Archive for November, 2003

Letter from Linhope

Saturday, November 29th, 2003

I’m writing from Linhope Street, where Simon and his two flatmates have been good enough to put me up and put up with me on my trip to London. I met Simon briefly in London before I left on my backpacking trip eighteen months ago. He joined me in Peru for two weeks in June, and we walked the Inca Trail. Now he’s inducting me into a far more exotic culture: the London Lad Flat.

Nick Hornby is the tutelary spirit of Linhope. The DVDs and CDs are stacked high. There’s an X-box, big speakers, and a bigger telly. I can’t tell which of the five remote controls I’m to use to change the channel. Since they are all consultants, there are three irons and stacks of clean but rumpled shirts all over the living room, and the fridge is full of Marks & Spencer’s meals of impressively recent vintage. It took me a while to find a dusty tethered phone behind the sofa—in London, the mobile rules. PG Tips tea fuels dressing-gown arguments about classic comedies. “Squeeze the teabag,” instructs Barry as I stir some suspiciously weak-looking stuff for him. His given name is Ian, but when your last name is Whyte, England can’t let the nicknaming opportunity pass.

Simon is a lovely host, good enough to haul himself out to Heathrow to surprise me. Jetlag is a headache-free hangover, and after a quick turn around Regent’s Park and down swanky Marylebone High Street, he allowed me to spend the whole evening lying on the sofa, eating Hob-Nobs and watching two full seasons of the British version of Coupling. It’s funny in a loveless way, a farcical Sex and the City predicated on embarrassment, which is still an abundant natural resource here. One episode is based on a woman flipping out when she finds a porn movie in her boyfriend’s video player: chuck her, mate. I’m tired of sit-com shrews.

Like an Oliver Sacks character, my face works for a while before I produce the right words for everyday things. Registration number, not license plate. Cash point, not ATM. A-meen-ity, not a-mehn-ity. On The Simpsons, Homer refers to a baseball made out of Secretariat and I have to explain to Linhope what a Secretariat is. As usual, I’m shocked and charmed by the amount and variety of chocolate bars pushed at every turn—stacked high over the cash registers, sold in vending machines on every Tube platform. No wonder the television presenters have fascinatingly wide hips. Simon may yet ban me from muttering, “God, she’d never be hired in the States”, even about Anna Ford, who becomes more extraordinarily beautiful as she ages without the Saran-wrap facelifts that are mandatory on the other side.

On Newsnight, Jeremy Paxman, who masters the art of looking bored and outraged at the same time, shreds a Labour Party spokesman over proposed “top-up fees”—discretionary tuition fees of up to three thousand pounds to be levied by individual universities, which are otherwise completely free to students. These pinko debates are a joy after two weeks in Mr. Bush’s America.

The weather is lovely—cold and bright—though wasted on me since I can’t drag myself out of bed before afternoon.

Happy Thanksgiving, New York. Wish you were here.

Awright?

Tuesday, November 25th, 2003

Swinging out to London this evening. My Ambien is packed. I’m wearing a fuzzy jumper and practising bleary scowls for Heathrow (sorry, HeathROW). The British Airways trolley dollies are among my favourites, for masochistic reasons, and I can’t wait to be woken up at five for chilled, stale baked goods, as I will no longer be able to call them. (Why don’t Americans extend this usage to “boiled goods” and “fried goods”?)

New York Breeds

Monday, November 24th, 2003

My New York world has filled up with babies and talk of babies. This is what happens when you’re thirty one. Even New Yorkers figure out eventually—much too late, in my meddling opinion—that we as a species are here to make babies as well as reputations. I’m delighted by this development. Kids are fun, especially when they’re spawned by people I like.

So I’m now inducted into the art of trying to find meeting places that are good for children. This requires different social hunting skills than I’d previously developed. Halley’s eight-year-old son, Jackson, is big and smart and mobile, so we go iceskating at the Rockefeller Center. Harley’s 18-month-old twins, on the other hand, are mobile but not sensible. In the wasteland of the Upper West Side we take refuge in the kids’ section of Barnes and Noble. The very patient manager allows them to fling the teen novels onto the floor while we sit on the floor and chat. I rib Harley for accidentally picking this generation’s Jennifer to name her little girl: like all the mamas our age, I thought Maya was a great name, too.

Alex has a three-month-old charmer called Gus, and the good fortune to live in Brooklyn. Gus is a sophisticate who has already been to the Met, and has seen most of Manhattan from his sling. So we picked nearby Halcyon, still one of my favourite cafés. There are drapy sofas, unburnt coffees, popping disco lights and, usually, thumping music. People think babies like cheerful colors and teddy-bear friezes. They’re wrong. Babies are essentially young people, and therefore like house music and strobe lights in a semi-darkened room. Halcyon makes no concessions to sprogs. Halcyon is always full of sprogs and their hip, gorgeous parents. The kids lie there in zonked-out bliss, staring at the lights and lolling inanely to the beat. They forget their patriotic duty to be grabby little brats and they become as delightful as Ecuadorian bus babies.

I’m going to make my fortune with a clubbing daycare franchise.

Extreme Makeover

Sunday, November 23rd, 2003

“Bless me father for I have sinned, it’s been eighteen months since my last check up and cleaning…”

I have a new periodontist. He’s a handsome young Kentuckian who could be my host Joe’s younger brother. Through his gloved fingers I guiltily explain my neglected teeth by telling him about my year of backpacking. He says kindly he can tell that I flossed in Laos.

Then he says, “You know, we could really fix you up. Have you ever considered orthodontistry?”
I explain that I already had six years of government orthodontistry as a child in Ireland. He peers in again, shakes his head and says, “Socialized medicine”.

I see his point. My top and bottom teeth don’t share a zip code. The bottom set is crooked. Two front teeth are caps from faceplant off my bike fifteen years ago, so I can’t do a blinding bleach job like Sarah Michelle Gellar. But I’ve developed a compensating pout that lets me close my mouth over the overbite, and by normal standards I’m not disfigured.

    “It’s because you’re Irish. Small jaw, big teeth. Things would be so much better if the Brits were simply born without premolars.” I mumble politely, because that’s what we Brits do. Then I ask what he’d suggest. A eugenicist’s glint appears in his eye.
   “First we’d take out the rest of your wisdom teeth. Then we’d do some tissue rollback on the recession right here. Then we’d get some braces to get your teeth into the right spot. Finally we’d do an operation where we’d break your jaw and add an implant to bring it forward. You’d lose that dent right below your bottom lip. You’d have a great strong jawline. Totally change your profile.”
   “Totally change my profile.”
   “Yeah. And you’d see it from the front, too.”
   “I’d look completely different.”
   “I think it would be a great look.”
   “I’d look like Katie Couric.”
He thinks about this, doubtfully. Then he agrees.

I see a future in which I have a firm, jutting American jaw. A jaw that would bust through the doors of corporate success, a jaw that could pitch for the Yankees or cheer for the Lakers. A jaw like Courtney Thorne-Smith.

I ask him if there’s any medical reason for me to spend ten thousand dollars have my jaw broken and extended. Not really, he admits.

Sometimes I forget what a creepy country America is.

35 People

Sunday, November 23rd, 2003

I’m visiting my past in reverse order. Two weeks in New York, a fortnight in London, a stint in Dublin, and then, saints preserve me, Limerick, indefinitely. The palimpsest of faces is a slow version of a drowning man’s flashback: my life strolls before my eyes. After five months in a log cabin with one laconic Canadian for company, I’m already all talked out.

I just counted 35 people that I’ve met with since I got off the ever-chic Greyhound bus ten days ago. (I’m turning into Rainman: first counting books, now listing people.) These were old friends, mostly, seasoned here and there with new words made flesh, like Adam Stein, Michael Barrish, Halley Suitt, and Betsy Devine. I also conjured up the kindred spirits I’d met while travelling last year—all of whom, due to my extreme provincialism, were New Yorkers or near as dammit.

35 people, not counting sprogs or fellow party guests. I have no aptitude for groups, so these were labour-intensive individual jawing sessions. This social limitation explains why it takes me two weeks to visit New York properly, and also why my site updates have been so sporadic. Special apologies to new readers from Feedster or Doc Searls‘ site: I’m usually a more attentive host than this, I promise.

Miniskirts

Sunday, November 23rd, 2003

Manhattan has been invaded by the Japanese schoolgirl look. Little denim skirts with Ugg boots; pleats and knee-socks; corduroy and sneakers. My knee-length skirts looked prim and tired, no longer sleek. So I gave in and forked out for my first garment in months. I bought a miniskirt at Urban Outfitters. It cost $38. It’s black, made out of a kind of sweatshirty material, and is exactly the kind of thing I lived in when I was nineteen. I thought I’d wear it with the flat Miu-Miu boots I’d rescued from storage.

It looked good.
It looked ridiculous.

My legs are my best feature, in my own vain and unreliable estimation. Only because I live in the first century in which western humans ignore good evolutionary sense and exalt slim and knobbly over dimpled knees. Fine by me. Legs are a good long-term investment. Patella and femur and achilles tendons don’t betray women over the long haul like other body bits, and better yet, they don’t come with a bimbo tag, which can’t be guaranteed if you suffer from fine hooters or a button nose. I almost always wear trousers, in case I have to escape, but a well-turned ankle is a reserve weapon.

In spite of faith in my limbs, as soon as I got the skirtlet on I had an attack of mutton-dressed-as-lamb panic. An A-line skirt with flat boots makes us all look short and squat, and I wasn’t sure all this thigh was really necessary. The skirt was overt, and I’m not. But I remembered when the Prada shoes I later coveted looked ugly to me, and hoped my style eye just hadn’t adjusted yet.

I launched my new look on the fashion-forward 2 train. Immediately the old man opposite hunched forward and muttered lasciviously until I had to move. On the street men stare at minis like toddlers stare at Teletubbies, especially after a decade of deprivation. It’s not that short skirts look better, or sexier—they don’t—but they are unmistakable signifiers. I felt like Paris Hilton. Not in a good way. I wanted to crawl back into my Kedey Island boilersuit. Instead I changed into age-appropriate sweatpants and pensioned off the overt skirt.

Kedey Island Diary

Sunday, November 23rd, 2003

Ranger Tim’s notes from the log cabin are a reminder of the gentle world I just left behind.

I went over to the narrows to grab some of the oak logs that Mike Helferty cut there last year during his trail clearing fit. Suddenly there’s this strange mammalian sound out on the water, like Flipper. Maybe 50 yards offshore is a pair of river otters, shucking and jiving in the shallows, now and then raising their heads way up out of the water to watch me, and scolding loudly about the intrusion. They’re so animate and sprite-like, amazing storybook creatures. Did you ever see one?

Rainbow trout filet for lunch to commune with the piscophile neighbours.

A Thing About Brooklyn

Tuesday, November 18th, 2003

Almost as soon as I posted the last soppy entry on Brooklyn love, I got this message from a charming man I met on a boat in Burma last year.

Thursday between 11 and 6 would be super. Do you mind terribly coming to Manhattan? I don’t mind travelling the world, but I have a thing about Brooklyn. Psychological, one assumes.

I’m including it in the interests of balanced reporting.

Breukelen

Monday, November 17th, 2003

“That makes me really angry,” says the man on the street loudly. New Yorkers announce their anger like other people announce their hunger. He’s looking straight ahead, sticking his chest out to get value from the gym membership. It takes me a second to notice the ear piece. It’s my first day back in cell phone range for many months, and now half the jaywalkers seem like screaming crazies.

The sky is grey, the wind whips up whirlpools of leaves from Central Park, and the people are monochrome, hard-faced bundles. They walk past shop windows decked out with $3,000 skirts. Either they can afford them, or they can’t, and neither state looks good for the soul. I walk all the way down from 66th and Madison to 30th and 8th and feel like a stranger. It’s a year and a half since I lived in this city.

But then I reclaim my bike from its foster parent, Andrew. I’m wobbly after a long absence, the more so since lanky Andrew has raised the saddle so that I ride down 30th Street on tip-toes. All the way out to Brooklyn I go, following my bike’s nose like a trail horse down my old Chinatown shortcuts. I brake at all the red lights I used to skim through and I breathe in short adrenaline pants. My fate is to get doored, or mown down by a left-turning cab, or gored by a courier. I can’t believe that I used to do this every single day.

At the foot of the Manhattan Bridge, where you dismount to carry your bike down the steps onto Brooklyn concrete, new graffiti covers the end wall. “BROOKLYN,” it says, “I’M HOME.”

When I first moved to New York, in 1997, I’d tell anyone who asked that I hadn’t come to New York to live in the outer boroughs. Instead I plonked myself smack in midtown, convinced by the withering insult “bridge and tunnel” that only Manhattan could be cool. I was a foolish rube. On this comeback tour, it took an afternoon in Brooklyn to teach me to love New York again. I’m still here five days later, courtesy of Domenic and Joe, the best hosts in the city. Dom spent half an hour hooking up wireless access on my laptop. Joe makes my Illy coffee every morning. There are stacks of New Yorkers and fluffy towels. I have running water, a bedroom big enough to party in, and I’m a few blocks from Michael Barrish, who introduced me to my new favourite diner, right around the corner.

I’m home.

Breakfast with Adam

Saturday, November 15th, 2003

Their first live-in simians, a pair of yellow squirrel monkeys named Emmett and Greg —

(A brief digression on Stein family pet names: it strikes some people as odd that my parents would name their monkeys Emmett and Greg, just as it strikes some people as odd that our family dogs have been named, in order of appearance, Casper, Willy, and George. I assure you that the Stein family finds it even more odd that some people give their animals idiotic pet names like Fido, Spot, and Bonzo. We’ve never discussed the matter amongst ourselves; we all just intuitively understand the fundamental rightness of giving pets normal people names, and we will get rather indignant on the issue if pressed.)

— were terrible pets, and I’ve never heard my parents express the slightest sentimentality toward either one of them. They were dirty and smelly, my mother assures me, and worse, they were constantly (here I quote) “blowing each other.” Now, this was the late ’60s, and Emmett and Greg surely had a right to their own lifestyle choices, but you have to admit that this is not very attractive behavior in a pet. Imagine my poor parents trying to throw a dinner party for a professor while their two pet monkeys engage in acrobatic monkey sex on top of the credenza. Savor the image as I have.

—Adam Stein, “Glory Days”

I’m in New York. After five months of log-cabin isolation, I’m as hepped up as a two-year-old who got into the Smarties. This morning’s date: breakfast with international man of mystery Adam Stein, with whom I’ve been corresponding for about a year. He is already disappointed that my voicemails don’t sound like Shrek. To make up for it I’ll spend the subway ride practising a list of questions about monkey sex in a reinforced brogue.