a New Yorker Living, but lost, in TX

What was I thinking?

For the next few months (and beyond when I think of new stuff), I’m going to tell you about me, a displaced New Yorker who lived in the greater NY Metro area all of my life, my wife, who has lived in a number of places, including Guam, Maine and Colorado, not to mention the state of her birth, Florida, and a lot of assorted residents who have lived in and outside of this house over the last 15 years or so.  I will try to be linear in my presentation, but since I tend to have an abstract mind, you’ll forgive me if I jump from here and flit to there, then  at some point remind myself that someone else may be reading this, and reel myself back in.

 

On June 1st, 1994 my new wife, Pat, and I arrived in our new home. We moved from the largest city in NJ,  population well over 200,000, to a “city” in Texas. I put that word in quotes because, while, technically, the new town was incorporated as a city, that is as much a misnomer as the expectation that they keys to the city would actually unlock the door to a vault in Fort Knox. The city of Josephine had a 1990 population of 301, although I truly believe they fudged on that number by adding to the numbers a few of the town’s cows and barn cats.

 

But I am getting ahead of myself. Up until May of 1993 I was working in Manhattan, where I’d worked, in various capacities for better than 11 years. When I was let go from a company on East 61st St , I began re-evaluating my life on the east coast. Sure, home is home, but I felt like I wanted something more. Maybe some land. My girlfriend of the time, the aforementioned Pat, and I looked at various options and settled on Josephine, a town that time forgot, and so, it seems, had the rest of Texas. Well, unless you fail to pay your property taxes on time. But that is a discussion for another time.

 

During much of the time that I worked in New York City I lived in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, which is just a couple of subway stops east of downtown Manhattan. Now, Greenpoint was largely a quiet neighborhood sandwiched in between Williamsburg, in Brooklyn, and Long Island City, Queens. I haven’t been back there in many years, but as I understand it, it’s become a very gentrified area, more like a suburb of Manhattan, instead of the bastion of the working class that it was when I was there in the 80s. I should go back there. Maybe I’ll take a virtual tour of the old neighborhood and hope the photographs are at least fairly recent. Who knows, I may even see my ex-wife, who as far as I know still lives in the same apartment building. Ah, the charm of rent stabilized and rent controlled housing. I never did know the difference between control and stabilization. But then learning the vagaries of the housing situation in New York is most decidedly not on my to-do list. It’s almost as unimportant to me as figuring out why dogs sniff each other’s butts. No, no, I understand it’s a way for dogs to identify each other. But I figure after you get to know Fred that intimately when you first meet him, why do you have to continue to sniff his butt? Talk about obsessive behavior! But again, I digress. Remember, I did tell you that might happen.

 

New York, to me, was and still is the greatest place in which to spend a lot of time. Sure the city is overloaded with cliches. Broadway, AKA The Great White Way, the museums, the street and subway entertainment, the restaurants (and if you’ve spent any time listening to the street entertainment, be it on or below ground, you know it’s free (unless you toss some cash into the hat or open guitar case), and some of it as every bit worthy of being on American Idol as anyone can be). But as with all cliches, there is truth to them all. Well, maybe not the part about the crocodiles in the sewers…but every metropolis has it’s share of urban legends.

 

Almost every Friday after work, my buddy John and I would go from our workplace on West 34th St to get pizza on Bleecker Street. I remember John’s pizzeria, on Bleecker a block east of 7th Avenue, had pizza to die for. Fresh veggies and chopped whole cloves of garlic…OMG. It was so wonderful that the line to get in there on a weekend night stretched south down 7th Avenue for a good block. It was so crowded in there they’d opened another pizzeria right next door called John’s II. Okay, maybe not the height of cleverness. But then who cares when the food is the thing. Then after we’d devoured the manna from heaven, John and I would walk over to a small hole-in-wall drinking establishment called the “Peculiar Pub.” Last time I checked both John’s and the Peculiar Pub were still there. The pub had something like 200 beers from around the world. It was there I learned I loved stout (it had to be on tap. Stout any other way, even from a bottle, was barely palatable) and I despised weiss beer. weiss beer – one word…yuck. I think if my first taste of beer was weiss, or wheat beer, I would have sworn off the brew for the rest of my life, and perhaps a few lifetimes after this one. Now I drink wine almost exclusively. But more about that in the future. For now, fellow denizens of the world, I will close and bid you good life. Until next time – Thanks for reading.

 

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