Friday, July 6, 2007

Jenn: the nomad

First of all - a shout out to my Mom - Happy Birthday!

So before I report recent activities that apparently make all my readers tired, I'm going to explain why I'm a nomad. It might be Mom's fault. But here we go. I know you have told me that I exhaust you with all my travels - that you can't keep up with where I am. It's not that I like the travel (who does with airports/airplanes these days?), but I like the places. I'm an addict, really, and I got some of my Mom's need to see everything. I don't quite understand it - why I can't just let some things/places/activities go. That's what Naveen would do. But really - I've been thinking about it recently - is it a fear of missing out on things? I don't know. But it's a big part of why I plan. What I really am passionate about is roaming - experiencing new places, new things, new people. Why do I have a thirst for the different, for the new? Why can't I enjoy a routine and getting more done and comforts of home. Well, I can, but knowing me I'd change it up pretty quick. Maybe I'll settle "down" later. An intern said something interesting the other day - we were talking about whether any of us had been on stage. The answer, if yes, was always "in high school and middle school". In college, especially in grad school - who has time for it anymore? You only do it if you are REALLY passionate about it. That struck me as interesting - do we just do everything when we are young, then grow up having found the things we really like and doing just them? And we have less time... Well, I'm not done exploring yet - in fact, maybe I can term myself an explorer. Travel is what makes me feel alive. The only problem is that a lot of it is cursory, surface-level. Naveen prefers to live in a place to really know it, not just visit for 2-3 days. Another thing to balance.

And along the same note - I find New York wonderful, and still unknowable. There are just TOO many things here to know, to feel familiar. Maybe a subset can be familiar - the things you are into. Portland felt so much more knowable. And Austin - I miss Austin. People definitely have flare there. I heard someone here say they hated the chains moving in - taking away the small corner deli or individual family store. But I would never imagine a slogan such as "Keep Manhattan Weird". But there you go - maybe my not being able to know Manhattan really has to do with me wanting to know a sample of EVERYTHING about a place. I don't want to miss anything! But it's impossible here. But I do love this place - this alive place. Everything is tangible, and everything makes you feel part of it - to a degree :-). Just walking my 3 blocks to the subway, passing churches, a grocery store, my favorite pizza store (well, their garlic knots are the best - except for my breath), a fruit stand, a deli, picking up a paper on my way down the subway... Living in the city - you are part of it just walking out the front door.

Which reminds me - Naveen went to our farmer's market (just outside the door) this morning and loved it :-). Yay for that! And I came to work obscenely early with my new carpool girl, and worked out and showered here. Ok not obscenely early, but I have to leave at 7:12 from my place to meet her. And she routinely works 10 hour days here. But I don't even want to tell about the better-timed carpool that is run by an extortionist manipulator. Sigh.

But the rest of the 4th of July was splendid - the run in the park made me happy. More cityscape - I'll have to take pictures one day. Then we saw the new Transformers movie in the theater - it was neat! We liked it - Naveen was like a happy little boy :-). So yes, it was cheesy and the characters and plot left a little to be desired, but it was entertaining and cute and the robots were very cool. The action - computer and human together - was done very well. So yay. Then we walked across town to join the throngs waiting hours for fireworks. We got pizza along the way :-). Happiness. I have some cool intern friends. We were on the upper deck of FDR with a great view of the East River and the barges that set off the fireworks. We even waited through some rain to see them finally a couple of hours later. So the fireworks were pretty awesome - saw cubes, hearts, smileys, planets, fractals, champagne fireworks. We saw stars and stripes that were awesome - they actually had stripes sort of hover high in the air on parachutes or something because they stayed there for several minutes! And there were awesome ones close to the water that reminded me of flowers - there was a center, then a trailing cone behind it. But they would shoot up a ways, then shoot back down, then shoot back up and continue oscillating. Sorta different. The only problem was that we missed some of the fireworks, and the effect of the finale because of the extreme smoke left in the wake of the previous fireworks. It really obstructed them entirely! We were unfortunately up wind of other other barges... But a fun night - we made our way across town to get home. Of course getting out of the area was hard - it took about 45 minutes to go a block because we ran into tons of people, but after we integrated with traffic again, we sailed home. Some of the interns mentioned the crowd was sort of sedate - no singing or hollering or anything. We pointed out it was still a weeknight...

So yeah - good times. The excitement of Thursday was that I found out I can get US Open tennis tickets through IBM!!!! I was so excited... The tournament is the week before and after Labor Day and we can even ride the subway to it. It's a life-long goal of mine to go to a major tennis tournament! So holy cow. So through some of Naveen's friends we have an opportunity to go to Belize over Labor Day weekend and scuba dive. I'm totally excited about that, too. See me, with the doing of all things? So we are doing both of course - we'll just go to Belize for 5-6 days and then come back for the tennis tournament - we got tickets for 9/7 - we are going to see the women's semifinals for only $40~ per ticket! So excited! We are going with some other intern friends - I've found that although events are really fun and important, people is what makes it. People are awesome, and I've met some cool ones up here - they make everything better. These random opportunities - they aren't just about things/places - they are about PEOPLE which is just so much better. Ah, life, and the human experience.

So here I go - struggling on, adventuring on. It already will be a great weekend...

P.S. More later on alternative careers, the American way of "working is everything", and where I fit in :-).

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for my birthday wishes! And yes, I will take credit for your love of travel and wanting to experience everything.....you have been my very best travel companion! And you are becoming quite the philosophizer......glad you are enjoying Manhattan! Love, Mom