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Entries in new york city (4)

Monday
Sep122011

10 years

I will never forget August of 2001. I was fresh out of high school and my parents took me to New York City for the first time as a graduation/birthday present. I was a total idealist ready for the fairytale and instantly swooned by the big city.

I will never forget being in the back of that cab, staring up at the twin towers and marveling at the brave window washers while we discussed whether or not to stop and go inside. We eventually decided that they weren’t a must-see…our logic being something along the lines of, “they’ll always be there”.

You know the rest of that story.

   

Ten years has brought a handful of experiences I never could have imagined and life lessons I didn’t know I needed. It has rounded out the edges of that sharp idealism into something more malleable, and now that I live in this great city, I am humbled everyday and only hope that I keep earning my right to be here.  

I don’t know much but I know this for sure: Nothing is permanent. Family dynamics are not. Friendships are not. Love is not. Home is not. I suppose it’s true that living in each fleeting moment is the only concrete thing any of us ever really has. And instead of entitled, we’re fortunate to share these moments with the people who make our coffee, the people we sit next to on the subway, the people who lend a hand when our bike falls apart, the people we work with, and the people who love and inspire us (just to name a few).  

Carpe Diem, ma babies.  

*All photos were taken by my parents in August 2001, on film!

Thursday
Aug252011

NYC: Part 2 - Opportunity, Footwear, and Surviving Yourself

Hello, Friends!

I’m sitting at a window enveloped cafe in the West Village watching every kind of fabulous person walk by.
A photographer is in the middle of the street shooting photos of a beautiful girl on a bicycle in a sheer floral pink tunic.
Everyone else is coming, going, exercising, shopping, dining or dog walking.

New York City is many things but this kind of scene is what I have craved year after year. I (like everyone else) want to live in this part of town and I fully intend to someday. I think it’s important to surround ourselves with the sights and sounds we want our reality to consist of.  That’s how I justify the trip from Bushwick anyway :)

“New York is the biggest collection of villages in the world.”

-Alistair Cooke 

For installment #2, I feel like much more of a New Yorker than I was last time. So what kind of wisdom can I impart on you?

I went to Burning Man in 2007 and have since described it as just an amplified and exaggerated version of real life, but I think that label is more appropriate for New York City. We (yes, we!) have every extreme here and it’s grand.

A few tips:

Footwear

  • Flip flops just won’t do. Though, I do see people wearing them all the time, I personally have tried and failed painfully. 
  • Urban Outfitter s flats won’t really work to your advantage either. 
  • Rain boots are a must. Granted, hurricane Irene doesn’t happen all the time, but on more than five occasions I have found myself wishing I had a good pair and I’ve only been here for about three weeks.

Commuting

  • MetroCard if you intend to call any of the five boroughs home, don’t waste any time getting a monthly unlimited. A friend made this suggestion and I’m very glad I didn’t put his advice to the test. 
  • Manhattan seems to be far more bike friendly than I expected. I have yet to try this out myself, but I see cyclists everywhere which I assume is a good sign.

Expense

  • Laundry detergent is mad expensive here. 
  • So are almost all sandwiches worth eating. 
  • Cabs really aren’t necessary. Avoid them and your days will be significantly cheaper. 

“Manhattan is a narrow island off the coast of New Jersey devoted to the pursuit of lunch.”

-Raymond Sokolov


Caffeine 

  • This city is known for many things but coffee isn’t one of them. If you re a coffee snob like I am this is an adjustment you might just have to live with (sigh).

Art & Opportunity 

If you’re thinking of moving here, I implore you to IGNORE any commentary about how competitive and difficult it is. While New York doesn’t coddle anyone, and while it is more competitive all across the board, the opportunities for networking and collaborating with other artists are worth every penny of rent. I have had more opportunities for my own business and livelihood in a few weeks here than I ever had in years of living in Salt Lake. Just sayin’.

“You come to New York to find the ambiance that will evoke your best. You do not necessarily know precisely what that might be, but you come to New York to discover it.”

-Dr. James Hillman

Appearances

Beautiful and skinny here are in a league of their own. Utah happens to be known for its attractive folks but damn, Gena. It is easy to lose sense of your self esteem here because no matter what you wear, how many pounds you lose from walking constantly, how fabulous you feel in your jeans, or how much money you make, there will always be someone five steps away who is skinnier, more attractive, better dressed, more talented, and more successful. As a side note, I was recently consoled by Garance Doré’s post: N.Y. skinny versus Paris skinny.

Upon moving here, all of these facts shocked me a bit. Especially coming from a place where there is so much inherent sameness that I never felt I fit into very well. I will admit that packaged carefully inside the eleven boxes I moved here with was the expectation that New York would understand me better that I wouldn’t feel like such an outsider and so in my head all the time. Ha!

The beauty I’ve learned is this:

  • We really are who we are, regardless of where we reside. You can never escape yourself and thank God for that. 
  • There are over 8 million 6 billion people in this city the world and if you try to keep up with any of them you’ll drive yourself mad. 
  • All of these people coming and going also experience insecurity, self-doubt, fear, and the pressure to make it . No one is exempt. 
  • Every one of us is unique in our own way, which is way more exciting than it is overwhelming.

These are obvious points but I think they’re important to remember and I’m grateful to be in a city that forces me to everyday.

“It wasn’t until I got to New York that I became Kansan. Everyone there kept reminding me they were Jewish or Irish, or whatever, so I kept reminding them that I was mid-western. Before I knew it, I actually began to brag about being from Kansas! I discovered I had something a bit unique, but it was the nature of New York that forced me to claim my past.”

-William Inge

“The city is not a concrete jungle, it is a human zoo.”

-Desmond Morris

“A hundred times have I thought New York is a catastrophe, and fifty times: It is a beautiful catastrophe.”

-Le Corbusier

“Sometimes, from beyond the skycrapers, the cry of a tugboat finds you in your insomnia, and you remember that this desert of iron and cement is an island.”

-Albert Camus

 

Sunday
Aug142011

NYC: Part 1 of many

 

Source: google.co.uk via Anj on Pinterest

 

Well where to start?  Since my last post I have moved to New York City.  
Brooklyn to be specific.  
Bushwick to be more specific.  

No amount of coffee has helped me get focused so I’m hoping writing will help.       

A few observations and lessoned learned so far:

  • The rain here is how I imagine rain in the Amazon to be.  No umbrella is enough to keep you dry.  I love it or hate it depending on the task at hand.    
  • The subway system is easier than I expected.  Except on Sundays.  After my jaunt to Target yesterday, I might opt to just stay close to home on Sundays for a while. 
  • Riding the M train is a great way to see Brooklyn because you’re above ground and literally cruising past the tops of buildings.  

 

 

Source: None via Anj on Pinterest

 

  • Drinks at clubs really are $15.  Possibly worth it when your favorite whiskey is concerned, but yet to be determined.  
  • I’m shocked by how difficult it can be to find free wifi in this city. 
  • I eat once or twice a day at most, drink way too much coffee, it’s humid as hell, and my muscles are screaming at me.  I suspect this is why so many New Yorkers are angry. 
  • I already have two new all time favorite meals.  One here and one here.  
  • I would feel pretty lost and lonely without some amazing people.  
  • I don’t want to ever stop marveling at this city.  
  • Leaving Salt Lake was the hardest thing I’ve ever done.
  • Moving here is the most exciting and frustrating thing I’ve ever done.  
  • Yoga has never been more necessary for me.  
  • I can’t wait to have a job!
  • I want to SCREAM much of the time, but I’m fully choosing this city and that’s a nice change.  
  • I have never loved my beloved Tom Waits more than now.  
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    Wednesday
    May182011

    Coming up. . .

    I’ve been wanting to get a couple of big posts done for a few weeks now but time hasn’t allowed.  So here is a sneak peek!

    Also, have you heard the new Bon Iver song, Calgary?  Suuuuuuper good.  I met one of my best friends at a Bon Iver concert so his voice has a special place in my heart :)

    Have a listen or download it here!

    xoxo