Having Your Cheesecake And Eating It Too
A relationship with a new city is like a relationship with a new guy. At
first, you compare a lot - my ex had better nicknames for me, he made the bed
in the morning. My ex was the one for me and now I'm just marking time before
becoming that old lady in line at the bagel shop who talks to her slippers.
You feel in your bones the sudden drop in comfort level with this new
entity. You have to close the door when you pee. You have to explain whom people
are when you're gossiping about them. You have to take it from the top. It's
a tedious process. And you wonder why we all know one of those couples that
should have broken up a long time ago before they got in a rut, and furnished it
at IKEA.
Now, as for my comparison, settling into a new city can be similarly
jarring. I'm not sure which I've done more of, but I know I'm not the only one
with a trail of broken leases as long as her trail of broken relationships.
I've dug up and planted and dug up and replanted more roots than an
obsessive-compulsive gardener.
And now I'm at it again, trying to make a go of it with this slick Pat
Riley of a city called Manhattan. And as always, the relationship got off to a
rough start and I wanted nothing more than to go home. And my new therapist
gave me her home number. And I didn't know if I had lost my ability to start over.
It's been six months since I relocated for work, "taking a break" from
the love of my life, Los Angeles.
I didn't want to love again, but it turns out we're adaptable creatures.
The other day, someone asked where to get a good cheesecake and out of my
mouth, smooth as Ricotta, came "Junior's in Brooklyn has the best. And they
ship." And I let myself feel pretty good for knowing this, and for passing as a
local more often than not, and for saying "Brooklyn" like I could tell you how to
get there on the 4.
This city has won me over like a guy you go on a mercy date with but end
up marrying because he remembers how you take your coffee and what size shoe
you wear. It's the little things that slowly weasel their way into your heart,
that make you feel at home.
I have the name of a Chinese delivery place in my cell phone and need
only speed dial my way to a dumpling delivery.
I hail a cab as easily as I used to parallel park.
I could tell you what cast members have been replaced in "Hairspray" on
Broadway. I can find Broadway by foot.
Now, I love my Lakers like Shaq loves his Escalade. Still, there's
something about finding your seat at Madison Square Garden that makes you feel like
you've got this town wired. Sadly, you have to watch the Knicks once you get
there, but if I can learn to love this city, maybe I can at least duty date its
basketball team.
On the right night, I can climb out of my 400 square-foot apartment and
sit on my fire escape and look down the block at doormen leaning on awning po
sts. I can watch little doggies in little sweaters strolling the Upper East
Side, a neighborhood immortalized not only by "Breakfast at Tiffany's" but also by
famous fictional resident, Carrie Bradshaw.
I know how to describe a location as being "on 67 between one and two"
instead of saying "on 67th street between first and second avenues." I know that
Central Park starts on 59. Like I said, these are small things, but like the
small apartments and small grocery store aisles here in the Big Apple, they g
row on you.
Maybe that's the only way to fall for a place as hard and humid and
expensive and compressed as this one. You endure the hard parts so you can
experience the simple pleasure of saying Brooklyn like you mean it.
How do you go from wanting to hurl yourself off the Staten Island Ferry
to thinking you might just want to dock here for awhile? You let yourself. And
having done so, I'm starting to think it might just be that simple with
relationships, too. And here is the most deeply buried lede in the history of
singles columns: I've got what some might call a "new boyfriend" in this new city
(and by "some" I mean people without crippling fear of commitment).
And that's how I can tell you relocation is something that happens
inside. It happens when you make up your mind to stop expecting a parade down Fifth
Avenue and just let yourself stop and smell the toasted nuts on the corner.
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