Fountain

Another upside of the new apartment: we’re across the street from my favorite spot in NYC.

lincolncenter

Bummed

Ten years ago, I was an early adopter of flushable wipes.

Then I moved into a pre-war building, with pipes so old that they were literally plumbed (from lead, or ‘plumbum’ in Latin) by hand, rather than assembled from pre-existing copper and galvanized steel lengths and bends as plumbing is today. Given those small and uneven pipes, wet wipes more or less instantly gummed up the works, so it was back to traditional toilet paper.

Freshly moved to a modern construction building, I’ve been asked by a bunch of friends about the building’s amenities. Sure, there’s a pool and a roof deck. But what I’m particularly happy about is the flushability. I may be wrecking the NYC sewage system as a whole, but I feel cleaner than I have in years.

Victor

Yesterday was my grandfather Victor’s yahrzeit – the anniversary of his death, observed by loved ones (but especially by one’s children). A dyed-in-the-wool entrepreneur (as was his father, Max, who was also an accomplished inventor), Victor loved his family, and loved his work. But he didn’t particularly love Judaism. As he once told me, after his mother died when he was a child, any religious observance in his family went out the door with his mother’s body. While he was alive, he would tell people he didn’t even want a funeral; he just wanted the people still living to enjoy their lives for the day.

So, rather than heading to synagogue as would be traditional, my parents observed Victor’s yahrzeit with a ritual much dearer to his heart: dinner at Denny’s. There was no Denny’s in New York when he was still alive, so any time he came out to visit us in California, a trip to Denny’s (particularly for the coffee, which he inexplicably loved) was inevitably on the must-do list.

I think sometimes about the New Orleans tradition of the Jazz Funeral: friends and family, led by a brass band playing somber songs and spirituals, slowly march from the deceased’s home to the cemetery. And then, as soon as the body is in the ground, as soon as the members of the procession have said their final goodbyes, there’s the ‘cutting loose’ of the body. The brass band switches to raucous jazz, and everyone drinks and dances and parties in their dead loved one’s honor.

I think the New Orleaners, like my grandfather Victor, have it entirely right. The best way to remember someone isn’t to sit at mourn, but to get right to living. As Joan Didion wrote, “the grave’s a fine and private place, but none I think do there embrace. Nor do they sing there, or write, or argue, or see the tidal bore on the Amazon, or touch their children. And that’s what there is to do and get it while you can.”

Nested

Yesterday, I moved into a new apartment. I was supposed to have moved in on the 1st, but due to some construction snafus, the space wasn’t ready at the start of the lease. So, for a week and a half, I was essentially homeless. Thanks to the kindness of friends and family, the dogs and I had places to stay. But, whoo boy, was it a pain in the ass.

Previously, I’d always thought of myself as a potential digital nomad. Needing nothing more than a laptop and the contents of my suitcase, ready to work and live on the fly from anywhere with a bed and an internet connection.

Turns out, that’s not so much the case. Perhaps it’s a result of corralling two small dogs through the process, or just of aging in general, but I felt out of sorts the entire stretch. And now, back in a more permanent spot, my brain is ready again to engage with work and the world.