A place where everybody knows your name.
The last time I knew this sort of community feeling was all those years ago when we all shacked up in Darlo - commonly referred to as The Glory Years or The Good Old Days. The days when we all smoked so we had a reason to go to the convenience store everyday. We also had 7 in the house so a daily run to the store for bread and milk was needed. None of us seemed to work either so to keep our brain cells a ticking we would also include the Sydney Morning Herald in our daily pilgrimage. So we knew Simon at the Victoria Superette very well. So well in fact we would often have beers with him at The Green Park. Where we also knew all the staff. A result which also stemmed from a daily pilgrimage of sorts.
And now I have my little New York Simon. One day a week I work in a part of Brooklyn called Gowanus. It is currently straddling the industrial/gentrification divide. All the same in its purgatory it is a cool part of town. I get off the subway at Smith and 9th Sts and descend from the clouds - the train tracks are about 100 metres above the ground which makes for some lovely coal black Christo-wrapped industrial architecture - to find the usual bunch of junkies huddled, gossiping, screaming (no wonder it reminds me of Darlinghurst) outside my convenience store. Here called 'bodegas' - in essence the same as our convenience stores but usually with added deli, coffee and beer. So this morning I enter and nothing said but a coffee presented.
Three sugars, right?
Huh?
Got ya, I know you are the no-sugar girl.