Thursday, April 8, 2010

Springtime for Greg in New York (do I have to explain that joke?)

It’s taken me awhile to come up with a good blog post. I want to write a post about one of the main pieces of this blog- my possible and gradual falling out of love with New York.

This post isn’t going to be about that. This one is going to be much shorter. I wanted to talk about a couple of random things instead.

Let’s start with how beautiful the weather here in the city was tonight, but not for the day. There’s a reason I live in a fairly cold weather climate. According to the local news, it was 92 degrees Fahrenheit (33 Celsius; you’re welcome Mel!) during the day, and 80 degrees at 11 pm. The city, during the summer, averages 85 degrees, and summer doesn’t go into full swing here until July and stays until the end of August. Are you kidding me???? It was gross (a word I seldom use) today. As my friend Daniel said today, “I prefer cold to hot. You can always put on layers. You can’t peel your skin off.” Oh Daniel, how pithy.


Haha! Get it?

But nighttime, and especially downtown, where the streets tend to get closer to the rivers and the ocean, was beautiful! We sat in Washington Square Park, and watched the beautiful NYU ladies and the “so-hip-it-makes-me-feel-like-a-jock” gay guys. There was a little kid playing an old, cruddy piano. He was good, but it was very by rote; his pieces, such as Chopin’s Nocturne Opus 27 No. 2 (yes, I know of that by memory), were pretty, but lacked any emotion. The breeze breathed into us, and all of my senses had been awoken. Ahhh, now this is spring in New York, the second best season here (there’s a reason someone named a film “Autumn in New York”).

NYU

Springtime means something more than just beautiful weather. It means baseball. [Sports are a guilty pleasure of mine, particularly soccer, baseball and hockey]. Pay no attention to the prognostications and economics of sport; American football holds no power over the country like baseball does. I take that back- this region, from about Philadelphia all the way up to Maine, along the sea coast and in about one hundred miles, is baseball country. When I feel that early spring breeze and the girls start to wear flowing dresses without stockings underneath, I remember spring baseball leagues when I was very young. I couldn’t get into it; when I was young, I didn’t like any sports, preferring to read and draw (I still love these things far more than any sport).

Mixed race woman holding apple
You wouldn't believe how hard it was to find any pictures of springtime dresses and New York that didn't involve Paris Hilton.

Somehow, though, I still remember the smell of fresh leather from the mitt on my left hand and the feel of cold aluminum in my hands as I strained to make some contact of the bat to the ball, to make my grandfather proud. And then, when I failed as I often did, I was reminded by my peers that I should just go back to my books. I embraced sports when I reached middle school, thanks almost entirely to feeling like an outcast among my fellow boys, some more manly than others. I champed my teeth and dove into the games, reading about their histories voraciously. I started to work on shooting a basketball or on pitching a baseball. And here I am now, rooting on my hometown Yankees with one eye and, with the other, watching the ladies. Oh, spring, how I missed you.

New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox

To finish up- I wanted to say that I doubled my readership! Mel Cotton, from all the way out in the inner west (which I’m still a little confused over) of Sydney, has joined in and I’m glad to have her on this journey. Bear with me, dear reader; I’m just starting to figure this all out. Oh, and thank you to Valerie, who lives in Oregon, I believe, for a wonderful comment on the first post. I always enjoy being called a “genius.”

I’m going to tag Meryl Streep in this, just for you Valerie.