Putting every piece of silverware, cup, plate, food item, dog food, dog treat, or anything that may ever come into direct contact with human skin into plastic bags is about as much fun as it sounds like it would be. And it is what I spent a significant amount of my time doing this weekend (between lectures.) We had our apartment “bug bombed” and an extraordinary amount of chemicals sprayed about, all in our extermination efforts. We have ended up washing all of the plates, silverware, and cups before we use them anyway because cockroaches can survive a nuclear blast and yet this stuff seems to kill them. We figure we should try to keep it out of our digestive tracks. We had to mop the floor too, to keep it out of the dogs’ digestive tracks. We had to wash every single article of clothing and bedding, including, of course, winter jackets, mittens, hats and gloves, and do all our dry cleaning. I spent 150 dollars on laundry. Turns out dry cleaning (even for the whole of 6 dry-cleanable items I own) is really expensive. Anyway, between all of this, I thought that I might be losing sight of what’s important in life and how lucky I really am. So I sat down and started making a list of things I was thankful for. They came slowly and arduously at first, but then started to flow. This list is by no means exhaustive, but I thought it might be nice to share.
I am thankful for:
-my family who loves me
-my wonderful boyfriend
-that I am my grandparents’ granddaughter and that means I can do anything
-my very cool roommates
-mobility in all of its meanings
-getting to look forward to my boyfriend’s visit, going to Hawaii over Thanksgiving, and going home for Christmas
-the experiences I had in Honduras
-the amazing host family I lived with in Honduras
-that my projects in Honduras have continued
-not having to worry if there will be running water when I get home
-warm water
-my old friends
-making new friends
-warm cookies
-my awesome dog
-being able to communicate in Spanish
-travel
-being able to drop off my laundry and pay someone else to wash it
-the lights on the George Washington Bridge
-the sunset over New Jersey
-Riverside Park and Trail
-the view from the Empire State building at night
-food carts
-shoes
-waterproof shoes
-warm clothes
-a dry place to sleep
-being in a very interesting academic program
-learning to manage a staff of 25
-the experience of getting to live in New York City even if it means that in a year I will complain about it endlessly, frown on the subway, and love it like only a New Yorker can.
And now, its time to get ready for midterms.
Archive for the ‘New York City’ Category
An early Thanksgiving
Posted in New York City, Thoughts on October 16, 2007| 2 Comments »
Don’t let the bed bugs bite!
Posted in New York City, Thoughts on October 12, 2007| 3 Comments »
“Good night, sleep tight, don’t let the bed bugs bite.”
It turns out that this is not just the cute phrase I thought it was. Bed bugs are real, and at least in NYC, they’re back. People thought that they had been eradicated in the US, like polio. In fact, when one of my friends first went to the doctor for the itchy bites on his arm the doctor said, “Well, those look like bed bug bites, but they can’t be bed bug bites because we don’t have those in the U.S.”
In fact, most people in my parents’ generation have never seen a bed bug. My grandma has never seen one, though she remembers her mother making her search for them when they went to hotels. After the second world war, the bugs were nearly wiped out due to extensive use of DDT in extermination. But now that DDT is banned and more people are traveling internationally than before (offering the bugs hitchhiking options), they are back, with a vengeance. Mountains of mattresses form on the side walks on trash days. Our apartment has been the unwilling home to a couple of pests and we are currently undergoing an exhausting process of extermination, and preventative measures and as anyone will tell you, these pests are just plain hard to get rid of with modern chemicals.
Jon, chucking, likes to describe their rather unconventional method of mating, traumatic insemination, which is about as appealing as it sounds. This is the kind of thing I would rather not know.
cold cuts and cocaine
Posted in New York City on October 3, 2007| 1 Comment »
About two weeks ago I walked out of our apartment building to take our two large dogs out for a quick walk when I realized that both Broadway and the street that leads to the park were completely full of police and police cars, both undercover, and in uniform. Apparently the police busted at $4 million dollar a year cocaine ring based out of the bodega across the street from my building.
“Buyers would frequent the Fiesta Meat Market at 3661 Broadway, where they could order cocaine with their cold cuts,” explained the police commissioner.
Spectators (and probably would-be customers) filled the streets making it difficult to negotiate my 180 lbs of dog across Broadway. An tall man wearing an impressively heavy gold chain around his neck offered to escort me across the street, which I thought was odd until I saw his badge tucked into his waist. Apparently the gentleman was one of the undercover cops that made some of the 24 undercover purchases from the bodega.
I use to go to the bodega on occasion because they sold all sorts of fruits and vegetables late into the night. Occasionally when I got home from work I would want a banana, and I could tie Spot up outside and run in to get one. Of course, there was the risk of accidentally getting a platano (plantain), though I don’t know who would ever do that. I mean I spent several months living in Central America and I can tell you they look completely different. Anyway, I am sure if anyone ever did do that it would be really embarrassing. The bodega also sold my favorite hazelnut coffee creamer and I haven’t been able to find it on my block since they closed so I have been forced to drink my coffee with original-flavored creamer, and it really isn’t as good.
Anyway, if you want to read more about the rather comic story:
http://www.nysun.com/article/63127
Grandma, don’t worry about me, everything is fine and I am safe and living in a building with lots of friendly people and there are generally lots of police keeping on eye on things on the block.
63,000 verticle people-moving machines
Posted in New York City on September 24, 2007| 1 Comment »
I realized recently that I use lots and lots of stairs everyday. It’s quite an interesting shift from Honduras. A friend of mine suggested that I bring slinkies to give to my Honduran host family’s children as gifts when I arrived. I thought it was a terrific idea, but in the end I was glad I went with something different because there were virtually no stairs in La Esperanza. There was lots of space and everything could be very spread out, and therefore, virtually everything happened on the first floor. NYC is a different story. There are 63,000 elevators and escalators in the city. I am currently sitting in the 6th floor basement (as in 6 floors under ground). I live on the fifth floor, and due to the crawling speed of our elevator, I end up walking up those stairs more than I would like. I walk down to the subway platforms and then take elevators to the platforms below. I am constantly going to classes somewhere between the 6th basement and the 17th floor. And I am pretty sure that the elevators at the NY Presbyterian Hospital are even slower than the one in my building. My thighs ache; even Spot gets out of breath walking up to our apartment. I would go up and sit out in the sun in my break between classes, but the surface of the earth just seems too far away for now.
Viva La Vie Boheme
Posted in New York City on September 11, 2007| 2 Comments »
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The weather in NYC is crappy and rainy right now, but it has been sunny and in the 80s recently, which has been bringing me endless joy, so I guess I have to put up with a bit of rain. Anyway, here is a picture from the shenanigans on the roof at the end of the all beer day fest over Labor Day weekend. I live in a pretty cool building.
Ya tiene novio
Posted in New York City on September 8, 2007| 3 Comments »
Spot now has a boyfriend, or at least that is how our building super put it.
I spent Labor Day weekend moving, again. My old apartment was dark, due to its position in the building and because it was on the second floor, above the bodegas below, it had more than its fair share of roaches. I also met some super cool kids in the building, and they had an extra room. So now I live with three cool roommates and another cool large dog, named Max. Max is Spot’s boyfriend. They play some throughout the day and I think it is great for Spot to have some company. Max is a big dog, he weighs 120 lbs. So now we have 180 lbs of dog in or apartment which is equal to another large person, or a regular person and a small child. The apartment is about average size for New York City so when the dogs play they either run into the walls, hit their heads on the tables, or threaten the existence of the plasma TV, but they sure do have fun.
I can’t even begin to explain how much fun it was to move for a second time in three weeks, carrying most of my stuff up three flights of stairs. It was awesome.
School also started last week and I have been feeling somewhat overwhelmed between figuring out my work and class schedules and finding some way to transport myself between the two locations when there is construction, or explosions, on the subway. I have been stressed as I adjust to many new situations and my new life here. I hope things settle into more of a pattern soon, hopefully just in time for my school work to really pick up. I remain excited that I can pay someone 12 dollars to do my laundry for me. I can also tell you, that last weekend my girl friends and I did not go to a salon in midtown and spend 50 dollars getting manicures, pedicures, and messages while we looked out over Madison Square Garden. Or wait, maybe we did. When people at work saw my nails they said that New York was already rubbing off on me. I have also generally been impressed with my professors.
Here are a few pics of the new place:
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Max and Spot
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My new bedroom. Notice the curtain hooks, I think they really pull the room together. I am a master with tools.
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The new kitchen. It’s small, but at least we have lots of shelves.
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The new living room
You can get to 
