City Soundbytes

I’ll admit, I really enjoy listening in on conversations in the city. People always have unusual things to say, and interesting ways of saying them. I love tuning in for a slight understanding of the New York demeanor.
As part of my ongoing initiative to document things that I overhear in NYC (yes, channeling off of Overheard in New York) I’m designing a small series of City Soundbytes that replay things I’ve heard throughout the day. These are a few I’ve heard over the past few weeks, but hopefully I can make it a regular thing (as there is much to hear in the city). 

catchup

Snaps as of late. My magnificent aunt Amy was in town for several days and it was so refreshing to spend time with her! She stayed at the groovy Ace Hotel and showed me a few hip places around town!

1 // From window on West 53rd St.
2 // Maritime Hotel
3 // Feet shot, TriBeCa train station
4 // Grouchy on West 16th St.
5 // In the irresistible ladies room at Schiller’s Liquor Bar during Sunday brunch
6 / 7 / 8 /// Ace Hotel entrance + lobby

More, more, more to come!

j

nyc etc.

Rain in NYC once again today. I saw this man out with his huge beach umbrella during a coffee run and couldn’t resist his character. It’s hard enough to walk on the busy streets with a small umbrella, so I’m curious how he made it around the city with his mammoth rain shield!
I have lots of fun things planned for blog posts (mostly regarding NYC and art schtuff) so you’ll have to stay tuned. I am feeling super inspired — the only problem is my schedule is so slam-packed that I hardly have the time! Patience! 
I am missing my D-SLR and tempted to have Mom send it — it’d be great to take to the streets. I want to start doing some street/style photography here, and I’m feeling the iPhone isn’t cutting it. One of the coolest things about some people on the street here is they have no idea how cool they look! 

you will find it

It’s very easy here to feel pretty lost. Not only in the sense that it’s a big city, but also because being here has made me feel both more fulfilled and at the same time, directionless. The best analogies to describe this feeling are looking for something in the dark and/or running in water.

The great thing about being here: opportunity. Everywhere. I can’t go out without hearing about/seeing/reading something about someone who is doing something awesome in the area. People here are in it to win it. As my roommate put it to me today, “work hard, play hard.” I can do it!, I thought. Then I went and took a two hour nap.

Maybe I’m thinking about this too much, but the more I think about it, the more I find a rhyme to my confusion. This move came completely out of thin air for me — nowhere was it even in my “five year plan.” By my age (24), the twelve year old version of me thought I’d be telling my children bedtime stories and making a hearty meatloaf for the family dinner by now. I am having such difficulty understanding the derailment of a seemingly engrained life plan. Why am I feeling it especially today? One of my oldest childhood friends got engaged yesterday — and every time it happens, a little word bubble in the back of my mind wonders about my life equation.

The “engrained life plan” I’m talking about is the story I wrote in my head as a child. It’s one that I gathered from my parents, and my grandparents, and just people in general. You go to school, work hard, and make friends. One day one of these friends becomes your husband or wife. Together you settle down and have children and acquire experience and possessions. You grow old. Things repeat with your offspring. Work is sprinkled in there somewhere.

It was that simple. But somewhere along the way, I decided to do things differently, or just at a different pace. And I’ve written about this before, so I won’t repeat myself. The realization always comes when I’m somewhere new, wondering what am I doing?

I don’t know what I’m looking for, but I’m going to find it. One of these days.

A Bride at 100

My sister shared this video with me. Listening to the 100-year old bride, Dana Jackson, talk about what weddings were like when she was young is my favorite part.

Getting married wasn’t a big thing back when I was young, it wasn’t no big thing— you just got somebody to preach or knew the bible a little bit, give a short talk, and that was it…just simple, you know, just simple — wore clothes, maybe a bouquet cut out of the yard. It’s not what you got, it’s what you make out the marriage.

 A great reminder in an age where weddings can become quite excessive…