Thursday, February 14, 2008

Happy Valentine's Day


It's the last few hours of that special day nestled right in the middle of February's cleavage, and I couldn't resist sharing the great gifts my wife and I received from the kids. The Boy has been almost telling us what we were getting for several days now — we genuinely didn't know — but Q has been a vault, refusing even to offer the slimmest hint one way or the other despite some clever prodding from my wife. As soon as we walked in tonight, they revealed the drawings and paintings they made for us (including a respectable Sponge Bob sporting a heart, courtesy of The Boy) and the matching mugs they picked out all on their own (with, admittedly, a little help from the babysitter). It was hard to stop hugging them.

One thing is obvious: We drink an awful lot of coffee.

Happy Valentine's Day, everyone. Love all around.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Coming and going








Always keep to the right; move quickly. When it's as cold as it has been these last few days, stow your glasses in your pocket for the walk or your breath will scarf up and over them until they're useless. Your face should be empty. You've timed the lights by now, so you'll barely register the streets. Visitors who come to marvel at the construction or to understand the destruction at Ground Zero can be unpredictable; be ready to negotiate them. Traffic will run against you, but you belong here, too; make them make way if you have to. Don't forget to notice the moon if it's there before you turn for the stairs down: today just a slight curve of white, the last sip of milk that lingers in the bottom of a glass. If you're lucky, a low plane will bank into the arriving day and light up.

You'll need your hat until you're on the PATH train. The cold runs deeper than you do, so respect it. Always take the same stairs because neatness counts. Pick the second car — it opens at your stop in the right spot. Remark favorably upon the wisdom of standing aside and letting the passengers off first. In the moment between the train's coming and going, remember how The Boy looked when he stepped out of his room this morning, blinking against the one light you were eating your cereal by. Remember how he always pauses, muzzy from sleep, before he instincts his way into the bathroom to relieve himself. And then how you look in at Q heavily asleep amid a riot of blankets and stuffed animals. And how you bend for a hug from The Boy before sending him back to bed (though you know he probably won't return to sleep). Before the train doors close, recall the quiet you left the house in. Respect it; it is older than everything.

The train lurches left just out of the station, so hold on as the doors close, preferably somewhere high where fewer strangers touch. Be inside yourself. Think about what you have to do today, but not too much.

At your stop, don't run; you won't miss your connection. Resist buying bad muffins and bad coffee. Don't resist wondering where all these people go. They haven't put out new books in the terminal bookstore since forever, so don't bother. Stay up by the platform and think of things; write down the remotely interesting thoughts that bother showing up. When the train lumbers in, head to the rear for a seat and you'll get one. You won't remember how the ride went.

If you step off the last train coming and it's snowing like it is today, close your eyes now and again to let the flakes suggest themselves to your face. Lean a bit when you stride up the steeper paths to your office. Pay attention to your toes. Go in the back way and take the stairs; there will undoubtedly be candy or cookies and you'll likely want an excuse.

Move your work a day forward.

On your way out to the train, pocket some of the ubiquitous candy for Q and The Boy and your wife — only the good stuff. You'll accelerate down the stairs because you will think you'll be late, but you won't be. Sit close to the front door in case you can catch the express if it's late. If it's not, you'll be on the local, which is fine, too. Either way you can't catch the evening going, no matter how many times you try. You will step off the local in the dark.

Walk across the platform to the PATH train waiting or coming. Stand away from the door, but you'll still need your hat against the wind. You can have a seat at the third stop where the train breathes out most of its riders, but standing will feel better. Off the last train going, the traffic will again run against you at World Trade, so keep moving. Keep your face blank. (Smile without thinking, though, if you re-listen to a message from your wife and the kids.) Maneuver the dripping ceiling. Walk up the moving escalator.

It's okay to wonder if the tourists at Ground Zero are the same from this morning; many will be taking pictures of something mysterious. If you need milk or apples, you might be able to fit in a stop at the Amish market. If not, go home by 7 World Trade and the big red balloon sculpture; wonder how they illuminate the marbled benches from below. Anticipate the wind as you near the river; you'll probably need to look away. Appreciate that you can ascertain a few stars even in this city, but check that those aren't the lights of jets on approach to La Guardia (they're both wonders, but the second one is less so, for some reason, by now).

Once inside your building, there will be mostly meaningless mail. You will share the elevator with a dog that's just been walked. The hall will suggest someone else's dinner; the dish will be unknown and unknowable. Hesitate, just for a moment, at your door to listen for the laughs that you will walk into.

Go home. Come home. Be home.

Thursday, February 07, 2008

Chúc mừng năm mới


Happy Tết, or Lunar New Year.

My wife celebrated by talking about Tết at The Boy's school, complete with a book, Tết treats (dumplings and shrimp chips), miniature cream puffs (homemade), and little red envelopes filled with lucky candy. Q came too dressed in her red áo dài (pictured above along with The Boy in his — at least for pictures at home). As usual, Q's favorite part of visiting The Boy's school was getting to wash the dishes.

Many customary wishes accompany this holiday. I'll pass along my favorite: May a myriad things go according to your will.

Here's to the Year of the Rat being a good one.

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Super Duper Giant Fat Tuesday

The first president I remember — the first one I have my own memories of — is Reagan. We lived in a small Kansas town that at the time seemed rather far removed from just about everything except the Soviet Union. Most of the U.S.'s planes were put together in Wichita (still known as the "Air Capital of the World," by the way), which meant that it was designated a first-strike target by that other superpower. According to predictions and all sorts of maps with damage estimates, we (give or take a few megatons) would go up with Wichita, and so in hearing about and watching Reagan versus the Evil Empire I felt part of something epic. I even went so far as to write a research paper for high-school English entitled "America's Red Threat," in which I argued for more or less eternal vigilance against the spread of domestic communism. I still have that paper and look at it now and then — a fossil that rather pristinely preserves a time and a mind.

Times and minds are, to say the least, different in all sorts of interesting ways, but again it's hard not to feel the size of the moment. Odds are (at least right now) that a Democrat will win the 2008 election and will likely serve for eight years. And given that the Democratic nominees include a woman and an African American, odds are that a woman or African American will likely be the first president that our kids remember. I had believed that such a thing would happen, of course, and in my lifetime. That it could happen so soon is testimony both to the utter train wreck that is the Bush administration and to the possibility of reinvention that American democracy affords itself. My new hope is that by the time Q and The Boy arrive at our age most people will think it odd to mention, let alone make much of, a candidate's race or gender or religion. That a candidate won't have to put forward a position on torture because only one position will be habitable. Such a hope doesn't seem all that frivolous today.

Anyway, I'm off to indulge myself with Super Duper Tuesday results from across the Internets, but first one quick story. On our way to the Metropolitan Museum of Art last Sunday, we came across smiling Obama supporters passing out flyers and stickers. (We took the flyer but passed on the sticker: we strive to keep our stroller as neutral as Switzerland.) Back on our way, we asked Q and The Boy who they thought would win Tuesday, and they both said Clinton. When asked the same question tonight before bed, Q yelled out "Roger Federer." Now that would make for an interesting paper.

Happy Super Duper Giant (Mardi Gras) Tuesday.

(Note: Delicious U.S. cookie courtesy of my wife.)

Saturday, February 02, 2008

Okay, so this is just cool

If you've got about three minutes, have a look at this — a great idea expertly executed.