Posts Tagged ‘manhattan’

A Unique Christmas In Manhattan

I was living in New York City in the Village with my very young daughter, newly divorced, alone, and quite broke. Christmas was going to be meager, or so I thought at the time, which was around 1970.

I barely had any friends in the city but around December, I met John and we quickly became friends. John was from England, kind of an offbeat free spirit and reminded me of the Beatles, who, at the time, were very popular, having recently visited New York. I would take walks and have long talks with John, who like me, seemed somewhat of a loner.

My most recent graphic design job had ended with a layoff, as had many advertising jobs around that time. Freelance graphics jobs were fewer and farther between. My financial situation required frugality, to say the least.

So Christmas Eve found me alone with my daughter, just glad to be with her. At some point there was a buzz at the door, and after buzzing back, and a bit of wait to see who it was (I lived in a 2nd floor walk up), John appeared, and with him a magnificent Scotch Pine, having dragged it through the streets of Manhattan, when some tree seller threw it out. We put it up and I had a tree, a friend and a Christmas filled with warmth and cheer, as well as spirit. I’ll never forget that Christmas, or John—who since then has enjoyed many Christmas’ with my daughter and I.

I <3 NYC Series: Big Beauty

Ralph Lauren, by Fanny LittmarckNew York is one of the most popular metros of the world. Name anything and New York has an immense significance in that particular field. Be it fashion, commerce, media, culture, art, Hollywood etc.  Two places I love are Manhattan and Queens. They list among my favorite destinations of New York, but I’d like to stretch more on Manhattan as the experience there has been close to heart. The tall sky scrapers are a beauty to watch. Standing on one of the tallest tower and viewing the entire city makes you feel on top of the world. Moreover you find the wealthiest people residing in this particular area of New York City which makes you feel superior. Manhattan’s neighborhoods are also fun to visit. Neighborhoods such as SoHo are very famous for shopping, and being a diehard shopaholic this place is close to my heart. There are varieties of stuff available here and you simply cannot stop your money flying out of your wallet! There is a particular place famous for its gay population named Chelsea and what I love about this place is the large number of gays in this area as well as I find this place the best to experience night life in New York City. Also, Chinese being one of my favorite cuisines, I love visiting Chinatown, which is heavily flooded with Chinese population and you get to savor world best Chinese food.

A Bite of the Big Apple

My happiest New York City Thanksgiving memory happened way back in the 1970s, after I had moved from Manhattan in which I was born to the end of Long Island.  Two close friends who lived on the Upper West Side invited me and another friend to their apartment for Thanksgiving dinner.  Neither of us had been to their place before and, after driving in on the Long Island Expressway, we actually found a place to park right in front of their brownstone apartment! It was a particularly beautiful fall day, with crisp, clear air, and bright blue sky with an occasional puff of cloud.  Walking up to their second floor apartment, I felt that this was not the typical West Side of New York brownstone.  I should know; I was born in Manhattan. As we all settled in with a cocktail and were admiring the pumpkins and bright fall foliage of the table’s centerpiece, I asked about the apartment.  It had the highest, most ornate ceilings I’d ever seen in a New York City apartment, and an actual fireplace.  There was something about the place that seemed out of the ordinary. I was impressed when they said the building had been the home of Enrico Caruso, one of the world’s greatest Italian tenors who died in 1921.  It had been broken up into one-bedroom apartments, but its grandeur was still present and I did feel a sense of history, especially when I found out that Enrico Caruso had died in the Vesuvio Hotel in Naples, Italy, which coincidentally was the hotel where I had stayed on a trip there in 1957!
Only in New York City on a beautiful fall Thanksgiving Day can one be in such an aura of charm, the historic past and the convivial present.

Central Park is World Best

Without any doubt my favorite spot in New York is central park. I am married and I think I speak for several married people who have ever been there that this is the perfect location to relax. The park has a beautiful scenery and is located in Manhattan. It can be easily accessed by buses and trains. The park is located in a safe environment which means I can hang out there at any time without fear of harassment.
The park allows me perform a range of activities such as my early morning jogging. Sometimes I just take a walk on the walkway in the park when I feel down and my spirits are lifted. The park is filled with various facilities such as the restaurants and vendors who sell various food. The park is also a great place for me to enjoy my picnic and lunch on days when I am not working. Sometimes when I want to get away I take a boat ride in the lake by renting a boat from the boathouse or visit the zoo museum. The kids in the park sometimes rent bicycles and roller-blades. There is also the music part which I love as the philharmonics perform annually in Central park.
I love to walk in the park and take pictures to add to my various social network sites. The pictures come out more beautiful because of the beautiful background nature has provided in the park such as the Shakespeare gardens. I also have some pictures taken with statues in the park. You can take pictures with statues of Shakespeare, Robert burns, Alice in Wonderland and the beautiful Angel of Bethseda fountain. If you ask me, this is the best park in the world.

Halloween in The City

I had never truly experienced Halloween until I went to New York City to celebrate last year. One of my good friends from college knew someone who lived in Brooklyn, and he invited us to stay with him for the weekend. My friend had decided to dress up as a pirate and I would go as an embodiment of the sin “Envy”. Now, we had both been to NYC many times before, but never crossed the Brooklyn Bridge, and let me tell you, we were a tad bit scared even before the Halloween celebrations began. Pirate’s friend said in passing as we arrived “Oh, by the way, I hope you weren’t planning on wearing blue here because you might get stabbed”. (Luckily her bandana was a safe shade of red). After settling into the apartment and getting ready, we hopped on the subway and crossed back over to Manhattan. We walked around SoHo, stopped for Falafel in the Village, and ended up going into the somewhat eerie “Evolution Nature Store” to get into the Halloween spirit. There they sell craniums, stuffed animals, and butterflies pinned inside glass cases, etc. We ended our night on Manhattan in Greenwich Village where the annual Halloween Parade is held. Unfortunately that night was particularly cold and rainy, but the parade still went on and every onlooker was dressed for the occasion in various creative costumes. Getting back to Brooklyn afterward was rather tricky as the subway system is far from perfect, so if I go back this year I’ll try to find living arrangements on the “right” side of the bridge.

Trying to Find Love in Central Park

I have been single for over 5 years. There we go, I’ve said it. It’s been a long wait, and to be honest with you, part of me wants to go to the nearest convent and sign myself in as a permanent member. I m a member of a dozen dating sites, I go speed-dating once a week, and I’ve even put an ad in the personals. While I still haven’t found the man of my dreams, I have had some fantastic, bizarre, upsetting and incredibly romantic dates.
My favorite still remains Mr B, who I met speed dating in Manhattan. We arranged to meet the following Saturday in Central Park, and my heart sung when I spotted him at our designated meeting place under one of the bridges. We then walked. And walked. And walked. Mr B knew a story about every single square yard of Central Park (he turned out to be a park ranger with a very good memory) and I’ve never spent a more fascinating afternoon, completely absorbed in the history and tales of Central Park.
While I wouldn’t recommend going out with Mr B again (long story), I would recommend tracking down the New York park ranger service, and ask for the information file on Central Park. It makes for fascinating reading, and will impress your next date!

Moving to Manhattan

My best friend had gotten accepted to dental school at Columbia Univeristy, and it was time for him to move to New York in August of 2002.  After a very late red-eye flight from Seattle to New York City, we gathered his 10 boxes of belongings and caught a cab from the airport to the student accommodations where he was staying.  Neither of us had even been to New York City before, much less lived there.  The taxi took us through some of the worst neighborhoods we had ever seen, and we just stared at each other wondering if he had made a huge mistake.  Ultimately, we were dropped off in front of his Upper West Side apartment building and breathed a sigh of relief.  It was the New York City we had in mind originally after all, complete with his classic Manhattan-sized 350 square foot apartment with an efficiency kitchen.  The difficult part now was finding a place to park to get his stuff transferred into his new apartment.  The taxi had to park a half block away, so we were forced to painfully carry his belongings a half of a block, and then up 3 flights of stairs, to his apartment.  It was a classic New York City moment. It was magical for both of us, with my best friend living in the Big City.  That night we also had the loudest thunderstorms I’ve ever heard, and I saw a bolt strike the Chrysler Building.  We had arrived in the Big Apple!