Soooo, last we left off, it was March 2010, Town and Country had
texted me, after yelling at me over text three months ago, over an Obama hat. I
stomped home from work and then deleted his text … now we pick back up.
I slide on my shoes and a light jacket. While no one moves to New York for the weather, I am enjoying it today. The sun is out, shiny and bright. There is NO snow. This is huge for me since I used to live in a state (Minnesota) where March is THE SNOWIEST month.
My mom’s flight is landing in 90 minutes so I am dashing to the
subway station so I can catch the M60 in Harlem. I love Mom; she is so cool and
so fabu. So normal for someone who went from monsoon summers to saris in the
snow. But my apartment is small, REALLY small, and I don’t know how two of us
are going to manage in this 312 square foot apartment. And, I guess it is what
it is.
Yes, the subway to bus mode of transport is kinda long, BUT it is cheap
and this is how Mom and I will come back home. I get to the terminal with time
to spare and wait. I debate getting a coffee, but decide against it the
unnecessary $4+ latte. When Mom comes out, she looks tired and exhausted. This
kinda of worries me since she just sat on a plane for 3 hours.
“Hey Mom,” I say. I’ll be honest, it is always weird to see my
family in New York. It takes time to adjust to seeing them, being around them.
I have been single so long and in New York, I have been single and alone in my
small living space that I have to get used to being alone. Which sometimes worries me, I wonder if after too long of being alone, I won't be able to funtion in a unit. “How was the
flight?”
“Good,” she says. I take her little suitcase and we go back to the
bus stop. We chat a little but the bus gets loud so we sit quietly. At 125th
Street we go down two flights of steps and Mom does okay. But now I am worried
because at 86th Street she has to go up a lot of steps. And then at
my building, she has 4 flights of steps to tackle.
I was correct to be worried. At 86th Street, she looks
at the stairs, nods and begins to climb. Once we are out from the subway
station. She is really short of breath and I am kinda worried. But after a few
minutes she is okay to walk to my apartment building. I leave her in the lobby
and carry the suitcase up four flights of steps, toss it in the apartment and
meet her.
“Are you hungry?” I ask. “Not, yet,” she replies. “Great, let’s
shop. I need capri pants. Spring is coming.” I need $40 pants to take my mind off of the Mom's health.
4 comments:
Thank goodness you are back. Have missed your posts!
Dear Cora - I know, I know, I am back!!! I have missed writing and you all!
More soon!
xo,
DG
Boy oh boy am I happy to see you back!! :)
Dear JNKParmar -
I am back! Back! Back! Back!
I know I keep saying I'll write and then I don't. Time elapses, I say it again. But I am really trying to circle back to writing.
More is coming, promise!
xo
DS
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