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Letter From Brooklyn
Jamaica To Avenue X -
Everybody Into the Gene Pool
by Rick Monaco
Back in California I drove an Audi A4 1.8T with
heated seats and Quattro all-wheel drive. These features made all the
difference, risking the difficult quarter-mile down to Bell Market to pick up
ripe avocados and a basket of cherry tomatoes. My Brooklyn equivalent is the F
train, which I catch two blocks up at the Carroll Street stop. It lacks heated
seats and a six-CD changer, but makes up for this in a particular brand of urban
diversity. The French probably have a word for it, but they wouldn't use it
here.
Of course it isn't the subway itself that evokes response and emotion, but the
people who ride. Without them it is merely a network of clunky old trains
plowing through sooty tunnels, clearing the heads of large track-dwelling
rodents. Add the human element and the system comes alive - a sometimes
thriving, sometimes decaying organism with veins reaching to all corners of the
city.
Summer presents the ideal setting for acquainting oneself with the dizzying flow
of fellow riders, many stripped down to minimal clothing, revealing all that
constitutes both the beauty and cruel joke which define humanity. At times one
is offered a momentary diversion from his daily rumination, perhaps in the form
of a soft blue cotton dress draped gracefully over elegant brown shoulders. But
always
equally available are the horror and unflinching reality that is the human gene
pool. It has been often speculated that God has a sense of humor. If one were to
note this riding the subway, he might also conclude that it isn't entirely unlike
that of the kid who pulled the wings off bugs in the third grade.
"Punch is a good guy. He's one of those guys... he's figurin' shit out. Just
figurin' shit out."
I pick up this bit of dialogue from two business
boys riding the 6 train up Lexington, both wearing checkered pastel Polo shirts
and blue-faced Fossil watches. They are young, probably 15 years my junior and
just out of college. The one speaking looks Irish, with a flap of red hair
relentlessly pursuing his forehead and chubby pale hairless legs, pushing from
khaki shorts. I imagine that Punch is a
co-worker, about the same age, and admired by both. The emphasis the kid puts on
this short phrase- "figurin' shit out"- can't be ignored. For a moment it seems
we are all doing the same, waiting for a fresh allotment of confusing shit at
the next stop. The doors open at 77th and a black guy with a Charlie Parker
shirt and wrap around shades slides in next to me.
" 'Scuse me, Doctor - what time you got?"
I tell him nine-thirty.
"Ouch! Not good.. not good."
I note that this is the first "Doctor" I've gotten (on either coast) and
appreciate the novelty and assumed sophistication. It runs circles around "Big
Guy," "Boss," and "Chief." My imaginative friend bolts at 86th, much too
involved in his pressing schedule to care about my amusement. In his place sits
a lanky, paint-splattered laborer, with a cement bucket and spade and skeletal
limbs.
The heat isn't as bad as I imagined. Part of it has to do with an air of
authenticity I assume I'm experiencing. After almost 38 years, this is my first
real, extended, urban summer. My seasons in Northern California were rounded at
the corners with few extremes, and the exceptions didn't last too long. I still
think that it's an ideal climate, and certainly one of the most beautiful spots
in the
world. But the weather out here lends itself to the city. It has weight,
distinction, and authority. When the sky decides to do something, it does it.
And everything seems played out on a scale that puts human participation in its
proper, individual perspective. Perhaps God's sense of humor isn't quite so
cruel after all - He seems to have spared them earthquakes. At least until I got
here.
Rick
Monaco had spent the last few years riding the New York subway
professionally, covering all the lines, but leaning initially and heavily on the
F. He's lived in Brooklyn, Manhattan, Scotland and California, and is now
considering purchasing a bed. His writing has appeared in the San Francisco
Chronicle and online at 3AM Magazine. He prefers dogs with large,
solid cinder block heads.
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