Thursday, May 30, 2013

Location update, take 2

States driven through in the past 8 days:
8. South Carolina
9. Georgia
10. Alabama

We're in Mobile, Alabama for the night. Driving the uhaul is actually quite easy on the highway (straight, flat) so life is good. Whew. 

11 hours today, 7-8 hours tomorrow. Spirits are high. Bring on Texas!

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

a photo a day

i successfully drove this truck home from the rental place, but it was prettttty stressful.  here's hoping i get into my groove tomorrow.  or maybe i can con dad into doing most of the driving.

we leave in the morning; our goal is mobile, alabama by tomorrow night, then on to houston on friday!


Sunday, May 26, 2013

location update

i'm in north carolina until thursday, when the trek to texas begins!  on thursday and friday i successfully moved from NYC to NC, with a stopover in DC at nigel and nora's place for fun games and awesome curried lentil soup.

states i've been in in the past four days:
1. new york
2. new jersey
3. delaware
4. maryland
5. DC
6. virginia
7. north carolina

the drive to texas will add a lot to this list.  stay tuned!

Thursday, May 23, 2013

stories from my year in new york city

as my time in new york has wound down, i've thought about what i've written about the city and what i haven't.  what is missing from my account of this year?

these are some stories that i don't think i've shared before; they say more about new york than they say about me.

here's a little portrait of new york city, through my eyes:

i helped a little old lady cross the street.  this boy scout cliche happened after our big snow storm in february.  the streets had been plowed, but walking was messy: as you crossed a street you had to go over the piles of snow that had been pushed off the road by the plows.  i was crossing a street behind an older lady with a cane, and ahead of us was packed, slippery snow before we could get onto the clear sidewalk.  i pulled out my earphones; "can i help you?"  "yes...can you put out your arm like this?" she held my forearm and inched across the snow.  "thank you."  "it's not a problem!"

*

old people and disabled people in this city make me so SAD.  i imagine their existence is hard, having to walk a lot to get groceries or fill prescriptions or go to their job.  it makes my heart hurt watching an old man with a cane struggle across the street or a hunched over old woman push her walker down the sidewalk, both things that i see every day.  a friend in my program believes the opposite: that it must be empowering for the elderly to be able to walk places, to not have to rely on a car that you might not be able to drive as you age, to have everything you need very close by.  maybe it's a matter of perspective - those who grew up in a city want to grow old there?  me, no.  please no.

*

to get to JFK airport by public transportation you have to take the subway to its second-to-last stop in queens.  on my way to JFK this fall the train car emptied out gradually until it was just me and a big burly man across the car from me.  this must be rule #1 of subway safety: don't be alone on a car with someone.  he was sort of sleeping but also sort of looking at me, and i trained one eye on him as i nervously pulled my bag closer and hoped the last few stops would bring more people onto our car.  they didn't.  when we arrived at my stop and i stood up to get off he smiled at me and said "have a good flight!"  oh, the assumptions we make about people.  let it be noted that no one talks to strangers on the subway, so his kind words were even more unexpected.  i hope he didn't guess the assumptions i was making about him.

*

that's the thing about new york: there are people everywhere.  that's what made the subway ride to the airport so weird.  there is safety in groups; walking with (female) friends through a deserted street in charleston late one night this spring was more nerve-wracking that new york city at the same time of night.  when i moved to new york i asked some friends, "okay: how late is TOO late to safely ride the subway?"  they sort of thought about it and gave an answer of around midnight or 1am.  let me say, though: there are just as many people on the subway at midnight as there are at 10 in the morning.  other than the time the guy sitting next to me fell asleep and graaaaaaadually slumped onto my shoulder - and no amount of shifting woke him up, so i let him sleep there for the couple stops until i got off - nothing weird has happened to me on the subway at night.  i love that.  i love this civilized city.

*

this is a city where people (myself included) will wait 15 minutes in line to check out at trader joe's.  in atlanta, if a line had more than two or three people in it, i thought it was long.  the trader joe's i go to on the upper west side has 29 (!) cashiers and routinely there are probably 100 people in line when i arrive.  people stretch around from the check out area through the store in line, so i do about half my shopping from the line.  we pass the prepared foods, the vegetables, the fruits, the sweets...all while standing in line.  trader joe's, i learned, sells everything at the same price in every trader joe's in the country.  i thought they were reasonably priced in atlanta; here it is like getting food for free.  for cheap, delicious food with no preservatives, i will stand in line for 15 minutes and then schlep my food on the subway almost 50 blocks.  my second favorite thing (after the price) is how nice the cashiers are.  you've waited in line for a while and then you get to a nice, friendly cashier, who takes the time to say hi and chat with you a little while they bag your groceries.  it is calmness amidst chaos.  i love it.

*

i will not miss the trash truck picking up trash outside my window six days a week at 7am.  i will not miss my 109 square foot room with a shared kitchen and bathroom.  i will not miss the trash on the sidewalk, the rats on the subway tracks, the homeless people who ask for money.  i will not miss walking through the city in the rain.

*

i will miss the reliability of public transportation, a system that goes everywhere you want it to go.  i will miss catching glimpses of the statue of liberty at unexpected times (from a plane, from the high line, from the brooklyn bridge, from the car ride back from coney island).  i will miss the ease with which my program allowed me to make friends, and the many wine and board games nights with those friends.  the food: i will very much miss the food.

*

i am sure i will truly miss being a student, but for now i am so excited to be a teacher again.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

graduation!

graduation was a two part affair.

part 1: teachers college graduation in the cathedral of st. john the divine (8 blocks from teachers college) on tuesday, which mom and dad came up for (yay!)...

getting ready to process in:


the enormous and beautiful interior:


with mom and dad at the reception afterwards:


and then part 2: columbia university's commencement on wednesday...

um, there were lots of people there.  this was my view of the proceedings:


and this is a pretty awesome photo from the top of butler library that i got off the teachers college facebook page:


(i am in the big set of risers on the right side of the photo - and then all the way to the front side of those risers, which was actually pretty close to the action.  all the blue people are the graduates.)

both graduation ceremonies were wonderful, and i have lots more to say...but i'm pretty tired at the moment.  more in the coming days.  tomorrow i drive to DC and friday i drive home to NC.  onward to new adventures!

Monday, May 20, 2013

a photo a day

visit to the natural history museum today!  people at the museum today: me, my friend justin, and 10,000 elementary school students.  hilarious.  at least i could see over their heads.


the african animals and the dinosaurs were my favorite exhibits!

Sunday, May 19, 2013

a photo a day

rainy sunday.  it's also 4 days until i move, so it's time to make some weird meals with what's in my fridge and pantry.

today's lunch: falafel (frozen, from trader joe's - really good) with broccolini (in the steamer/rice cooker, which is my favorite kitchen appliance), sweet potato, salsa, cheese, and sunflower seeds, all wrapped up in a flour tortilla.  this meal is actually looking pretty good.


Saturday, May 18, 2013

a photo a day

Three of my non-grad school New York friends threw me a going away dinner last night, complete with this cake (!!!). We were friends when I arrived and have become even better friends over the course of this year. I will miss them lots and lots.  Sigh. Goodbyes are lame.  (But this cake is awesome.)


Friday, May 17, 2013

a photo a day

brooklyn bridge walk - yes, that's twice this week, but with different groups of friends.  this time was with friends from my cohort as we enjoy our last days together.  gorgeous day for it, too - spring is finally here!


(that's lower manhattan behind us, with one world trade center on the right - they put the spire on top so it's now at its full 1,776 feet!)

Thursday, May 16, 2013

brooklyn bridge + grimaldi's

on tuesday talia helped me check another thing off my new york city list: walking across the brooklyn bridge as the sun goes down...


...and eating dinner at grimaldi's, a pizza place sort of under the brooklyn bridge that is famous and delicious.  becky took me here when i visited her once, so i had been before, and the pizza was as good as i remembered it.  actual conversation between me and talia when our large pizza arrived:

me: "that's a lot of pizza!"
talia: "don't you think we'll eat it all?"
me, without pausing: "yep!"


and we did.  YUM.


Wednesday, May 15, 2013

a photo a day

countdown to graduation: 6 days.  i got my robe today.  things just got real.


some thoughts:
1. yes, i will be wearing a carolina blue robe, and yes this seems traitorous.  however, i have been comforted to learn that UNC's official colors are white and "columbia blue," so ha!  we see who used this color first.
2. have you ever seen a more pretentious graduation robe??  seriously.  it's not black AND it has fancy badges on it?  i am both embarrassed by this robe and totally excited to wear it and be an ivy league graduate.  hooray!
"The Summer Day"
by Mary Oliver

Who made the world?
Who made the swan, and the black bear?
Who made the grasshopper?
This grasshopper, I mean-
the one who has flung herself out of the grass,
the one who is eating sugar out of my hand,
who is moving her jaws back and forth instead of up and down-
who is gazing around with her enormous and complicated eyes.
Now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washes her face.
Now she snaps her wings open, and floats away.
I don't know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention, how to fall down
into the grass, how to kneel down in the grass,
how to be idle and blessed, how to stroll through the fields,
which is what I have been doing all day.
Tell me, what else should I have done?
Doesn't everything die at last, and too soon?
Tell me, what is it you plan to do
with your one wild and precious life?

Monday, May 13, 2013

a photo a day

Peeking through the fence...

what i'm listening to right now

"holding a heart," by toby lightman:


(doesn't this song sound like it belongs on grey's anatomy?)

Sunday, May 12, 2013

my mama is the best-est!  she taught me to cook, to love being outside, to be nice to people, and that being a woman is awesome.  i don't get to celebrate with her in person today, but i do get to see her in 9 days, which is almost as good.

happy mother's day, mama!


(edinburgh, summer 2010)

Saturday, May 11, 2013

"I like living. I have sometimes been wildly despairing, acutely miserable, racked with sorrow, but through it all I still know quite certainly that just to be alive is a grand thing."
--Agatha Christie

Friday, May 10, 2013

a photo a day

Pensacola for the weekend to celebrate Kelly's birthday! But the sun isn't exactly cooperating...

Thursday, May 9, 2013

chocolate babka

a huge seinfeld fan, i love this scene, where jerry and elaine want to take a chocolate babka to a dinner party but an old lady in line in front of them gets the last one.  but as a southerner a "babka" was a foreign concept to me.  what is it?  a loaf of bread?  a dessert?  i have never known.

 

um, today i had some chocolate babka.  and it was IN. CRED. I. BLE.

a babka is like a huge loaf-sized croissant, filled with chocolate or cinnamon.  it is a dessert that isn't super sweet.  this is my favorite kind of pastry.

one of my professors this semester fits all my stereotypes of new yorkers.  she is jewish, wears crazy high heels every day, talks very loudly and with her hands, and is only 39 and is a super accomplished lawyer and a dean at the columbia law school.  she initially totally intimidated me and now i love her.  she has taught us to advocate for ourselves in negotiations and difficult conversations, and you can tell she cares about us as individuals and about our work as educators (her husband is the head of a jewish day school, so she understands our jobs).  today was our last class together, and she brought bagels...and chocolate babkas and cinnamon babkas.  WARM.  warm baked goods is the way into my heart.

and now this seinfeld episode makes even more sense.  a babka cannot be replaced by another item from a bakery.  a babka is worth the freak-out that jerry and elaine have when they don't think they can get one.  i am a babka convert.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

a photo a day

last night i went to dinner with some friends at a restaurant far, far away from where i live (about as far as you can get and still be in manhattan), but the place is SO GOOD and SO CHEAP, and it is BYOB, so you can drink for a reasonable price.  victory all around!  it's called cafe himalaya and it serves noodles and curries and dumplings and other deliciousness.  it doesn't have its own website, which tells you something.  it is at the corner of 1st street and 1st avenue, and that appeals to me, too.  this restaurant can do no wrong.

after dinner we went to the big gay ice cream shop, and YES, THAT IS REALLY WHAT IT IS CALLED.  i have been twice, and both times i got the ice cream cone called the salty pimp, which is vanilla ice cream, caramel, sea salt, and chocolate sauce.  it is so good you would push someone into a puddle in order to get this ice cream cone.

this is me and brook with our salty pimps.  i was unable to wait for her to take this picture before forced to take two bites.  YUM.


days until i leave new york: 15.  ARGHHHHHH.  i am so sad about this.

Monday, May 6, 2013

what i'm listening to right now

"next to me," by emeli sande:



my friend trevor introduced me to this song on our drive to coney island this weekend - i love it!

Sunday, May 5, 2013

a photo a day

some friends and i went to coney island today!  it was colder than we wanted it to be.  it's may!  the weather should cooperate.


we rode a rollercoaster called "the cyclone" that was built in the 1920s.  charles lindbergh apparently called this ride "more thrilling than flying."  it was scary as SHIT.  this is us before the ride:


and after.  AT LEAST I LIVED THROUGH IT.  it was a pretty traumatizing 3 minutes.  we got margaritas afterwards to calm ourselves.


the boardwalk, with the hotdog stand where everyone else had a hotdog and i had some delicious cheese fries:


such a fun day!  glad to have done this in my last month in the city.

Friday, May 3, 2013

a photo a day

picnic in central park!  i wish i could have one of these every day from now until when i move...it makes me so happy to sit in the sun and people-watch.

grilled tofu sandwich...


and a doughnut topped with glaze and coconut flakes, both from the cinnamon snail, a vegan food truck.  yum.


then there was some lying against a tree and reading...


with this as my view.  life is good.



do yourself a favor and have a picnic soon.

happy friday, all!

Thursday, May 2, 2013

what i'm listening to right now

"book of love," by peter gabriel:


cheesy as it is, this is EXCELLENT paper-writing music...except i'm sort of swaying to the music (via headphones) in my chair in the library.  let's pretend that no one is noticing.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

april: 10, 11 & 12

my classmates and i have recently spent a lot of time commenting on how this semester's work load is significantly less than last semester's.  no one's complaining...we're just reveling in our additional free time.  i had more time to read this month as a result!

(the countdown begins: i'm two papers and three projects away from graduating - woo hoo!)

orange is the new black: my year in a women's prison, by piper kerman (my sister recommended this to me a long time ago and i finally read it - SO interesting!  it's a memoir by a (white, middle class, young) woman who spent a year in a minimum security women's prison.  she writes about the hardest parts of being in prison and the little joys she finds there - she lifts the curtain on an experience i can't imagine and know very little about.  highly compelling.  i love memoirs, and this is a quick read - i'd definitely recommend it!)

matilda, by roald dahl (yes, i am in 3rd grade.  actually, i re-read my copy of this from when i probably was in 3rd grade.  adorable, as expected, but slower than i remembered - the tricks matilda plays are explained in excruciating detail.  my sister (a 3rd grade teacher) says this is normal for kids' books.  i re-read this because i saw matilda on broadway last week!  when i was in london last summer everyone was raving about the show, and it just opened this spring in new york.  i bought tickets early and got very affordable seats in the back (and i mean back) of the balcony for me and my friend dominique.  um, it was the cutest show ever.  fun songs, beautiful scenery, and the little actress who played matilda did a great job.  and miss trunchbull (remember her - the mean headmistress of the school?) is played PERFECTLY by a man, which i thoroughly enjoyed.  a great show!)

when she woke, by hillary jordan (this is a dystopian novel where criminals spend little time in prison (too expensive!) but have their skin dyed a certain color - it corresponds to their crime - and are set out in the world, with the idea that the rest of society will isolate them much like prison would have.  woah.  cool premise.  the narrator has been convicted of murder, and is set out into the world dyed red.  all of this i gleaned from the amazon.com blurb (and the first 30 pages of the book), but what the reviews did NOT tell me is that the book is taking a relatively political stance - her murder is that she had an abortion.  in this future world, roe v. wade has been overturned and certain states have outlawed abortion.  an interesting idea: not that the future gets more liberal, but that it gets more conservative - an idea that actually seems likely right about now.  but the political angle of the book wasn't what i was expecting, so i let you know this in case you are interested in reading it.  it was an easy and interesting read, but the premise was slightly more interesting than what the author does with plot once she's established the premise.)