Monday, July 28, 2008

you wanta cwofeee, tony?

I think you know you are finally fitting in somewhere when you are able to walk into a convenience store and just nod. Or like Carrie Bradshaw, 'Just the usual, thanks.'
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.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

a stormy sunday

Today is grey. But definition gun metal grey. 
Not the usual smoking lounge 200% humidity non-existent visibility.
It is cool. Everything is clear, with an edge, colours are bright, trees are greener than green. 
I like it. It is dark.
You want to put the lights on at 3pm in the afternoon and play monopoly while the sky decides to crack.
If only a New York summer was like this. Generally there really isn't much cracking going on.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

pool #1 hamilton fish pool

Hamilton Fish Pool Photography by Damon Winter / The New York Times
So the first cab off the rank is Hamilton Fish Pool. It is on the Lower East Side. I arrived there after work one hot, hot day to find it closed. This didn't really faze me because in my search for swimming pools I generally meet hurdles. Like the day I went to swim at Lasker Pool in Central Park only to find that the pool was closed. Because there had been an iddy bitty bit of thunder about. And the rule is: 'The pool will be closed for one full hour from the moment that you hear the last rumble of thunder.' I think the Germans built the swimming pools in NYC as there are rules upon rules upon rules. 
So at Hamilton Fish Pool I met the woman at the gate.
'Is the pool closed?'
'Yeah'
'Is it going to open back up?'
'Yeah, well I dunno. We've had a little accident. So we are closed while we clean the blood out of the pool.' 
She said this like it happened most days.
A little wait though and then it was into the no-longer blood-streaked pool. 
At 7pm some of the NYC pools close to the kids and allow the adults in for lap swimming. This seems to be a subtle form of racial segregation as it makes sure the blacks swim during the day and the whites swim in the evening. Because of course only white people swim for fitness. 
So in my lily whites hopped. 
Hamilton Fish Pool actually does have lanes. As well as black lines on the floor of the pool to keep you swimming in a somewhat straight line. We take this for granted in Australia.
I looked for a spare lane and decided to swim closest to the edge of the pool on the southern side. Pretty soon into the laps I realised my school boy error. I swam my first lap with relative ease and then the second I felt like I was swimming uphill. This is no mean feat. Imagine swimming uphill.
I was swimming and thinking and then I realised that the pool was so shallow (I would say about 3 feet) that with the amount of people swimming laps in the pool the water was being forced against the edges. Creating waves. Big waves that hit the sides and then engulfed me being the first thing they hit on their way back. Great for fitness. Not so great for pleasure. I felt a little like that child at the graduation.
And then the swim was over. Refreshing. Only a few band-aids seen. The change rooms were kinda like subway dungeons. Damp, definately rats living in every odd numbered locker. But then again it is free. And rats live in New York too.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

the pool tour


Photo: Nicole Bengiveno/The New York Times

Swimming pools in New York City. I arrived here and basically they immediately pumped up the heat. June saw a week of 40 degree days. Welcome to the city.

So I was on the search for a swimming pool. I would have been happy with any puddle but my inquiries were continuously met with, 'Oh, no when I'm hot I just take a shower.' Cool.

Sometimes Australians seem really naive overseas. I know I look like this all the time. We expect things to be the same as home. Hot = swim. Simple. We live good lives.

Anyway it turns out that there are swimming pools in New York City. They are outlandish, romanesque, palatial. And for a very good reason. Public swimming pools are free in NYC. They are for the poor. The poor who don't leave the city during the summer. The poor who don't have a house in The Hamptons, let alone a caravan park site in Lorne.

The really lovely Olympic pools were built in the 1930s when the WPA decided it needed to get the kids out of the East river. Too many were drowning, dying from parasites, diseases, rats...
So they built 11 huge pools, spread out over the 5 boroughs. And they were visions. Visions of European splendour, architectural escapism from the slums. The message being that even the working class could swim like royalty.

So it all seems so Robin Hood - the poor getting even, getting given castles. But something doesn't quite stick. Unless I am so much a product of pay-as-you-go that I couldn't possibly understand a time and a place when governments provided. Either way we are going to go on a little tour.

I am going to swim in every public swimming pool in NYC.

And then I will report back.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

kind years and not so kind years

The other night I watched Pretty in Pink for the first time in a long time...
So my 2 favourite Pink bits:




But please, I warn you...if you feel the same flutter for my little Andrew try to resist the google temptation. The years have not been kind. So we are just going to pop him in the freezer circa 1988.

PS. Who knew he had an alcohol problem and was hung-over for all of Pretty in Pink? I thought that awkward smile was oh-so coy and yet it looks like he was just trying to keep his breath in his mouth...

The other great thing about that movie was this song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVNivk0_3_c

Enough said.

Friday, July 04, 2008

runner's thighs

The other day I was trudging up the steps and steps that are at every subway station in this city...God help disabled people..

I came across an older man with a trolley...trolleys are like substitutes for cars here...it is even called 'the pony'...it is a modern day packhorse for moving house on the subway...anyway I asked him if he needed some help with his trolley...

'Oh no, mumma, I couldn't let you. It's a macho thing.'
I thought fine, suffer in your pride...

So I was on the platform about 5 whole minutes before he got to the top and then he said to me,

'Could I ask you a question?'

'Sure'

'Are you a runner?'

And I thought like 'Are you married?' that my lie would shorten the conversation...so
'Nooooooo...'

'Oh. I think you should give it a go. I think you would be really good. Look at those thighs. They are real runner's thighs.'