Winter Options
On the frigid Friday when we're boycotting everything... striking, protesting... I went out, and New York City somehow always seems to be business-as-usual. While I remember distinctly the sense of empowerment I felt demonstrating as a teenager in the 60's-- like part of an army of compassionate humanity, today I feel snubbed and overlooked. Even the weather is daunting. Victims of the cold here receiving little sympathy; they are anonymous and powerless. The wounded martyrs of ICE demonstrations are filling news platforms, and yet the bodies here-- mostly homeless, some nameless... have suffered from another kind of ice... and their narratives maybe quietly heroic. Two men I discovered Tuesday in a doorway-- one a migrant terrified to check into a shelter or warming center. Hours later, shivering in my apartment, I fretted about these men; they were not young. Reluctantly I called 311 and they promised no names would be asked. But promises in this country in 2026 seem to be threadbare things.
Most of my friends are staying inside in this polar vortex; for those with draughty old apartments and insufficient heat, sometimes a reality check outside in the form of a brisk walk kickstarts our internal thermostat. But I find many of the shut-ins more nostalgic than ever-- binging on the 'Manhattan before 1990' sites and vintage city photos. For the second time last night I watched I Am Twenty-- an extraordinarily poignant Russian film from 1964 with a story behind it. But the art museum scene-- the poetry, the conversations-- brought me into the usual nostalgia and longing for a time when these deep discussions among friends were daily occurrences. Also-- the old version of Moscow is on display and fantastically interesting.
I am no longer sure who anyone is, in this time when even my friends have enhanced their face, have altered their lives to depend on mobile phone platforms and award-show culture. I also watched-- again, the Louis Malle 'Place de la République' in which he interviews regular blue-collar type people on the streets of Paris. This is the version I recall from my first trip there in the early 1970's... and somehow each person he questions seems to have a very candid answer. The fact that they are 'who they are' seems now a treasured state of being. A certain intimacy radiates from just the stark honesty with which they face a microphone and camera. It is disturbing that I don't feel this connection in casual conversation today-- in interviews and televised dialogues. The obvious make-up and hair aside, everything seems scripted and manipulated-- calculated, prepared, and 'filtered'.
Several of my neighbors have gone on small holidays and returned tanned and unprepared for this unusual cold spell. They have also avoided disturbing politics and daily discouraging takeaways on the diminished value of democracy in America. But these people have money-- they have options. There is no option for the two men trying to sleep in the Lexington Avenue door-niche Tuesday night.
When I was a teenager, my Aunt Rita had a little shop. They sold John Meyer of Norwich clothing-- sort of preppy but decent quality wear for suburban men and women. Casual clothing-- practical things. Of course all these brands have been reinvented in the digital age, but back then I was something of a hippie, and... well, the clothes were not for me. I did make wool curtains for the store fitting rooms and then made myself a warm winter skirt from the extra. I sat on a vintage stool at a counter after school and folded things, hand-wrote tickets and promotional postcards. I loved it there. In January, they had a shipment of what they called Cruise-wear-- suddenly summer clothing-- bathing suits and cover-ups, T-shirts and khaki shorts.. golf-wear. My aunt had to explain this to me... it was a thing.. and I suppose even the concurrent shop window display gave people a break, a sense of hope in midwinter 1960's when snow was plentiful and the cold was consistent and predictable.
The saleswomen were all friends of my aunt-- one especially remains in my heart-- a tall, elegant Jackie Kennedy type with a lovely speaking voice and innate elegance. We became sort of intimate. Her husband, I remember, was this tall photographer. He was so handsome-- and a little rough. He both adored her and had that macho edge one puts on because in his heart he knew he'd married 'up'. I saw him with other women in the city. This was common then; no one spoke of it. Later she suffered from breast cancer... and he left her. When the shop closed, we lost touch and I went away to college. In the end I heard she'd remarried to a man who spoiled her-- took her on exotic voyages before her premature death. I am surely older than she would have been. Today I miss her-- her patient explanation of 'cruisewear' to a girl whose small world did not encompass weather-driven vacation choices. She touched my life in such a gentle way and I hope she is warm.
I miss these people who knew exactly who they were; the people of the Place de la République are here among us somewhere in the city-- delivering things, slicing meat in a bodega... making pizza maybe... but they are rare. My aging friends are a little fearful and insecure... they begin to walk with hesitancy and they mistrust, with good reason, the institutions which were designed to protect us. Everything is inappropriately invasive and these people who seem to live in old photos and memoirs-- well, they call me, narrating their disappointments-- maybe looking for sympathy, not always aware of this.
Perhaps I am guilty, too. In this culture where one does not 'see' oneself, I am surely afflicted. To protect from the diagnosis, I avoid mirrors, avoid too much effort to change my appearance. Inside I am pretty much the same, although I miss the alacrity and candor with which I once greeted people and embraced their intimacy. I'm a little guarded and not sure these 'others' know themselves. They think they do, but not in the way these French working people on the street knew exactly where they were going and why.
We do change. My son has changed me profoundly. I am now a football fan-- a sports fan. One osmotically absorbs the passions of one's loved ones. And he will not know that I switch off the pro-bowl game to catch a rare cameo of Tarkovsky who has sadly left this world... or Yevtushenko, reading his poetry in 1962 Moscow... to screen-- one more time-- the world as it was when I was barely ten years old, when I Am Twenty would have been beyond my understanding and certainly not something my parents would have taken me to see. Fortunately, like most things of the heart, one does not have to exchange one thing to allow for another. Unlike the two men on Lexington, we have options-- maybe not economic but emotional and intellectual ones. May we put them to better use.
Labels: 1960's, 1970's, aging, homelessness, I am Twenty, Jackie Kennedy, John Meyer of Norwich, Louis Malle, Manhattan Before 1990, Marlen Khutsiev, Moscow, New York City, Paris, polar vortex, Tarkovsky, winter freeze, Yevtushenko
