The east is social.
I dont like it out west, Peter informed me.
Peter was from Prague and, like us other particles of
dust, had been vacuumed up by the addiction of New York City. He
rented the apartment across the hall on the fifth floor of the
9th Avenue walk-up. We all paid rent to Bobby, our Greek
landlord, who could only be tracked down at the Galaxy Diner up
the street. Two phone numbers (one a cellular), a beeper, AND a
secretary...and it still took days to find him. Well, unless you
had an itch for some late-night apple pie.
Everybody has their own car out west and stays in
their own space...it is very anti-social.
We nodded at one another with squinted eyes as I put my
keys in the lock and said goodnight. Anti-social out
west...social in the east... Hmm! I thought in the temporary
quiet. Then, why is it eyes shift downward when they meet
another pair on the subway? And, when you emerge from your
underground flight, you cease to see all the people because
there are simply so many? What you see, rather, is an atom
called Manhattan. A mass of individuals, bumping neutrons and
electrons, within the island's cell walls. And, nobody talks to
strangers.
*********************************************************
"He was so handsome," she told me when she got home, "sooo
good looking. I totally noticed him right away. Slick suit,
sunglasses, skin and hair - dark. From the corner of my eye I
saw that he noticed me too. Then 86th Street came so I had to
get off...oh well. But suddenly there he was, walking next to
me."
"So, ya live around ere?" As he continued to speak I
thought, Oh no, NO! Damn. Seriously, it was one of those moments
that you just want to put your fingers over the lips and say,
No. No. Dont speak...no, shhh. Just stand still and let me look
at you.
One of Lisa's many. We put him on the shelf labeled The
Male Betty Boop © 1996 - an absorptive figurine complete with a
vocal misfortune. She shook her head and looked down at her
salad dappled with sushi rolls from the deli on the corner of
55th and 8th. After 5 o'clock, the salad bar-by-the-pound price
dropped to $2.99.
"So, we talked," Lisa went on, "Where ya heading, this
and that, and after we stood on the corner for a while he asked
if I wanted to go out sometime...He was just so hot...I mean,
bee-yoo-teeful man...gorrrrgeousI couldn't help myself. And,
wealthy. Name's Mark, a trader on Wall Street, originally from
New Jersey...he told me all about it. Anyway, I wrote down my
phone service number so he would not be able to track me at
home, just in case. In the midst of handing him the used gum
wrapper on which I had written, I said, 'Ok, but prrrromise me
that you are not some kind of subway-stalker-psychopath.'
And he chuckled. And they giggled. And he promised.
It only took Mark a few days to not only track down our
home phone number, but our address and where Lisa worked. Once
he proceeded to roller blade to both locations due to a string
of not-returned phone calls, our eyebrows raised. But he
persisted bi-daily and Lisa agreed to a date with Mark, the Wall
Street Trader. To shut him up. Inevitably, she couldn't go
through with it.
"Look, Im a sensitive guy," he convicted when she
excused herself moments before Happy Hour. For twenty minutes he
yanked her ponytail with club in hand while proclaiming
everything he thought a woman would want to hear. She said maybe
another time.
For the following thirty-six hours, Mark left message
after message... "Cmon, I am a really sensitive guy so if you
don't want to go out wit me, just communicate that...I'm all
about communication. I really just want to get to know you, ya
kno? So, if you dont want to get t'getha, just say so. I can
tell when someone's dodging me, ya kno. I mean, I don't mean to
sound paranoid but I am really in touch wit my feelings. I am a
really sensitive guy...annnd, I need to express myself openly."
And nobody talks to strangers.
Jenny Lorant is a writer, editor and teacher living
in San Francisco.