Friday, January 22, 2010

A Place to Raise Your Spirits

A great man (namely, MiaManda's pretty awesome father) once told me:
"When you have money, it finds a way to disappear, but when you need it the most, it has a way of showing up."
Being that I can't help but over-think most topics, I've slowly been building a list of things that seem to ebb and flow at just the right times - money, tummy fat, sex, sanity, and a handful of life's other little pleasures and mysteries. The reasoning can be debated, but the fact can't - life is full of ups and downs beyond anyone's control.

So it was with great glee that I encountered possibly my 20 most entertaining minutes in NYC to date. A combination of "little things" so completely enjoyable and random that even this grinch smiled despite being on the tail end of way too many consecutive days of mundane work, bad take out, contempt for electronics and a generally Negative Nancy-esque attitude towards the technology industry.
Such a tale would be better off shown in the style of a Goodfella's bar stroll, alas my funds, acting inabilities and constant mumbling preclude that from my list of options. Instead, we'll have to go to the good ole' bullet point format that tends to pop up on this blog so often. So imagine, if you will, a grumpy me dressed in my finest hoodie, jeans, 3 year old sneakers and Sox cap strolling out of a generic NYC apartment building feeling like Bill Gates himself just gave me an 8-bit bitch slap of epic proportions:
  • A random dude on the street sees the hat. I brace for a "Youk sucks" or "Wish you had A-Rod, don't cha?" or even a simple "27 baby!" Instead I'm pleasantly surprised with a "43 more days 'til spring training then it's on!" A man after my own heart - he reminds me that the early evenings and frigid temperatures will soon part as mits pop, tobacco gets chewed and girls feel comfortable in tank tops and short shorts. A fleeting grin passes my mug as there appears to be hope for a happier future.

  • By the time the temporary enjoyment of such random camaraderie wears off, I'm standing on a subway platform. Luckily a purty l'il thang has decided I'm the least threatening homeless looking dude riding the 4-5 at that point in time and saddles up next to me to wait for a ride. Two things become very apparent within moments of her entering the corner of my eye:

    1. Somewhere under her mini skirt this lovely lady has a wedgie of epic proportions. Between the squirming and shifting, my approximation would be that her lower intestine is being harassed by unwelcome satin.

    2. Her parents stopped at being happy that she isn't working a pole. Apparently discretion, patience and being a lady were not taught in her home.

    With little more than an ounce of hesitation, the girl decided to go for it. While I'm not full on staring, there is no doubt in my mind that my jaw hit the floor as a mini-skirt was lifted to expose a fishnet-bound 22 year old glute trapping some combination of lace and dental floss. I'm not one to complain, but such excitement often drives me deep into my soft, anti-social shell, and in this case onto another train with a facial expression that can only be described as a mixture of awe and confusion.

  • Thinking that the night could get no more random, fate decided to throw one more piece of unexpected excitement my way - through the words of Robert Frost. A poem of such simplicity and thoughtfulness that anyone who has walked through a snowy forest after a long day must instantly have their spirits raised:
"The way a crow
Shook down on me
The dust of snow
From a hemlock tree
Has given my heart
A change of mood
And saved some part
Of a day I had rued."
-Dust of Snow

And with those three tiny, random events, an evening of whining and whimpering was turned into a 3 hour grin-fest. The moral of the story is thus:
  • Guys - Randomly (and nicely) talk a stranger each day.
  • Girls - Randomly flash guys. Even better - strike up a conversation with them.
  • Geniuses - Write good stuff that can't be fully appreciated until it lands on a Jeopardy advertisement.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Very nice. I've never been flashed in SF, unfortunately. Good poetry, though.

DH

Anonymous said...

Chad,
Once again, I hope that you are being read by someone that will publish your "mindless dribble" because you are an incredible author.
I am very proud that you are slightly deranged.
Love,
MA

Anonymous said...

Chad,
Once again, I hope that you are being read by someone that will publish your "mindless dribble" because you are an incredible author.
I am very proud that you are slightly deranged.
Love,
MA