of these vegetables, none of the bok choy or radish are that impressive. I looked of photos of bok choy plants, and mine look like nothing compared to what I see on the internet. My radishes are not even spherical, they are just semi-thick stems of red. Well, I never watered them, they may not have gotten as much sunlight as they needed, and who knows about the conditions of the soil, but I’ll tell ya what. They sure do taste good.
Decomposing
Ants are having a feast
Bok Choy
Radish
Bok Choy, radish, and weeds
Wild garden
Radish root
First radish!!!!
Wintercreeper
Hideous mass of wintercreeper
Showing the size, engulfing the entire tree
Unfortunately friends, the wintercreeper is everywhere. This is a terrible nightmare. I couldn’t stop myself from photographing so many instances of it. In the gallery below, every photo contains wintercreeper vines. So many trees plagued by these insidious vines. The wintercreeper is out of control, but so are many of the invasives. Bush honeysuckle and privet, you will see. In the below photo, it is so clear what these invasives are doing to the forest. You see that everything else in this photo is brown, has lost its leaves, but not the winter creeper. No, the wintercreeper stays green, as so many of these invasives do, and so right now, they are so obvious. And they really are ruining the nice fall aesthetic that we would otherwise have here.
I took about 20 photos. I could have taken a hundred. These are fine examples. They
Wintercreeper ruining the vibes
How many invasives can you spot here? Wintercreeper, bush honeysuckle, English ivy all present in this photo
This dark green wave in center is all wintercreeper, huge mass
Wintercreeper fruiting with berries
Wintercreeper climbing this nice birch tree
This tree is totally smothered in wintercreeper
Wintercreeper climbing this evergreen tree
English Ivy
As you may know, Wintercreeper is not the only invasive vine that is causing problems. English ivy is another. Both of these escape cultivation and run loose in the wild, now. I saw plenty of it at Shelby.
English ivy on trunk
See the green on the trunk?
English ivy
Japanese honeysuckle
Another invasive vine, Japanese honeysuckle. I saw one that had fruits. I haven’t seen the fruit yet. Note that this is also totally, stark green, when the native plants are pretty much all losing their leaves, turning colors (except the evergreen trees).
Japanese honeysuckle in a tree
J. honeysuckle fruits
A Nightmare Image
This is a nightmare image
This is a nightmare image, of course. What do we see here? On the 16th of November. A green jungle mess. Why is it green? Why is it choked? Everything in this photo is invasive.
Can you ID the wintercreeper on the trees? On almost every tree trunk there is wintercreeper. On the one all the way to the left, English ivy. Down below, the forest floor is covered, choked with Chinese privet and Bush honeysuckle. And so, in the worst places, in a worst case scenario, this is what the park looks like.
Below is what it’s supposed to look like, right now. (Just pretend the green isn’t there because that’s wintercreeper.) If you see any green, it should be evergreen trees.
This is what it’s supposed to look like (except the green, imagine that’s not there (invasives))
Much of the park is in a bad state, and probably thousands of hours of manpower are needed, to deal with it all. The below photo is showing what is a common sight as you walk the trails, which are these groves of bush honeysuckle. There are simply massive groves of bush honeysuckle, hundreds and hundreds of stems, thousands of pounds of biomass.
Bush Honeysuckle / Chinese Privet
Bush honeysuckle grove
Bush honeysuckle grove (all of it)
Bush honeysuckle. So many
Thick grove of Bush honeysuckleAll of this green wall is bush honeysuckle or Chinese privet
Green wall of bush honeysuckle and Chinese privet
Right now, if you walk along the trail here in the above photo, you should be able to see the river from the trail. You would be able to, but you can only get a glimpse of it here and there, because there is a wall of thick invasive mess blocking your view. The space is filled with honeysuckle, privet, and wintercreeper.
All of this green is Chinese privet and bush honeysuckle
Below is a photo of the largest privet I saw on my walk today. Must be one of the largest in the park. They can become mid-sized trees.
Large Chinese privet in center
Privet will soon be dominating a new area of the forest. This part is currently clear, but right now the floor is covered with, entirely covered with young Chinese privets. Hundreds of them. In the below photo you can see. Anything green you see on the ground in this photo, all of those hints of green, all of those are young Chinese privets. All of them.
Field of young Chinese privet plants
Northern Red Oak
As I walked the trails, I was looking for things that were not invasive too. Especially right now, it’s a good time to appreciate the trees. The last invasive species pull I did with CD Paddock, she gave us a little of some of the largest and oldest trees in the park, and that has inspired me to look for some impressive trees myself, and appreciate the non-invasive plants even more. Especially, our native trees. So, I was walking along the path and I spied off in the distance, one particularly massive orange tree, as you can see in the photo below. I snapped this as soon as I saw it. And I decided to investigate.
What is this massive orange tree?
Getting closer…
Glorious tree
Trunk discovery (note the bush honeysuckle all around)
Northern Red Oak!!!!
I had to fight my way through a bush honeysuckle grove to get here, but I made it. What a beautiful tree. Internet tells me it is a northern red oak. Amazing tree. Hanging off of it, all the way down to the ground, was one of those huge muscadine vines. Those are so crazy.
Muscadine vine (the straight, vertical line in the center of photo)
Other Trees
One of the tallest trees here
Loblolly pine?
Majestic fall beauty
Christmas ornament ball tree
Christmas ornaments???
Mystery Tree
My main purpose for going to the park today, and especially for bringing my camera (all taken with my Moto G phone camera), was actually just to investigate a mystery tree. That’s all I had really intended to do. I had seen it, only one, and it had strange, fern-like leaves. I have been thinking about it, and I want to know what it is. Well, I found the one I had seen before, and then further along my long walk I found ONE more. So they are quite uncommon in the park, but they’re there.
Here is the tree, which is losing its leaves as well. What is this rare mystery tree?
Mystery tree trunk
Various Other Scenes
Other sights included massive leaf larger than my hand, the husks and seeds of flowers like tall thistle, coreopsis and whatever else, cattails (I think that’s what they are?), a patch of northern sea oats, and a stag. The stag ran out right in front of me. Not uncommon to see but it was a good looking one, pretty large, and had a solid pair of antlers. That’s the closest I’ve been to one I think. The fen/marsh area is particularly striking right now. Looking very bleak and desolate.
They have cleared the wildflower area. Did they burn it? This must be investigated. It’s completely cleared. They may do that every year, to prevent the trees from taking hold. I would have gone and investigated on this trip but I had done enough. And that can be investigated any time, really. But it’s amazing to see that that field had been so packed and chock full of life, thousands and thousands of coreopsis blooms, birds, bugs, bunnies, and deer, and is now totally leveled, for the season.
Well. Somehow this came about to be about 20,000 words. It’s still not finished. That makes it a novella..? I’m posting this even though it isn’t finished (although it is already twenty-thousand words) because I don’t know if it will ever see the light of day otherwise. The only thing that has to be finished is the last story, which basically goes like this: I was invited to swim in the ocean by a Russian guy and a bunch of Eastern Europeans and two Mongolians, I actually took him up on the offer and we actually stripped down to our underwear and swam in the ocean together, there in November on Brighton Beach, me and a burly, tattoed, Putin-loving Russian. Before the swimming, which I don’t know if he really believed I would do, we had a few Peronis, and they told me their stories, of how they had come to the US, and what they were doing, as best as they could tell me, because they all spoke very little English, except for the Russian. He facilitated the conversation. It was a very interesting experience to say the least, a very New York experience, and is the kind of thing that happens that makes you love and miss New York City. That kind of excitement and possiblity, that anything can happen when you step out of your apartment and into the chaos and wonder-world. If this was the majority of my experiences there in the city, and if it wasn’t so god-damned expensive, well then I might have stayed. But I reread this, and I think, man, was I being harsh on NYC? Was I just weak? Did I not give it a chance? And then I reread my writing, and I remember the moments, and I think, no, it’s the truth. It’s my truth, and there you go.
This is somewhat dense and breathless, and definitely needs a major edit and some paragraph breaks, but if you can handle that, you are a true, noble reader, and I hope you enjoy reading it.
I tried to write about New York City in general, and my experience there as a whole, but every time I tried to do this, it just made me too miserable and depressed. And, after another round of sitting down and attempting to write about yet another one of my horrible memories, I thought, If I died tomorrow, is this what I would have wanted to be writing? And the answer was absolutely no, not at all. Me writing about how bad New York City is isn’t going to make New York City any better. It’s not going to make me any happier, and conversely, it just makes me feel worse. And you don’t benefit, because with everything going on in the world today, you definitely do not need to know exactly and in great detail just how much of a hellscape cesspool nightmare New York City is. If you were really curious about that, you could just Google it. Or, for the truly adventurous and masochistic, move there. So, it seems to me that nobody benefits from me writing about the horrors of that city. Instead, I will just write for you about everything fun and interesting that happened while I was there, and we will just, as much as we can, avoid the great tragedy, and the true horror. We’re just going to get that all depression, anger, and misery, and sweep it up into a nice neat little pile, and stash it under the rug. Even though the ratio was quite abysmal, of good memories to horrific, bleak, despairing ones, it would still be a shame if they never saw the light of day, instead being drowned in a vast and crushing sea of facts related to the failings of the city, anecdotal reports of assault, battery, menacing, robbery, and shootings, and just a little murder, and an overwhelming tide of MTA-induced misery. (The most triggering acronym, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.)
If I was one of those sanitation expert people, who goes to the restaurants and evaluates them and gives them a rating, I would with no hesitation give NYC a F-, with the comment, “Wholly, thoroughly, and completely unsuitable for human life.”
New York City has a famous saying, that you might have heard. “If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere!” They’re very proud of this saying. Let me tell you what this actually means. You may think, as I did when I first heard this, is that what New Yorkers mean when they say this is that New York is a tough city, fast-paced, a little rough around the edges, and scrappy, and you really have to be a go-getter, and work hard, to make your dreams come true here. It makes sense if that is your understanding of it, and that’s what I took it to mean, when I had first heard it, and when I had first moved here. However, this is an incorrect interpretation of the slogan. What the New Yorkers are trying to tell you when they say, “If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere!” is this: New York City is so incredibly hostile to human life, is so rigged in oppostion to the success of any individual person, that if you somehow possess the magnitudes of resilience, resourcefulness, and luck required to not only survive, but survive without suffering significant psychological, physical, and spiritual trauma in this city, similar to if you had been in a dogfight and downed over the ocean in enemy territory, captured as a POW, made it through the camps, and somehow managed to find your way back to your motherland and were able to live a decent life again, if you could manage that, then almost certainly, you could handle just about anything. That’s what the New Yorkers are telling you, when they say, “If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.” But, most people can’t survive being downed in the middle of the ocean in enemy territory, and they also don’t really need to try it out anyway, to see if they can or not, and are not in any way weak or unambitious for not wanting to. In fact, they’re probably just smart, for avoiding such a horrible and potentially disastrous ordeal that may not give them any real payoff in the end, except for being able to say that they got through it alright. When New York City tells you, “If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere!” this is what it means.
The New York City experience is different for everyone. The right way to go about living in New York City is to have a large amount of money, and ideally still have your company or someone else foot the bill of your housing, and live in a safe place, like West Village or Stuytown in Manhattan, and enjoy all of the finest things, and avoid as much of the horror and inconvenience as possible. That’s the right way to go about it. The wrong way is to move there with no job or skillset that guarantees you like 70k+ a year, and with no friends, and live in some random, miserable neighborhood in Brooklyn far away from everything you want to do and everywhere you’d rather be. So, my experience is obviously different from someone who say works in finance and moves into a nice company apartment on the 15th floor of a new luxury apartment building, with a gym, security guards, lots of other well-off tenants, a rooftop bar, and all the finer things that money will bring you. If you have money, like, a lot of money, you can everything you want, and if you don’t, well, have fun enjoying your life. That’s how it is in New York City. A city of peasants and lords.
The day after I escaped the city to my family home in Indiana, I walked over to the sink to get a drink of water. I looked up out of the window to see a troop of ducks crossing the frozen lake, over into our yard. About a dozen ducks, walking in single file line, in pairs of two, with bright orange feet, waddling, flip-flapping across the ice, slipping, sliding, quacking up a storm. Such a pure, wholesome, whimsical sight. It’s exactly what you want to see when you look out of your window. And, as I looked out at this procession, cracking a smile, as these goofy birds made their great journey across the ice, a thought entered my mind. “This, right here, is better than anything I ever saw in New York.” And unfortunately, it’s true. The mecca of American culture can’t hold a candle to a bunch of ducks on ice. It can if you don’t care about ducks, and more of the whimsical, pleasant, and free sights that nature brings.
You can have your fancy culture, your world-renowned orchestra, and immediately after the show, walk out of your world-renowned concert hall to see someone lying semi-unconscious on the ground, vomiting on themselves. You can enjoy schmoozing and partying with fantastic cultured people, and then walk out into the street and enjoy the spectacle of a family of rats bigger than cats playing tag on the sidewalk, darting in and out of the spokes of a wheel of a parked car, frolicking and generally having the time of their lives. (To be honest, I actually enjoyed watching this rat-frolicking, but I’m not normal. I commented to one girl as we walked back through the neighborhood from the station, after hearing a particularly loud squeak, “Was that a rat??” and she said, “It sounded like one!” To which I replied, “Ah, nature!” and she said, “Yeah.. haha..” and quickened her pace.) You can go see a show of the rising talent you’ve been fan-boying, have a stupendous time, and then on your way home enjoy a wonderful train failure that leaves you stranded in the middle of no-man’s-land Brooklyn, manage to devise your alternate route home, and then share the next train with man on drugs and completely out of his mind, violently kicking the train doors and punching the metal walls of the train, and wondering if and when he’s going to stab somebody, and what you’re going to do about it.
New York City is a city of highs and lows, a city of excess, a city of excitement, and adrenaline, randomness, filth, culture, wealth, nonsense, poverty, misery, and everything in-between. You can find any food you’ve ever wanted, and it’s almost guaranteed to be amazing. You can find anyone who shares any interest you have, no matter how minute, and can easily one-up you in your quirkiness. You can find almost every rung of the socio-economic ladder, probably on the same city block in Manhattan. I say almost because I doubt the super-rich would ever be walking those streets, would ever have any reason to descend down into the filth and chaos with the peasants, but I don’t know. It could be thrilling for them, to mingle with the common folk, and see them in their natural habitat. The different burrows all have their own charms, like the Bay Area drivers being the absolutely worst psychopathic drivers in the city, and Little Carribean being some kind of hodgepodge-African-Carribean city in the middle of New York, and the area around Brighton Beach being basically Russia, with Russian architecture, restaurants, language, markets, food, and of course, Russians, with all of the signs being in Russian instead of English. You take the train down 5 stops from Avenue H, the middle of Hasidic Jew-ville, where you see people in enormous, circular furry hats, kippahs, long, curly hair, and you are now in Russia. 3 stops north and you’re in the Carribean.
I was talking with my neighbor, after having gotten out of the city, and she made this comment. “The idea of New York City is nice.” I am in complete agreement with this statement, and it sums up my thoughts on it as well. In theory, New York City is a fantastic thing. And it has the potential to be incredible. The idea that so many different kinds of people can live in one city, together, that you can have all of these various walks of life living in harmony, all these little neighborhoods, with their own charms and flavors, is a beautiful, wonderful idea, and it is the idea of America. However, while the idea is a wonderful one, in execution, New York City is failing.
Once, at the second apartment I was living in, I saw the sun. I saw it through the window, and I thought, for a moment, “What.. is that?” Oh my god, that’s the sun! It took me a second to recognize it, because I had forgotten about it. I forgot that the sun was a thing, that exists, that you can see.
I have escaped from the city, and every day that passes, I feel much better in my soul. And actually, still writing this now, it’s been something like a month, and it is now a distant, vague, and unreal memory. Like a fever dream. I can almost forget, how horrible it was. But let me tell you, and let me tell me, before I truly forget, as I already am forgetting.. however bad you think New York City is, it’s worse than that. I’m not saying this to slam New York City, and I take no pleasure in it. Quite the opposite. I wish it wasn’t so. It’s painful for me that New York City is such a horrible mess. In many ways I loved it and loved what it was trying to be. However, right now, New York City is so bad that when you ride the trains, you are constantly bombarded with a myriad of signs that tell you not to kill yourself. “Don’t kill yourself!” Veterans, don’t kill yourselves! Depressed subway riders, don’t kill yourself! Subway surfers, don’t kill yourselves! Drug abusers, don’t kill yourselves! This is at least 6 out of every 10 signs, on every station, but especially in the worse-off areas, where the people are obviously more depressed. And possibly even worse than the signs that tell you not to end it all, are the advertisements for luxury, high-end perfumes, makeups, hotels, and vacations that 99% of people riding the train can’t afford, and the irony of which is absolutely not lost on these people. It’s a blatant taunt. The city is so bad that you can be assaulted on camera, in broad daylight, and not a thing will be done about it. People kill each over noise disputes. People are losing their sanity because of the constant, insufferable noise pollution. It gave me homicidal urges. If you think that’s excessive, read my post about the honking. You don’t know until you’ve been there. And, of course, people are dying in the streets. People dying at the airport. People dying, the slow death of poverty and despair, people with no options left, with nowhere to go, people on drugs, people in the grips of psycotic hallucinations, schizophrenic frenzies, or drug-induced madness, tweaking, dangerous, violent people, riding the train with you on your way to work, screaming about murder, riding the train with you on your way home.
Everything I’m saying here is real. It’s all very, very real. Even now I read this and it sounds like I’m making it up. I often felt that it couldn’t be real. That this just wasn’t possible. How could it be this bad? It was the same with the trains. It felt like some kind of false reality, that I was in some kind of simulation that was conspiring to play as many cruel pranks on me as possible. That this was my country, the United States of America. That this was the greatest city we have. But as horrible as it was, it was no simulation. It was unfortunately as real as real life can be.
After I had been in New York for a few months, and discussing some of things I’d been seeing and experiencing with the New Yorkers, I wondered, “What do the Europeans think of this? They must be horrified.” And just a few days later, I got my answer. I saw a comment on Reddit, in response to the question, “What is the most apocolyptic American city?” Which I thought was really telling, the fact that someone is saying, “American city”, because so many American cities are apocalyptic that we now have to have a competition to determine which one is the most apocalyptic. Apocalyptic is a strong word, but not an exaggeration. I once was unlucky enough to walk through Flatbush at midnight, having gone to the wrong station with the exact same name as the station I wanted to go to. It was like being in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. I passed a woman who was speaking to herself in tongues, skinny, haunted, witch-like, and I was so.. confused.. enchanted.. I can’t find the word. I was entranced. She was just so otherworldly and strange that I forgot myself, and made the mistake of looking directly at her, which you should never do, and as I passed in the dark street, she looked back at me, with wild, inhuman eyes, and I was to the deepest depths of my soul, terrified. As I walked down the street, dimly lit, trash everywhere, trash fluttering in the wind like tumbleweeds, and the few other living beings about were other ghosts, zombies, rats, and dark, mysterious people, hoods up, moving quickly. I prayed to the almighty God that I would get home that night without being stabbed, shot, or robbed, and I was at all times ready to flee like a deer.
Dog On The Roof
When I found my first place on 180 Lenox Road, after a week of attempting to get some sleep, I noticed that among all of the din, of sirens, honking, construction, and the booming bass of a club on the corner, there was a sound that I would hear from the hours of about 8 or 9pm, to 11pm, consistently, every night. It was a dog, howling. As I rolled up to my apartment, with my two suitcases in tow, on Lenox Road, I saw in the street a woman with no shirt, and flashing her koochie. An older black woman, clearly on drugs, dancing naked in the street, saying, “I’m so young! Oh baby, I’m so young!” Some drivers honked (at this point that goes without saying), most of them just drove around her. That was right outside of the grocery store that I would frequent, a block away from my new apartment complex. The general air of things, the trash, the seediness, plus now the naked, dancing drugged-out lady, made me feel like at any moment someone was going to walk up to me with a gun, and say, “I’ll take those bags, sir.” and I wasn’t going to be able to do a thing about it. And actually, it’s very good that that didn’t happen, because if it did I would have been completely out of luck. The New York Police Department would not have taken a report, and most likely would have chastised me for my stupidity, walking around Brooklyn with luggage. What did you expect would happen? A lot of New Yorkers would agree with that sentiment. That was my new neighborhood, and when I told my two New Yorker friends about it, and expressed my concern, they were like, “That just sounds like New York!” Which, for some reason at the time comforted me, I guess because I was thinking, “Oh, so it’s just this bad everywhere.“, when I realize now is actually incredibly horrifying, because, “Oh, it’s just this bad everywhere.” However, it’s not that bad everywhere, just in most places, and I was living in one of the worst places in the city, of which there are many, but still it wouldn’t be surprising if that happened anywhere at all in the city. Welcome to the neighborhood! At the end of the street was a club, that would blare music until 2am every night. Next door was an apartment complex that was being redone, with drilling, hammering, beeping, smashing, screwing, sawing, every kind of construction verb aside from wrecking balling and dynamiting, from sun up to sun down. Outside, right down in the street, there was the honking. The honking nightmare. I already wrote about that. I thought it was just bad in this street, because the street was narrow, with cars parked permanently all along the sides, and people would come from both ways, get stuck, and honk, nonstop, at all hours of the day and night, all day long. But, alas, the honking was the same everywhere. Narrow street, wide street, empty street, it doesn’t matter. If you want to tell if someone is from New York, just have them sit in the driver’s seat of a car, and wait. They will have an uncontrollable, irresistable, and overwhelming compulsion to honk within about ten seconds. The sirens were also particularly horrible, and my neighbors in the rooms would frequently be blasting music or screaming at each other at all hours of the day and night. And on top of all of this, there was yet another sound, and it was the howling of a dog.
Every night after sunset I would hear a howling. Not just barking, but pathetic howls. This dog was clearly in distress, and every night, I would lay there, trying to sleep, listening to these howls that would keep me awake, and break my heart. One night, I had now been in this apartment for a week, I heard the dog yet again, howling away, and it was particularly horrible and pathetic that night, and so I went over to my roommate’s room, a 40 year old Iranian man, and said,
“Do you hear that?”
He replies, “Yeah.”
“It’s horrible.”
“Yeah.”
“I have to go talk to the owner. It’s just not right. Will you come with me?”
I really wanted him, not as much for company as for protection. This apartment complex was a trap house, gutted and desolate, even though all of the residents that I had met were nice, and held the door for each other, and talked. My Iranian friend was not interested. “No way, man.” So, alone I set off to find this dog and ask the owners if they would so kindly take care of their dog and not have it howl all night. I could hear that the dog was somewhere above me, so I went up a floor, to the 5th floor, but it was still above me, and so I went up to the 6th floor, and then.. I was on the top floor. Yet, the dog was still above me. Which meant that, it was not in any apartment at all. It must have been on the roof.
Walking to the end of the hallway, I discovered a stairwell leading up to a door that I presumed lead out to the roof. I went up to the door and pushed on it. It was shut tight, but the handle to the door was missing, and so, with incredible curiosty, I peered out through the hole, into darkness. I couldn’t see much, but I could tell that it was the roof, and I could hear the dog, shifting. The dog was somewhere out there, and it knew I was there, because it stopped its howling, and made no sound for some time before starting to bark at me. I searched for another way onto the roof. I went around to the other side of the building, and found an identical staircase, and this time the door was open, cracked open on the hinge.
Knowing that I would be passing through this door alone, onto a dark roof, with a mysterious dog, and having no idea what else, I was nervous. I slowly creaked open the door, took a look out, and stepped out onto the creepiest roof imaginable. It was nearly pitch dark. There were a couple chairs sitting out, a large pile of trash, and strange metal devices, the kind that you see on roofs, if you ever spend much time on them, that look like instruments you would attach to a lunar rover. The dim light from neighboring buildings were casting long and strange shadows across the roof. I felt like I was on the surface of the moon. The dog was now not making a sound, but I knew it had to be on the other side, and I stepped out of the doorway and took a few tentative steps onto the roof, scanning for any other human, that I really did not want to see, and almost definitely would have just run away from. I could see off in the distance, on the opposite side of the roof, a tower, like a spire, with a closed conical roof, and it was the apex of one of two spires that flanked the sides of the brick building that was our apartment complex. It seemed like the dog was inside of this spire.
At this point I realized that I didn’t have my glasses, and I was not about to cross this roof and go investigate the spire while being blind as a bat. I went back down to my apartment to get them, and I couldn’t resist saying to my roommate, “There’s a dog on the roof!” He still wasn’t interested. I grabbed my glasses, went back up, and this time, when I stepped out onto the roof, I saw that on the roof of the adjacent building there was now someone up there, and with his own little doggo. I thought, Now this is something, just two dudes on the roof. Truly, I was ecstatic to have his company. I struck up a conversation from across the chasm between our buildings, and I explained my situation, and asked if he had heard any barking or anything while he was up here. He said that he had, and he occasionally saw people hanging out in the chairs. One of them must have been the owner. I said that I going to go investigate the dog, and I would report back. Then, slowly, I crossed that dark roof, with all the strange metallic devices, walking slowly, creeping over to the tower where the dog was, incredibly wary of any potential human lurking around, and wondering whether the dog was freed or not. The dog was quiet now, sensing me, and I came closer, and walked around the tower until I could see into it. But it was so dark, there was only enough light for me to make out an opening in the tower, which was an open, arched doorway. I couldn’t see much, but I knew the dog must have been in there. At first it was quiet, I’m sure wondering just who and what I was, and then the dog started to growl at me, now barking, and having gotten what I came for, I ran back across the roof and to my new friend. He said, “Well?” And I said, “Yeah, there’s a dog on the roof.”
The whole business of going onto the roof, of discovering a roof, and the source of the howling, of the dog, and the creepiness, and the speaking with a stranger across roofs while looking out over the Manhattan skyline and Brooklyn, all made for an intensely strange, surreal experience. I went back to bed, and heard no more howling for the night. Waking up the next morning, I went back to the roof, still being very cautious, again expecting at any moment to run into an owner, and saw the dog in the light of day. It barked only a little, and then, it seemed that it was glad to see me, that perhaps I would save it from it’s miserable situation. I approached slowly, and what I found in the room of this spire was a beautiful, sweet pitbull mix, in a cage only slightly bigger than the dog itself, with no food or water, and nothing but trash for a bed. Whoever was “taking care” of it had been leaving it up here every night, alone, in this state. I was disgusted. This sweet dog was staring at me with doleful eyes, wagging its tail, and accepting my pets, as best as I could manage them through the prison bars. And seeing this sweet dog like this, in such a state of misery and imprisonment, absolutely broke my heart. Right then and there I wanted nothing more than to free it and take it with me. But there was just no way I could do it. I had to report it and let the professionals handle it. So, immediately I alerted the management of the building, and to their credit, they were responsive, replying that they would look into it and talk with the owner.
I spent all day thinking about this dog, wondering if anyone was going to come for it, and that night I went up to the roof and saw the dog again, and heard its pathetic crying. Then again, the next morning I went up to the roof, seeing the dog again, and contacted management, pushing them for action, asking for advice, wondering if I should call animal control, or what. They said they would handle it, and the next time I went to check on it, three days since initially discovering the dog, both the dog and the cage were gone. Only scraps of trash remained in the tower. I messaged again asking what happened, and they said they had contacted the owner, and they must have moved the dog. And sadly, this is the end of the dog on the roof story. I wished they would have taken it away, and it could have gotten to a better home. I hope that wherever you are now, roof dog, you’re having a better life.
This was still at the beginning of my stay here in New York City, and I wish I could say that it got much better from here, but unfortunately, this was just one of the first in an endless stream of sad, miserable, and heartbreaking sights and realities.
Crazies
I wrote about the painted-face lady, and knowing what I know now, I was stupid to have ever engaged with her. Not really stupid, I guess, but naive. When I showed up in New York City, I was a sweet, young lad, from the suburbs of the Midwest, and the mountains and valleys of Japan, who had been fortunate enough to have had no dealings with totally insane people, dangerous people on drugs, people who want to hurt you, scam you, rob you. I didn’t yet know that there were people who were completely out of their minds walking around the streets of New York City, riding the trains, dangerous, unpredictable people. I knew about homeless people, of course, but not all homeless people are insane or dangerous. Sometimes they’re just homeless, down on their luck, dealt a bad hand. But the homeless people of New York, many of them, are just completely insane and dangerous. They are people who belong in psych wards, with professional supervision, who should absolutely not be roaming the streets, freely traumatizing the general public, and yet for some reason, they are. I know it now, I learned real quick, but when I first moved to New York City, I had no idea. I really didn’t know a thing. And, like burning your hand on a hot pan, you learn through experience, and that I did with the painted-face lady. Then I basically knew, but what really solidified it for me, that there are people around that you simply cannot have any interaction with, and must be avoided, and that they are legitimately dangerous and can hurt you, came from an encounter on my local station, Avenue H, at my second apartment on Avenue H.
I stepped onto the train and happened to sit across from a man who was in the middle of a full blown schizophrenic/psychotic episode. I did not understand this immediately because I have never encountered anyone in the grips of psychosis. I mean, most people haven’t. Most people don’t live in New York City. He was dressed in rags, and stinking, sitting in a pile of trash bags, but that’s common. That’s nothing new. He was talking, directly to me, and referring to another passenger on the train, pointing to him, saying that he was a New York City police officer, and he (that passenger) saved his (the insane man’s) life, and I was somehow doing something wrong. I sat there, listening, trying to put this story together. At that point, in retrospect, I should have immediately marked this man as insane, and moved away from him. But I still didn’t get it yet. The man he was pointing to was obviously not involved and was ignoring everything, and as I listened to what this guy was saying to me, he became increasingly aggressive, his voice rising, until suddenly he sprang up, towering over me, and screamed, “Get the fuck off the train!” His spit flying all over me. He had reached into his pocket, as if he had some kind of weapon, and he was over 6′ tall, probably 6’2″, 230+ pounds. And then, way too late, I realized the danger, and I was out of there like a fox, immediately scampering off the train. The rest of the members of the car followed me out, some ten or fifteen people all vacated the train car with me, and I and several others went onto the next car. After stepping onto the car, I said, heart pounding and shaken up, but trying to lighten the mood, (me, the victim) “My bad, everyone!” And the woman in front of me screamed and turned around, and I said, “Sorry -” and she said, “Oh my god, I thought you were him.” So then, already feeling like an idiot for having somehow antagonized the psychopath and caused an interaction with him, I now just felt extra-really dumb, and so I now sat down and shut up. A younger woman, my age, walked by me and asked in passing, “You good?” And I said, “Yeah, I’m good. I’m great. Just another day in New York City.”
And that’s true. You’re starting to get it now, right? I’m trying to explain that, that it’s true. These incidents are commonplace. Traumatizing for me, I had never been menaced in that way before, traumatizing for the rest of the people on the train, traumazing for everyone, whenever any kind of incident like this happens, for everybody involved, and these incidents are happening all over the city, daily. For me, this happened on a Saturday. I was going to work, working that weekend, and had just had a pleasant call with a friend, getting my mood up for riding the trains on the weekend and going to work, instead of staying at home and recovering, and trying to tell myself that it was going to be a good weekend, and I was going to do good work, and obviously, that completely 180ed me and put me in the hole, and after the long trek to Manhattan, walking across the city, past all of the panhandlers, who were being particularly aggressive, I think because it was Thanksgiving weekend and they knew there were tourists and visitors about, after forcing them off of me, as they were being especially tenacious, like the one guy who latched onto me, repeating, “Come on man, you seem like such a positive person. What’s wrong?” And I thought, Do you just say that to everybody, or do you really think that I look like a positive person? Because you’re right, you AirHead-selling-jackass, I am a positive person. I am a radiant lightning-ball of joy, and the problem is that I live in the most degraded, backwards, miserable place on Earth, and have just been reminded of it, again, after I had with much effort tried to tell myself otherwise, told myself that everything would be okay, and you need to leave me alone right now, because I don’t have even a single ounce, not a scrap of any time or energy left for you today, Mr. Panhandler. Soon after, I walked in to Anime NYC, with my precious VIP pass, joined the horde of weeaboos dressed up like anime characters, posing, snapping photos, complimenting each other, and generally having the time of their lives, and by comparison, it made me feel all the more miserable. There was no place I would’ve like to have been less, then, and after giving it a go and attempting to enjoy it and do my job, I threw in the towel and went home.
Of course, by the end of my NYC life, I was an expert at recognizing dangerous situations, and dangerous people, and learning how to deal with them, but sometimes there’s nothing you can do. For example, on one of my last nights in the city, I was riding back from Manhattan, and onto the train steps a dangerous person, and I knew right away that he was trouble. He exhibited the classic signs, the scanning, frantically looking around the car, jittering, leg bouncing furiously, nervously, sitting with legs spread wide, ready for action. He was tweaking, for lack of a better word. I don’t know what it is, if it’s drugs, and what drug, or purely mental illness, but he was dangerous. He had the potential to be dangerous.
There were five of us in that train car, myself included, and of course the less people that there are, the higher are the chances that you will be a victim. There was a young couple in the middle of the car, a girl my age on her phone, sitting across from me, and a man in his later 30’s on the other end of the train, reading a book. I was the only one standing, and I was watching, and the couple was watching. The girl and the book-reader were none the wiser. I watched this guy, out of the corner of my eye, and through the reflection in the glass, but discreetly, as you never want to look directly at them. I watched him, discreetly, watched as he bounced, then as he stood up, began pacing. He paced, back and forth, multiple times in front of the couple, then over to the book reader, then back over to me, now walking right behind me, where I couldn’t see him at all, and after his small bout of pacing, he decided the time was ripe to start kicking.
Now, I just want to remind you that we are trapped with this guy. The doors have closed, the train is in motion. Until the next station, you have nowhere else to go. It’s us, and it’s him. He decided then that it was time to start kicking, and so he began to kick the closed train doors. With his huge, heavy boots, he pulled his leg all the way back, both hands firmly gripping the metal poles of the seats, and he kicked. Big, heavy boot kicks. The kind of kicks that you would use to bring a door down. Phone girl is paying attention now, she glances over, the couple still watching, carrying on their conversation nervously, and as for the reader, he was desperately pretending not to notice. After six or seven kicks, our lunatic gets bored, and comes up with a new idea. Now, he wants to punch. He started walking again, and as he walked, up and down the aisle, he randomly punched the walls of the train car. I don’t know how he didn’t break his hand. He walked right over to the book reader, and punched the wall next to him. And it was at this point that I wanted nothing more than to get the fuck off this train. However, I also wanted to go home. At the next stop, I decided that if this psycho didn’t get off the train, I would. But, until we arrived at the next station, we were stuck with this guy, and I had to start seriously considering what I would do if he tried to assault me or one of the other passengers. And, what if he pulled a weapon? What kind of weapon? Knife, gun? On me? On the couple? On the reader? What would I do?
These are the things that I thought about, these are the thoughts that are in my brain, as I rode the train home from meeting an old friend that I hadn’t seen for a long time, having a good time over beers. This was the end, the flourishing touch of a wonderful night spent in New York City. At the next stop, this dangerous man walked up to the open doors, and he stood there, and looked around, insanely, and he really made me take a guess, because I had to decide if he was getting off or not before the doors closed. I really didn’t want to get off, and thank God, right before the doors closed, he stepped off, and we all breathed a sigh of relief. And yes, just another day in New York City.
The same week as the door-kicker guy, I think it was actually just the next day, on the way back from work, riding a packed Q train from the after-work commute, there was a man shouting. I could hear him shouting, screaming, all the way from the other end of the car. It was a packed train, so I wasn’t worried about myself, but I could hear from his ranting that he was psychotic. He was not in reality. His behavior was similar to the man who threatened me before, and yelled at me to get off the train. This guy was shouting, at the top of his lungs, over and over, something about “shooting a motherfucking n**** in the head”. At the next stop, half of the people on the train got off, and one woman moved to the other end of the car where I was, and sat down next to me. I said to her, “What’s going on with that guy?” And she said, “I don’t know.” And I said, “He sounds angry. Is he on the phone?” She said, “No, I think he’s just.. you know.” Yeah, I know. I replied, “Well, he sounds dangerous. He actually sounds insane. I really hope he doesn’t try anything.” And she said, “You know, just leave him alone, he’ll be alright.” We continued talking, then, and she said usually if you just leave them alone they’ll be alright, and that she sees things like this all the time, as most New Yorkers do, and you can recognize a true New Yorker because while someone is screaming about murdering someone else, and kicking doors, and pissing on the floor, a true New Yorker sits there the entire time on their phone and never looks up. What an incredible thing. I think it’s partly a survival mechanism, because it’s true that you absolutely cannot engage, and it can cost you your life, as it did for one rider, two weeks ago as of me writing this, who tried to intervene in a fight between two other riders over loud music (noise!), and was shot and killed. You simply can’t engage, because these people are too far gone. So you sit there and look down, look at your phone, look out of the window, and pray to God that you get home safe. She told me that she was from Africa, and had lived in the city since 2008, and that things have always been bad, but have gotten much worse since Covid.
New York has done this to itself, by the way, from what I have read, because they put almost no money into mental health services, closed all of their psych wards, and did not do anything in response to this. So, they basically have no plan and are doing nothing useful or serious about their serious mental health problem. Somehow they seem to be not doing anything about anything that is fundamental and important to the success of a city, such as having working public transportation, which people have no other alternatives but to use, and generally having people be safe.
The woman I was sitting next to on this train ride with the screaming, murderous psychopath then proceeded to tell me a story about how on her bus ride that morning, there was a man also shouting about murder, and nobody on the bus said anything. And I can tell you, this poor woman, as like so many of the New Yorkers, did not look like she was thriving. No, like so many of these train riders, she looked beaten down and exhuasted, like she had been through the ringer. And is it hard to see why? No. Imagine, that on your bus ride to work in the morning, someone is shouting, ranting about murder, and in the same day, on your train ride home, someone else is doing the same thing. And that’s nothing out of the ordinary. Just another day, in New York City.
Odetari and the Hot Mom
There was one artist that I really wanted to see. This is Odetari. I found a place called Baby’s All Right, in Brooklyn, and they had concerts every night. Two shows, every night. That’s pretty amazing. And they weren’t just rinky-dink acts. They were pretty damn good artists, with decent followings, songs with millions of plays on the streaming services, and they were coming from around the world. The first show I saw there was a band called Jitwam, I got free tickets to the show through a company that sent you free tickets to things for $5 a month, which was cool until I just didn’t want to go do anything anymore, at least not take a gamble on events, because it reached the point where I had so little energy and patience left, and every single excursion out into the Hellscape of NYC was so taxing and strenuous, that I really couldn’t afford to have any failures in my excursions. They absolutely had to be a success. That meant big-time stuff, like genius pianists and orchestra events at Carnegie Hall, and seeing old friends. But in the beginning, I made it out to Baby’s a few times, and saw Jitwam, who were way more amazing than I ever would have expected, having a full band and with all members being absolutely GOATED at their instruments, and then another group called.. I can’t even remember, but they were from London, and did some crazy stuff on the synths, that was very electronic.. and then, the last event, Odetari. It was his second show ever, if what I could gather from the internet was true. And I have to give you a little background on Odetari so you can understand how important this was for me.
First of all, I came to NYC for the culture, and this was exactly what I was looking for when I came here. Odetari was only playing two shows, one in LA, and one in New York City, in Brooklyn, 30 minutes from where I was at the time. If artists are going to go anywhere, the chances are good that they will at least go to NYC. If speakers are going to go anywhere, if anyone is going to go anywhere, to promote their thing, chances are good that they will be coming to NYC, and that is one of the great sources of power of the city. When I first visited, my friend had just commented that some of my photography reminded him of Yayoi Kusama, “my boi thinks he Yayoi Kusama” was his exact comment on my Instagram. I thought, “I wonder if I can see any Yayoi Kusama while I’m here in the city”, and I looked her up, and lo and behold, there was a Yayoi Kusama exhibit at the David Zwirner going on at the exact time that I was there. Yayoi Kusama is internationally recognized and famous. She is a big deal. And just like that, I could go and see her work, in person, on a whim. That is the power of the New York City. The culture game is real. And so, I was following Odetari, one of a few new artists that I had really gotten into, and he posted on his Instagram that he was going to have two concerts, and one of them was at Baby’s All Right, and I was like, wow, hell f***in yeah. I bought two tickets immediately. This was a big deal for me because I have never been in a big city, and had never been able to just go to shows like I could then. Unfortunately, NYC is a horrible nightmare, and so I couldn’t enjoy just going to shows on the weekends for long, but I got a taste of it, and it’s amazing. If you are a music lover, to be able to just get on a bus, on any night you want to, and go see talented musicians actually perform, in the flesh, see the artists who are making all this great music, it’s an incredible thing. And, it’s totally inspiring. To see them doing it. I have never been able to do that, and I hadn’t seen a lot of live music, and so this was one of the first times I was able to go see an artist that I was really into at the time. I would say before this, I was able to see Jack U perform at Spring Awakening, a music festival in Chicago when I was in college, but it was still big stage EDM thing, which is fun, but not really an intimate experience that you have when you go to an artist’s exclusive concert. I could hardly see Skrillex or Diplo at that concert. But Baby’s All Right is not a big venue, it could fit maybe 200 people in the room, probably not even that. 100-150. So you were right there, up close and personal with your artist.
I bought the Odetari tickets a month or a little over a month away from the show, and I had a mission, to convince at least one other person to go to this show with me, and share the love of this great new talent, and despite telling and inviting everyone I knew and barely knew, my best friends, my roommates, my new acquaintances and co-workers, I could not get a single person to attend that concert with me. To be honest, that was really for the best. Nobody was going to be able to match my level of fandom, and I could fully immerse myself and act autonomously alone. It could be a completely personal experience for me, treating myself. It was a really important thing for me, and if I did bring anybody and they weren’t as into it as I was, it may end up tarnishing it, although I still would rather have brought someone else, because I like to involve people. I’m just a social guy, you know. But anyways, that night rolls around, Odetari night, and it was not great timing. At that particular time, which was I think November 6th, I was less than a week out from leaving the current place I was subleting at, and leaving it in a hurry, because it was completely unliveable, and I still had no place to go, because the real estate company I was working with on a new apartment was, I was learning, a complete sham, and run by loser scammers, and so not only was that not going to work out, but I was going to have to fight to get some money back, because I had paid a “good faith deposit” (there is no more irony in any other name of anything ever) to secure my place in the apartment and have it taken off the market, so they said.. I was running a sleep deficit because it was impossible to sleep at the apartment, I was depressed because NYC is depressing, and I was stressed about being homeless or spending days in AirBnBs, which would cost probably 150-200 dollars a night, or sleeping on the couch in my office building, because I learned that they were open 24 hours a day, every day.. I was really going through it, by the time Odetari came around. But this was the entire reason why I was here, and I was going. I was shutting out all of the chaos of life, and I was getting what I wanted, now.
It was a Thursday, and I took the train over to Baby’s All Right after work. I was early, and had some time to kill, so I went to a nearby bar, and I was really debating that, because I didn’t want to spend money, and I didn’t want to drink too much, and I might have, because I often drink too much when I’m depressed. I walked back and forth past a decent-looking spot a few times, and just decided to go for it. It was a clean, stylish place, not too fancy, and only a few people in there. It was still happy hour, so I got a, I think Narragansett, which had been my go to, because it’s the cheapest thing you can possibly order at a bar in New York City, sometimes as little as $5, for this light beer. And it’s not bad. I got one of these, the bartender was friendly, just chillin’, wearing a flannel. I feel like any bartender that’s wearing a flannel is gonna be pretty chill. I don’t think you really wear a flannel and aren’t chill, unless you’re wearing one of those flat-cap baseball hats with it, and then you might be a douchebag. Just maybe. But this guy, he was just chillin’, hooked me up with the beer, we made some small talk, and then a huge group, looking like a company party came in and gave him something to do.
I went over and sat in the comfiest couch in the place, over in the corner, and drank my beer, and thought about life. At that time, I was thinking about where I would live, within the city, but I was also thinking about how the f*** to get out of New York City, if I really should, or if I should try and stick it out, if it was going to get any better here. I couldn’t see how it would get any better, but I hadn’t totally given up on it yet. I was agitated, and energetic, and with all of these thoughts rolling around in my mind, I couldn’t sit still, and I started pacing, as I do. I am a pacer, notoriously, and many people have commented on my pacing. I can’t help it. It’s something I do, when I’m really worked up. And here again, I started pacing in the bar, which was really quite a big establishment, so I had plenty of space to myself for pacing, and I was really just drinking my Narragansett and pacing, pacing, until a girl came up to me, and she said, “Hey, are you okay? You should join my friend and I for a drink. You look like you’re really going through it.” And I said, ok, and sat down with them. Two girls, my age, mid-late 20’s. And I said, “Man, it’s really that obvious, huh.”
I really don’t hide my emotions well. Sometimes I’m an open book. I guess it was the pacing, and I was probably sighing a lot too, I don’t know. They said yes, it was obvious, and they asked me about life, and we talked, and had a little therapy session right there. The one girl had recently quit her job, as in walked out two days ago, her manager having disrespected her for the last time, so she said, and the other girl had just interviewed for a new job, fashion designer, that she really wanted, and then there was me, who was just not in the position I imagined I would be in, in my New York adventure. They took opposite stances, regarding whether I should just give up on New York City, or stick it out and see if it could get any better, with the one girl saying I should just get out if I really didn’t like it, and the other girl saying I was just a quitter, but she was really only being a devil’s advocate. I kind of wondered that too, I thought about that a lot, if I was just quitting on something too early, just giving up when things got difficult, and then some more things happened and I was able to say with 10000% certainty that New York City is just the worst place on Earth and it was never going to get better for me. And, we kept talking, and had some laughs, and then I checked my watch, and it was Oderari time, and I had to go. We hugged, I said thanks, they wished me good luck, and out I went. I had a date with Baby’s.
New York City is a horribly mismanaged cesspool nightmare, but the people are alright. I had plenty of positive, fun, serendipitous interactions with the New Yorkers, and I wish I really didn’t have to leave. There was always someone around to share in your outrage with, always someone around to lend a hand. That’s why, I think it’s a real shame that the city is so terrible, and the government is so useless and ineffective, because it’s a real let down for the good people of the city. They don’t deserve to live in such a shithole, they shouldn’t have to. It’s a god damn shame.
I crossed the street, got in line, and in I went. I didn’t even notice the security guy. He was standing in the corner, dressed in all black, his sneak level 100. He could have hit me with an arrow and I would have been a dead man. He said, “Hey, ID.” I showed him, then went to the next gal, scanning the tickets, and I could hear the lady in front of me talking. She was a Hispanic woman in her 40’s at least, and I had the feeling this was someone’s mom, saying something about could she buy a ticket, she needed another ticket for her husband. And I thought to myself, This is perfect. If you remember, I had bought an extra ticket and tried my utmost to find anybody to bring to this Odetari experience with, and had failed. And I said to this woman, “Hey, I have an extra ticket. Do you want it?” And she was like, “Oh really? Yes, but let me call my husband.” I said, “Ok, let me know if you need it.” And scanned mine.
At any other Baby’s All Right concert, I might have wondered what so many parents were doing there, but with Odetari I already knew how it was going to be. Odetari had launched a Discord server, and I had joined up, and they did an age poll. There were several thousand fans in the Discord, and that’s where I learned that 80% of Odetari’s fans are under 16 years old. I wasn’t surprised. I found Odetari on SoundCloud, but I’d be willing to bet that about 98% of his fans came from TikTok, where he was making videos of Sonic The Hedgehog saying stupid shit and with his music in the background. I didn’t think about kids dragging their parents along with them to Odetari, but I also wasn’t surprised, because I saw multiple kids ask in the Discord in response to the concert announcement if under 18 was allowed in, and if they needed a guardian, which was pretty hilarious. So I was looking forward to seeing the youngins show out for Odetari. And I was hanging out in the lobby, still a little early for the show, and then the Hispanic mom found me and said, “My husband is here, can I have your ticket?” And she tried to pay me for it, and I said no way, I’m just happy that someone got to use it.
After that I went in the back, and picked out my spot. I was down on the right side, not all the way in the back, somewhere in the middle-back, with the wall to my right, so I could lean like a true American (apparently we like to lean), and have some space. I had a perfect view of everything: of the stage, the DJ booth, the rest of the concertgoers, of which the average age was probably 17. It was a good mix though, not just kids, but some parents, and then some adults in the 20’s like me, the parents and older crowd all in the back, teens up front. Before Odetari there was a DJ, no performance, which is not that hype, as DJs just can’t do much with what they’ve got, but he did a good job. Basically every song he played was gas, a certified banger, from Lady Gaga to Crystal Castles and Lil Uzi Vert. He was just going through the hits, but hey, that works. And occasionally shouting into the mic, “Who’s ready for Odetari????” He went on for too long, I think an hour, but I tell you what, at the end of that hour we were ready for Odetari. And then, the anime visuals came on, some scenes from Kimetsu no Yaiba (Demon Slayer), and it was go time.
Odetari came out swinging, with the bangers, dressed in a giant fur coat, black knit cap, gleaming grills on his teeth, starting off right with a hit. Crowd goes crazy. It was really great to see. And for having little concert experience, Odetari was a pro. Authentic, energetic, relaxed, and you could tell he was happy to be there. The fans knew all the words, to Odetari songs I hadn’t even heard, and it was fun to see which ones were really the fan favorites, and what the favorite parts of the songs were. The Baby’s audio engineer also got his shit in order for this concert, because the last one I had been to, the bass was just way too much, and for this concert the audio was perfect. So, everyone was vibing, Odetari performing like a champ, having a great time, and then, probably 2/3 of the way into the concert, this woman comes down and takes the space in front of me. She’s looking into the crowd, looking for someone, I’m kind of watching her, interested, and then she turns to me, smiling, and says, “I’m looking for my daughter!” I laughed internally, because you know, it’s a pretty hilarious thing to be saying at a concert, while noticing that this mom is extremely hot. This is an extremely hot mom. I said, smiling back, “She’s definitely in there having a great time!” This hot mom looked again into the crowd, and then seemed reassured, and turned her attention to the concert. Before long, she’s throwing her hands up, dancing in front of me, and generally being sexy. She’s kind of looking my way, you know, and I’m thinking, Is this hot mom making moves on me? I’m still watching Odetari, but now I’m watching her too, and she’s moving around, vibing, and then after one particularly wild flail of her arms, says to me, “Oh my god, did I hit you??” (She really didn’t even come close.) And I said, “No, no.” And she said, smiling, “Oh, ok!” Then she keeps dancing. She’s having a good time, dancing here in front of me, and then she comes up with another reason to talk to me, I can’t remember what it is was this time, and then I said whatever, and then I went to scratch the corner of my eye, just a casual swipe, and she seemed to think that was her fault, and she says, again flashing her perfect smile at me, “Oh, I’m sorry, did I spit on you??” And my genius response to this was, “No, but you can spit on me anytime.” (Sometimes, my brain just comes up with something so brilliant that even I can’t believe it.) And without breaking eye contact, immediately she replies, “I would love to spit on you.”
So, here we were. It was now confirmed, this incredibly hot mom was in fact into me, and not only into me, but she was so into me that she was ready to spit on me, if only my heart desired it. For a minute, I forgot all about Odetari, in his big fur coat, and the screaming fans, except one of them, who was the daughter of this hot mom, and I was thinking. Now, what, do we do here? I just came here for Odetari, I was not here for love, and then, the universe bestows an incredibly hot mom upon me. But with my current state of affairs, being so run through the ringer by the city, my sole focus on Odetari and the concert, and with a daughter in mix, I imagined me standing around with hot mom and her daughter, not even sure who’s age I was closer to, and the potential awkwardness of that scenario… And I’m sorry to say I just wasn’t up for it. After I told this story to a few friends, they all asked, “Did you at least get her number?” Nope, I didn’t even get that. I didn’t even think to ask, actually. I forgot that was a thing. She kept dancing in front of me, the concert ended soon after, and then she went off to find her daughter, and I was out of there.
That was the end of me and that hot mom, but really, just having a such a beautiful woman tell me that she “would love to spit on me”, that alone was a great treat, the whole concert being amazing on top of it. I had a feeling if I stuck around I would have met Odetari, which the videos posting in the Discord after the show confirmed, but I was happy enough, and my night still wasn’t over. I had to make my return journey, which is the most difficult step of all, as the city generally does not want you to ever have a good time on the trains, and conspires to make it as difficult for you as possible, always. I was going to take a new route home, and had prepared it beforehand, looking at the maps, memorizing the stops. I left Baby’s, had gotten to my first station, boarded the correct train going the right way, and then after two stops, the train stopped, and the conductor announces, “Okay, everybody off!” And kicked everybody off the train, at a random stop in no-man’s-land, and I along with about three hundred other people at this station now tried to figure out what the hell we were going to do. Being randomly kicked off a train at a random station is a problem for everybody, but it’s particularly annoying for me because I don’t have a smartphone, and so have to navigate the old-fashioned way, via inconveniently placed metro train maps and conversations with angry and unhelpful MTA employees. This happens once, it happens twice, it happens thrice, and all in the same day, and you really stop having any patience for it, and stop wanting to do anything ever. But for Odetari, I could handle anything the NYC subways could have cooked up for me, barr seeing someone get shot or stabbed, or shot or stabbed myself. That would not have been worth it. It took me at least an extra hour to get home that night, but I didn’t care.
The city likes to punish you for having fun. New York City is a masochistic city, for masochists. Some of my worst train nightmares coincided with some of what were supposed to be my most fun outings. For example, all North-South trains that I could have possibly needed went down after my attending a concert with the “Mic Jagger of Japan” (Yoshiki) at Carnegie Hall, because someone got hit on the tracks, and it took me at least two more hours to get home that night. Another time, I had to take “replacement bus” (I avoided these like the plague from hereon afterwards) because the Q line was down for the weekend while I was trying to go to Carnegie Hall for a concert, (wow, and that was actually the exact same day that I went to see Yoshiki), and Jesus Christ, it took an hour on that bus to go what would have been two stops on the Q, because of traffic. Getting screwed one way is bad enough, but most of the time New York City is not content with that, and will f*** you on both legs of your journey, especially if you are attempting to do something fun. New York City just loves f***ing it’s citizens in the ass as much as humanly possible. A city for masochists, no doubt.
The Prostitute
This is not really a fair name for the story, because the main character of this story was not, in fact, a prostitute. However, she did look like one, and she even commented on this herself, which made it all the more amazing, as I gradually discovered that this lady I was speaking to, on a sunny bench in a small park area between apartment complexes, was not only not a prostitute, but was totally super-smart, and extremely well-read. Near my first apartment on 180 Lenox Road, I had discovered a little spot that was great for just sitting and being outside, and enjoying the outside air. These spots are rare, at least rare enough in Flatbush, and this was a good little spot I found, only a five minute walk from my apartment. There was enough space between the buildings that the sun could actually come through, and for most of the day, earlier in the day it would hit two of the benches in this little plaza. There were three benches across from the two that basked in the sun, but they were shaded, covered by some trees, and usually they were taken. I only sat on the sunny benches, and I didn’t come here many times, because this was before shit really hit the fan, and my New York life took a complete and amazing nosedive, engine blown, propellor off, windshield shattered, turbines in flames, but most of the times I came here to this sunny bench I had some kind of interaction.
It is a great thing about New York, one of my favorite things about it, is that if you are looking for some action, you can always get it. You can always get something. The number of characters is too great for you to go out in the city and not find anyone to talk to, anything interesting to come away with. I was standing on a corner in Flatbush, on Church Ave, inspecting a strange architectural marvel I had just discovered, which was something like a modern building being built around the shell of some ancient one, and as I stood there, trying to understand what was going on here, a man saw that I was interested, and came over and started telling me all about it. He was middle aged, had terrible teeth, a large scar on his chest, his arm was in a sling, and to top it all off he had little to no hair on his head. Basically, he looked like he had been having a rough time. But this guy, he told me all about the construction, that they were upgrading the outside of the building while keeping the frame, and I commented on the other interesting architecture in the neighborhood, as there were a number of large sandstone/granite churches that looked like they were straight out of Europe, like mini-castles, and other interesting buildings, and he knew all about them. I mentioned that I was new to the area, and he told me about some cool architecture in the city that I could go check out. He gave me an entire itinerary and had me feeling like going off on a great adventure right there and then to go see some of these sights, but I had a bum leg and couldn’t do much walking those days. We talked for about twenty minutes I’d say, before shaking hands and saying goodbye. Those are the kinds of quality interactions you can have in New York City, and they aren’t hard to find. It’s that kind of place, where rubbing shoulders is unavoidable, interacting with strangers is normal. It’s one of the things that I liked the most about NYC. Me personally, I’m trying to have quirky and fun interactions with strangers basically 100% of the time. And I did think that New Yorkers were mostly friendly, or at the very least helpful, and often times quite chatty. They could also be mean, scary, and totally insane. At least it’s not hard to tell who’s who.
There was one morning where I got onto my Q train, for the morning commute, and it was pretty packed. I was still groggy from waking up, and took one of the only seats left open, that was in the back corner. The seats form an L, there are just a ton of L configurations of seats on the train, with three seats along the wall, and two seats turned towards those three seats, perpendicular to the wall. The corner seat that I sat in this morning is the seat in the bottom-left corner of the L, and it is the most undesirable seat. You have to squeeze between people to get there, and you have the least space to yourself out of any possible seat. I guess though, once you get into that seat, if you plan to be sitting for awhile, it’s a great seat, because you are furthest removed from the rest of the people on the train. You’re kind of tucked away. You just have to get there. It is often left open, even on a packed train, but I had an hour ahead of me, and anyways it doesn’t make sense to leave seats open when there are so many people fighting for space, so I was going to sit.
Because I was groggy, I was lax, and didn’t really do a check of the people I would be sitting by, scanning them for danger signals. Big mistake. I squeezed into this corner seat, and plopped down. Immediately after that, the guy sitting to my right turned his head, not only 90 degrees, but like a full 130. He was leaning forward, with his arms on his knees, and he turned his head that far back, at least 130 degress, to look me right in the eyes, and stare me down for a full ten seconds. He was extremely displeased that I had the audacity to take this corner seat, and he was going to let me know. And this guy, I looked him in the eyes. He was wearing a red bandana, and had a black facemask on. He was Hispanic, probably in his 30’s, and he looked like a crazy-eyed killa. I was absolutely terrified. I looked away immediately, and he kept staring at me, for about 10 seconds, I swear to god. And I sat there, praying that he would not stab me, praying to God, that my mistake would be overlooked, that I could be forgiven for accidentally taking this seat, and at the next stop I swore I would move. I just needed to make it one stop without getting stabbed. But to my great relief, at the next stop he got up and got off the train. That was one of the more terrifying New Yorkers.
The first time I went and sat on one of these sunny benches, within two minutes of sitting down, a guy came over to me. He was a younger guy, around my age, wearing a red NBA tank top. He started chatting me up, asking me for the time, and then just a few sentences into the conversation I was thinking, Okay, so you’re just a little bit kooky aren’t you? I wish I could remember our full conversation better, because the whole thing was a wild ride, but the best part I do remember. He said, “You know Chris Brown? That’s my cousin.” And I was like, “What, really? Wow!” A little bit later in our conversation, and he says, “Yeah man. You know T-Pain? That’s my cousin.” And now I’m thinking, wow, really? Chris Brown and T-Pain are related? I wouldn’t have thought that, but I guess they’re both musicians, and – “Yup, and you know Jay Z? Yeah, that’s my cousin right there.” And now I was starting to think, you know, this man really has an incredible number of very famous musician cousins. I would be lying if I didn’t say that I getting a little dubious, but of course I didn’t say anything. Really, it was definitely more fun if these facts were true, than if they weren’t.. And anyways, aren’t we all cousins? Distantly removed. Then he told me that he had a show coming up at the Barclay’s Center on Atlantic Avenue, and that had me saying, “Really??” to which he replied, “Yeah.. I’m just the opening act though.” We talked for a little bit more, and I remember him saying, “I just thank god every day for being here, and keep thanking god. Every day is a gift. It’s a blessing to be alive.” Amen, brother. And then, he bade me adieu, walked off. A kooky guy, a character 100%, but he had good energy, and a lot of famous cousins. Nothing wrong with that guy.
Next time I went to the benches, a few days later, and I wondered if I would be seeing my friend with all the famous cousins again. He wasn’t around, but when I walked up to the little plaza, I spied an interesting-looking woman sitting on one of the benches, my favorite bench. There were three seats on the bench, and she was all the way on the right. Her shirt was pulled down, quite far down, showing a lot of skin, tan, dark skin, soaking up all of the sunlight, like she was at the beach. She was older, at least late 50’s, 60’s, (I hope she wasn’t in her 40’s looking like that, and if you are reading this, nice bench lady, and you are in your 40’s, I’m so sorry), and for being older, she was really done up, in a gaudy kind of way, with thick eyelashes and mascara, large earrings, long, purple plastic nails. You know what I mean. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, but, for showing all of the skin, looking a little rough due to the age, and then the layer of glam on top of it, just her general vibe, was giving me prostitute vibes, but of course I didn’t know that she was one, and I wasn’t going to say that she was one. I felt a lot better when, at the end of conversation, she commented on it herself.
The truth, we will never know, but I can tell you that I sat down next to this lady, and same as with the guy with all the famous cousins, within minutes she was talking to me. I think I’m just really approachable, I don’t know what it is. People like to talk to me. If you also sit down by someone on a park bench, I think it’s completely normal and fair game to start talking to them. But she said, waking up from her snooze, “Excuse me, do you know what the date is today?” And I actually did know it, somehow, because that’s one of those typically irrelevant facts like how the weather is going to be, that I’m just okay with living out, and not knowing, but today I knew it. And so our conversation was off to a great start. It’s been too long now, this was months ago, so I can’t rememeber all of it, but I remember that we were first talking about what a great spot this was, and how you could actually soak up some sunshine, and then we talked about how we had both just moved into the neighborhood, and what we thought about it. She made many, many good jokes about the sirens, all of the sirens and the sirening happening. She was living behind me, in the building behind mine, which was an enormous new development that towered over the rest of the sad little classic brownstone apartment buildings that the typical Flatbusher lives in. Her building had reminded me of a tower in an Xbox 360 game I played in high school, called Fable 3, where the main evil villian was a magical wizard guy, and started building his magical wizard palace out in the middle of the ocean, and it was called The Spire, and throughout the game it just gets taller and taller, and you can always see it in the background, rising. At the end of the game you go through The Spire and get to the top and kick his ass. I never finished the game though, too long. Her building was like 50 stories tall, which is 40 stories taller than any of the other brownstones around, and was also extremely shiny and new, and it lorded over everything like The Spire. I used her building as a reference for when I was trying to find my way back to the apartment in that Flatbush maze.
So I found out she lived in that building, which she confirmed was in fact very nice, and had a pool on the roof, which she said she would usually use, but sometimes she couldn’t get in, I can’t remember why. They were just closed sometimes. We were both like, what, that’s dumb. So here she was at the bench. And I’m just thinking now, this is really how it goes in New York City. We are neighbors, she lives right next to me, and in my apartment, dogs on the roof, cockroaches on my toothbrush, mold, mice, and lead paint, noise, drugs in the hallways, the heat doesn’t come on until December 15th, and right next door, this lady living in paradise, nice new building that I hope has no cockroaches but you never know in this city (I saw one in our fancy Broadway office building bathroom, on the 15th floor), the drugs are probably higher-end, and she has a pool on the roof. Probably has a gym as well. Living very different lives. You will see a neighborhood of mansions right next to a block of brownstone apartment buildings, and they can be the same area, and the one neighborhood of mansions probably has 30-50 people in it, in luxury, although they live in New York City so their rich-person experience is still tarnished (but you know what? It could be enhanced, if they enjoy lording over the peasantry), and then in the same area of brownstone apartments, maybe 400-500 people. My building had 6 floors and something like 12 apartments on each floor, so if we say that there were on average 2 people per room, although I bet there were more, more like 2.5-3 people per room, you would have 144 people in the building, occupying the same physical space as 2 or 3 mansions. So, yeah. That’s a big difference. And you would walk out of your shitty brownstone and into a street of mega-mansions. Honestly though, I think that’s kind of nice, because you can at least have a nice street with nice houses to walk down, and imagine you live in one, and if you are in the mansion, you can look out of your window and see the people eeking out a meager living in their tiny brownstone apartments and thank god you’re not one of them.
Anyways, this lady was living in that giant building, and we were talking about the building, and I commented that there were always sirens going on right around there, and I even saw some action at the building when I walked past it a week ago. Some firefighter trucks had pulled up, the firefighters poured out, then an ambulance arrived, and they went around back and put someone in a stretcher. I watched a bit of this, I had nothing better to do, you know how it is. And she said that the first floor was a hospital, or a nursing facility, and there was always action going on.
Anyways, as we chatted, I came to realize that this prostitute-looking woman was not only not really a down-on-her-luck-type individual, but she was very smart, and well-educated. She was completely defying her looks, and I was utterly shocked, when for some reason I mentioned that I had recently been reading a George Orwell novel, and I said, “You know George Orwell?” And she said, “Of course.” Making me feel ashamed for even asking her! And I said it was one I had never heard of, Burmese Days, and she actually knew about it, and had read it, and could recollect some of the story. Now, people, do you know about Burmese Days? Have you even heard of this book, let alone read it? Maybe so. I’ll tell you that I only knew about it because my roommate had it in his book collection, and he hadn’t read it. If you don’t know about it, it was Orwell’s first novel, inspired by his time working for the British government in Burma. I had never heard of it, and I’m not a librarian, but I do know a lot of books, and if I had to guess, probably 1/10000 people have heard of it. Maybe I’m totally wrong here, but I don’t think that’s a book that most people know, let alone have read, and yet here we were, me and this mystery woman, discussing the plot, and the characters, of this rare George Orwell novel. And as we talked, in the back of my mind, I was thinking, “Well this is kind of crazy isn’t it? This is not at all how I expected this interaction to go.”
And that’s how it is, here. You just never know who you’re going to be talking to, in this city. This is another one of the things I really liked about New York City. You can bet that whoever you’re talking to, the chances are high that they’re going to have some interesting things to say. I had been eyeing the book that she had with her, it was a thick one, and after talking about Burmese Days I asked what she was reading, and you know what it was? Carl Jung. Yeah, that’s where she was at. Then my surprise was complete. And not only was she reading Jung, “one of his later works”, but she knew a lot about him and his philosophy, and seemed to be a big fan, except she was disappointed he was a misogynist. Ah, well, nobody’s perfect!
Incidents On Trains
I had many incidents on trains. Much of my New York life was spent on trains, so naturally I would have many stories from them. I already told you a few of them, such as the bandana black mask terrifying Hispanic guy who stared me down when I sat next to him, and all of the crazies, punching the walls and screaming about murder, but that’s really only the tip of the iceberg. I have many, many more. I had an hour commute one-way, to my office in downtown Manhattan, and then because the trains are almost always down or delayed, it would really come out to be an hour and fifteen minutes on average, and then I had to take trains and buses to go anywhere ever, because I was living in the no-man’s-land of Flatbush, and then south Flatbush, so.. I became quite familiar with the New York City public transportation system. Which is, for sure, the worst public transportation system out of any city on Earth, if we measure that by how many people are inconvenienced, traumatized, injured, killed, and add up the total human suffering and time-wasting. It can’t even be a close contest. New York is thoroughly trouncing all possible competition. It’s something they are doing quite well. And sometimes, the things that are happening, you think, this must be some kind of joke. Someone must be doing this to get a sick-kick, because there’s no way that this could otherwise be the reality of it. It just can’t be.
For example, one morning, I hopped onto the Q train, my beloved, and began the great nightmare journey to work, and after two stops, the train was down. Delayed, the conductor announces, for reason unknown. Across from us, at the platform, a B train rolls up. The B train runs the same route, but skips a few stops, and everyone has told me that the B train is faster, and you should take it instead of the Q if you can, but I’ve ridden it many times, and can say that there is no difference at all between their arrival times, and so it doesn’t matter. The conductor comments on this, saying the B train is available, and most people on this semi-packed train do the natural thing, and cross the platform, and get onto the B train. I watch them load themselves on, and now the B train is nearly full to the brim, and I thought, “Yeah, I’m just going to wait..” But, I also had the feeling that if our Q train was delayed for unknown reasons, the B train might not be doing any better. And that feeling turned out to be correct, because for the next 10 minutes, both trains now just sat at the station, and you could see that everyone who had crossed over to the B train, was just extra-pissed off now, because they were crammed in, and standing. But, eventually, the B train did take off, and then another one rolled right up, and so I figured I would be stupid not to make the move now, and so I and everyone else who had stayed on the Q, crossed the platform and got on this B train. Then, after we had all sat down, the conductor announced this: “I’m sorry, everybody, but you’re going to want to give yourselves a liiitle more time (he really drew out the i in the little) in the mornings for the next month and a half, because we’re doing construction in Central Park. Thank you for your patience!” And everyone collectively groaned, and that’s where it again entered my mind, I’m almost laughing to myself now, that it feels like a joke. It’s a cruel joke, that someone is playing on you. It just doesn’t seem like it could be real life. Now, if you know the New York City subway, you know that everything he just said is completely meaningless, because they are always doing construction everywhere, all the time, and everyone is already factoring in delays and train downages, because they happen everywhere, all the time. It’s a fact of daily life. So, this doesn’t really mean anything to anyone. It just means that our B train, the one we’ve all just decided to get on, is also going to be further delayed, and we’re going to be even later to work, or wherever it is that we’re all going at 8:30 on a Tuesday morning.
Some people get out their phones and make the calls, which I have now heard a hundred times, and always go like this, “Yeap, sorry, stuck on the train, gonna’ be late!” Sometimes with a little laugh, sometimes with agony and exasperation. This B train continued to sit there, now, and the Q train that we had all abandoned then took off. Another Q pulled up, and I made the move again, because, why not? At this point, I have nothing to lose, and the more times I can switch trains on this platform, the more fun it is for me. I had already told my boss that I was late. Now I could play Frogger as much as I wanted. Luckily though, because really I can only spend so much time on those trains without completely losing my will to live, that Q train was the winner, and we were able to go several more stops now, before our train goes down because of a “signal delay.” It seemed to me that “signal delay” was just a catch-all, get-out-of-jail-free card to stop the train, like saying your “stomach hurts” when you’re trying to get out of going to school. “I’m sick, my stomach hurts!” “We’re stopping, ‘signal delay!'” Conductor wants to stop and eat a snack? Signal delay. Rat hit the windshield, can’t see? Signal delay. People on the train actually about to get to where they are trying to go, on time? Signal delay. Generally I was okay with a signal delay being the reason for the train stopping, because it meant about a five minute shutdown. What you don’t want to hear is “Someone got hit” (“Again???” A true reaction from a New York City subway rider.), and you don’t want to hear nothing. If they don’t give any reason at all, it’s very sus, and you should expect the worst.
The trains lurch. It’s the best word to describe their stopping and starting. It is extremely lurching, and random. You cannot predict how strong or aggressive any individual lurch will be when the train stops or starts. It’s kind of fun that way, but it prevents you from ever relaxing, unless you’re seating, or vigorously clutching something. It’s very rare that you see someone who can just stand there, and not hold onto anything, and still not desperately grab for the nearest pole, rail, or wall when the train slams on the breaks, or lurches off to a start. I had the utmost respect for anyone who could ride that train without holding onto anything, ever. Sometimes people would think they could, and then they would be sent flying, smashing into other riders, apologizing embarrassingly, or saying nothing at all, and just eating the embarrassment, then finding the nearest thing to hold onto and gripping it tightly. For my hundreds and hundreds of hours on those trains, I could never get the hang of the lurching. It would trick you, too, because the train would glide into a station, as smooth as butter, perhaps for a few stations it would do this, lulling you into a false sense of security, and you would relax, until the next one, where the train would suddenly come to grinding, screeching halt, and then you would be sent flying.
There was one time where I was beginning my commute home from work, and had gotten onto the Q train at 52nd, like usual, and there was an open seat between two girls. I was eyeing the seat, but I opted to stand, because I had been sitting all day, and I usually let other people sit if I can, and I didn’t want to squeeze in between these girls anyway, but the train sat in the station for longer, and longer, and I was still eyeing the seat. I thought, let me just get my seat now then, and as soon as I made the move to sit in this seat, the exact moment that I started crouching down to land my buttox in that plastic chair, the conductor decided to slam on the gas. I was sent flying into the girl to my right, and ended up sitting right on top of her. And she went, “Oh!!!” I immediately jumped off of her and into the seat, apologizing profusely. And I just thought, it’s like they fucking planned it, and I said that to her. “It really feels like they’re trying to do this to you, doesn’t it?” And she laughed. She said, “They have a camera. They were waiting for you to try and sit down.” And we had a nice, wholesome laugh about that. This interaction was much better than when, another time, the train took off like the Cedar Point Dragster, and although I was holding onto a rail above me, my left foot was in the thinnest puddle of water, and when I tried to plant my feet I ended up spinning nearly 360 degrees in half a second. This happened on a completely packed train, during the morning commute. I felt totally embarrassed by my wild random spin, but to relieve me of some of my embarrassment, I had what I thought was a pretty witty comment, and said, “Wow, just like a ballerina!” You really don’t see a move like that every day. It was impressive. But the morning commute is a rough crowd, and not a single of the ten people in my immediate vicinity had any reaction to my spin move, or my witty comment, or really just my existence at all. They wanted nothing to do with it. There was one girl, sitting next to me, who when I spun, without looking up went “Oh..!” with a little start.
Once, on the Q train home from the office, I boarded at 52nd like usual. It was a good crowd on the train, not packed but pretty full, with the seats mostly taken and a good number of people standing, and I had to wait a few stops to get a seat. I really wanted a seat, because I had some reading material that I was keen to crack open, and that was a copy of The New York Times. A physical, paper copy. I had swiped it from the office, and it looked like a really juicy edition, and I had never read the physical New York Times before. The last time I had a copy of an actual paper newspaper at all I can’t even remember. So, that was going to help alleviate my boredom on the ride home, and give me something to do. I ended up scoring a seat that stuck out into the center of the car, the bottom right of the L of seats, and that was a good enough one because I at least had no one sitting to my right. I sat down in this seat, reached into my bag, and pulled out the Times. I placed it on my lap, and started to unfold it, and then something magical started happening. As I began unfolding this behemoth of a paper, it started to grow, opening up, and continued to grow, and then it just didn’t stop, but it kept unfurling, and becoming larger, and now was starting to fall apart, because there were like, newspapers inside of newspapers, papers tucked inside of papers, and suddenly, very quickly things were spiraling out of control. Do you guys actually know how big a physical newspaper is? One copy of The New York Times is like an entire book. It would probably take ten hours to read it front to back. I had no idea it was going to be anything like this.
As I was sitting there, wrestling with it, trying to keep all of the papers together, and get to what I wanted to read, on page A15, my left elbow flared out, and out of the corner of my eye, I saw the woman sitting next to me recoil a bit. I turned to her and said, “Ah, sorry.” And she didn’t say anything. And I knew it was my mistake, although I was having a little bit of fun with this, and you are not supposed to have fun on the trains. I understand that I was being a jackass, I got that. I didn’t almost hit her in the face, nothing close to that, but I still got too close, and I was making a fuss and a lot of noise. That gigantic paper was crinkling and rustling like it was paid to do it. She didn’t reply, and I said to her, and to myself, “Sorry, I’ve never really read one of these before. I didn’t realize it was so big!” And she sighs, loudly, and reaches up under her knit cap, and takes out an earbud. She had had headphones in, but I couldn’t tell because of the cap, and then she says, loudly, and with obvious annoyance, “What?” I realized now how it was all going wrong, and I said, “Oh man, nevermind, I’m sorry-” But she cut me off. “No, you said something to me. What did you say?” She wasn’t going to let me go. She had taken out her headphones, and now she was going to hear whatever this jackass newspaper-reader guy had to say. I said, “I’m sorry for disturbing you, I just had never read one of these things before, I didn’t realize it was so big.” And she said, “Okay, well you don’t have to read it right next to me. You can turn away from me.” With that, she put her earbud back in, and left me to my own. Chastized and shamed, I turned as far away from her as physically possible, and continued my struggle with the paper from a respectable distance.
Some people on the trains really didn’t like me. Some people did. I talked with quite a few cuties. There was one girl, I think this was also at the 52nd Street station, but it might have been Union Square, and I noticed her on the platform. She was young, very pretty, and had striking orange hair. She was just generally an interesting gal, and I was standing right by her, waiting for the train, when she said to me, “Excuse me, but do you know if this train is going to Brooklyn?” And I was like, “Oh, hello!” I told her it was, and we got on the train together, and started making conversation. Turns out we were both new to the city, and both musicians, and she was here for some singing program at a university that sounded like something I probably should have heard of, and she said she was working with a producer making some “electronic pop music with orchestras.” I asked her where she was coming from, I think she had hinted that she was not from the US, and I was having a hard time guessing her accent, because it was subtle. She told me, “Israel.” And suddenly, after saying this, she looked around the train car, getting quiet, and laughed nervously, and said, “I shouldn’t be saying that so loudly.” This was just a week or two after the Hamas-Israel conflict broke out, and she was right for thinking that. I reassured her, and didn’t think she had too much to worry about, but later I thought about it, and she really was smart for wanting to keep a low profile. I got her Instagram and told her I looked forward to hearing some of her music, and I saw that she followed me, but I didn’t follow her back right away. The next time I was on Instagram, I tried to look her up but she wasn’t still following me, and I couldn’t find her anymore. For whatever reason she must have unfollowed me. Shame! If there’s ever a super-cute orange-haired Israeli girl that gets big making orchestral electro-pop, I can say I met her on the Q train in New York City.
Another time, riding the Q, (I was almost always riding the Q), I was coming back from the JFK airport, and had thankfully very few nightmare incidents, which was fair, because my trip to JFK was so full of them (it was actually the most harrowing and horrible journey of my life to date), and this return journey had consisted only of helping a couple French girls get on the right train, I was only a few stations from the stop for my second apartment in south Flatbush, Avenue H, and I had pulled out my phone. Just absentmindedly checking my messages, I think, and when I did that, and was sitting there, I heard, “Hey.” I looked up, and there was a cute girl with frizzy brown hair sitting across from me, on a mostly empty train. I said, “Hi.” She said, “You don’t have a smartphone?” And I said, “Nope.” And finally, it had only taken months, but it worked. I was finally getting some positive attention from a girl because of my super-cool flipping phone. She said, “That’s cool. Why?” Yes, frizzy hair cutie, it is cool. I’m a cool guy. (I actually said that. “‘Cause I’m a cool guy.” Man, so cool.) And then I tried to explain to her in a very brief window of time, why I had given up on the smartphone life, and to answer her basic question of, “What’s it like?” I could spend more than just a few minutes answering that question, but as it’s become so normal to me now, I don’t have all of my thoughts on it prepared and ready to go, like I used to. I just told her, “It’s nice. You should try it.” And then just like that, my stop had arrived, and I said, “Do you want my number?” And she said, “Oh no, that’s alright.” Which I thought was hilarious, but I was also already walking out of the door. It wasn’t good timing. This is how I’m justifying her denial of wanting my number, anyway.
I have gotten a lot of attention regarding my no-phone life, and now flip phone life, from the other youngins of my generation, once they realize that I’m not just messing with them, and that I actually don’t have a phone. Because, it’s so uncommon to be in your 20’s and not have a cellular device, or to have a flip phone. You are such a magical unicorn, I found out, that nobody actually believes you when you first tell them that you don’t have one. They say something like, “Just scan this QR code.” or, “Can you just look this up in Maps?” and you say, “No, sorry. I can’t. I don’t have a phone.” And they say, “Right, haha.” And you say, “No, really. I don’t have one at all.” And then they say, “Wait.. what the f***?” I was doing business at the town hall in Hokkaido, after I had moved there, I was doing some business somewhere, and they said, after I handed back my form with no phone number written down, “Anata no denwa bango wa nandesuka?” (“What’s your phone number?”) And I said, “Sumimasen. Denwa bango wa naidesu…” (“Sorry, I don’t have a phone number…”) And she definitely looked at me like I was lying my ass off. She was like, “What? Why are you lying to me about this?” Oh, I just remembered. It was in Ozu, at the doctor’s office. She just kept looking at me like, “Why are you lying? Why would anyone lie about that?”
I was interested and looked up phone ownership rates in the US, and basically, not having a phone made me a statistical anomaly, which I was thrilled to be, as from the age range of like 20-29, 0% of Americans did not have a phone. Contrary to what Scrumpillion Wombus told his mom though, I wasn’t doing this to be cool, or because I thought I was “better than everyone else.” I just did it because I wanted to know what it was like, and then it turned out that I liked not having a phone. The flip phone is a great compromise though, and my life is better with it than without it. The smartphone I now have that I use whenever I have wifi, that’s okay. It’s good for making Instagram reels. But I could get rid of it any time.
This didn’t happen on a train, but just because we’re talking about girls..
There was one girl I remember, I met her when I went to Le Pain Quotidian, a little bakery/cafe Panera Bread type thing, to pick up my cheap meal. I had been introduced to an app called whatever (I can’t remember), where you would find places that were getting rid of excess inventory, meals generally, but there were some grocery stores that would give away produce and whatnot, and I had some fun with that. I introduced this app to Mr. Six Corners (my extremely entertaining supervisor at Japan Foundation and my NYC best friend) and within a week he had used it five times. I only used it a few times before I couldn’t afford the time or energy for it anymore, and one spot I had success with was a Le Pain Quotidian near the office. The first time I had used this app, I went to the restaurant, and was hanging out, after confirming that they had wifi, because I had a smartphone that I was using the app on, but no data for the phone, and I needed to wifi to present the QR code that would only appear at the right time, so I couldn’t screenshot it beforehand (what a pain in the ass).. anyways, I had all that confirmed, and left, walked around and killed some time, and then came back and was hanging around the store. There were two other people in there hanging around as well, a guy who looked very Spanish, and this girl in a pretty yellow leather jacket. I said, “You guys here to pick up your packages?” (I can’t remember what they called it in the app.) And they were like, hell yeah. We did some chatting, the guy at the counter announced that we were ready to get our goody bags, and we got ’em, and then I was still talking to the girl in the yellow jacket on the way out, told her to have a good night. She was gorgeous, brown hair, nice smile, tall, and had that vibrant yellow jacket, the same color as kids’ yellow rainboots. That’s a color that you don’t see every day. Anybody who wears a color like that is probably a bright ray of sunshine, or trying to be. And she had these amazing boots on too. But why I really remember her, and she’s making it into this blog at all, is because when we said goodbye, she turned around, I happened to see that she had one of the greatest cabooses I’ve ever seen. It hit me hard, like, BAM. I can easily say that it was in the top 5 cabooses I have ever had the pleasure of seeing on a woman, and the moment I saw that caboose, I wanted to run after her right then and there and ask her for her number. But she was already descending into the subway, boots gone, then the caboose, finally the yellow jacket, and I just that beautiful buttox go. Someday I might really regret letting all of these chances slip away. But at least I have a great memory of her in her in that yellow jacket, and her phenomenal caboose.
Brighton Birthday Beach Party With the Eastern Europeans
Lord, this is a story right here.
It was the day of my birthday. That is to say, it was my birthday, on this day. I had only just moved in with my new roommates, after a frantic and exasperating search for a new apartment, that I desperately needed because 180 Lenox Road was such a nightmare. It was so loud that I was unable to sleep at night, and it was also crazy expensive, even if it would have been nice, but doubly worse for how absolutely terrible it was, and so there was simply no way that I was ever going to stay there for another month, even though my roommate was pissed at me for leaving, because he was strapped for cash, and knew he wouldn’t be able to find another soul to take the place, and help him pay the rent that he was already, I suspected, extremely behind on. Unsurprisingly this resulted in me having to fight tooth and nail to get my security deposit back from him, but thank God in the end I did, even though it came three months late, and in two separate installments. He had 100% spent my security deposit immediately on rent that he owed, I knew. I not only managed to escape this untenable situation with my full deposit returned to me, and without having to go to court, and also, surviving a difficult mess with a shady, scummy real estate company that I had fallen in with, as they were complete and utterly shameless, well-versed tricksters, who were wasting my time, and energy, and had $500 of my “good-faith deposit” (god, what a name), with many terms and conditions that were so designed to ensure that I would never get it back, but guess what, I DID, get it back.. anyways, I waded through all of this nightmare, sleep-deprived, and expecting fully to spend some nights sneaking into my Japan Foundation Manhattan office and sleeping on the floor, because, what, am I going to pay $200 a night for an AirBnB? Absolutely not. I was fully prepared for this, when out of the great sky, a miracle fell onto me, only several days before I planned to vacate 180 Lenox Road, plan or no plan. This miracle was contrived by the greatest man in New York City, who I had mentioned in the last story, Mr. Six Corners, who I expect to give his own entire chapter in this saga, but let me say here that he saved my ass so bad that I actually owe him one million dollars. If I ever have an inordinately extravagant amount of money, Mr. Six Corners, you get one million dollars. I’ll say it now. (You see that I have left myself a nice out, by not defining the exact amount of money that I would have to reach before I pay him one million dollars. At least Mr. Six Corners, I will pay for your flight ticket to America to come visit me any time, and a splendid penthouse for you to stay in, with your four cats.) This incredible man hooked me up with some roommates that he had stayed with when he first came to NYC, fine gentlemen, of whom one was a JET in Kumamoto of all places, just like me. We had an immediate bond over this, which is the power of the JET program, and Kumamoto, the greatest place on Earth. (The more I see of the world, the more I feel that that is absolutely the truth.) When I arrived at that new apartment building, from the outside looking relatively the same as the 180 Lenox Road apartment, a typical brownstone, but then I walked in. I walked in through the scanning security door that was actually functioning, into a lobby that had a fireplace (albeit fake), and fine art, tile, marble, and was clean, and saw that people felt comfortable enough to actually leave packages in the lobby, displaying that they could possibly trust each other enough to do that, and then my roommates showed me the new apartment, with nice furniture, decorations, and all of things that make a home a home, and in that moment I wanted to cry. And they showed to my own room, a room that was furnished, beautiful, comfy, warm, quiet. I really wanted to cry.
I slept that night for 14 hours straight. And when I woke up the next day, I told them, Mark and Casey, that today was my birthday, and they said, “What????” And so we went to a Russian restaurant in the neighborhood, and it was without a doubt the best restaurant I went to while I was in New York, possibly one of the best I’ve ever been to in my life. It was literally some of the best food I have ever had, and it was also on my birthday, and I was still in shock after escaping 180 Lenox Road Hell, and that I had teleported into such different and fortunate circumstances. I had a fried fish, the best, most incredible fried fish I had ever had in my life (I know I keep saying this, it’s true), with the most amazing sides, a cooked cinnamon apple, a broccoli salad, some pasta dish, I can’t even remember it all, and then desert, cherry blintzes, and the beer, my god, the beer!! It was some sour, apple tasting beer, and everything I put in my mouth that night was perfection. It was all incredible, it was a feast fit for the highest nobility and loftiest royalty, it was 10/10, and I left a worthy review on Google, telling them so. And, to make it even better, not only was it the best food I had ever had, and the best food in New York, but it was also one of the cheapest places I’d been to. It was completely reasonable. And Mr. Six Corners came to join us for that feast, and so it was Mark and Casey, that he had stayed with before, Mr. Six Corners and I. Probably, this is in the top 3 meals of my life. It will be very hard to beat what must be first place, where I ate a chicken head in Macau at a Dim Sum dinner, in front of my American study abroad group, Chinese, Macau students, and various international professors. That was an incredible dinner and will be a tough one to beat. But anyway, before our magnificent birthday feast, I had some time to kill in the day, and it was a beautiful sunny day, November the 11th. It was a good day for exploring, so I decided to take the train down south just a few stops to Brighton Beach to see the ocean.
It’s kind of a crazy thing that you can easily forget, that New York City is right on the ocean. You wonder why the air smells so fresh, and why there are seagulls around, and then you remember, oh yeah, the ocean is somewhere around here. You don’t see it, unless you fly, or take a boat further out along the river, or go to the peripherals, like to Coney Island and Brighton Beach. But you could actually live in New York City, and live on the ocean, which still is an amazing thing for me to say.
I’m back at my workplace and East Nashville home base, Ugly Mugs.
It’s officially 9 am. I didn’t know what time it was all morning, because I have a new experiment (I just keep coming up with these things), which Parker has officially taken up, when he asked if he could put black electrical tape on my car clock, and then I noticed that he put the tape on the oven clock in the kitchen this morning as well.
The experiment is not really much of an experiment, it’s simply that I don’t like knowing what the time is all the time. I want to know what time it is on my terms. The issue is that if I know the time, I constantly use it to track and evaluate, even when I don’t want to. For example, by seeing the clock in the kitchen, first thing when I wake up, I unconsciously or consciously evaluate my wakeup, and start thinking about what it means. Am I late, am I early, is that good, is that bad, oh I am two hours late to the party, oh I’m early today… all of these thoughts. I don’t want to have those thoughts, actually. Unless I consciously want to.
Then, I had to cover up the clock in the car because that will also tell me what I don’t want to know, which is the time.
Mostly, it’s in the morning, but I find myself looking at the oven clock throughout the day and making all kinds of judgments about it, that I don’t really want to make or care about. It is tied to all kinds of thoughts about time-wasting and productivity. The only time I want to know what time it is really is if I have some plan that revolves around time, that I have somewhere to be at a certain time, basically.
I don’t mind knowing the time in general though, this is a minor thing, so I haven’t been too bothered by it. But the other day I just decided to try covering up that oven clock, because I was getting annoyed by it. I just put a rag over it, same thing with in my car. Well, Parker must be officially adopting and on board with this policy, because he’s covered it with black electrical tape. Now, the thing is that we can’t use it for baking or for the built-in timer, so that might have to change… but at least he’s shown that he’s on board.
In my apartment in Ozu, I didn’t have a clock. I think I had a clock over my bed, that was out of the way for a while, and then I might have even decided to take that down.
It’s kind of fun, when you actually don’t know what time it is. It’s a subtle thing, but I have been living these recent days, mainly in the morning, I wake up and go about my business, usually coming here to Ugly Mugs, and I simply don’t know what time it is, exactly. I have to guess. Sometimes it has been later than I thought, but usually it has been earlier than I thought, which has surprised me.
The no-light policy is going well, except reading by candlelight is a pain in the ass. My candles are not really cutting it, and it is a serious struggle to read by candlelight at night. I have to solve this problem because we have a lot more darkness ahead. I guess I need either a bigger candle, or a lantern. I think it would be incredibly awesome if I had a real lantern with oil. That would put me squarely in the 1800’s, right? I would be a real 1800’s man if I did that. I would love that. Resurrecting arcane technology.
I’ve loosened up on it a bit, because it seems that a little artificial light doesn’t matter too much. Screens are definitely the worst, as opposed to overhead room lights. Screens, phone screens, TV and computer, are definitely bad and will mess you up. They’re just so bright. But flicking on a room light doesn’t seem to do much damage, at least the lights in our house, which are not that bright in the grand scheme of brightness.
It’s weird not wanting to step outside after the sun goes down because of all the artificial light in the neighborhood. There are about 75 bright artificial lights that I can see from my doorstep. It’s kind of shocking how much there is.
Well, I had nothing in particular that I had to write about here, I just thought I should write something to keep you guys in the loop, and keep the practice going. I can tell you this—I got a free coffee this morning.
Indigo is a charming and friendly barista, surely a favorite and beloved individual here at Ugly Mugs, and I knew she was a musician because she asked me about my Gibson swag once, (she said, “You got a lot of Gibson swag, man,”), and I told her about my brief stint there, and she said that she had played Garagefest. If she had played Garagefest, that meant she must have been pretty good, at least not bad, so I knew that she was a decent musician then, and I had been meaning to ask her about it. Well, I didn’t see her working for a while after that, but the other day she was, and I overheard her talking to someone about her upcoming show. I asked her about it when she was on break, and she told me it was at the East Room, right down the street, a cool little venue, and it was Saturday, and thought I might go. I also finally learned her name.
This story could go on for a while… Cutting to the chase, I went to the show and ended up not sticking around, because the first band put me to sleep, and I had a whole ‘nother hour before Indigo’s band, and I couldn’t do it. I left, and I didn’t talk to her but I had seen her, and I didn’t know if she had seen me, but I came in to Ugly Mugs this morning and she was immediately happy to see me and telling me thanks for coming to the show. So, she had recognized me, and we talked about it, I told her that I had a confession, I couldn’t stick around, but I will listen to her music, and I had at least bought a ticket and supported the arts. She said it went well, and they did have a good turnout so I guess I didn’t feel bad about leaving under those conditions.
(I feel like I could give Indigo a plug here: Her band is “Chrysalis”, she said listen to the album, “Dog Songs”.)
Well, we had talked and I thought she might have just forgotten to charge me for the coffee, but she said, in a hushed voice, “You’re good,” and shook her head, and I was like, Oh, I’m getting free coffee! Got it. And I said thanks, took it and ran.
She has a bright and wonderful personality, I’m listening to her right now. She can connect with every single guest, and treats everyone the same. That’s a special person. You know she has a lot of friends.
Part of what I wanted to write about, I touched on here, which is that Indigo had recognized me, and knew that I had been at the show. I had the same feeling then that I had a few days ago, when another Ugly Mugs barista was at the climbing gym, and she works the desk at the gym as well, and I had talked to her and gotten her name… then the other day, I walked into the gym, and someone shouts out, cheerfully, “Steven!!” and it was her. She was sitting there on the mat with her two friends, here as a climber, and she was excited to see me. It seemed that we were now officially friends. The thing about that that was really interesting to me is that I had this feeling of being surprised that someone recognized and remembered me.
I think it reflects something about where I am right now, and my general state, because that is not such a surprising thing, and even it’s the expected thing. Yet, I think that I feel something like a ghost, around here. I don’t know why, possibly because I am spending a lot of time thinking, and being in a mental world. I think that’s really it. It doesn’t feel like I am fully inhabiting the physical world, sometimes, and I also don’t feel that integrated here. It’s like, what am I doing here? I have a feeling of being adrift and loose, to some degree.
I don’t think this is a bad thing. It sounds like it might be, but I don’t feel lost, which would be the bad thing. I just feel ghostly at times. So, when Izzy recognized me, and remembered me, it was like, “Wow, someone recognizes me. I am living in the real world.”
Psychologists, explain this.
I have been spending a lot of time in alternative worlds, reading and writing. That’s probably the biggest part of it. That’s why going to the cafe and being at the climbing gym are good balancing hobbies, because they put me in a social environment and tether me to the real world. Spending time in nature is the same, but that can be solitary. But when I see that caterpillar eating my sunflower leaves, I definitely feel like I’m in the real world, then. I’m watching real life happening.
One more thing about going clockless, that I was noticing, is that you don’t even really need a clock to tell what time it is. If you want to know precisely, a clock is good, but there are a lot of subtle ways that your brain can figure out the realtive time. The temperature, the position of the sun, the way you feel, the traffic and movements of people around you, all of these are indicators. I found that I could have a good idea of what time it was just by looking around me. A good idea, but not perfect.
You don’t need a calendar either, to know what season it is, what month. You can track the temperature, the plants, the stars if you know about that. That’s kind of a cool way of tracking time, I feel.
I wanted to write about…. something…
I’ve lost it.
Well, Sunday was a special day at the climbing gym. I have been working on a boulder for about three weeks now, probably. Two or three weeks, five sessions or so. I’ve watched a lot of people attempt it, many succeed, many fail, and I’ve had several people coach me on it. This climb has been my new nemesis. And on Sunday, a breakthrough happened.
I had been making it up to a certain point, where you make a lunge and grab a hold with your left hand, but I had been unable to hang on after making the lunge and grabbing the hold, because my body is moving that way and I can’t stop myself. It was annoying me, because other people could, and it seemed that the advice here was to “just do it”, but I didn’t like that, and was getting frustrated. That was the farthest I had made it on this climb, this was my new hurdle. And I had had the idea that possibly you could flip your right hand and grab a hold on the right, which would stabilize yourself as you flew to the left, and grab the hold on the left at the same time, but it was tricky to flip your right hand fast enough, and without looking, while you lunged for that hold on the left. I tried that idea a few times and gave up on it.
I had shown up to the gym on Sunday, after being there in the morning with Parker, Dev and Mel, just to socialize, because some of my fingers on my right hand were a little compromised. They all said that it was fine, and that I should try climbing anyway, as long as I didn’t have pain, and stay away from the “crimps” (tiny holds that require pinching), and so I went home finally to eat something, and Parker and I came back, ready to climb. Well, I showed up a bit after Parker, and when I got there, he was talking to a guy, an excited and animated blonde guy, who was apparently famous for his “dyno” abilities. Dyno is climber slang for dynamic move, which is any move where you jump and grab something, or run and grab something, basically. And this guy Max was apparently the king of dynos, and was called “Dino sensei”. I looked down at his chalk bag and saw a picture of a triceratops in a karate gi, so he was actually the dino sensei. And Max showed us several dynos, that were completely mind-blowing.
I told him then that I was working on the yellow one, and he said, yada yada, should be able to dyno this easily, from the start, and then he did a dyno on it, jumping from the bottom, right up to those two holds and grabbing them both simulatenously, right and left hand at the same time. This is exactly what I had wanted to do, and it blew my mind. It was amazing to see. And I was like, dude, you just did it. You just did it. These things were nothing for Max, this dyno wasn’t anything special—he showed us several more dynos that were supremely impressive, massive jumps from the bottom of a climb to the top, skipping everything in-between… but to see him do this dyno on my climb, that I had been struggling with for weeks, it opened up a portal in my mind. It unlocked something.
I had almost had it right. I almost had the right idea, with my double-handed grab, except that I had been thinking to do a double-handed grab from the position that most people were getting into, where they would reach up with a left land, and then put the right hand on a tiny crimp, right next to the left hand, and then make the lunge. I didn’t like that at all, because it made me so scrunched up, although I could get to that position, and I was trying to flip my right hand from there, and lunge over. Well, Max did the double grab, but he didn’t bother getting into that first, scrunched up position at all—he skipped it entirely. He just went from the lower start position, and jumped straight up to those two holds and grabbed them, not bothering at all with all of the rigamarole in-between. That’s what blew my mind.
I immediately copied his “beta” (slang for the way that someone does a climb), and I succeeded on the climb soon after. The only difference was that I ended up jumping and grabbing the right hold first, getting secure, and then reaching over and grabbing the left, because it was hard for me to nail that simulatenous move. But I still just skipped all of that mess and tomfoolery on the way up.
I feel like this was a crucial moment in my climbing development. I thought there was a real lesson here, even in life, because of what had happened. I had watched everyone do this climb basically the same way, so many times, that it had become accepted to me that that was how the climb had to be done. I had had some thoughts of alternative methods, but they hadn’t worked, and I didn’t think much more. I’m not experienced, so I couldn’t see the way, either. I couldn’t see what else was possible.
But Max, his dyno brain, is working completely differently. Max is someone who climbs differently, and sees these climbs in an entirely different way, as he’s looking for the jumps, and how he can simply jump up to the top. I felt like watching him do that jump on my climb, it was like—look, there’s a totally different way of doing this. And that way was the way that worked for me. I had been seeking it, I had been looking for a way like that, and Dyno Sensei revealed it. Dyno Sensei showed me what was possible. That was amazing.
After that, I was unlocked. I feel like it was a big lesson, the lesson of—you don’t have to do it how anyone else is doing it. You can do it in an entirely different way. Just remember that. There are multiple ways to do the climb, and they are not going to be the best for everyone. People have different bodies, different flexibilities and strengths, and they will want to climb things differently.
That’s not true for all of the climbs, some climbs seem to require much more of the same “beta”, where basically everyone does them the same way. But some of these climbs, there are a lot of ways you can do them.
It has been interesting to watch our shorter friends, Yueng Lan and then a few days ago, Maddy, climb, because they have to do things differently than Parker or I, being shorter. They have their own methods, and it’s cool to see what they do.
Maddy has been so far the only person I’ve seen climb a difficult, yellow climb that involves going under an overhang, getting up onto a couple large, extremely clunky boulders, and then jumping high up to the finish. This one has been a puzzler for nearly everybody who’s attempted it, and we actually had a kind of special moment the other day, on that day with Maddy, where almost everyone in the gym ended up gathering around this puzzling yellow climb, and all testing their strength on it, and cheering each other on. We all wondered, who could defeat it? What was the way? It was like we were trying to pull the sword out of the stone. Who was the chosen one?
Well, it looked like, nobody. And after thirty minutes of everyone testing their strength, the dyno-ers, the strongmen and women, the dextrous, it seemed that nobody was going to send it. And we were all disappointed and had given it our best effort (I say “we” but I was just watching, resting my hand). Maddy had come the farthest during the attempts, and if anyone was going to send it, it seemed like it would be her.
Well, after everyone else had called it quits and walked away, Maddy had not given up yet. She was going to take this climb down. Maddy is about 5’2” I would guess, by the way. And that’s important, and it was amazing to see, because she was really showing us that day that being short doesn’t have to stop you. Maddy tried it about two or three more times, after everyone else had given up, and then, she sent it. She cracked the code, by not trying to climb up and stand on the clunky yellow rocks, as most everyone had tried to do, but by getting on the side of them and then using them to jump up to the top, in a dynamic move. She thought that that’s what the routesetter had intended to be done.
It was amazing to see her work it out, and ultimately send the climb. An impressive climb, that I haven’t seen anybody else send yet. And bonus points because she is one of the shortest climbers out there.
It’s fun to watch the advanced climbers do what they do, now that I have some climbing knowledge. You don’t appreciate it as much when you don’t know what’s going on. It all just looks like a bunch of plastic knobs and ledges, and people can either climb them or they can’t. But you start to see the nuances, the techniques, and then you can appreciate how people approach them differently, how they figure them out, the strength and dexterity required to complete a climb, and the creativity exercised by each person in their completion of the climb. And then, a lot of the fun now has been talking with people, about how they do the climb, how they approach it, what’s holding them back, sharing secrets and knowledge. I don’t think I’ve really cracked into this aspect of climbing until just recently.
One thing that I appreciate more now, and can see in people when they climb, is body positioning. Body positioning becomes extremely important, but it’s hard to notice if you don’t have an understanding. Simply having good body positioning will often be what allows you to send a climb or not. Being able to put yourself in a stable configuration, or understand how to rotate or pivot your body, or figuring out what position you need to be in to progress in the climb. Positioning is subtler than strength, but as you go up in difficulty, it seems to be being tested a lot more.
There was a pink one a few weeks ago that was tripping up a lot of people, because it was just so weird. And it wasn’t a strength issue, the reason why people couldn’t climb it. I think it was because people couldn’t figure out how they were supposed to position their bodies. I couldn’t figure it out, I didn’t know how I was supposed to balance on it. I tried moving my body this way and that, I tried sinking down, different foot positions, switching my feet, but it was all weird, and I would fall off. That was a really interesting climb. I didn’t get to send it, either, because they had taken it away. But that one was all about positioning. And I would watch people send it, and it was like, they didn’t even do anything. They did what it looks like you should do. It doesn’t look hard, but I would step up to it and try it again, and simply be unable to do it.
Yesterday was supposed to be a rest day, and it kind of was. But I “worked”. I dog sat. It wasn’t a full rest day.
Today I woke up and felt like, yes, today needs to be a rest day. And today is actually becoming a rest day. Even me writing this, we’ll call it a restful thing, because I’m just having fun with it. There’s no expectation. This is purely for enjoyment. There’s a big difference, between having to do something out of obligation or requirement, versus just for fun. And this writing here is just for fun.
Two days ago I finished the first draft of a story idea that I had hatched. I carried it all the way to completion and that took about ten days. Ten days of tenacity, of sticking to it, of staying on it, and not letting it escape me, but getting through the whole thing, through the ups and downs, the struggle and joy. When I finished the draft two days ago, I felt euphoric, and yet, lost. It had consumed me and stayed in my mind for ten whole days. I couldn’t believe that much time had actually passed. For ten days I contemplated the story and worked on it, held it in my mind, stayed tethered to that fantasy world. And when I was done, I felt strange. It was over. Except, it wasn’t over, and it’s not over. That was just the first part. But that’s probably the hardest part, I feel. Who knows. I’m new to all of this.
It’s the longest story I’ve ever written, possibly ever. Probably ever. And I still haven’t recovered from the writing of it yet, I think.
I knew that the first thing I had to do upon finishing was celebrate. I couldn’t move on to anything else without celebrating the accomplishment. Even from a work perspective, if you are trying to accomplish more, you have to celebrate. It’s part of the job, it’s a necessary thing.
I racked my brain on what to do for my celebration. I tried to walk through the great suburban desert of East Nashville to go to Woodland Wine Merchant and buy a bottle of wine, to crack open with my lads tonight, but I only made it halfway through the great suburban desert before dying in the sun and throwing in the towel. I thought about going to Waffle House or getting some donuts at East Park Donut, but I didn’t really to spend money on that. I wanted to have an experience, and I knew that I had wanted to go swimming. I keep thinking about surfing. I guess I miss surfing, and I miss swimming, and I really want to do it again. So, I decided I would go swimming, even though it meant work, because I had to figure out where I would go, and drive there, which I really didn’t want to do. But I had to celebrate, and it was all I could think of.
I found that Percy Priest Lake seemed to be the closest place to me that I could swim in the wild. In freshwater. I had to drive on the highway…. blah blah blah. Long story short, the highway was a nightmare, the “beach” was a strip of grass next to the highway, covered in trash, there was a homeless guy there with swollen, rotting elephantitis ankles, the water was scummy, and made my eyes sting, and yet I did enjoying frolicking in the water like an otter. It was exactly the feeling I was looking for. Then I returned on the nightmare highway, and had angry visions of bombing everyone on the highway, and of having a giant plow affixed to the front of my car that would allow me to drive through the highway unimpeded and plow everyone out of my way. I was stuck in bumper to bumper traffic in the 90 degree July sun and moved 0.2 miles in 10 minutes. Not a good feeling.
Climbing Conquest
So, I still haven’t recovered, and still need to rest, before entering work mode again. I did go climbing at the gym, and if you had read my recent post “Perseverance”, I talk about my “nemesis” climb, the V1-3 that was stopping me from becoming a V2-4 man. Well, I walked into the gym yesterday with Parker, and I had actually forgotten about that climb for a minute, as I was really just there to have fun, and chill, but my man Ryan, a #1 One Piece fan, and a chill high school kid, he told me when I walked in, “Bro you gotta get that climb today, they’re taking it down soon!” And I was like.. Oh, god dammit. The pressure is on. Great. I was supposed to be here for fun.
You know what happened? I was fully charged, and I was strong, and I did some warmups, and then Ryan came out from the behind the counter, and Parker said, “Well, are you gonna do it now? Ryan’s here to watch.” And I said okay. And I walked up to the wall, and I screamed, “THIS ONE’S FOR RYAN!!!!!” And I took that sucker down. It was euphoric. I laid on the ground after the conquest, not moving, eyes closed, basking in the glow of victory. Parker gave me knucks, and Ryan clapped, and then he said, “Now you have to find another project-” But I cut him off, and said, “CHILL. Ryan, chill!!!!” I had just beaten this climb. I didn’t need another project (new challenging climb to be working on) just yet. Chill, bro. Let me savor this.
Well, today, it’s a million degrees, and I was not going to try and go swimming again. Nope. I’m not going anywhere, and not driving on the Nashville highway ever again in my life if I can help it. So.. what else could I do for my rest day?
When I was back in Ozu Machi, way back when, in the depths of the pandemic, when we were all bound to the home and desperate for things to do… I bought a 3DS and got Ultra Moon, in Japanese, and played through the whole thing. I hadn’t played Pokemon for like, ten years, so I had no idea what they had been cooking up, but I knew they had been cooking. I remember that time fondly, exploring the new world of Pokemon, and learning so much Japanese I thought my head would explode. These days, I’ve been feeling a pull to Japanese again, and I’ve been thinking about that playthrough, and so as a treat, and for my rest days, I thought I would try to recreate the magic.
After debating on which new Pokemon game I would buy, I ended up settling on Pokemon Violet, for the Switch, an open world Pokemon game from 2022. And now, if you can stand it, here’s what I want to share with you.
Return To Japanese
Note: I think that even if you are not a Japanese language learner you might just be interested to see some of my notes, and a breakdown of some recent Japanese study. If you are not, this part might not be so interesting for you.
I played for about three hours between yesterday and today, and I haven’t even made it to the first town. Parker was watching my slow, crawling progress, as I sat there with my notebook, scribbling my 20th Japanese study note, and he said, “People would love to see this.” I think I had played for over an hour before I even caught my first Pokemon, which is something you can do, if you skip the dialouge and get straight to business, in about ten minutes.
When it comes to studying language, Pokemon is a great mix of everything. Right out of the gate, we had the sensei speaking in keigo (honorific, polite Japanese), especially when talking with the main character’s mom (called in game, ママ, Mama), modeling a real conversation between a Mama-san and her daughter’s school’s sensei.. you have the kids jabbering casually, and then you have the instructive Japanese of the in-game instructions. Between game prompts, in-game signboards, character dialogue, etc… there’s a lot of variety in the Japanese being used. There’s a wide range of characters of all ages and backgrounds as well, and they all have different styles of speaking, so you can see what language is used by an old fisherman, an honorable sensei, a Mama-san, or a young bug catcher child, or an insolent breakdancer gangster lackey, a mob boss, a scientific genius..
Here are some of the snippets of Japanese I wrote down in my notebook today. Let’s break them down. Just for fun.
ご近所同士仲良くしよう!
The word I was wondering about was 同士, and in the context of 近所同士, which is something like neighborhood companion. This is probably a phrase that Japanese use, and is used for members of the neighborhood. Your neighbor friend was saying this to you in the game.
凄腕トレーナーなんですよ
This word is すごうで. I thought it was a more polite way to use 凄い, and actually it’s using the same kanji 凄腕、凄い.. So I was on to something there. 腕 is arm. So it’s saying “great arm”, literally. The dictionary says that 凄腕 means “1. remarkable ability, brilliant technique or 2.virtuoso, resourceful person”. It’s a compliment to someone’s ability. I like this word.
交流を深めてください
交流を深める seems to be a set phrase. It’s saying something like, “deepen our exchange” or “grow together in our relationship”.. Kind of a thing.
ポケモン勝負より放題
I wrote this down because I couldn’t remember at the time what 放題 was. It’s houdai, unlimited, as much as possible. Like 飲み放題, “all you can drink”. So this is “Let’s battle as much as possible.” I might need the whole sentence to perfectly translate it or to graph the entire meaning because I am a little confused about the より here, which seems to be in this case saying “less than”.
実りある勝負をしよう!
I had never seen the 実りある part here. Not hard to guess what this means. I take this to mean “fruitful”, so, “Let’s have a fruitful battle!” 実 is fruit.
勝負をしかける。
Noting that しかける is a verb used with 勝負. This sentence just means “To start a battle.”
Well.. what I have taken on here is unfeasable. I have about forty more notes in book, just from today.
I’ll do a few more. It’s good review for me, at least…!
へえー!きみ やるね!
I was just suprised at this sentence. It’s so basic. The girl I had just beaten in a battle said this, which basically just means “you can do it!” as in, “You can fight!” That’s what I took it to mean. Natural English translation of this sentence might be: “Damn girl! You can really fight!”
Hermoine, Crookshanks, And Katakana
I was mysteriously drawn to choosing a young black girl as my protagonist in the game. I named my girl Hermione, trying to write that in Katakana (this took me about five minutes of debating and saying aloud how I thought a Japanese person would write it), and settled with ハーマィオニ. This turned out to be very close to correct, but not quite. The official Japanese translation of Hermione is ハーマイオ二ー。And then after naming my character ハーマィオニ, one of the starter Pokemon was a cat, and extremely cute, so I had to pick that.. because Crookshanks. (Hermione’s cat in Harry Potter world.) I couldn’t name my cat Pokemon Crookshanks though, because I was limited to 6 Japanese characters when naming in the game, which pissed me off. What the hell? 6 characters??????
Crookshanks in Katakana is a nightmare. I have to attempt writing it now, for you. For the blog.
クルックシャンクス.
I guess that wasn’t so bad.
But was it right?
Internet says: クルックシャンクス
Yatta!!!!!!!!
I do not know how much you are enjoying reading me thinking about Japanese and getting an insight into my Japanese study world, or if you are just confused. I imagine it would be interesting just to see some snippets of Japanese and look into the world of Japanese language. Japanese is really a fun and interesting language. (Profound statement.)
Chat GPT Sensei
疲れておいでですよ
This was interesting because of the おいで part, which seemed to me a kind of grammar conjugation going off of 疲れておく (spoiler: not true, it’s actually a form of 来る), but I don’t think I’ve ever encountered it. The おいで, and then adding です at the end, which is a formal sentence finisher. This sentence is keigo (honorific Japanese) I think, which has interesting and lengthier conjugations. That’s my guess here.
This one actually is a puzzler. So let’s ask our master translator, Chat GPT.
(For all y’all who don’t already know about the power of Chat GPT.. you’re about to see it. I’m bouncing around here in this post. It’s my rest day, alright? Stream of consciousness. Below I have pasted the entire result of me asking: “Can you help with this sentence? I’m wondering about the conjugation.” to Chat GPT.)
(Chat GPT answer)
Yes, I can help with that! The sentence: 疲れておいでですよ is a polite and somewhat gentle expression in Japanese, but the conjugation is slightly unusual and worth unpacking.
Breakdown:
疲れて = the て-form of 疲れる (to be tired)
おいで = an honorific or polite imperative form of 来る (to come), but in this context, it is functioning differently
です = polite copula
よ = sentence-ending particle for emphasis or assertion
What’s going on here?
This is a respectful/polite way of saying “You look tired” or “You are tired,” using a classical or regional (often Kyoto-style or older) construction. It’s a softened, polite version, especially common in service industry or among people showing concern in a gentle way.
Key point:
おいでです is a polite respectful form of いらっしゃる, which itself is an honorific verb meaning “to be,” “to go,” or “to come,” depending on context.
So:
疲れておいでですよ
really means:
You are tired, or more literally, You are in a state of being tired, said politely and with care.
More “standard” equivalent:
お疲れですね (You’re tired, aren’t you?)
お疲れのようですね (It seems like you’re tired)
In summary:
The conjugation おいでですよ is a respectful and slightly old-fashioned or regional way to say “you are…”
It comes from おいでになる, a polite form of いらっしゃる
It’s perfectly natural in certain contexts, especially when someone wants to express gentle concern
(End Chat GPT answer.)
How incredible. Chat GPT just gave us a detailed explanation on the meaning of 疲れておいでです. This phrase seemed strange to me is because.. well, it is strange. It’s a set phrase, it’s keigo, and it looks like it comes from older Japanese, so the grammar is funky. It seems to be an older and more polite way of saying お疲れですよね!
That was an interesting one. Yes indeed…
興奮しやっって ついつい…
しやっって is an interesting conjugation.. I didn’t even notice that so much when I wrote it down because I was thinking about the ついつい, and I understood it. I think it is another way to say しちゃって.. combining しちゃう and って. Now I can’t even remember exactly what って is used for in Japanese, in this context at least… But that gets used all the time. The ついつい seems to be “accidentally” or “unintentionally”.
Yeah.. we can stop here. Let’s wrap up this brain dump.
Reflecting on this morning’s session, I was thinking: I already know so much Japanese, and yet there is so much Japanese I don’t know. It’s crazy. There’s just so much language out there. So many words. It’s wild how much we all really know.
Four days ago at the coffee shop, after handling some of my business, I had a wild and intense urge to feast on donuts. I immediately typed in “donut” on Google images, to feed my desire, and I gazed upon images and images of wonderful, colorful, round, chocolate, cake, glazed donuts. It was driving me wild, and I wanted to get donuts right then and there.
I was with my sister at the coffee shop. I was speaking out loud, vocalizing my internal struggle with wanting to immediately go and buy a large amount of donuts from Kroger, but not wanting to spend money nor gorge on such an unhealthy food, as I knew I would do. Yet about two months ago, I had this wild urge to eat an entire red velvet cake, an urge I have had many times but never given in to, and I thought, that night would be the night that I finally gave in, and feasted on red velvet cake. I had earned it. However, when I went to the store, I found that all of the cakes, the red velvet included, were encased in large plastic containers, and I had recently just started my anti-plastic campaign, and I wavered, but I knew that I could not commit a double sin, of gluttony and environmental crime, and so I didn’t get the red velvet cake.
But right next to the cakes, in the bakery corner, was the rack of Krispy Kreme donuts, and they caught my eye. Perhaps I could settle for a donut, or twelve. Checking out the stand, I thought that there were many satisfying donuts for my purchase, and then I looked at the boxes, and saw that they were all entirely made of paper. That was acceptable. So I bought a whole dozen, jelly, creme, glazed, cake, chocolate, mamma mia, and I took the whole dozen home and feasted. I personally ate six that night, five in a row, and then one more later at night. My roommates had two and three respectively. One was leftover for me, the next morning – proof that last night’s donut devouring was not just a dream.
I reflected on this prior donut gorging, as I debated whether or not I should immediately go to Kroger and do it all again, because it was actually a wonderful thing. It made me feel alive and brought me incredible joy, and my roommates too. And so I was thinking, at the coffee shop now having this wild urge again, that perhaps this could be a satisfactory donut feasting as well.
I tried to justify it as that I could make a blog post about it, and that’s exactly why I am making this post now. I said that I could write a poem, being inspired by the book of fancy and fun poetry, and my sister, in her wisdom and genius, said that I should write the poem right there on the spot, as I was at the time in the midst of the urge and desire. So I did, and this is what came out of me, born out of pure, unbridled donut lusting.
Ode To Donuts
Donut
Schmonut
Gronut
Wonut
I love a diddly dang donut
Munch, smunch, yummy yum yum
Chocolate, cream, glazed, crumb
Crumbly bumbly yummy donuts
Pink brown white yellow and green
Give me a donut right now
Please
My tummy!
My tongue!
Howls for donuts!!!
I ended up not getting the donuts for several more days. My intense desire had abated rapidly. We did end up going to Kroger but I didn’t want the Kroger donuts. I had to investigate some new donuts, and so we ended up going to East Park Donuts a few days later, and having a classier donut.
One donut plus the tip cost me $5.50, whereas a dozen Kroger donuts cost $16.50, but hey. It was a nice experience, and my sister was gracious enough to buy me the strawberry donut, which was actually amazing. It had a perfect texture, being one of the sour cream cake donuts, and then the strawberry glaze actually tasted like strawberries, and not the fake strawberry flavor (you know what I’m talking about). I was afraid to get it because I was worried about the fake strawberry flavor, but my sister knew better. She knew it had that real strawberry flavor.
There was a real difference between the quality of the donuts, the biggest thing being in the range of flavors present in the East Park Donuts, and in the quality of the donut batter. The cake part of the donut. There was a significant improvement in deliciousness and quality of the bread part of the donut. When it comes to quality, East Park Donuts wins. Good for a thoughtful donut enjoyment experience, with a friend, over coffee. Kroger’s Krispy Kreme has them beat on quantity. Good for an insane, hedonistic binge at midnight, with your two hungry roommates.
We have the Donut Distillery right down the street, apparently. Donuts and whiskey? We’ll have to write another poem for that.
Have you ever had a donut binge? Any other kind of treat binge or gorging session? Let me know!!!!
The only stain from my Osaka days was my League binge. Please never forget, everybody, fuck League of Legends. Fuck Overwatch, fuck competitive gaming, fuck video games. Fuck Fortnite. Fuck all of that shit. Fuck vice. Read books, lift weights, play guitar, write a novel. But, there is no doubt, fuck competitive gaming. I can’t just say fuck video games because some games are really cool and rewarding to play. Samorost 3, Pikmin, Zelda, etc. But the modern competitive video game that cares only about stealing your time and attention and money, only about getting as much as they possibly can from you, fuck them. Fuck them so hard. Don’t ever think that they are not trying to fuck you over. They are.
*Depressed at the cubicle. There will only be two more days of this.*
The other day, I threw my mouse in the trash. I’m thinking about that right now, because I’m somewhat hoping that my roommates haven’t taken out the trash, in which case I can dig to the bottom of that full can, get my mouse back, and play League of Legends tonight. That’s what I’m thinking about this morning, now, at 11:37am, from my cubicle. (And you know what? I fucking did it. I pulled my mouse out of the bottom of that jam packed can, covered in celery juice and coffee grounds, and I wiped it off, and I played six horrible games of League of Legends. Filled with idiots, filled with trolls, with people being angry, people being mean, people being sad. I played until 2 in the morning, spent 4 more hours on the computer after a full day of being on the computer, and then went to bed watching someone else play more League. The League formula is so powerful that it made me pull my trash mouse out of the trash. That’s addiction. That’s an addict relapsing. Fuck you League. I will never play you again. You suck asshole, and you people who run League, you fucking suck too. You never get any more of my precious time again. I will never say the words again, like He Who Must Not Be Named. The Game That Must Not Be Named. That is what you are, now. You have achieved Harry Potter supervillian status. The Game That Must Not Be Named. The most hated enemy. And I will never play any game like you. I will never touch a multiplayer competitive game for as long as I live. I don’t want to. I have no interest in it. And I will not. 1/24/2024. Remember this day. The final day, the last day I was a slave. The last day I allowed myself to be taken advantage of. When you play these games, you are not the player. You are being played. (Oh, that’s so good.) January 24th, 2024.
I’m sitting here, and after having gone through a period of just straight up depression, probably from a lack of sunlight and any social interaction or physical movement, basically there has been no joy yet in my day, except when Mr. Shimoyama had a few words with me, and a moment on the train where the train lurched forward and I slipped in water and did a little ballerina pirouet, spinning exactly 360 degrees in one second and somehow perfectly catching myself on the railing, to which I made a witty comment and not a single person of the many people around me on this packed train had any response to at all, and I now have some energy, having had some coffee, and am waking up. I am waking up, and I am waking up in my cubicle, which is something of a desert of the senses, you could say, and am now once again retreating into the oasis of my mind for my mental water and dates, that are entertainment and stimulation.
I don’t really have a pressing task right now, I already managed one. And the problem with these computer tasks that require no creativity is that they are not going to provide you any kind of juice, or gas, to get you going, and inspire you. Conversely, they require energy and motivation. But right now, I’m out of that. The tank is empty, you can say. And so, I daydream.
I was thinking about my time in Osaka, actually. I was thinking about the time I spent at Tully’s Coffee, at Tennouji Park. When I think about Osaka, the two months that I spent there, living in Toyo Hotel (which was really more of a hostel), I think about a lot of things. At the time, I did not appreciate how transformative of a period of time that was, but the more that I go back to those memories, I see how precious they are. Like Thailand, they cost me so little, and are worth so much. I didn’t really know what I was doing in Osaka. Actually, that’s not true. I had just been in Hokkaido, trying to force myself into a life that wasn’t working for me, and after forcing, and scheming, and carrying out plans that just weren’t working, I gave up on the game, and relinquished myself of that vision. I left, and I decided that I would now simply give myself up to the river of life, for some time, without planning, as that only seemed to get me into trouble, and cause me trouble, and I did that, and ended up in Osaka. I went to Osaka because I wanted to be somewhere else in Japan, and I wanted to try a big city, and my Japanese friends told me I would like Osaka more than Tokyo. They said it was more of my style, and when I did a little Googlin’, and found a Tokyo vs. Osaka post, and saw that Tokyo had in its corner, “History, food, art, entertainment, anime culture, sports, etc. etc. etc.” (basically, everything ever) and then on the Osaka side, only one thing, “Comedy”, I knew Osaka was for me. I have so many stories from these two months in Osaka, so many good stories. I was a completely free man living in hostel with international travelers, mostly young people but there was a mix of everybody, longer term students living there (Mao and “Miss Tiger”, Yuko Woo, Chinese girls), a teacher, half New Zealander half Canadian, who had been there for four years who was exactly a modern day hippie hobbit (short, hairy, always barefoot, and with long dreads)(and just to give you an idea of the level of swag that this man was at, he wore the Okarina from The Legend of Zelda, Okarina of Time around his neck, 24/7).. and there was.. god what was his name, KEN, it was Ken, Ken was a real character man. I don’t even know what the hell Ken’s story was. I can’t remember where he was from, I think he was from Arizona, and what the hell he was doing at Toyo, I have no idea. When I first met Ken, I have to say (sorry Ken) I thought he was cracked. He was always asking questions and I almost felt like he was a little nosy. But very quickly Ken grew on me, and I saw that he was just goofy and easygoing, and always in a good mood. You know, with people being so complicated and moody and difficult, anyone who is always in a good mood is a winner in my book. That’s a person that is so welcome in my life. I need it, because I’m fucking moody sometimes. I’m not one of those people, and that’s alright. The happy people, the people who are always having a good time, who keep things in perspective, and are not overly preoccupied with all of the many great horrors and injustices of the world, who are always grounded in the here and now, who are up for talking about anything, who keep it light, they are winners in my book, and they are very valuable to me. Ken was one of those people, and so was the other guy, and they were buddies.. Noah. I have to remember these names. Noah, my god man, what a character. I also thought he was just a total goober (I’m sorry Noah). I mean, you have to be a little crazy to commute anywhere six hours a day, which is what he was doing in Australia, to his college. He said that was normal, but man, that can’t be normal. There’s just no way that’s normal. That’s pretty fucking insane. He would drive three hours every morning, and three hours back at night. You would think he was making that up right, but I swear Noah wasn’t a liar. He wasn’t even an exaggerator. He just actually did stuff like that. He had big square glasses. We both showed up at Toyo at about the same time, and he was looking to become an English teacher, and he got a job while I was there, and was working out of the hotel. I remember his first interview, he told me that he was interviewed by a anime cat, and he couldn’t take it seriously. I thought that was hilarious. I could never have taken it seriously either. I mean, if someone decides to have an interview with you, and they use an animated cat to do it, you don’t take that seriously, because that’s not serious. That’s a dumbass company right there.
“Miss Tiger” Yuko Woo was one of my favorites. We had a special bond. She was hot for me. She was like my old Chinese wife, in a way. We just acted like an old married couple. We had really great banter. She would just give it to me straight, and you know I love a woman who gives it to me straight. She once asked me, “Why you wear glasses? You look like nerd.” And took them off of me. “That’s better.” That was Yuko Woo. Her Zodiac animal was the tiger, and she was talking about it one day, I can’t remember why, I think because we had a Chinese New Year’s party together, and that year it was the Year of the Mouse, and she said she was a tiger, so I started calling her Miss Tiger, and it was really very fitting for her, and then she asked what I was, and I told her boar, because that’s what I am, and then she started calling me “Mister Pig.” And I told her many times, I am not a pig, I am not born in the year of the pig, that’s a different Zodiac animal, no, I am a boar, a mighty boar, with tusks, roaming the wilds and goring things, and she would say, “Ok Mister Pig.” Yuko was into partying every night, or on most nights at least, and I was always disappointing her, because I almost never went out, and at least not with the big group, or whoever she was going out with that night. I did still go out, because it was the first time I had ever lived in a place with a real nightlife, and I experimented with that, and I gotta say in the end, it’s mostly just not for me. I’m just not the type, I guess, because most of the times that I went out, I didn’t really feel like it was ever really a success, or something that was good for me, even with all of the meeting people and the seeing things, but I did get stories, and those are always worth something. I did go out with Woo a few times, and every time I did, she would just get drunk and dance, and she would do a little wavy dancing, kind of just standing still and waving back and forth, like kelp in the ocean, just vibing out.
I’ll save my going out stories for later, I guess. I haven’t talked about Mao yet, who is the last of the main characters of Toyo, the main residents, who were there for the entire of my two months. You see, I learned from the hippie hobbit Matt, that you could actually live at Toyo, you could become a resident, and they would move you up to the top floor, the resident’s floor, and you had elevated status, and paid a monthly rate that was even cheaper, and the hotel was already so cheap. This hotel was so popular because it was so cheap, it was notorious for being cheap, because, I learned after I was there, from the hippie hobbit Matt, that we were living in the worst ghetto in Japan, called Nishinari. It was a famous place, and Japanese people knew the name, and when I asked some of my Japanese friends about it, they were like, “Eeee? Nishinari no?? Nande?” (“What? You’re in Nishnari? Why?”) And it’s funny, and I think about this a lot now, because I lived in the worst ghetto in Japan, and it is incomparable to New York City. The worst ghetto in Japan is by comparison the most blessed and greatest paradise on earth compared to New York City. That’s no exaggeration. I saw only one homeless man in Nishinari, and he was doing great. He had a fort of boxes, he had a nice spot on the curb, warm clothes. He wasn’t begging, he wasn’t bothering anybody. I passed by that man almost every day, on my walk to Tully’s, and Tully’s is the reason why I’m even writing about this at all this morning. Tully’s Coffee at Tennouji Park is the best place in Osaka, or if you want to include the whole park, Tennouji Park is the best place in Osaka.
I was thinking about Tully’s Coffee because this morning, I put a Tully’s coffee cup into our office Keurig machine. I fantasize about some of the best moments when I’m in shitty places, like a cubicle, and the New York City subway. So you can understand why I fantasize about Thailand and Japan almost every day that I’m here in New York. And when I think about my time in Osaka, and all of the things that I did, and everywhere that I went, the purest, most joyful memory I have, which is almost a physical sensation that I can feel when I conjure up the memories, is me walking around Tennouji Park, in the clear, blue winter sky, with all of the smiling, happy Osakans, and hanging out at that Tully’s Coffee. It was only a short walk from the Hotel, and I went there almost every day, in the mornings, for most of the two months of my Osaka stay. There was one period of time where I fell into the void that is League of Legends, where I completely forsook the outside world, and fully assumed the identity of Kindred, Lamb and Wolf, the hunter, and it was not worth it, and fuck League of Legends, but that’s what I did. And I knew I had given up on the physical world when I stopped making my Tully’s pilgrimage, because that was a very important part of my life then. It was a routine that brought me great joy. It was a sacred place for me, a place for me to be. And what was so special about Tully’s, and Tennouji Park? Nothing, really. That’s the magic of it. It was just an ordinary place, an ordinary park, with happy people, some futsal courts, some park events, a michi-no-eki with the local produce, a zoo nearby, a nice Italian restaurant, super popular place, and Tully’s. The nicest coffee shop in the world. This Tully’s was big, and the walls were all glass, so you could see outside. You could watch all of the people in the park walk by, smiling, living their lives. The coffee shop was always packed, probably 30 or 40 people could all be in there sitting at once. There was a table with plastic dividers, for covid, that could seat up to 8 people, and that’s where the computer people, the people that were there to do business, would mostly hang out. Next to that, there were six armchairs, with small square tables in between, for sitting across from a friend or with a group, and chatting. There were then all along the back and on the other side, small tables with two chairs across from each other, lining the store. And in the very back corner there was a low table with two couches on opposite sides. There were three ways in or out. The front main entrance, and then one entrance to the left side. The one on the right, nobody came in that way, but you could leave through it. The park itself was like a giant rectangle, with a large grass area in the center. Man, there was even a roller rink and a small dog park. I mean, when I really think about it, that park had everything you could want. It had just about everything for everybody. And surrounding the park was the greater Nishinari area, that had all of the shops, huge malls, the shoutengai (the covered, long outdoor malls, with rows and rows of shops), the zoo, Shinsekai to the west, and the tower, in the middle of Shinsekai that was like a small Tokyo tower, a giant Don Quijote, a huge, multistoried onsen facility.. Man. I miss that like crazy. It was this sprawling, exciting microcosm. To the north of the park there was a stately art museum that was unfortunately closed while I was there, and a Japanese garden, a big one. So, you could take your pick, where you wanted to go, what you wanted to do. There were so many places to play, just in that little few square miles of Osaka. And then we were right on the train line, the subway, and not far from Toyo and the park, you could ride the faster rails, that could take you the farther places, like Kyoto and Kobe and Nara. Those trains ran on the dime, they ran on the money, they never failed me once, and I rode them often. They never failed once. God, I hate to rag on New York City, I really do. It just makes me depressed. But, this city is just so fucked compared to Osaka. So fucked compared to Japan. I just can’t help but think about it.
I didn’t tell you what I paid to live at Toyo, either. It was 30,000 yen a month. Do you know much that is in dollars? I’ll tell you. It’s like $220. That’s how much I paid, in a month, to live there at Toyo.
I would go to Tully’s Coffee almost every day. If the weather was particularly bad I might not, but I would still try. The best memories I have of Osaka are of walking past all of those happy people in the park, seeing the soccer players, and the couples, and the parents, the kids, the groups of young guys and girls, living their lives, and then going into that Tully’s, paying my 300 yen for a coffee, and taking a seat amongst the Tullians. I was a regular for sure, and the staff knew me. I am charming, you know, and make small talk, and generally like to have positive interactions with people, so it wasn’t long before we were chatting, and they were regular friends to me. There were four staff members that I would regularly interact with, but my two besties were the manager, who was almost always there, a woman in her 30’s or early 40’s, and Kento, a young guy who lived in California for a year and had amazing English. We would always have a laugh together, over anything at all. He always had something fun to say to me. I remember he said to me once, that I was confusing the other staff girls, because I would sometimes speak in English, and sometimes in Japanese, and they didn’t know which was which. It’s common to speak in both languages when you’re both familiar with them, but for a low-level speaker of one of the two languages, the switching is quite confusing. The other two members were younger girls, who I never could get much out of, but they knew me, and they knew what I wanted, which was always a medium black coffee, until I realized that the medium was just too much for me, and I switched it to small, which was I remember a momentous decision, that I’m sure was talked about by all of them, when Kento said, “Medium?” And I said, “Make it small this time.” I’m laughing so hard writing this. It’s actually true though, that’s how it went. And he was like, “Oh!” I would always ask what kind of coffee they had today, and they would just start telling me, so I didn’t have to ask. It’s the little things, you know. I felt like I had really reached a certain status, it was like a badge of honor, when the manager came over to me one day, when I was sitting in the back, and she told me that one of the seats at the 8 unit table where the Tullians went to do their work sat, she told me one of those seats was available now. She knew that I always liked to sit there. She noticed that, you know. She knew my habits, she knew me. That was sweet. It’s really the little things.
They ran a perfect ship. It was always clean, people were always taken care of. That Tully’s was so popular for a reason. And they always played jazz, good jazz, like jazz trios, jazz quartets. That’s my favorite kind of jazz. I remember they were once going through a jazz Harry Potter CD, for maybe a week or two, they were playing Harry Potter jazz. I loved it. I mean, jazz, coffee, nice, happy people. Not hard to see why Tully’s Coffee was my favorite place to go. It doesn’t take much. And you could find anybody in Tully’s. There were often other foreigners. There were Japanese moms, girlfriends, couples, students, families, businesspeople, old friends, kids. Everybody was there, hanging out, living life, having a good time. Always good conversation and smiles. One of the young worker girls, she didn’t have much English, and was a little on the shy side, and I remember once walking in, and walking up to the counter, and there was a foreign family there trying to explain to her their complicated order with all these bells and whistles, and I could see the girl was having a tough time with them, and I thought, This is my moment. Leave it to me. And I stepped in and saved the day. The mom said, “Thank you so much, we’re from Hong Kong, I thought Japanese people would speak more English!” And I translated their complicated order with the bells and whistles, like no ketchup on the wiener, that kind of thing, and everybody was happy, and the shy girl was grateful, and I felt like I had performed a great service. It’s nice when you get to use your language skills to actually help people. It’s a very satisfying thing.
The only sad thing about Tennouji Park, and the Tully’s – the only problem with it, was that it wasn’t my culture, and it wasn’t my people. The Japanese never intentionally made me feel that way, but the language barrier did. And, I never felt this way when I was in Ozu, or in Kumamoto at all, because it was rare that I was ever surrounded by masses of people. I was usually in smaller groups, where I would be, you know, 5% of the population at the least, but I also had a role, like in the classroom, I was a part of it, being a teacher. I think that was actually the biggest difference, because while I was in Kumamoto, I had a role, and I had an identity, and that gave me a reason to be in Japan. There was something I was doing that tied me to Japan, and made me a part of it. But once that was gone, I felt that there was nothing now that really bonded me to Japan, and I didn’t have a place in it anymore. And I started to feel that when I would hang out in the park, and at Shinsekai, and at the mall, and on the giant circular crosswalk in the sky on the intersection between the park and malls and giant buildings, and I would be surrounded by Japanese people, hundreds of Japanese people, and then there would be me. Just me. And I would feel it, then, that I was different. It was like, wow, this is a lot of Japanese people. In fact, every one of them is Japanese. And, I’m not Japanese. I’m different from them. Sometimes that’s a fine feeling, and it comes with a lot of perks. Most of the time, really. It’s fun to be exotic. It’s just that, eventually, you don’t want to feel that. Or, you don’t want to feel that way all the time. You want to be exotic, of course, but you also want to just be normal. That sounds like something that celebrities could really relate to. You just don’t always want to stand out. Sometimes, you just want to be like everybody else. And when I wasn’t thinking about how I wasn’t Japanese, which was actually 99% of the time, the language barrier would often remind me, because even with the level of Japanese that I had, which was that I could have a conversation with anybody, I wasn’t nearly fluent. I would still make mistakes, I wouldn’t understand what they would say, I would have to ask them to repeat themselves, all of those things that just get in the way of normal communication, clunk things up, and remind you that you’re different. Those little, passing interactions, are very important for relationships. The fleeting interactions. You may have just a small moment to make an impression, to say what you have to say, to show some personality. Being unable to do that, it’s hard. Having something you want to say, but not being able to say it, right there on the spot, or trying and failing, it’s just hard. I had just been back to the US for the first time in years that fall as well, and I remembered, or really, I learned for the first time, that feeling of just being so easily enmeshed in a culture, of existing so easily in it, being able to understand everyone and everything, knowing what they’re going to say before saying it, being able to handle every interaction nearly effortlessly, was just so.. refreshing. So easy. Like being a fish in water again. That was really the only problem with Tennouji Park, with Tully’s Coffee. By extension, that was the only problem with my Japanese life, then. Otherwise, it was just about perfect.
Man, I really miss Japan.
It’s weird to say this, and it’s weird that I feel this way, but I do. I have very few regrets in life. I actually might only have one, and it’s this. They say you only regret the things you didn’t do, and so far for me in this life, that holds true. I wish I would have told my Tully’s friends that I was leaving Osaka. I didn’t tell them goodbye, I didn’t tell them I was leaving Osaka. And when I think about it, it feels like I just disappeared into the night, vanished without an explanation. Time passed, they wondered where I was, if I would ever come back, and then eventually, stopped thinking about me. I wish I would have taken the time to tell them goodbye, and thanks for everything. Thanks for running a great store, thanks for the friendly conversation, thanks for caring about me, thanks for giving me a place to go, a place to be.
When I think about Osaka, it’s those moments at Tully’s and in Tennouji Park that come back to me, but there was another place where great memories were made, and that was in the Toyo common room, where I made so many friends, encountered so many characters, had so many great conversations. I really did make so many friends. Genesis, the German med-student that failed her med school exam and was taking a haitus, Jean, the French beatmaker who quit his engineering job and was looking for a new lease on life, Ben, the Scot, the sustainability expert, Thal and Roy, the Israeli guys who had finished their mandatory military service and were now doing the customary world travel, all of the main crew of Toyo, Mao, the Tiger, Noah, Ken, and Derek, the photographer from Illinois.. there was a crazy Pakistani man, a guy from Florida, who, when we were talking about crazy Florida people, told me a story about a guy who taught his parrot how to say, “I consent” so that he could have sex with it, and when I said that there was simply no possible way this way true, no matter how crazy Floridians are, (because let’s be real, it is anatomically impossible to have sex with a parrot), and he Googled it and said that ok, it was a fake story, but he believed it because that’s how crazy the Floridians are.. Man, so many characters.
There are many stories here. There was a mystery man. In the lobby, in the common room on the first floor, where we all hung out, there was a guitar. It was a piece of garbage. It was mostly broken, but it had strings. You could make some sounds, but you didn’t play that guitar. It was mostly for the comfort of guitar players, to have a guitar around, and to look at, even if it didn’t work. But one day, after I became a resident, and they moved me up to the 5th floor (and I remember asking if I could just stay in my 2nd floor room so that I didn’t have to “move all of my stuff” (insert crying laughing emoji)(because I had like two suitcases) I started checking out the upstairs, and found a nice roof, and a secret lounge that no one was using. Inside of this secret lounge, there was a guitar, that was nice and actually functional, and I adopted it. I never saw anyone in the lounge, after hanging out in there for some days, and I figured that this was just a left-behind guitar, and started keeping it in my room, and somehow, Aya chan, one of the Toyo staff, a wonderful gal, knew that I had the guitar. A few weeks later, she asked me if I had the guitar, and if I could leave it in the lounge, because the owner had been looking for it, and I said, “The owner???” She said he used to live there and still comes around sometimes to play in that room, and he was glad that someone was using the guitar, but still wanted to play it too. So I left it in the lounge, and wondered about this mysterious man. Not long after that, when I went up to the lounge to play, as I walked up the steps to that 6th floor, I heard something. I heard music, string music, but it wasn’t guitar. It was something else, something like a sitar, some Middle Eastern sound. I walked up to the door and listened, and what I could hear was absolutely blowing my mind. Whoever was playing whatever in that room was a complete genius of the instrument, and I knew that must be the mystery man. I stood there in awe, listening to this master, getting a private concert, and waited. I didn’t want to disrupt him, obviously, but I needed to know who he was, and so when he finally stopped playing, I opened the door, and there he was. Sitting cross-legged on the floor, the mystery man, a Japanese man with long hair, playing his mystery instrument, made out of a gourd, with 20+ strings. (Google tells me it’s a kora, 21 strings.) I said, “Sugoi.” (Wow.) And then we became best friends. I apologized for taking his guitar, asked him about his instrument, he played some crazy stuff for me, told me all about the kora, asked me to play some guitar for him (which I was so embarrased about and have never felt more humbled) but he was encouraging and said I had a lot of feeling behind my playing. I felt like I was meeting a rare character, a magical being, like a unicorn, or Tom Bombadil from The Lord of Rings, something mysterious and ephemeral. I saw him outside of that room, once. He was a young man, but he had some problems with his legs, and walked with a cane. We met several more times, and played together, and talked about music, in that secret room, in a private space, outside of time, away from the noise and chaos of the world.
The ability to get away from the rest of the world, to have such a private, personal, untouchable space, both in that lounge, and in my room, was a truly amazing thing. And I had complete freedom at this time, with no one to answer to but myself. My time was entirely my own. Another rare, and powerful thing. But that’s a very precious thing, and you have to be careful with it. In the throes of winter, in this Toyo Hotel, I did for some time disappear into the void of League of Legends. It’s almost no different than if I had been sucked into an opium den. I disappeared from the lobby, I disappeared from the world, and I entered that magical, fictional world of the Rift. I hadn’t played in years, prior to this, I had nothing to do with the game. I was an addict. And I went back in. I had to relearn the game, a lot had changed. I had always been a jungler, a king of the jungle, killing monsters, surprising opponents, dictating the flow of the game, supporting the strongest members of my team, shutting down the enemy movements, controlling vision, territory, and objectives, and I gravitated to that role again, choosing as my character a new character, Kindred, Lamb and Wolf, a deadly archer with a spiritual wolf companion. I had to relearn the game, learn the new characters, learn this new character, her ins and outs, as she was a totally new concept, being a ranged hypercarry, but in the jungle – with no way to immobilize the enemy, easily killed, but a killer herself. Highly mobile, with an incentive to invade the enemy jungle, with the ability to mark targets for death, and hunt them down, growing stronger with each kill – she could fight early, she could fight well, if you knew how to handle her, and what fights to pick, but she couldn’t fight everybody. That didn’t come until later, when she had grown in power, and was completely unstoppable. She was conceptually entirely new, with a steep learning curve, and with massive potential for payoff, which made her fascinating to me, and that’s what I did. Day in and day out, for a week, for ten days, I hardly left my room, and mastered this killing machine. I will never forget one of the last games I played. Of course, I knew this was a problem, that I was playing League, that I was again disappearing into this void, but I didn’t care. I didn’t care at all. I was in. And in that last game, the final fight is burned into my mind. I had now mastered Kindred, I had perfected the killing machine, I played the entire game flawlessly, with no missteps, and in the end my total dominance from start to finish was complete, as I single-handedly cut down every member of the enemy team and ended the game, while my own team watched on. I decided that the game was over, and so it was. It was a flawless victory, my mastery was complete. After that, what do you do? Where do you go? Was I going to keep playing, to climb the endless ladder, rise to the top of the ranks, spending more precious time that I don’t have? I already didn’t have time for this. No. It was enough.
It was rare that I ever had anywhere specific I actually wanted to go, as I was mostly just hanging out, going to Tully’s, and enjoying the company of the other Toyo people. They gave me plenty of things to do, they all had their own itineraries, they were full of ideas, and I could join them if I wanted, or just let them go out and do the excursions, and get the report when they came back. It’s fun talking to other backpackers this way, because everyone goes out, and they do their things, and then you all come back to the hostel and talk about it, sharing stories, sharing ideas, inspiring each other. Sometimes, you find someone you really like, someone has an idea that you want to get in on, and you do it together. You can always find someone to go out to eat with you, if you want it, either in the common room, or going out somewhere. You are like a little family, for the time you’re together. I was happy to go along with others, and for that time I was something of a tour guide, because I was one of the few in the hotel who was actually a Japan resident, and spoke Japanese, and knew about all of the things that they were learning about for the first time, and so I could introduce them to new things, show them some of the more interesting aspects of the culture, and I became a little bit of a local expert, and could take them to places that tourists might not get into. Most casual tourists, probably very few came to Nishinari in Osaka at all, and so you got a different and more adventurous crowd, more world travelers, more experienced travelers, and people who wanted to experience deeper elements of Japanese culture. Well, on one excursion, that was wholly my project, I convinced some of the other Toyoans, that was photographer Derek, French beatmaker Jean, and the Scot, Ben (his name is not Ben but what the hell was his name), to join me on an expedition to the Tower of The Sun. I had been enamored with it since I discovered it in a pack of famous-Osaka-things cards that I got in a vending machine. I still have those cards, and what an incredible purchase. That pack had all of the Osaka gems, all of the local treasures, everything to do, everything to eat. In a pack of cards. And when I flipped through them and saw The Tower of The Sun, I had the feeling that I had seen it before, somewhere in Toyo, and I started walking around and checking the walls, which were all covered in art made by the guests and staff, until I found it. There on the wall in the main lobby was an image of the Tower of The Sun. And so I looked this thing up, and I knew I needed to go there. It was kind of far though, about thirty minutes or an hour away, and I didn’t want to go alone. I pitched this trip in the lobby, and Jean, Matthew, and Derek signed up for it, and so we planned to meet the next morning, not too early, just something like 9:30, and all go together. And at this time in my life, I had no phone, and one of the biggest inconveniences about not having a phone, and you wouldn’t expect this, is that you actually don’t have an alarm clock anymore. I usually wake up early, and so I was sure it wouldn’t be any problem, but for some reason that morning I slept in. I woke up at 9:45 or 10:00. The day of the big expedition! Shit!! I called my friends on the Line app, no response. I rushed down into the lobby, but I didn’t see them. I wavered on what to do, and decided that they must have just left without me, hoping to see me there. So, I grabbed my camera, and I made the trip myself. The Tower of the Sun is an enormous art installation from the 1970’s world art expo, that was held in Osaka. The outside is basically an enormous, 100-150 foot tall concrete and metal cone, with two arms, and with a giant hybrid sun/moon face, with a quirky sun face painted on the front, and a quirky moon face painted on the back of the main tower. It’s like an enormous, modern, Japanese totem pole, in reverence to the sun and the moon. (Then you get inside, and it’s totally not what you would expect, and I knew you could go inside, but had no idea what was in there). It’s amazing. And it’s part of a huge, many-square-miles-large park. I took the train there, walked to it, and looked all over – but my friends were nowhere to be found. I went inside and picked up the four tickets that I had pre-ordered, and wondered what to do. Could they have gone ahead? Were they already inside? Did they give up on the trip? Did I somehow get ahead of them? Should I wait? And these are the fun kinds of questions you have when you don’t have a phone. These are the fun little riddles you have to solve. Because obviously if I had a phone, I would know. They would have told me. But I didn’t, just like the olden days, and I had to wonder what happened. This best part of the story wouldn’t have existed if I had a phone, so when people ask me what it’s like to not have a phone, remember this story. I asked the girls working at the Tower’s reception if there were already three young male foreign men in the Tower, and they said no. I didn’t know what to do, and I waited around for some time, probably fifteen minutes, and walked around the park. I think I had a time set on my tickets, that I was supposed to use them within a certain timeframe, from 11am-12pm, so there was some time pressure. After waiting, and explaining my situation to the nice girls working the reception desk, I decided that I wasn’t going to be finding my friends, and I should just give the rest of my tickets away. I went back outside, and saw a couple with two young boys entering, and offered them my tickets, but they already had some. Same with another guy walking in. I walked up the entrance ramp, and went out into the park. Nearby, there were three young girls, high school aged. I tried them. As soon as I started talking to them, they were shy as hell, giggling and alert, as this is a very rare occurance, having a wild gaikokujin start speaking Japanese to you, and I offered them the tickets. They were very apologetic, and thought carefully about it, but they had somewhere they needed to be, and wouldn’t take them either. So after that, I just said, well, I tried, and I went back into the tower. I updated the reception girls, and told them after all that I couldn’t find anyone to give the tickets to, and was just gonna’ have to go in alone, and they were sad to hear it, but shouganai! It can’t be helped. And then, not a minute after I had gone in, and was looking over the initial design sketches for the construction of this magnificent tower, one of the reception girls came running over to me, saying excitedly, “Sumimasen! Sumimasen! Tomodachi ga kimashita!!” (“Hey, your friends are here!!”) And I ran out, and there they were! And I said, “What the heck!” And they were like, “We were in the lobby the whole time!” I couldn’t believe it. Somehow I had just missed them. And so we went in together, and had a great time. And it turned out, externally the Tower was all about the sun and moon, but inside, it was The Tower of Life, and the thing was filled with giant sculptures of paleolithic creatures, protozoans, early man, dinosaurs, jellyfish, spiraling up to modernity, from the ancient times. The entire interior glowed red, and there were spiny things everywhere, and there was a whole section at the beginning that was just crazy tribal masks. Then, afterwards we went to a nearby mall, and gorged on amazing udon. God, I love udon. And while we were loading up our udon with all of the goodies, Jean was standing next to me at the counter, pouring the fried crunchy crispies into his bowl, and this whole time we had been speaking English, and then he says something to me, and I was like, “Bro, was that French?” Because I couldn’t understand him at all, and he was like, “Was it? Oh, sorry, my brain is so tired.” He was so tired that he had just defaulted back to French.
In the spirit of having written every day on this blog, as in having written some kind of post every day for three days in a row now, which in the history of this blog is totally unprecendented, I will keep it going, and write yet another post. The challenge this time is, what to write about?
I am not much in the mood for writing, to tell you the truth. I am in the mood for living. But my environment is not currently all that conducive to living. Or, not living, exactly, but living passionately and with gusto, and savoring life and tasting the joys of life, as I kind of want to do right now, in some way.
I picked up the guitar, but I’m not quite in the mood. I am beset on both sides now, literally on both walls of my room, by people who I will be bothering if I unleash the beast, as has now happened multiple times. It’s dark, and I feel confined, in this room, and in my spirit.
Something I have learned about rock and rocking – you can’t do it without making noise. You must make noise. And if you are going to do it right, you must unleash. You can use headphones, but it’s not the same. We all know that. It’s not the same, and you’re bound to the headphones. It’s like a silent rave. Not a fan of the silent rave, even though I like the idea. But it’s not about being quiet. It’s almost the principle of the thing. It’s about making some fuckin’ noise. It’s about unleashing the beast, freeing your spirit, that’s what the fuck rock is all about.
I went to Gibson Garage today. I work in the same building as the Gibson headquarters, and their main store, the Gibson Garage, that has all the fancy Gibson guitars. It is a guitar player’s dream to be working in the same building as this Gibson Garage, and in the last week I’ve been in there probably four times. Today, again, I played the Kirk Hammett 1979 Flying V. The Epiphone verson. That guitar is absolutely amazing. I want it now. That’s the first one I was interested in, and I also have been interested in the Epiphone Extura Prophecy Explorer, but I picked it up today, and I just wasn’t that into it. But that Flying V, I picked up afterwards, and was once again, extremely into it. So that must be the guitar for me.
There is one other guitar that I really want to try out, and that’s the Fender Mustang, whatever. Some kind of Fender Mustang, with the racing stripe. I want to see what that guitar is all about. I first saw one at the Nashville New and Used Music store. Caught my eye, that one did. But I haven’t played it yet.
These days, I’m all into rocking. Punk rock, metal, heavy metal, grunge, rock of all of those flavors. That means Metallica, Nirvana, Sex Pistols, Ramones, Superheaven, Disturbed. Not much Disturbed right now, because I’ve already listened to it all and am waiting to crack into playing Disturbed. I have my hands full learning Nirvana stuff, and now just recently, Metallica. A completely different ball game. We are riffing the fuck out now. I LOVE it. I’ve been playing Blackened. Genius song, and genius writing, and heavy as fuck. The riffs outstanding. The Ramones and Sex Pistols is fun to play, but the Metallica so far is something else, because I’m actually getting to work the neck and do some riffing, some interesting fret work, that I haven’t done yet in my guitar player career, which is still pretty short. But today, at the Garage, I have been hooking into a $2700 Mesa/Boogie amp (the Mesa/Boogie Rectifier Badlander), and I played around with the knobs and settings, and with the Flying V, and I landed on a sound that was so heavy and chunky that I can say 100% it was the best sound I have ever gotten out of an amp/guitar combo. That was the sound for me. I need that sound in my life. I must have it. I asked the guitar pro guy, who’s name I should really remember, how can I get something like this sound but not pay $2700 for this Mesa/Boogie, and he recommended the Marshall DSL to me. And I keep hearing the name Marshall pop up, so I might have just found my next amp.
I titled this post Humanism because I had to think of something to title it, and I looked up and directly across the room in front of me was a small framed Keith Haring artwork poster, with this word written across the bottom. I can tell you a little story about this, the story of how I came to own this poster and three Yayoi Kusama framed posters. Here is the story, not the most riveting tale but mayhaps thou’ wilst enjoy it nonetheless.
When doing my Christmas shopping with my dearest sister we attended a local thrift store that I must have passed by many times and never noticed, although it was much further down Gallatin than I originally thought, so actually I have not passed by it so many times, and it looks like it would be a CVS or Wallgreens, and that’s probably what it once was, but it is not a thrift store, and I went with her to this thrift store that was so close to my house on Gallatin, and it was amazing and full of treasures and gems, and I spied a Yayoi Kusama poster, framed, for $18, that was calling to me, sitting in a wicker chair, all alone, and I thought, that this is here for a reason, but did I need it? No. And was I shopping for myself? No. I was there for other people. I was there to shop for other people, for Christmas, so I resisted and did not buy it, and I have often thought, if you aren’t sure, just don’t buy it, and if you are still thinking about it later, maybe then you can go back and get it, and be sure about it. That way you avoid making impulsive purchases. Well, guess what? After Christmas, and during Christmas, I kept thinking about that Yayoi Kusama poster. That frame. I wanted it, and I could justify it, because I am a Yayoi Kusama fan, with nothing to show for it, and it fills a niche in my room that I don’t have, which is any kind of connection to visual arts and the art world, that I do love and am interested in, and currently, you wouldn’t be able to tell if you looked around my room, except that I have one large handmade couch throw hanging on my wall, that I bought at a local Indian restaurant called Surya when I lived in Ozu machi, and then I have a fluid painting that I made awhile ago. So, my room is sorely lacking in wall art and especially of the art world, in the visual arts way, and so I wanted this poster, and I could justify it, and I had a little Christmas money to spend. Well, when I got back home to East Nashville, I went back to the thrift store to see if they still had the frame, and they still had it, and they had two others, and then they had the Keith Haring up on the wall, and I thought, I must buy all of these. I need to have all of these. I absolutely must, and this is important. And they were all $18. So now, in my room, I have three of these framed Yayoi Kusama exhibition posters, and one Keith Haring, and this was money well spent, and I don’t feel guilty at all. The reason being that it truly is a reminder and a link to the visual art and art lover in me, and I appreciate these frames and am reminded of that world every time I look at them. When I look at these Yayoi Kusama frames, I think about going to her exhibit when I was in New York, and I think about her story, from what little I know about it, and it makes me happy. My room, if it were going to be a representation of me, is now more complete, having these artworks. And someday, if anyone were going to enter into this room, they might say, “Cool pictures!” or they might say, “You like Yayoi Kusama?” and I would say, yes, I went and saw a Yayoi Kusama exhibit in New York, I love Yayoi Kusama. Keith Haring I don’t know much about and have not been to a Keith Haring exhibit, but I have always liked his work. I couldn’t say that I really knew his name or connected him with his art until I bought this frame, though. The Yayoi Kusama also ties in with my Japanese self, and that’s important. I have a nice bottle of Kagoshima shochu on my bookshelf, that also is a reminder. The word iconography has been in my mind, recently. The iconography of my room, that brings certain things to my mind. It is powerful.
I have been hanging out in my room more than I would really like to, because it’s winter, and after staring enough at these blank walls, I started to have ideas about how to decorate them. I have been leaning records against the wall, on the back of my couch, and I can display five records that way, which is amazing. After the Superheaven concert, I bought a record, which contained two copies of a folding album artwork, and I also got a free poster with my purchase, so here were two large rock visuals that I could tape to the wall, and then after doing that, I had the real brilliant idea, to rip up the picture book that come with my deluxe Bleach album (Nirvana), and stick all those pictures to my wall. I wasn’t looking through that book anyways, it was just sitting there in the record case. So I tore it up and stuck it all over the walls. Now I have had rock iconography, and I think more about rock, which is great. But the Yayoi Kusama and Keith Haring are something else, they give me something else to think about, and represent something else I care about, and love. So I’m glad I got those.