I’ve been expectedly terrible about writing my weekly life recaps, but here are some of the importanter events:
• My bedroom is teeny, so I bought a bed frame without an attached headboard to save room, but after two years, I’ve been craving something to bang my head against while listening to angsty music. Thinking a mirror would help make the room appear bigger (and allow me to judge how pretty I must look while sleeping), I set about finding one that was tall enough to be wider than my frame when set on its side but also wide enough to stick up over my mattress to give me something to lean against. Basically the only one that fit the bill remotely was the IKEA Mongstad, but it happened to be perfect. There’s an IKEA in Brooklyn with a free shuttle that leaves from my neighborhood, but thinking it’d be even easier to just toss it in a cab, I bought one off of craigslist from a guy on Wall Street and convinced Kamran to help me move it.
I knew it was going to be big, but I might have underestimated how unwieldy 66 pounds (and 2 ounces) of 74″ tall, 37″ wide mirror is. Kamran and I had no problem carrying it downstairs, but the wind was blowing so much by the time we got to the street corner that I had a hard time staying upright with it resting against me while we waited for one of the big minivan cabs to drive by. Ten minutes later, we had seen a couple of them up the street, but they were snatched up by other people before they got to us. In the meantime, we had tried to hail some of the SUV cabs, but drivers were literally turning around in the middle of the street and going back uptown when they spotted the mirror. We thought about hiding me around the corner and trying to trick someone into stopping for just Kamran, but eventually a nice driver in an SUV stopped out of the goodness of his heart and helped us load the thing into his cab. Of course it didn’t fit. Once it hit the plexiglass partition that separates the driver from the back seat, a foot of it was still sticking out the back of the car. So we gave up, turned back the way we came, and took the thing on the subway.
We hadn’t brought gloves, and we hadn’t drank our protein shakes, so our hands were aching and our biceps were shaking by the time we loaded it onto the 2 train. I was saying things like, “If I have no problem carrying it this way, why can’t you just stop being a pansy and make it work?” And he was saying things like, “I’m a physicist. I’m pretty sure I know the best way to distribute the weight.” It was only two blocks to my apartment from the subway, but we probably stopped five times to yell at each other, but once we got the thing in place behind my bed frame, we were like, “Yeah! Teamwork!” And then we went out for bubble tea.
• My cousin, Ethan, and his wife, Katherine, stayed with me this week while visiting NYC for the first time. They drove to Pittsburgh from Ohio and then took a bus the rest of the way, arriving in Brooklyn at 3 a.m. Thursday. I had signed our spare key out for them with the doorman earlier in the evening, but the overnight guy somehow didn’t understand which of the exactly one keys he was supposed to give to them, so he ended up calling not me, whose name was on the sign-out sheet, but the owner of the apartment, who is my roommate, Jack. At 3 a.m. Having them here reminded me so much of my early days in NYC, lo those nearly eight years ago, when I would get on the subway going the wrong way and when walking anywhere seemed like such a hassle. I remember my first week here, when my boyfriend at the time, Todd, and I were trying to move out of the student housing at NYU he’d been in for a year and get our own place in Chelsea, and I felt like the walk from the subway to the realtor’s office could have taken two hours in the July heat. I later realized that it had been two avenue blocks. Which are admittedly equal to four or five street blocks, depending on who you ask. But still. Two.
• Kamran and I took our friends Nik and Jack to Momofuku Ko for lunch on Saturday. It’s our favourite restaurant in NYC. Period. We sat in the same place at the counter as the last three times we’ve gone, and the same chef we’ve had the last three times served us, and the soundtrack was The Beatles and LCD Soundsystem and The Beta Band, and I got tuh-RASHED on the wine pairings, and Jack and Nik didn’t complain about having to eat an oyster, and I’ll always remember that lunch.
“Momofuku” means “lucky peach”.
• “Game of Thrones” started up again. Like you haven’t heard. Kim has been coming over every week to watch it, along with an assorted cast of characters who have seen somewhere between all of and two of the past episodes. As I sat watching it last night in my thrifted orange damask armchair, I looked around the room at Kim and Jack and Nik and Chris and thought about how crazy it is that I was just, like, hanging out all normally in my NYC apartment with my NYC friends. I’m 99% sure Joffrey is going to die soon.
• My friend Jessica was in town from Germany a couple of weekends ago. She was an intern at my company for a year, and there’s absolutely no other way we ever could’ve become friends. We ate queso fundido and sang karaoke (Jessica likes to do the Ken part of the 1997 hit “Barbie Girl” while our friend Jeff does the Barbie part) and one friend developed a crush on another friend while that friend was busy developing a crush on a third friend, and it made me sad that our group of friends is probably legitimately too old to be hooking up with each other with abandon and without consequences.
• My friend/former co-worker Chantee was in town yesterday after having left NYC a few years ago, and we met up with Kamran, Jack, and Jeff for the whole duck at Momofuku Ssam Bar. They take a Long Island duck, stuff duck sausage under the skin, confit the legs, and serve it all with hoisin sauce and fried shallots and greasy chive pancakes and rice that soaks up all of the duck juices. There’s a reason the place appears on “best of” lists along restaurants like Per Se.
You wouldn’t know it from Jeff’s face here, but Chantee is one of those people who’s hilarious but never at your expense and only makes you feel good about yourself when she’s around. I wish my sense of humor was more that and less naming-all-of-your-faults-in-front-of-everyone-we-know, but my mother died when I was 18, and I’ve never recovered. Just kidding. Well, sort of.
• My stomach is tired.
7 Comments
a) Please post a photo of the mirror treatment on the bed.
b) are you worried about breaking the mirror with your head in a rush of lusty lovemaking?
c) ew. “lovemaking.”
d) Can we talk for a moment about how attractive Chantee is? You’re welcome to invite her along to S.C. (and not just because she’s attractive.) Maybe she’ll temper your accidental racism. (probably not)
Your mirror story made me feel all triumphant about living in the suburbs. Suburbs, hells yes! And I remain extremely jealous of all of your eating adventures. And also, so cute about friends developing crushes on one another! I am officially too old for this to even happen among my group anymore. They’re all wrinkled and jaded.
I love how very New York this post is – I mean around here moving a mirror or arranging for a spare key isn’t any work at all, but getting amazing quality food like Momofuku Ko definitely is.
I also want to see this mirror treatment.
That point where your muscles are shaking and yet you can no longer feel your limb(s) is AWFUL…
if this had been my story that would have been the moment right before my new headboard provided me seven years of bad luck.
” I felt like the walk from the subway to the realtor’s office could have taken two hours in the July heat. I later realized that it had been two avenue blocks.” — This is near-identical to one of my first NY memories as well, and now I’m all nostalgic and sighing at my desk. Mostly nostalgic for being 22 and being able to eat whatever I want, but other stuff, too.
This whole post is kind of reflective and nostalgic (and lovely). Are you dying?
I was going to third the request for photos of the mirror, then I remembered I can just see it in person, then I wondered why I haven’t yet. I also want bubble tea.
I second the bubble tea part.
This post had both Momofuku and Game of Thrones in it, so basically it’s the best post I’ve read all month. Seriously. If I were Julie Andrews singing about a few of my favorite things or some shit, those two things would be in the first verse.
I had my own cousin come in to crash at my place while exploring my city last weekend, and I have to say I was almost offended when they didn’t take my local advice. Christ, that sounds snobby. But come on: If I tell you to take one subway line EVEN THOUGH Google Maps tells you to take another, it’s because I live these subways, I know what works, I know what frequently DOESN’T work, and I know that Google Maps is a lying little bitch. Does that ever happen to you in NYC? Or do you just accept it because people either a.) are free agents and can really do whatever the hell they want to do or b.) are going to do whatever the hell they read in some guidebook anyway? I mean, does it break you if you tell someone your favorite places to eat, what the city’s known for, what you aren’t going to get ANYWHERE else, and they go and eat at, like, Guy’s American?