Excuse me. With 864 words, this post might seem
relatively long to the permanently stressed ASL student, as well as to all my
other very busy friends. Is it worth reading? Maybe to some of you. Bold key terms might help guide you
through it. And don’t worry, I won’t write entries of this length every day of
the next 8 months :) Enjoy and comment!
Today was a genuinely good day. I rose early—about 7am—and
took a short walk through Central Park,
along the frozen Jacqueline Kennedy Reservoir. Maybe it’s the bleakness of
trees in winter, maybe it’s the fact that I am used to beautiful (if not huge)
parks in Leipzig, but Central Park did not look that great. It’s nice indeed, but in no way did it feel like a
special park. Then all the way south to Battery Park and the Staten Island Ferry terminal. Overlooking
the huge Upper New York Bay, seeing the distant shores of Staten Island,
Governor’s Island, Ellis Island, Jersey City, and Brooklyn already changed my
understanding of words like vast and huge. A thought came to mind that back in
Germany, nothing might ever seem huge to me anymore. I guess I’ll have to
update my idea of that term repeatedly during my time in this country. There’s
more to see. Anyway, the ride to Staten Island was great. Thanks to Miriam for
suggesting the ferry! Enduring the chilly air, I was rewarded with some great
photographs. I would have explored Staten Island a bit, but lower Manhattan was
waiting.
I boarded the next ferry and roamed the area around Broadway and Wall Street, visiting (among
other places) the beautiful Trinity
Church and finding that, in front of the New York Stock Exchange, you do not see any ruthless brokers with
sinister smiles and hands forming a pyramid. I guess that this is legally confined
to the building’s interior. I went on towards the East River and towards Brooklyn Bridge. Finding the sidewalk (which is in the middle) was kinda hard due to construction sites and stuff, but I
managed. I’m quite positive this is the largest bridge I’ve ever crossed.
Walking on it, it became clear to me that I just won’t ever understand how
something like this is possible. Millions
of tons of stone and steel, spanning a distance of I think more than a
kilometer, holding their own incredible weight, defying gravity, waves, winds, and
thousands of cars every day. And how do they do that? Physics. I say we can
calculate that, we can learn and see that this is possible. But I am skeptical
that we are really capable of comprehending such phenomena. If you can (and
care to) follow me. The view from the bridge was amazing as well. I have never
seen anything like Manhattan’s skyline
before. Had I not experienced it myself, I would not have thought it possible, the
amazement I felt today at the architectural
grandeur of that city. I can’t find better words to describe it. It simply exceeds
my verbal skills.
In
Brooklyn, I bought and ate my first
American pear, and it was good. Then caught a train to Coney Island. Long
ride again, at least 30mins, but at least not underground. The amusement park Luna
Park at Coney Island was closed due
to the season, and it somehow appeared to be closed since the 70s or 80s.
Everything looked somewhat vintage, used. Anyway, closed amusement parks have a
greater appeal to me than opened ones. The boardwalk
along the beach, both partly covered in snow, was cool. I read in a tour
guide that there is a Coney Island museum, so I walked a long and lonely way through a pretty run-down residential area, about 20 blocks, to the given
address. What I found was no museum, but a gate to an area that looked like a
gated community. I asked the guard, and he had never heard of said museum. Back
I walked. About 20 blocks. Through the snow. Online I found out that the museum might have been closed
a couple of years ago.
Back to the subway, exiting at Washington Square Park in
Greenwich Village, Manhattan. The
only actual plan I had before coming to New York was to visit a place where Jack Kerouac had been. Café Reggio,
opened in 1927, is such a place. Very pretty. Huge Romantic paintings, bronze
busts and china plates on the heavy burgundy walls, and dark wooden furniture. Crowded
with people, a mixture of local boheme and non-local tourists. I found that the
Village hipster does not really
feature any visible distinction from his or her distant relative in Leipzig or Berlin. Home. Later I walked the streets a little more and went to a
comedy club in the East Village,
this time even paying for it, and ordering drinks (unlike yesterday). The host and four
comedians were, in sum, quite good. I learned that in Arizona, you can buy a gun at age 17, but not rent a car
until you’re 25. And there is a Puppy Bowl! Google it! After that, I decided to call it a day and headed back home.
Nice post, friendo!
ReplyDeleteBut I almost forget to mention something (you'll probably won't have time for the tour, but just for the nostalgia...)
So, check that link out:
http://cinemassacre.com/2010/04/26/follow-that-marshmallow-a-ghostbusters-tour/
BTW: Have you built a snowman yet?
Hey Steffen! Gracias. Haha, great tour, but as you said, I didn't have the time...And no, I haven't built a snowman. Better things to do in NYC ;) Stay tuned!
ReplyDelete