Sunday, October 22, 2006

runway

two tall, twiglike waifs using the houston street median as their own catwalk.

a small male photographer across the street. his camera hugged in his palm.

a tragically hip woman at his side. looking on with a critical eye.

the light changes.

the small man and overdone woman bark to "walk! walk! walk!"

and as i, myself, begin walking across the wide roadway, modestly attempting to trudge my sunday groceries home.

the two waifs begin prancing. pouts in check.

new orders are shouted:

"stop! stop! stop! go back."

the four tiny, fragile legs scamper back to their mark.

the photographer is frustrated. hand on his head. crying:

"just . . . walk like a normal person!"

Saturday, October 14, 2006

gap

i had braces for four years.

i wore a retainer . . . forever.

tonight.

a couple of friends claimed the "gap between your teeth is adorable."

was it the unexpected observation.

was it the trigger of adolescent insecurities.

was it the turn of the clock.

12 midnight.

it was her 90th birthday.

i cried the whole ride home.

whatever it was.

Thursday, October 12, 2006

it just so happened

i knew i would likely be out of my element.

these kinds of affairs are fancy. i'm not very good at fancy.

but i prepared myself. i wore the right dress. i did not, however, prepare for the torrential downpour.

as i arrived. there it was. a red carpet.

seriously?

and i wondered if i would need to tell someone, "oh the dress? the dress is h&m." it may not have the same ring as "vintage chanel." but the dress was doing its job. and for a beautifully low price.

as we entered the event. i immediately turned to my friend with a look of, "help!"

there were streams of ridiculously good-looking people. who somehow managed to avoid the wet-dog look i had developed. i struggled to wrap my umbrella. my homemade scarf wouldn't quite fit in my knockoff bag.

and then we explored. there was absolutely amazing food and drinks everywhere. some stationary. but quite a bit was floating through the crowds. deliciously mobile.

i made my way to the extravagant bar, asking simply for a white wine. when the bartender presented my drink with particular flair. and i instinctively pointed out, "ooo! that was fancy."

immediately it occurred to me: fancy people don't say something's fancy.

oops.

moving on, i couldn't resist taking the initiative to ask a server if i could start eating from the buffet. so i did. and about 30 minutes later, we noticed everyone else had joined the trend.

but still. what was with the red carpet? yes. audi's newest car was quite extraordinary. we noticed that much as they drove it through the crowd.

through. the. crowd.

but camera crews? the flashing bulbs? we hadn't seen anyone page-six worthy.

even when i saw heather graham enter the party. looking flawless. i thought, "that's it?"

but then i noticed more excitement as others showed. mostly models. many i didn't really recognize. but they were spectacularly attractive. and very tall. i did the math.

we began wandering the crowd. i made my way over to "the car." i will admit. it was sleek as hell. as i stood there admiring the star of the evening, i was approached by sal.

sal is a car salesman. of course. and he could see me in that car. of course. i assured him that i was not a likely buyer. but, throughout the evening, sal became a comrade of sorts. a squatty little middle-aged man. barely my height. with thick glasses. he provided some sense of groundedness in an otherwise heavenly bunch.

a little later in the evening, an announcement was made that there would be a speech. snore. but, as the speaker began talking, my friend and i exchanged questioning glances. stephen colbert? i didn't know he did car comedy. he spoke about 5 minutes. breezed past us. and later i caught him speaking with entertainment tonight.

i knew this evening had been entertaining for me. surreal actually. but entertainment tonight? again. i was somewhat puzzled by the clamor surrounding the r8 - the car we had all been called upon to drool over.

while entertainment tonight was reporting in the distance, i noticed a lot of picture-taking happening literally in front of me. as this man stood directly in front of me, i casually glanced to gain some memory. some recognition. as he walked away, i asked the photographer who the man was. the photographer confirmed. that was wyclef jean. the photographer asked if i'd seen anyone else. he noted that he'd already taken shots of heather graham. i offered up molly shannon as a new conquest. his eyebrows raised as he asked where she'd gone. i pointed. and he was off.

it was time to head to the unavoidable bathroom line. as i waited outside the door to one of the individual restrooms. i assumed i was standing in line behind a large black man. he looked purposeful. the door opened for my turn. and wyclef stepped out. his imposing companion leading the way. i went into the little room with my own eyebrows raised.

wyclef apparently doesn't flush.

but maybe he didn't have time. he headed straight to the stage and began performing. everything from old school fugees to his solo work.

at one point in his set, i saw a white guy take the stage. i giggled at the very straight-laced "suit" attempting to hang with wyclef. but this guy had the last laugh. because before i knew it, wyclef handed the mike over. and the man that had crashed the stage began singing every single word of the wyclef song. and he was good.

that was my cue.

time to leave.

it's always best to go out on top.

good samaritan

yesterday, i was walking into what is, sadly, one of the two places to eat when i'm out of my office and trolling around the bronx.

i noticed a $20 bill lying on the sidewalk. the wind was picking up. and it looked as though it might blow away. though i'd already considered and dismissed the possibility that the bill was mine. i picked it up. $20 means a lot to me. but it means even more to those i encounter up here. before i could get the words out, "did someone - -" a woman and her friend snatched it out of my hand proclaiming "that's
mine." and "thank you."

i stepped inside to place my order.

and suddenly.

all hell broke loose.

two young men got up telling me that they knew who had dropped that $20. i explained that i'd picked it up and the women had claimed it. this sent two other men in the place spinning.

i got a bad feeling.

as i looked out the window, i saw the two women walking away and heading down the street.

a man in a winter hat and workman's clothes stepped into the store. and everyone started talking at once. apparently this was the man who had dropped his $20. he had returned to his work van before realizing he was missing his money. and i realized that the others were explaining i had picked it up. the man began professing "thank you, thank you, thank you" as he held out his hand. mistaking my own $20 bill for his. i apologized and explained that the women outside had claimed the money
as their own.

the man shot out the door and down the street after the women. and we could hear screaming. lots of screaming. one of the young men in the shop began laughing good naturedly when he saw my face which - i'm sure - was full of alarm and splashed with regret. he just kept saying to me, "it's ok. don't worry about it. it'll be fine. those bitches are crackheads."

in all of this chaos, i heard the man and the two women screaming outside. he was begging, "please pleeease give me my money! that is MY DOUGH!" the two women were swearing they didn't have it. the man's co-worker and friend yelled into me, "was it those two women?" i started to respond with a nod, wondering what i was getting myself into. the friend briefly stepped in and repeated, "was it one of them? because they sayin the don't have it." i just responded, "i picked it up. they
said it was theirs and took it- - " i interrupted myself, "i just don't want to get in the middle of this."

i sat inside as i watched the men and two women screaming. standing in each other's faces. puffing out their chests. pointing fingers.

i realized my heart had leapt to my throat.
some of the finger pointing was at me.
my mind was instantly filled with a thousand nightmarish scenarios.

the top two:
they all start beating the shit out of each other.
they all start beating the shit out of me.

in a rather anticlimactic fashion, it stopped almost as suddenly as it had started.

the men got in their van and squealed off. without having their money returned.

my food was ready.

i walked out. clutching my paper bag. holding my breath. listening to the two women continue their tirade.

about two blocks away. i exhaled.

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

predictably

by 9am, my day was in full swing.

i had a client with - what i have almost certainly determined is - borderline personality disorder calling me from a local hospital.

she was crying. and screaming. and literally begging for consolation.

then she hung up on me.

my days are so unpredictable.

Website Counter
Counter