Summary: Dear Lonely Planet...
Because there's no perfect guidebook to life
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Putting the 'family values' in 'horrendous, unstoppable
nuclear apocalypse'
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A funny thing happens when you get more than 120 miles
outside of New York City....you stop giving a shit if you ever go
back.
This is not to say I don't love it here, cause I absolutely do. I'm
usually the first to jump all over out of towners, pointing out
that we have culture and shopping and taxis and comedy and theater
and a park. I love bragging about how I don't need to leave the
block to find
every single thing I need to survive and how I
can have pizza, laundry, and a questionable Craigslist masseuse
delivered to my front door without even having to put on pants.
Practice note - Dear Lonely Planet does not condone eating pizza
without wearing pants: mangia at your own risk.
But this past weekend, I broke free of NYC's gravitational tether
and took a road trip with the 'rents down to the University of
Virginia. My lil bro was graduating, so I went to go support him
and yell inaudibly as Pomp And Circumtance blared through hastily
assembled towers of speakers. Truth be told I also went down cause
I knew I was gonna get in a night of college-style fun, but
ostensibly it was cause I'm an awesome brother. During my hours of
down time, strolling through Monticello and learning from my father
what ginko biloba leaves look like, the wash of calm that exists in
nearly every non-gotham washed over me. Stress melted like so many
shreds of mozzarella on the slices I wouldn't be eating at 4 a.m.
that night; anxiety flowed down like the trash water I wouldn't
have to jump over to cross the street.
What was this strange sensation I was experiencing? Could it
be...peace? Could I actually live in a place outside of the East
Village of Manhattan and not go crazy with boredom, finding instead
the simple pleasure of, oh, I dunno, dog ownership? Might the two
grand a month I was spending on rent be put towards an actual house
that has a yard and a bbq out back that will most likely not be
peed on by a homeless person someday?
Good lord, I thought
to myself,
New York is killing me!
Don't start hatin' on me or say "oh Eric, now that you're thirty
you're slowing down." I'm
just as ridiculous as I ever was! I've attacked
the work hard / play hard dichotomy with aggressive zeal ever since
I found out you could drink and still get good grades my Freshman
year of college. Well, Bs, at any rate. But it was once again made
clear to me that I really don't
have to do that! Sure, the
Onion covered this territory a while back with their aptly titled
"8.4 Million New Yorkers Suddenly Realize New York
City A Horrible Place To Live" but I needed to see the forest
for the trees for my eyes to open.
I'm sure after a few days I'll start thinking about how I'm happy I
don't have to drive places, knocking out my current thought that I
wish I had a car with a/c to get around town. After two weeks I'll
tell myself I couldn't live without walking to a comedy show, a
burlesque show, three happy hours, a Cuban sandwich place, and an
all night diner without turning off of Avenue A, but for now I'm
just annoyed that I have to pay 7 bucks for a beer while I'm doing
it.
In a month, I'll probably regret ever claiming I wanted to leave
this place. NYC
is my home and I do love it, but I gotta
wonder if it's only cause I'm not living more than 120 miles away.
Date Published: May 24, 2011 - 5:54 pm
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Tell me about it...my boss is a real ball buster too.
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Fear not, friends and well wishers, for this is not the
end...just another step along the way in an ever expanding path
that's taking a lot longer to traverse than I originally planned.
The good news is that after 10 months of living off of tax returns
and quarterly dividends I'm working again. Temp job baby! We're in
the black!
Well, for the week anyway. Over the past few months I've been
keeping myself pretty busy with such fun activities as 1)
desperately drafting cover letters, 2) quietly sobbing when
reviewing my checking account balance, and 3) telling myself that
this is progress towards my ultimate goal of transitioning
permanently into human rights advocacy. Having yet to score even a
single interview to show for my efforts is teeth-clenchingly scary,
and now I find myself back in a law firm setting doing some
lawyering stuff just like I used to back in the dizzle. My friends
being the ever-supportive cast and crew that they are have said fun
things to me like, "back to your old unhappy self, huh?" and "you
realize you're never going to leave there now, right?"
Thanks guys.
Powerful, uplifting messages.
So while it may be progress, I'm still not quite there yet. When I
took a hammer to my life last Fall, I set out to accomplish a bunch
of things, and I'm still working at that whole career transition
one nearly a year later.
But I also set out to start writing more, and my goal was to start
getting stuff published. And as of Sunday night, I did it! Thanks
to some great editorial guidance and a slightly more serious
platform than I normally operate on, I put together a pretty
kick-ass article about my experience in Peru during the 2006
presidential elections. It's got humor, drama, politics, pisco
sours, you name it...you can check it out here:
Everyone Cheats, by Eric Noah Feldman, at The Hypocrite
Reader
Now if you'll excuse me, I'm gonna go clean up and get ready for
bed, cause (sigh) I have a big day at the firm tomorrow.
Date Published: May 19, 2011 - 6:41 pm
"The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and
over and expecting different results."
~ The rental insurance agent, when asked about replacing my
stolen iphone ~
Friends of the blog may recall that earlier this year,
my iphone was stolen. Well, stolen is such an
ugly word - really it was more that a security guard in an upscale
Malaysian hotel rifled through my bags while they were in "locked"
storage, removing my laptop and iphone, then ultimately returned my
laptop to me after he uploaded to it pictures of himself and a
short pornographic film of him nailing his girlfriend.
Sadly, the iphone was never recovered.
Along with my good pal Shwa "Player Hater" Losben, I spent my last
hours in Asia running around Kuala Lumpur filling out police
reports and bitching to various hotel officials in the hopes that I
would get some kind of reimbursement for the value of my glorious
smart phone. The unrequested acquisition of a homemade sex tape on
my desktop bothered me less than the sudden loss of all my Plants
Versus Zombies accomplishments, but in either case I wanted
justice. I wanted to be made whole for my troubles. And as of this
past weekend, the wrong is righted.
A few months of cross-border negotiations led finally to the filing
of an insurance claim by the hotel for their little ooops-my-bad,
and they wired me the value of my stolen phone. All in all, they
were actually pretty helpful throughout the process, even if it did
take a few months of back and forth. This fortuitous cash infusion
coincided with me FINALLY getting my old Samsung P.O.S. exchanged
for a shiny iphone 4. I thought I could never love a piece of
technology as much as I loved my old iphone, but I was wrong. New
iphone is like getting a second puppy who can fetch the paper and
bark the alphabet while the first puppy suffers from arthritic
pains and
needs to be held upright while defecating. Old
phone, replaced and forgotten.
Needless to say, I rushed to get my phone set up right when I got
it Sunday evening, so I plugged that bad boy in to my laptop
(complete with the homemade Malaysian videos as evidence, should it
ever be needed), and to my surprise it offered to restore my old
phone settings for me. Could it be? With the press of a button,
could all my settings be restored, pictures recovered, contacts
replaced, Plants Versus Zombies cheats re-unlocked? It absolutely
could have been... had not that damn security guard already updated
my laptop with his stupid iphone settings.
My first clue that
something was amiss came when iphoto popped up
on my computer displaying 9 pictures of the thief himself, staring
at the phone in an attempt to customize my gear. I knew I was
really in trouble though when I saw the 10 hours of phone calls
this guy made to any number of his 85 contacts that he added. Among
the dozens of hotel employees and managers, some of whom helped me
fix up this whole mess, one named popped off the page and caught my
eye - "My Lover Sha". Finally! A name to the...well, I would say
face but you never actually see her face in the video.
I had to chuckle as I plugged my phone back in and wiped it clean
of the security guard's evidence-stockpile that he left behind.
This whole ordeal was so ridiculous and drawn out that when it
finally ended, I was just happy to bury it and move on...especially
given my new "never-have-I-ever"trump card, "never have I ever seen
a Malaysian homemade dirty movie".
Date Published: May 04, 2011 - 3:00 pm
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Working hard < Working smart
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I finally ran out of excuses. Any attempts to blame a lack
of home base, a dearth of viable options, or lingering cost issues
have faded...the stars have aligned and there is simply no reason
why I can't go to the gym now.
After my half-baked attempts to work out in Sri Lanka
failed miserably, I reduced my entire workout regimen to a handful
of situps between swigs of ayurvedic tinctures that promised to
make me skinny and healthy. Shockingly, the aged berry potion I
purchased from the "doctor" in Kandy didn't magically make me lose
30 pounds as he promised, but I took the failure in stride...hell,
even some roadside miracle tonics don't perform up to
standards. But cmon, this was Sri Lanka after all, so I gave myself
a free pass on fitness until I returned to civilization.
Friends of the blog may recall that as my
time in South Asia wrapped up, I made a New Year's resolution to do
10,000 pushups in 2011. I wasn't about to let everyone down, so
when I settled into my comfortably white-washed life in Geneva, I
kept pace and am proud to report that I'm well on my way to meeting
my goal by year's end. Sadly, however, I took this somewhat minor
accomplishment as a sign that my body was improving itself despite
the kilograms of falafel and gnocchi I was pumping in to it. As a
reward, I gave up on even attempting to join a real gym or go
running outside or anything silly like that. No, I was contempt to
drink cheap Swiss pinot noir, crack out 50 up-downs and contentedly
fry up some garlic for my "healthy" pasta dinners.
Sadly these blissfully excused days of laziness have drawn
to a close. I've got a dresser and a shower to call my own, and
there are plenty of cheap or even free work-out options in and
around NYC. So finally this past week, armed with freshly washed
gym shorts that had seen little action that hadn't involved
watching Hulu from a desk chair over the past 8 months, I laced up
the cross-trainers and hit the gym.
And the second I hit the gym, it hit
back. My back hurts. My legs hurt. My arms? Well they don't hurt
that much but they certainly aren't at 100%. It turns out that
doing almost no physical activity for three business quarters
atrophied my body such that after just two days of diligent
gym-going, I'm calling it off today so I can rest. Possibly also so
I can take an ice bath. Alarmingly, despite 4 total hours of gym so
far, I haven't seen the drastic physical transformation I had
expected; nothing that a deliciously heavy pasta dinner can't cure
though.
Today might be a loss but come rain or
snow or sleet or shine, I'll be making a concerted effort to get my
butt to the gym at least 3 times a week, hopefully even more than
that. If nothing else it will seem like a nice way to feel
productive while I fail time and again to get a job.
Date Published: Apr 28, 2011 - 1:00 pm
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Lego Rome wasn't built in a day
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63 days.
It took me 63 days, return date from Geneva to today, to actually
get into a somewhat normal living situation and off of random
people's couches. Granted, there were some mitigating factors at
play that dragged out the process, including being unsure of my
permanence in the country at first, the sudden nature of my leaving
The Continent, and a complete lack of certitude as to my eventual
landing spot. Any immediacy in settling on a sub-par sublet was
eviscerated by the amazing reception I got from all my friends,
many of whom offered me keys, room, and board,
all at the low low price of the pleasure of my
company. Without a reliable budget or even a geographic focus, I
was truly forced to embrace the nomadic lifestyle of a couch
surfing corporate wash-out, replete with rolling bag full of
unlaundered clothes, constantly asking the world, "what's the
wireless password here?" Truly, it was a harrowing process and the
extremely long delay in landing a new sublet was due to a million
outside factors beyond my control.
Either that or I'm just a lazy bastard. Personally I think it's the
former, but I could feel murmurs rippling through the crowd that
suspicions of the latter were fast crystallizing. I'm still
recovering from the emotional and physical toll that my recent
adventures took on me, soul and body, and I did myself few favors
given my lifestyle in the two years leading up to fleeing society.
Hell I barely remember the first 30 days after I got back, mostly
due to exhaustion and needing to sleep for a week just to get back
on my feet. I needed some time to slow things down, take stock, and
rest before getting back to it. But 63 days??
In 63 days, rabbits, foxes, and kangaroos
can successfully reproduce. In 63 days, if you
count for only 8 hours a day at a relatively fast clip, you can
count to a million...three times. 63 days is longer than the
Falklands War, the Indo-Pakistani War, and the 6 Days
War...
combined. And hell, it only took the Apollo 11
astronauts three friggin days to get into lunar orbit! Now, as a
matter of course I believe that the marketplace of ideas should
decide belief and that we must balance all the facts before making
any decisions, but the numbers appear to be stacked pretty solidly
against my near-glacial pace of house hunting.
Despite my stutter-start failure in getting my rear in gear, at
least I am finally making some progress. I'm all set up in a new
West Village spot for the coming weeks, and after a quick trip to
visit my parents and steal every ounce of unclaimed food in the
pantry I should have enough food to last me at least through the
weekend. The job hunt is slow but I'm registered with the proper
temp agencies and eventually will make one of these assignments
work. And possibly best of all? Last week I got new jeans! Yup,
things are looking up, to be certain.
What's to become of the next 63 days? From where I'm sitting, seems
like it takes about 48 days to sail around the world using only
natural forces...but I'll settle for getting dental insurance.
Date Published: Apr 25, 2011 - 12:10 pm
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Dream come true, or night ruining train wreck?
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"Be careful what you wish for, you might just get it"
~ Your annoying roommate who thinks he knows what's best for
you ~
Have you ever thought you wanted something so badly that you would
change your plans drastically just to get it? Shifted your entire
vacation schedule to make sure you see a hallowed church or
glorious ancient wonder of the world? Well that's how I felt about
trying poutine in Montreal last weekend. While investing one of my
many free days in a trip to Montreal, my travel buddy and friend of
the blog Shwa "Slow Jam" Losben asked me how I wanted to spend our
big day out Quebec's white-washed Gotham. Without doubt or
hesitation, I demanded merely that we see Old Montreal and check
out the poutine selection. History and snack food, that's what I'm
all about.
Poutine, for those who don't know, is a big pile of french fries,
smothered in brown gravy and covered with bits of squeaky cheese
curd. Needless to say, this was going to require another pass on my
no-dairy policy and at least two lactaid to ensure my personal
safety. For the whole day Sunday, we asked every local we met where
we could score the best poutine in town - general consensus was La
Banquise, a short cab ride from where we had spent most of the
afternoon day drinking and engaging in enlightened discourse.
Predictably, what started with a meaningful conversation about the
distinctions between macro- and micro-level morality over a pint of
Boreale devolved into a pissing contest about which one of us was
smarter over happy hour shots of Jack Daniels. With both the
weather and the conversation turning stormy, we hopped a taxi and
handed the nice man behind the wheel a piece of paper with La
Banquise
scribbled on it in Sharpie. As Shwa was quick to
point out, I dropped into my broken "not sure if you speak English"
English, and I asked driver, "you know this? Can you drive there
yes?"
"Yeah I know it, hop on in guys," he shot back in perfect
diction.
The meter ticked up at what appeared to be an alarming pace, and a
bit of panic helped clear the clouds in my head left behind by our
impromptu bar crawl.
We've been driving an awfully long
time, I thought to myself.
This poutine better be friggin'
awesome. After a rainy exit from the overpriced cab, we got
seated pretty quickly at the super tacky and super busy La
Banquise, and my compatriot and I settled quickly on splitting a
large original style poutine and a couple of brewskies. My fork
shaking with anticipation, I dove in head first as soon as my prize
arrived on the table, unapologetically shoving three full spoonfuls
into my face before coming up for air. I leaned back. I
savored.
I hated it. How this was possible I knew not. Apparently I had
incorrectly assumed that because each element of this delightful
mess was in and of itself delicious, the mixed whole would be
triply amazing. To be entirely fair to the dish, perhaps it
suffered from a bit of
"anticipation failure" as much as it was itself
a disappointment. Once it was built up in my mind as the greatest
thing ever, the very purpose of my visit to a foreign country, it's
hard to really live up to that hype. At that point, my poutine
needed to be extraordinary simply to meet my most basic of
expectations. Such is the danger of building up your travel
expectations without really knowing what you're getting into - for
all the people that see Angkor Watt and oooh and aaah with joy,
there are assuredly just as many vacationers that meh and sigh.
Granted, being saddened by the site of a hallowed 800 year old
Khmer temple mountain is a slightly bigger let down than receiving
middling poutine in the frozen north, but it still sucks to get
exactly what you want only to discover it sucks.
Date Published: Apr 16, 2011 - 2:00 pm
"Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change."
~ Stephen Hawking ~
I like it when things have an order to them. It's nice to know that
you can trust X food not to have dairy in it or Y bus to show up
around when it says it will. Of course, random and haphazard travel
through the developing world throws all of this into chaos, but at
least it's chaos when I expect it, disorganization by design. I'm
happy to cast caution into the wind when the time calls for it, but
when it comes to scheduling my emotional well-being I like to have
just a teensy bit more control over the situation. So when my
pre-determined itinerary suddenly shifted last month and all of my
carefully laid plans fell into disarray, my psyche struggled to
adjust. Before taking off on my "crazy" journey to Sri Lanka and
Geneva, it should come as no shock to anyone that I spent nearly 7
months putting this whole exit strategy into place. Sudden
upheaval? More like meticulously carved plan of action!
But shit happens. Plans change, and we're forced to adapt quickly
or end up suffering for our inability to do so. On the road I'm
usually ready for these kinds of split-second changes and am
actually pretty good about keeping others calm in the process.
While flying from Lima to Iquitos in Peru, for instance, my flight
was turned around when it was revealed that buzzards from a nearby
jungle trash heap had invaded the local airspace, making it so even
the great and powerful Sully couldn't land that
bucket of bolts. Did I panic? No, I got on the phone and in broken
Spanish somehow managed to switch the reservations of not only
myself but two of my travel companions to the afternoon flight and
got them to waive the charges. And when I got stranded on a
Panamanian island for four hours with no water or bathroom after
our guide misunderstood the phrase "pick us up in forty minutes,"
did I lose my cool? No, me and my ex-girlfriend took to making
sandals and undergarments out of palm leaves which we stripped off
the trees. I weave a mean frond-cross-hatch, by the by.
But my latest game changer was different - it wasn't a slight
setback or a change of expectation. I was coming back early without
laying the normal groundwork for my arrival, leaving me unsure of
job, home, or future. Pepper in some of the oh so normal events
that recently occurred in my life, such as turning 30, becoming an
uncle, spending three months in Sri Lankan solitude, etc., and my
brain was a lil bit frazzled.
Why do today what you can put off
until tomorrow became
I need this on my desk yesterday,
overpriced falafel replaced by impossible rent costs. Waking up
after the five month dream was rough, and I'm only just now really
coming out of my sleepy haze.
And my leading theory as to why I'm only just now getting back to
normal? Because right around now was my originally scheduled return
time. My last hurrah in St. Thomas this past weekend was to be my
final adventure on the road, signalling the body to stop
instinctively slapping the snooze alarm on my adult life and to
step out into the light of day. Maybe I'm not as flexible as I
thought after all...given a month of adjustment time, I basically
just waited until the world caught up to my expectations. Granted,
existential readjustment is more complex than
weaving a brassiere, but only slightly. Those straps are
tricky!
On my way back through the Atlanta airport from the impossibly
sunny Caribbean, I thought about all the little steps it was
finally time to take in adjusting back into a normal-ish life.
Figuring that the process was really only starting, I decided to
make a list of what needed to get done to help organize my
thoughts. I spent weeks and weeks making packing lists and
preparations to travel abroad, but spent exactly 12 hours throwing
everything into a bag and racing back home...how could I possibly
have expected that to work? Proud of myself for the admission, I
allowed for one final trip to Chick-Fil-A to let my brain flood
those serotonin receptors and positively reinforce all the
wonderful progress I was making as a normal functioning human, but
I would deny myself fries in order to stay healthy.
But you know what? Dude behind the counter tossed some fries in
there anyway. I signaled to him that I didn't pay for them, but he
waved me off..."oh don't worry about it. Enjoy them!" So to
celebrate my return to responsible decision making, I failed to
cross off even the first item on my newly drafted list.
Oh well. Best laid plans, as they say.
Date Published: Apr 08, 2011 - 10:00 am
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Corn fields: preferred vacation spot of sexual deviants the
world over
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Some people figure it out early, knowing right off the bat
their preferences. For others it takes years of angst-filled
searching, arguments with the family, and a series of
self-reflective moments that challenge the very core of their
being. In either case people tend to fall off the wagon now and
then, straying from their chosen path to test out the other waters,
check out to see if just maybe their pre-conceived notions of
propriety and right in their choice was as correct as they thought.
Debate rages whether its a matter of nature or nurture, and the
priests and scientists may be fighting it out for decades to come
without any real answers.
I'm talking of course about one's taste in vacations. People tend
to just enjoy the happiness associated with just being on vacation,
so we don't always look back to figure out how we'd like to spend
our hard earned days off / extended unemployment. Now thirty plus
years wise, I think it's time I made some decisions in my life
about how I like to spend my leisure time and be honest with the
world about who I am.
The most major distinction I see amongst vacationers is of course
Mountain versus Beach. Sure, we can all love the beach when it's
cold out and getting up to the hills when you want some bbq and a
breeze in summer time, but when faced with the option of one or the
other, apples or oranges, which one is the winner? In a
none-too-shocking vote of 1 to 0, I
voted
myself a Mountain man. Sure, a small native chieftan in the
jungles of Peru once laughingly told me, "you are not meant to
survive in the wild," but I'm not talking about survival skills.
I'm talking about a little cabin thing, a grill of some kind, a 30
rack, and the ability to sit on a deck and watch the sun do stuff
in the sky. Rise, set, whatever, as long as my feet are up and it's
breezy outside. You can do that all at the beach too, but there
people expect you to go in and out of the ocean and it's hot out
there. I wasn't built for heat, so Mountain wins.
However, my desire to watch leaves grow from the safety of my
well-stocked chalet often loses out to a taste for
adventure...hence my repeated visits to Asia. The beach does hold
some extra appeal to me when it happens to be located at the end of
an unmarked path carved lazily through the underbrush of the
Malaysian coast. And thanks to a childhood spent on the Jersey
Shore, I'm used to my beaches being somewhat crashed out and
full of unknowns. So this past weekend when I
was down in St. Thomas for the wedding of my good friend Nick I of
course was overwhelmed by how goddamn nice everything was.
The potable water didn't make me sick. Paths were clearly marked
and the people understood everything I said to them. And the
bathrooms, oh the bathrooms! You could sip a pina colada off the
floor, I tells ya! Amazingly though, I half prefer the adventure of
diseased, convoluted, bathroom-free beach going. Call it what you
will, but I think my masochistic drive for challenging vacations
are just a part of who I am...why question it? Maybe I'll end up
spending a few extra days holed up in a cheap hostel, afraid to
stray too far from the facilities, but it's exciting. Most likely
I'll bitch about it the entire time, and then afterwards I'll end
up with better stories out of the whole ordeal.
When it comes to the wedding last weekend, I must readily admit
that I enjoyed the ever-loving crap out of my shmancy hotel room,
swim-up bar, and picture perfect dining room experience. Big ups to
Nick and the resort, Marriott Frenchman's Reef, and a full
admission that as far as the sweet life goes, they pulled it off
big time. Still, you give me some street curry and a bat-filled fan
room for 8 bucks a day and I will lose it with joy. What can I say,
I know what I like.
Date Published: Apr 05, 2011 - 3:00 pm
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One of them was eaten by hill people
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"Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's need, but not
every man's greed."
~ Mahatma Gandhi ~
I really thought it was time to settle back into a normal routine.
I finally adjusted to being back in the states and was very
seriously somewhat kinda considering starting to think about
looking for non-couch-based housing again. Then a warm breeze
gusted open the lovely curtains at my friend's apartment, rousing
me from my squatter slumber and ruining an otherwise glorious
mid-week, mid-afternoon nap. Despite the spike in mercury a chill
crept down my spine. The snow had melted. Flowers, re-awakened. My
post-travel recovery coma was in danger, for Father Time had
marched forward and Wedding Season was upon me.
Don't get me wrong, I absolutely love weddings, but my constitution
is that of a jellyfish, my willpower non-existent. "Another Long
Island Iced Tea?" Why yes please. "Porterhouse steak with a red
wine demi-glaze and frites?" Don't mind if I do. "Stay up for four
straight days making it rain all over this hotel, dropping down
science on how we wreck every establishment dumb enough to let us
forfeit a security deposit in lieu of being responsible?" You
betcha. The first thing to go at any nuptial celebraccion is my 85%
veganism. And my friends find no end in teasing me as to this
point.
This latest wedding trip took me down to St. Thomas to rock out
with my Crocs out down Caribbean way. The first mettle-testing
treat came into view well before I even got to the ceremony; for
anyone who has ever been to the A Terminal of the Atlanta airport
knows all too well the gravitational draw that is Chick-Fil-A. My
bagel-centric northeast lifestyle affords me
few opportunities to go Cowboy and get down to
Chick-Fil-A territory, or as I like to call it, "the promised
land," so I actively schedule flights through Atlanta with enough
of a layover to get me some chicken biscuit action. I'm not saying
I've ever added in a stopover through Atlanta when I could've
easily flown direct, but I'm not saying I wouldn't consider it.
Anyways, my vegan guilt was nipping at my frontal lobe and begging
me to get back to eating well again, so I put the buttery goodness
of chicken biscuits out of mind and patted myself aggressively on
my proverbial back.
Job well done, I prematurely boasted. My
flight was off in a different terminal anyways so there was no real
chance of me getting pulled into the black hole of failure. So I
took my time, wandering lazily over to my gate, only to arrive and
find that due to weather issues in Florida they moved my
plane...back to the A terminal...shouting distance from the
Chick-Fil-A. Ruh roh.
Still convinced I was strong enough to make it through without
caving at Mile One of this
ill-fated self-restraint marathon, I busted a
move over to the gate to catch my flight and get out of the danger
zone before it was too late. Panting and short of breath, I charged
past the precious and powered through a crowd to get onto my plane
to paradise and away from dark, sexy temptation. In the comic
timing that only the universe itself can design, my thunderous
arrival coincided perfectly with the Delta rep hopping on the horn,
announcing sorrowfully that "due to weather issues in Florida, we
have moved back the departure time...three hours." Me and my
half-assed veganism were screwed.
Accepting my fate as a
lapsed health nut, I ambled over to the terminal map
to find exactly where my Christian chicken joint was hiding and
panicked when I didn't see it on the board. I read and re-read the
directory, angrily scanning the Food Services list over and over
again to find my way home. My irascible chicken lust turned my
quest of inconvenience into a full on manhunt, and I opted to just
run up and down the hallways hoping to spot the Chick-Fil-A logo.
Each foot fell effortlessly forward, pulling me knowingly towards
my prize. I moved independent of thought or want, my automation
driven by the sole and unified purpose of savoring that chicken
biscuity goodness. Seconds felt like eternities, but I could smell
that I was closing in, and then....nirvana!
I brushed past an indecisive mid-westerner debating between chicken
and spicy chicken, and with hands trembling asked the nice lady for
a chicken biscuit. "Sorry hun, breakfast ended 30 minutes ago." I
was crushed. Devastated. Breakfast had passed, and with it all hope
of biscuit. Forced to settle for the basic Chick-Fil-A chick-fil-a
sandwich, I reassured myself that even without the biscuit, this
mid-morning lunch was still a brag-worthy event, so I sent out some
taunting text messages to fellow chicken lovers alerting them of my
accomplishments. Sneaking off to a nearby seating area, I hunkered
down and plowed through that sandwich with a determination
bordering on frenzy. Each carefully lain pickle danced with the
lightly breaded fillet and quickly flooded my neuroreceptors with
massive amounts of soul-soothing serotonin. Greasy and satisfied,
only then did I notice I hadn't snagged any napkins whilst scoring
my sandwich.
No matter. The receipt would do.
Date Published: Apr 01, 2011 - 4:25 pm
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Pensively he stares and wonders, feeling all alone /
Re-living his missteps and blunders; all the misplaced
bones...
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This past weekend I had the joyous opportunity to return
the the land of plenty from which all of my post-college hang-ups
sprung: DC! Of course I had been down to visit our nation's capital
a few times since abandoning ship three years ago, but never had I
showed up with a great wave of many of my old friends from back in
the day. Thanks to a mid-Atlantic based bachelor party, I Bolt
Bus'd my way through the highway that is New Jersey and strapped on
my old school party shoes for a night out with a dozen of my
closest friends/fellow idiots to see if we were able to pick up
where we left off so very long ago.
Spoiler alert, we can. Follow-up spoiler alert, it takes a serious
toll on the body.
Yes, apparently the collective will of a score of
newly-turned-30-year-olds is greater than the sum of its parts, and
we were each made stronger by the desire to outdo those around us.
The evening started with a biergarten style dinner that escalated
quickly out of control thanks in part to liter-beers and
pretzel-sandwiches. What was to be a
fast, no-nonsense pit-stop before the evening
began devolved into a screaming sausage-fest, meant both literally
because of the bratwurst entrees and figuratively for the
high-volume-dude attendance rate. Undeterred however, each of us
pushed forward in a sort of reversion-to-our-20-something-selves
that played out in a series of separate vignettes across the
night.
Highlights included drinks being spilled, heads being butted,
ruffians being arrested, crashing an Asobi Seksu show without
paying a cover, jamming out front with a homeless dude who had a
guitar, and ultimately a severe case of heartburn from the Bulleit
Bourbon / weisswurst combination. Seemed like a good idea at the
time.
Anywho, the weekend clipped forward with the usual level of inside
jokes and stupid human tricks one would expect from juveniles such
as ourselves, and as I pushed through each day I thought to myself,
"I could
totally move back to DC! This still seems like a
great place!" When I shared this sentiment with some of the other
guys I received about 7 variations on the "you're not serious, are
you?" theme. Ultimately I ran through their arguments, recalling
also the 6 months or so I just spent traveling the world
essentially by myself and each lonely night that I sat wishing I
was back in Gotham to hang out with my friends and family, and
decided my
delusions of grandeur, my creatively retold
histories of DC, were just that...delusions.
So much separation from the ups and downs of normal life in the
District allowed me to forget all the badness and just remember the
happy shiny. Just like as I move forward from my trip abroad, I'm
sure that all the bad pieces about it, like the crushing loneliness
or getting attacked by a rat in the john, will soften into a soupy
milieu of joyous escapism. For now though I can at least learn my
lesson and keep re-establishing life in NYC unabated.
All things told I had an awesome weekend, and it was super sweet to
get back down for another night of old-school chillin in my old
hood...but it certainly was hard to separate the glories of the
past from the potential for fun in the future. My DC time was
great, but even if I do go back it wouldn't be the same. To
paraphrase Heraclitus, "you can never step into the same river
twice, for they have gentrified that area of town and built a Whole
Foods over it."
Date Published: Mar 28, 2011 - 2:15 pm
"How happy is the blameless Vestal's
lot!
The world forgetting, by the world
forgot."
~ Alexander Pope ~
Vacation mode is a hard mantle to shake. After a week or so the jet
lag falls away and the circadian rhythms return to pre-travel
standards. After a fortnight, every single sentence ceases to begin
with "woah, that's so expensive here, in Sri Lanka things were
cheaper," or "woah, that's so cheap here, in Geneva things were
more expensive." And finally, after a month or so, the waking dream
of foreign travel is replaced with the stark reality that real life
has once again banged down your door and has placed its feet on
your bed and eaten all your Cheerios. Damn you, stark reality.
Granted it took me a while to get to this point but I'm finally
emerging from my extended feeling of "vacation mode" that resulted
from my half-year of life on the road. Slowly but surely I
reintegrate into the fabric of New York society, whose forlorn loom
lay dormant lo these past five months whilst it was denied my
thread. I'm loving the easy access to my friends and family,
extensive public transportation, and myriad restaurant options,
each more exotic than the last. But just a few days ago while
perusing the East Village dining scene, I saw undone some of the
great personal progress I had made while traveling abroad! Even
though I didn't love the idea of it, being on my own for such an
extended period allowed me to try new things and forced me to excel
at stuff like traveling by myself, drinking by myself and
dining by myself.
But now that I'm back where I can understand all the conversations
around me, and thanks to a healthy dose of personal conceit assume
they are all about me, I no longer feel comfortable marching into a
popular restaurant and uttering the soul crushing phrase "table for
one." I saw all of this unfold as I was killing a couple hours in
the E-Vil last weekend, waiting to meet up with some pre-game
companions. Having been kicked out of my friend's apartment moments
earlier, I had to find a way to spend two hours
and get
myself fed. The perfect opportunity to enjoy a leisurely sit-down
meal, I thought to myself.
After a brief stroll around the avenues, I traversed the
restaurant-laden bazaar that is St. Marks Place dead set on
stopping into Yaffa Cafe. As I approached I noticed the excessive
crowding of the interior and figured, "gee, it's awfully packed in
there, I wouldn't be able to get a table for one right away so I'll
keep going." This of course was a lie to cover up the fact that I
was scared to dine along amongst such clamor. I reformulated my
plan of attack and figure I would check out Hop Devil down the
street...but as I approached I noticed the
excessive emptiness of its vast interior. "Gee,
it's awfully empty in there. I'd stick out like a sore thumb if I
was sitting by myself." I felt unable to deal with the inevitable,
"are you waiting for someone or do you just want to order and feel
alone in the world? also, would you like to hear our specials?" So
on I walked.
The cold was biting and my shame mounting, so I figured the best
place for a single 30-year-old man with no self-respect to dine in
this area was my favorite overpriced taco joint, San Loco. As some
of you may know, I love San Loco with the kind of fervor normally
felt by creepy shut-ins for 1000 piece puzzles, and I have made
many a late night stop there for a
solitary Guaco Loco at 4 am. But even two
Tecates and a rice and beans soft taco brought me little solace -
this wasn't a celebratory wee hours drunky snack. This was a man's
dinner, and that man was too scared to eat by himself again.
What the hell had become of adventurous Eric? Like many a vacation
beard before it, is so effortlessly my confidence trimmed off once
returned home? Was I simply burnt out on keeping on my brave face
while abroad that I just needed to hide out in a divey taqueria
until I found my pride again?
Then all at once it hit me - I'm simply never going to be happy
about dining alone. I can wish it were different or pretend that
I'm awesome at being out on my own and not caring about what other
people think, or that I'm cool with grabbing a book and reading at
a restaurant to wile away an evening instead of standing around at
some overcrowded bar as my friends and I discuss how awesome we are
for being at an overcrowded bar. Nope, the fact is that my least
favorite thing about being abroad and on my own was that whole
on my own part. And frankly now that I'm back I see no
reason whatsoever to be ok with it now that there are actually
people around who want to hang out with me.
I suppose the lessons I learned abroad haven't actually been
forgotten now that I'm back home; really I just needed to realize
that what I learned was that I couldn't be taught in the first
place.
Date Published: Mar 22, 2011 - 3:00 pm
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Testing the limits of "make yourself at home"
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One of the hallmark travel habits of 20-somethings is the
ever popular couch crash. While relatively green to the concept of
having money, post-college journeymen and women reluct at parting
with their hard earned dollars for anything that isn't
bacon-wrapped or cargo-pocketed. Granted, as we get older and our
bank accounts get a little more cushy, the itch to act like a
growed up and get a hotel room when we visit our out of town
friends starts scratching its way into our psyches, but we continue
to fight for our right to couch surf. I'm proud to report that even
at the ripe old age of 30 I've been able to tamp down the ominous
threat of "maturity" and continue to sleep on the sofa whenever I
head out of town. In fact, I'm even taking it to the next level now
that I've landed back in the states without a home or a job - I'm a
career couch crasher.
Yessir, my transformation from responsible adult to
useless layabout is nearly complete. In my
furthering efforts to continue the good fight and find a human
rightsy job back here on the homefront, I've become that dude for
whom you make excuses for when you bring home a late night booty
call. I'm the permanent fixture in your living room that
continually takes your snack food when you're not at home. The
six-packs I provide as in-kind payment keep me on your sunny side,
but I'm always one coffee spill away from ruining our friendship.
And guess what -
I'm not going anywhere.
Well, that's not entirely accurate. I actually am in the process of
re-integrating into the normal routine of NYC living, it's just
that the process is slow-moving. To help me out along the way, all
of my friends have been
super supportive and amazingly willing to let me
use up their vital resources while figuring out what my next
steps will be.So believe you me, I want to get off of your couch as
much as you want me off of it, it's just that the glacial pace of
the job market right now is keeping me firmly planted in the middle
cushion with me feet splayed lazily across your snack table. I
suggest we just treat this like I'm a friend visiting you from out
of town...indefinitely.
Date Published: Mar 18, 2011 - 1:00 pm
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Delta's wildly unpopular "if one of us sits near a baby we
all do" policy in effect
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"Good bye, proud world! I'm going home."
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson ~
Friends, countrymen, lend me your couches! Your restless wanderer
is returned to you, and he's as homeless and jobless as the day
he left. Now, I know what you're thinking - why haven't they
wrapped up How I Met Your Mother yet. I mean, how many chances is
this guy really gonna get? Rest assured, we're all equally
concerned about the situation and I promise now that I'm back in
the states I'll start up an aggressive letter writing campaign to
the powers that be at CBS. Oh right, you may also be wondering
where I've been and why the hell I'm back in the US of A.
A bit of necessary exposition on my recent absence and sudden
reappearance in an entirely different hemisphere of the world.
First, please accept my sincerest apologies for the sudden
blackout and just know that I missed you all lo these past three
weeks. I was actually clipping along at a really hot pace in
Geneva, and Dear Lonely Planet even hit the amazingly rewarding
10,000 page views mark just a couple weeks ago. When last you
heard, I was eating cheap pita and hummus in Tel Aviv and reeking
havoc with my continuously successful
"halvah for my men and arrack for my camels"
campaign when I received some troubling news about a brewing
family emergency back home. This is not the proper forum to go
into great detail, but to accent the severity of the situation I
was on a plane to Geneva a mere 8 hours after receiving said
news, and back in the states just 12 hours after that. Things are
settling here on the home front but I will be NYC based for the
foreseeable future.
Given the sudden shift in schedule, I had to cram a massive
amount of self reflection and looking back into just a few short
hours as I tossed everything into my suitcase and raced to the
airport. After a few restless hours of fitful sleep in the rank
dorm room my brother was trying to pass off as a viable shelter,
I grabbed an overpriced taxi to the Tel Aviv airport and settled
down in the main rotunda to wait for my flight.
Overwhelmed by a sudden sense of deja vu, I took stock of my
surroundings and realized I had in fact been there before...even
in the same seating area perhaps. Just about three years prior to
this hastened Israeli exit, I took full advantage of Jewish
philanthropy's boy-we-hope-you-marry-another-Jewish-person
campaign popularly known as Birthright to visit the homeland and
get free schnitzel. I sipped my fresh squeezed orange juice and
the vitamin C jarred loose some long forgotten memories of my
trip, and suddenly it was clear to me that I sat in this very
food court 1,095 days earlier on my way back home. Then, as now,
my great adventure was drawing to an abrupt close, and I was left
only with the pulpy innards of 8 oranges and my thoughts.
Personally I love it when things come full circle like this, so I
gave a little nod to the universe so as to thank it for its
ham-handed attempts at existential subtlety. I
kicked up my feet and tried to unpack everything that had
happened in the past three years since the last time I sat in
this chair, drank this OJ, and window shopped at this duty-free
store. Unsure of where to begin, I defaulted to counting the
countries I had seen since last I fled Israeli's shore.
Eight, by the way.
I reminisced about the weddings I had been to and strained to
retrieve the bachelor parties I had drank away. I recapped
quickly all the friends I had visited, and recalled slowly all
the women I had kissed. I chastised all the decisions that led me
to work at a law firm, and barreled angrily through the bumps in
the road that drove me to Sri Lanka, Geneva and now Israel.
I sat for hours in the Tel Aviv airport, exactly where I sat for
hours just three years before. And for a few more hours I
remained, kept company by three years of memories and an orange
juice.
As the pre-flight procedures started up and my cup ran dry, I
rose from my post and took my leave of Israel. I knew that I was
returning home but almost nothing else was certain...I wasn't
even sure then if I would be back to Europe. Thanks to a
frisky Malaysian security guard, I had no
phone, and thanks to my insatiable need to find fulfillment from
my life I had no job or apartment waiting for me upon arrival.
Here and I thought burning down my life to leave for Sri Lanka
was intimidating. Turns out that coming back home proved to be
even scarier.
Date Published: Mar 14, 2011 - 3:30 pm