FRESH
YARN presents:
Queens
Surface Transport
By Elizabeth Warner
So
I've returned to New York City for a few weeks from Los Angeles and I've
just completed the fun, ritualized swallowing of glass shards typically
associated with an IRS audit, and I'm on my way out when Mother phones.
And she's got the Movie Section in front of her and she asks why on earth
anyone would ever want to attend a filmed reenactment of a Greek
wedding...mine, big, fat or otherwise. And I point out that her own cultural
outlook is just a few Ferragamo steps to the right of some of the militia
members I hang out with and say I'm going out. And she says to
where and I say to the Tropical Rainforest Exhibit at the Central
Park Zoo and she says Oh. That's rich...since when do you care
about the rainforest? ...to which I maturely reply since now.
So I get
to the Simulated Tropical Rainforest Exhibit in the Central Park Zoo where
I'd planned to come for months. Because when you live in Los Angeles you
spend an inordinate amount of time lamenting the time you're not in New
York and then trying to figure out what that lamentation actually means
and does it mean that you actually miss it and do you actually belong
there or are you just romanticizing it because you've got way too
much time on your hands and would you miss Cleveland, too, if you
were tan, car-bound and career-free? So you come back to NY for a quick
getaway and suddenly you're crossing the avenues like yeah I don't
live here anymore but make no mistake I'm eminently qualified to give
you directions anywhere, like even to Proper Noun Streets in the West
Village that I never knew how to get to when I did live here.
But the fact
is I've been trying to get to the Simulated Tropical Rainforest exhibit
ever since I read the shattering expose in the Sunday Times Magazine
about how we're all no more than boomerang-tossing cannibals whose
indifference has already decimated our ever diminishing wildlife kingdom
And how it all amounts to an environmental Armageddon just waiting to
happen. So, time running out and all, I decided to hightail it over
to the nearest natural resource center, lickety split. To check it out.
That's what happens when you notice essays in the Times Magazine
located right before the gratuitous luxury condos on Fifth, and next to
the Weight Loss Camp ads.
And I'm absentmindedly
following a small square placard which details sleep patterns of red Amazon
newts... when along comes this guy ...one of those guys who thinks he's
gonna tell you something you didn't already know like how we should
treat our environment like it's number one. The kind of guy that you
can just tell thinks he's got you figured out like nobody's business,
see, because here you are at the Simulated Tropical Rainforest Exhibit
at the Central Park Zoo, and he's noticed you've got glasses on so you're
probably not consumed by your own vanity. And he's also noted that given
your yesterdecade clothing you clearly weren't trying to pick anyone up
either. On the other hand, he's observed you're not with any children
or anything
so that means you came here alone, for your own
edification. So he's thinking this suggests somehow you're interested
in this sort of stuff.
And you instantaneously
hate him for being so patronizing... and thinking he knows he's got your
number dialed with that deliberately crooked John Cassavetes smile he
offers, like hey, cool, here we are -- two intelligent, educated people
in a chance meeting at someplace other than a counter at Barney's or a
fern-filled pasteria on the Upper West Side... and clearly he'd like
to talk... but you despise his arrogance for reasons you don't fully understand.
And he's
got that hip Jewish intellectual thing working, with the rumpled corduroys
and the sturdy shoes and the New York Review of Books under his
arm and a t-shirt peeking out beneath a button down that either has the
Periodic Table of Elements or somebody Live at Red Rocks on it and he
knows that's exactly the kind of thing that just sucks you right in.
And he's
got that literary bent that means it took him five years to graduate because
there was so much Goddamn fun to be had in New Haven... and that
kind of thing just spells trouble for you ...and you tell yourself you've
absolutely got to steer clear of this Tom Wolfe in sheep's clothing ...and
as he's walking toward you, you know with a kind of morbid warmth that
he's the kind of guy who says his favorite thing about New York are the
free movies in Bryant Park...and you know he'd take a bullet for Saul
Bellow or Martin Amis, and he'd tell you Janeane Garafolo hung the moon
and that John Sayles was civilization's only hope. And that he knew exactly
the right moment to say David Foster Wallace was over, but
you also know he's got a big picture of Natalie Merchant on his cork bulletin
board right next to a pair of tickets to hear Norman Mailer and Bono argue
with Charlie Rose at the 92nd Street Y. And you know that even though
he says he watches out for Shark Week on the Discovery Channel
he is also acutely aware of precisely when to say Behind the Music
was groundbreaking, when it was coasting, and when it got important
again... but he's also exactly the kinda guy who says he thinks Catherine
Keener's really remarkable and he thinks she's got such an apt mind, but
he doesn't know why he's so wild about her, and you hate him for categorically
denying that it has anything to do with the fact that she's stunning to
look at.
And you know
that he always asks for soba noodles off the menu... and that he
used to live with a guy who played bass in a band that was just called
band
and you know he'd happily tell you California's noteworthy
only because it gave us citrus and made option a verb...and he's
strolling over to get a better look at the Chilean Salamander but that's
because he just wants to chat, maybe tell you about how he likes books
too, but how he thinks reading groups are deuxiemme...and that
he'd say he'd rather have a knotted rope dragged through his lower intestine
than sit through a staged reading of anything and you're getting
really woozy now and all you can think of are the horrible whirlpools
that faced Ulysses -- but if you tell him that, he'd just ask if
you meant Homer or James Joyce
and so you hate him even more ...and
you want to smack him and tell him you'd never even seen a John
Sayles picture but that Chicken Run was a fine film and he's getting
even closer and sure, he'd smile understandingly if you told him you'd
never had the intellectual stamina to finish an issue of the New Yorker
but you can't can't can't talk to this guy because you've been
to that fire before so you turn on your own gutless cloven hoof and you
get the hell out of the Simulated Tropical Rainforest Exhibit in the Central
Park Zoo.
And then
relieved, you walk out into the sprawling urb that is Manhattan. With
your dignity intact. Or at least some semblance of pride. You think. And
so what if he was impossibly attractive? You can't think about things
like that, you don't know why exactly, but someone this week said concentrate
on yourself. Like maybe your Mother and your grocer and every medical
professional you know. And besides, you notice, there's bright green gum
on your shoe and you'd really like to know how long its been there. So
instead, at that very moment an eerie manic cloud wells up inside of you
and you suddenly become extremely annoying. You wander around arrogantly
and pompously, feeling holier than thou and weighted with a greater sensitivity,
a more refined angle. You shamelessly lament your own idleness, calling
it ennui but unable to spell it. But, turns out, you're also a nearly
perfect idiot. Your job appalls you...yes, you're a writer... But you
really just create junk mail. You are the devil's script doctor. Which
isn't even neat in an archival sort of way.
And
then you suck your friends into that vortex. Your friends who in seconds
become almost monochromatic. Since clearly you're the only
person around who could simultaneously take in both forest and trees.
On the one hand are your friends who, out of their own timid need to function
safely within a system, had day jobs. Who saw the day's variety in a hand-roll
or a quesadilla or maybe a new font, who personally felt and appreciated
the impact Voice Mail had had upon society, who spoke of hybrid engines,
Clay Aiken, and Refinancing Opportunities in the same earnest commuter's
breath. These were your friends with jobs.
Then there
are your colleagues in the other camp who worked sporadically. Or
not all. Who actively take advantage of a nation that had unwittingly
established economic systems whereby one could continue to legitimate
part-time work as one struggled feverishly to contribute with one's "art."
Those who genuinely felt they had some kind of right to preen their aesthetic
pinfeathers in front of an adoring and guileless world...a world sucked
in by its own earnest appetite for comfort through variety.
And it's
these people who disgust you as you walk along, making a mental note of
the Body Shop's animal testing protest and Showtime's latest billboard
foray into Message Movies, existing in, and of, the world as a kind of
moral lightening rod...you capricious, infatuated, imperiously-cross-eyed
testament to narcissism. You who humble yourself to acknowledge the man
who sells you cigarettes while you sip coffee with people in the morning
under humid greasy lights.
Suddenly
you think about the people in your life who possess any complex regard
for highfalutin misfits like James Joyce. You think about his smoldering,
drunken Irish heart. And how infrequently people like that get deposited
upon this earth. And then you think about Thomas Merton. Once you remember
who he is. And you think yourself incredibly highbrow for thinking about
Thomas Merton in the first place, and then you quickly, greedily, heap
lots of other demi-important figures onto your shiny horrifying plate
and you swallow heartily, contentedly. Then you continue on in your hatefully
superior day, you unctuous benevolent light shedder.
And you step
out confidently onto Madison Avenue searching vainly for significant meaning
with which to begin a candid narrative. And no sooner have you regarded
all of these dull prospects when you see the large Queens Surface Transport
bus bearing down upon you at forty miles an hour and accelerating. A huge,
daunting and very evil bus, with the coldest halogen eyeballs you've ever
seen ...and you can hear it getting louder and louder and it wasn't
like you couldn't move but like you didn't move. You didn't move.
And sure your heart was propelled from your chest cavity into your
throat. And sure you could feel that funny liquid coating the edge
of your eyeballs. And here's where you might say "And now
my troubles are finally over." But you won't. Because nothing happened.
Nothing. You instinctively, mechanically stepped backward. One step. Averting
disaster. Averting "Does what's left of the body have any identification
on it?" Averting "This is EMS one twenty seven we got
a dismembered female at East Fifty Eighth street and seven witnesses."
Averting "And to think I just had a drink with her last night."
Averting "gosh I wish I'd gotten that green mock turtleneck back
before she ...is it absolutely not cool to ask her grieving family for
it back?" Averting "This is Mrs. Raines from the credit
office of Citibank Visa it's very important that you return my call at
one eight hundred seven six three oh four seven oh." Just took
a step backward. And you lived. And you live. And you're standing on the
corner shaking and you're wondering about this near fatality and along
comes the guy from the Simulated Tropical Rainforest Exhibit at the Central
Park Zoo and he stops in front of you and he bends down and he picks up
your scarf which has fallen onto the pavement and he smiles and steadies
you under your elbow and asks if you'd like to have a cup of joe to calm
down and all you can do is just stare at him and...and...and... nod, and
mutely follow.
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