From 50 years of our overstocked archives
Sam Smith
Your
editor's casual inattention to duty over the past few days is in part
the result of an unpredictable pleasure of parenthood: being swept into
the migratory path of one's children - in this case from Long Island to
the Bronx.
For the past eight years I have been an
occasional visitor to Suffolk County, discarding stereotypes in favor of
a view based on innumerable random experiences ranging from the
pleasures of the Montauk coastline to the less pleasurable experience of
being imprisoned with my wife and a crew member for 45 minutes aboard
the Bridgeport to Port Jefferson ferry on a 85 degree day.
I
have come to learn that Long Island does indeed have more shopping
malls per square mile than just about any place on earth, but that not
far behind is the acreage devoted to farming, some of the most
productive in the state, that no one had bothered to mention to me. I
have learned to expect to drive within blocks from a corner dominated by
a futon discount store to a revolutionary era post road whose buildings
and trees still remind one of what once happened here.
It
is a place where the past and present have been dumped together, a
place that can spawn both Walt Whitman and Bill O'Reilly, and where
patriotic icons of post-constitutional America sprawl about the
landscape like exhausted geese unable to reach their destination, yet
where you can attend a Unitarian church and hear a guitar backed choir
singing about Joe Hill.
Except when out on the
battlefield known as the Long Island Expressway, the residents seem
quite content with their inconsistencies. They neither brag about them
nor even seem to notice them. It is the stranger, arriving with
misapprehensions, who finds it all extraordinary.
But
now, as uncontrollably as a tie-up at exit 47, it is time to leave Long
Island and make friends with North Bronx, site of my daughter-in-law's
next adventure with the medical profession. From a little cottage within
walking distance of Long Island Sound to the eighth floor of an
apartment building overlooking a subway yard and distant Manhattan. From
a landlord who happily enclosed a porch for our granddaughter to the
complexities of getting a new rug in an old, large New York apartment
building. To one who has always felt threatened by the negotiations of
everyday New York life, I watched with amazement as my son and wife
double-teamed the issue with the aid of a cleaning woman who said she
had told the super "I wasn't going to clean that rug because it was a
waste of money. He was going to have to get a new one anyway."
Even
as this is written the apartment is being repainted and rerugged and I
have turned my energies to other matters like checking out the stores
within walking distance and finding some lights for under the kitchen
cabinet. We also ate in a restaurant that offered cream cheese for your
bagel in two varieties: full or schmeared.
I am already
proud of my new proxy neighborhood and am making secret plans to run my
granddaughter for lieutenant government based on her connections with
both Suffolk County and the Bronx. She walks with the self-assurance of a
New Yorker so the rest shouldn't be difficult.
Meanwhile, I apologize for the dilatory postings and expect things to be back to normal by Tuesday.
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