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How to Succeed at Lying Without Really Trying

Srikar Dudipala
September 16, 2022

I don’t ever really mean to lie. I promise. Okay, so maybe that was a lie in itself. But I definitely know that it’s wrong to lie. Why do people lie sometimes anyway? You know the lies I’m talking about. Not the ones that have a very specific, almost desperate purpose, like denying cheating on a test or hiding the fact that you just stole half of your cousin’s Halloween candy even though she’s only six years old and you are 22 and can definitely just buy your own damn chocolate. No, I’m talking about the lies that leak out of you in low-stress environments, the lies that happen for no clear reason at all, the lies that are entirely unnecessary and yet still keep happening for some strange, godforsaken reason. My mother, as most mothers do, instilled the importance of honesty in me from a tender age. Although perhaps not always in a tender way. And yet, whenever I do happen to slip into falsehoods, I never really think of it as lying. Rather, becoming. I am an author simply telling a story, and those listening simply don’t realize that they’ve picked up a fantasy novel rather than a memoir. The first time I lied and became someone else it was—and I swear this is the truth— entirely an accident. It was my first day as a camp counselor for Flying Horse Farms, a summer camp dedicated towards serving children with cancer. I was admittedly quite nervous. Despite my passion for serving these kids, I couldn’t help but feel stage-fright at the thought of being their mentor for the entire week. What if I’m not cool enough for them? On the first day of camp one of the campers waddled over to me with chubby cheeks and grubby hands: the entire toddler package. As he looked up at me with wide eyes, he immediately proceeded with the rapid-fire interrogation only 5-year-olds and professional CIA operatives have mastered. “What’s your name? Are you a grown-up? My mommy and daddy are grown-ups too, do you know them? How old are you? Is this week going to be fun? I always have a lot of fun playing baseball, do you know what baseball is? Do you pee your pants at night too?” Befuddled, I pointedly ignored the last question and instead decided to focus on the first. Should be easy enough, right? And yet, I panicked. I didn’t want to be Srikar in front of these kids. What if Srikar wasn’t fun enough? “Stanley,” I blurted, without thinking. Wait. Stanley? That’s not my name. Too late. The kid had already waddled off. And so, for the rest of the week I was Stanley “Almost a grown-up” Duncan, camp counselor of the Red Unit. And Stanley was a damn good camp counselor. Stanley got ice cream for all of the kids and jumped in the deep end with a huge CANNONBALL!! to the glee of his campers. None of the kids ever batted an eye when the other counselors called me by my real name; they were too engrossed in this one persona that I had become. Usually when I become someone else, it’s never in a high-stakes situation. Where’s the fun in lying when there are actual consequences for your actions? It always works best at massive parties filled with drunk faces I’ll never see again, or whenever I happen to interact with a stranger on the street. Quick, casual moments when I’m too lazy to really be myself. Who knew that constructing a fake identity was less work than presenting your real one? There’s something unburdening about not having to work about being your true self. Becoming just slips out of me without thought, much like responding with “thanks, you too” after the McDonalds drive-thru worker tells you to enjoy your meal. One moment your brain takes over in autopilot as you are unsure of how to deal with a perfectly not-stressful scenario, the next you are left to wonder why the fuck did I just say that? The first and most important step of becoming is to come up with a name. Not just a name per se, but also an identity, a persona, a backstory, a set of morals that defines you. All in just a few seconds. The moment you are approached by someone new at a party or you are waiting in line for a cup of coffee and a stranger wants to chat, you must be fully in character from the first syllable that leaves your lips. I’m Lee. Went to Georgetown. Family is from Greenwich, Connecticut. Old money, the kind where I went to brunch since I was five years old and host dinner parties that aren’t actually about the food. So you got to give off a real preppy, almost snobby kind of vibe, like someone just stuck a smelly fish under your nose. No, that won’t do, the clothes I’m wearing right now aren’t nearly nice enough. Fine. I’m Lee. UCLA graduate (my beard is grown out far enough to look 23), played volleyball in high school, golden boy of the family. It’s important to nail the Cali vibes, a kind of relaxed, casual fit like you live on the beach and you have a 4.0 GPA without even studying. Supreme confidence. That’s our persona. We can work from there. Becoming is like breathing. If you think about it too much, you start getting in your own head and wondering how you even do it in the first place. You have to feel your way through it purely by instinct, and tailor who you have to become as the conversation continues. My two favorite places to become someone else are Uber car rides and barbershops. Short-lived interactions, relatively inconsequential, yet incredibly fun because no one loves to learn more about you in a quicker amount of time than drivers or hairstylists. It’s their speedy questioning that really allows you to become an expert in crafting entire life anecdotes from the unexpected. Once on a 5 AM Uber ride to the TF Green airport, I had a driver with an incessant chattiness level that was inappropriate for the absurdly early hour. Over the course of the twenty-minute ride I became a burgeoning stand-up comedian who was off to New York to run a couple gigs for the weekend. I can’t tell jokes for shit, but the driver didn’t seem to notice. It’s always a problem when you have to meet someone multiple times after becoming someone else. As I said, lying’s only fun when there aren’t any consequences. To this day, I have to remember that at my local barbershop back in Akron, I’m Jay who goes to Ohio State when it’s Denise working, but Fabio who has his own online start-up if it’s Eric cutting my hair. When I first started becoming, I would run into problems with so many co-existing versions of myself. Not anymore. The trick to remember is that you aren’t yourself—Jay is Jay and Fabio is Fabio, and neither of them are Srikar. Now, even when I make an identity mistake, I just seamlessly chalk it up to an entirely new persona. Lately I’ve been wondering why I take part in this mostly harmless, yet somewhat morally compromising pastime. Again, I swear, I don’t really try to. It started like how I imagine most people start lying: to protect myself. Growing up with an incredibly shy personality made it hard to reach out to new people and put my personality out there, so I didn’t. I simply put out someone else’s personality instead. Whenever I became Stanley, or Lee, or Jay, I felt as if there was an extra blanket of protection between me and the harsh blizzard of the real world seeking to delve into and expose my every flaw while leaving me frozen in the cold. Over time, I began to gradually inject more and more of my own being into each persona, until one day, I didn’t have to become anymore. To be frank, I’m not sure if I actually stopped, or if all of my personas simply merged into myself. Nevertheless, I attribute my little lying escapades as the reason why I, as my real self, have become much more comfortable with talking to others and engaging in social environments. I no longer have to become. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that I still don’t want to. Nowadays, I don’t feel the need to protect myself or to hide. I choose to become someone else to escape from myself for a little bit, to pass the time when I’m bored, or just because I want to have some fun. After spending so much time with my own personality in a single burnt-caramel skin, it’s nice to be able to be someone new from time to time. It’s a chance to explore all the people that I could have been in life but chose not to, and live in a multitude of alternate realities, even if only for a few moments. The last step of becoming is learning how to stop and return to yourself. How to keep what happens to Stanley Duncan isolated in Stanley’s life, and not Srikar’s. When I was younger, I made the mistake of letting my identities bleed all over my life, staining the whole thing red. I told the whole class in fifth grade that I was born in Pittsburgh to explain the fact that I loved the Steelers. In reality, I’ve always lived in Akron, Ohio. I kept up the charade all the way through freshman year in college, to the point that some of my closest friends to this day believe that I’m a Pennsylvania native. I started genuinely forgetting where the falsehoods were in my personal life. Where do I end and another version of me begin? Is something still a lie if everyone in the world believes in it? After enough time, you start to believe it too. I think those are the best lies of all. And who knows, maybe this whole piece was a lie and I’ve never actually become anyone else at all. If so, don’t be mad. I promise I didn’t mean to.

A Shooting at Dartmouth

Sam Hawkins
September 16, 2022

“We are haunted by the what-ifs.” Note: Names have been changed to protect identities. “When are you pulling up?” His forced-deep voice crackled through my cell speakerphone as he crunched into another potato chip. “I get off work Friday at 3:00. What is it, a two-hour drive for normal people?” I opened my crusted eyes to the blurry morning light and threw my blanket back over my head. “I’ll be there by 3:30.” “Wait, for real?” “Nah, bro. I have better things to do. Gotta sit in my room alone and watch YouTube.” Bruce choked. “You absolute loser. Yo, Brendan’s actually planning on coming Friday. So if you’re done being an asshole, you should actually come up. Think Steve could come too?” Steve’s house sits in one of those quaint Massachusetts neighborhoods where the taxes cost more than the homes themselves. I pulled into his driveway, narrowly avoiding the tall stone walls framing the pavement. I watched him open his home’s front door from on top of a hill. He lugged two bags over two broad shoulders. He flicked black hair from his face, keeping dark eyes on me as he slowly sauntered up to my vehicle. He stopped right before the car, looking me deep in my eyes and smirking. He paused. “Did you get fatter?” I scoffed. “Did you hit puberty yet?” His smirk became a smile. “Not yet,” he replied. “Some day though.” He threw his bags into the open trunk. Burrito juice snuck down my forearms as I raised my voice to battle down the pandemonium of early-night college drunks. “So, Bruce.” I devoured a wrapped chunk of beans, chicken, and rice. “I heard you joined a frat?” My strained vocal chords weakly combatted blaring mariachi music. “Not yet, buddy.” He wiped beans on the sleeve of his gray V-neck. “I’ll be rushing in the Spring.” “Ah. How fun.” I thought back to high-school Bruce in dorky plaid shorts and bright-colored Under Armor tees. “So you think you’re cool now?” “You do realize 70% of Dartmouth kids are in frats? If I don’t join a frat, I won’t have any friends at all.” He picked his burrito up an inch, opened his mouth, and threw the food back down. “You know Sam, I’m curious how things are going for you with girls recently. Bet you’re getting too many to count over there on that gap year, working at Bertucci’s and playing that cello.” He paused for a moment. “Oh, and how’s your ex doing?” I choked on a throatful of hot sauce, pausing for a slow drink of water. “I appreciate your concern, Bruce,” I said, “but you have bigger things to worry about. Looks like the freshman fifteen is not just a joke; consider switching to light beer, champ.” Steve laughed and Bruce chuckled. Brendan was still quiet on his side of the table. “Brendan, how has your freshman year been so far?” Steve licked dripping cheese off his fingers. “Oh it’s been good,” Brendan replied. “You have a good crew and everything?” “Yeah. It’s good.” Brendan ripped a chunk out of his chimichanga. “Cool. That’s good.” Steve paused for a moment, then returned to his feast. Bruce reached into his closet and dug out two hats, Mario- and Luigi-themed. “We’re not getting anywhere on Halloweekend without costumes, boys.” While Steve and I argued vehemently over which one of us was Mario, Bruce threw on a construction helmet, and Brendan wore his favorite Brady jersey. In a miniscule, darkly-lit, ugly-poster-adorned, dirty-clothes-littered dorm room, we traded jokes, jabs, and drinks. The air reeked of spilled beer and unwashed clothing and our eardrums burst with screamed lyrics of Mo Bamba. The pelting rain leaked into my shirt and covered me with a coat of wet cold, but we warmed the night with laughter. Steve and I jokingly commiserated about the solitude of gap year life, and Bruce and Brendan traded freshman stories. Bruce’s friends guided us left, onto a side street. Bruce walked ahead of Steve and me, and Brendan walked behind us. “So Bruce, are you going for that brunette girl?” I asked. “Not just going for – it’s gonna happen, Sam.” “Quite the confidence there, big man,” Brendan laughed. I could hear Bruce’s friends laughing ahead of us. One girl turned and smiled back at us. “You think I have a shot?” Steve asked. “No chance,” I answered. My reality shattered only because my senses were relaxed. My ears cracked first when the BANG rang out. “What was –” “Ah, FUCK.” Brendan exclaimed. Brendan’s body crumpled to the pavement, his hand clutching his stomach. My ears rang and my head rushed with blood. The white-trim windows of the blue house across the street were dark and wet. I saw no one there but at the end of the street I watched a man grab a girl’s hand and run with her. Brendan lay crumpled, groaning in the dark rain, curled in the fetal position, alone with his hand on his stomach. Naïve bravery and survivalist cowardice harshly debated one another in time-slowed, primal self-dialogue as I considered whether to help him. I saw Steve dive for cover out of my periphery and I figured he knew better. I dove too. We waited. Brendan lay alone, crumpled, wet, and groaning on the cold pavement. Steve and I flattened ourselves on the dirt floor. After a few moments, Steve started towards Brendan. I followed. Rain pelted my eyes. “What do you think that was?” “It almost sounded like kickback from a car,” Steve answered. Dark rain pulled his black hair over suddenly sober eyes. “There was a car?” “What, you didn’t see it?” “You see that red leaf on his back?” We approached Brendan. I knelt down. “Brendan, you okay?” Brendan groaned, his body curled fetal, his side to the cold pavement, his face staring down into the muddy sidewalk. “I’m fine, I’m just gonna lie here for a second.” I lifted up his jersey around the lower-right side of his back where the red leaf lay. A breach in his skin, puckered and folding over itself, spewed a steady stream of dark red down his pale back and onto the pavement below. I put his Brady jersey back down. I took off my hat. “We need to put pressure on this – can someone give me their sweatshirt? Or your flannel or something Steve?” Steve stood in the dark rain with his Mario hat still on and tossed his shoulders out from under his flannel. He passed the crumpled shirt to me and I shoved it underneath Brendan’s jersey. “That sounded like kickback from a car,” Bruce said. Apparently he had come back too. His construction helmet rested in his hand. “That’s what I said,” Steve replied. “I thought it was a firework.” Blindly hoping my efforts were having an effect, I flexed my arms hard into his back. “I’m going to call the police,“ Bruce decided. “No don’t call the police I’m fine,” Brendan protested. “Brendan I’ve gotta call—“ “Don’t call the fucking police, I’m fine bro it just hurts a little in my stomach.” “Brendan, even if it was like, shrapnel from a car or something, we still need to call the cops.” “I’m fucking fine, I feel nothing don’t call the fucking cops.” “Can you move?” “I don’t really want to. Don’t call the cops. It just feels kind of weird in my stomach but don’t call the fucking cops.” “I’m dialing.” Silence rang heavily. Bruce’s friends surrounded us as we hovered around Brendan. The smell of fresh rain coated the air. Droplets pelted the pavement around us. Soaked, freezing clothes lay heavy on our backs. “God damnit Brendan. I liked that flannel,” Steve joked. Brendan tried to chuckle, but the breath caught tight in his lungs. “Could whoever’s putting pressure on my back ease up a little? Really hurts.” “Shit, yeah, my bad.” “Hang in there Brendan, ambulance should be here any minute.” Steve, Bruce, and I spent the next two hours hiding in a nearby sorority as all of Dartmouth campus received a text stating that the school was now in lockdown. Bruce went upstairs to comfort his friends. Steve and I sat on the first floor in an open closet with a direct view of the front door wondering what we would do if they came back. Eventually we were informed nothing but that there was no reason to be afraid. We were driven to the hospital in the backseat of a police cruiser. For a few moments of his life, Brendan was tipsy, filled with painkillers, injected with morphine, and slit open with surgical knives. Eventually, the knives found the bullet. We entered the blinding white room and saw him lying in the bright white bed in a blue-white hospital gown like an angel resting in heaven. I was amazed how quickly they had completed the operation. “How you feeling, Brendan?” Bruce asked first. Brendan’s bulging eyes scanned confusedly around the room. “Brendan?” “Oh, yeah. Yeah. I’m good.” None of us were sure quite how to talk, what to say. All of us were trying to dislodge the tension but none successfully. Bruce moved in to break the silence. “The operation fully done?” “Oh, yeah, it’s all done.” “And? Any synopsis?” Bruce chose the chair beside Brendan’s bed. “Oh, apparently I’m lucky. The bullet entered my lower back.” Brendan swallowed. His eyes stared forward, avoiding our gaze. “But I was lucky. The bullet went between fat and muscle. Which means it avoided any bone. If it had hit a quarter inch anywhere else I might have been paralyzed. Or worse.” He straightened his back. “I’m lucky.” Steve and I drove left-lane down bucolic, forest-bordered New Hampshire roads. The greens and browns of thick evergreens flashed past our passenger windows. “Dartmouth’s food is shit,” I declared. I pushed the accelerator. “True. My breakfast sandwich was sandpaper.” “Facts.” Silence sat for a moment. “Think we’ll be heading back to Dartmouth any time soon?” I forced a chuckle. “I’m still trying to process what happened.” “I know. Me too.” “The odds of Brendan being completely okay are so low.” I swallowed. “I don’t know if lucky is the right word, but the bullet could’ve hit him elsewhere, could’ve gone through him and hit one of us, could’ve—” “I know, I know. I mean good news, I guess, is statistically speaking, we’ve experienced more than our fair share of random shootings for a lifetime.” “Isn’t that too bad.” A truck became my rear-view mirror and I tossed us into the lane to our right. The truck passed and I pulled back left. “I guess we reacted the right way. You giving up your flannel, me putting pressure on the wound, Bruce calling the cops.” “The odds of so much going randomly right in such a randomly wrong situation. Not just the bullet’s lucky placement, but the fact they caught the guys that same night… and on the other hand, the odds it’s us who get shot at, the odds the kid who gets hit is a visiting student, the odds of a shooting happening at all in Hanover, New Hampshire.” I decelerated. “Think this will stick with us?” “Maybe. Could’ve been far worse though, remember that.” “Brendan. Of all people. Nicest kid you’d ever meet.” Steve had no response. The pair of us rode back home alone together. “During Wednesday’s sentencing, the victim’s mother read an impact statement describing the trauma her family has faced over the past three years. ‘We have cried so many tears,’ she said. ‘Our hearts are broken. Our sense that people are intrinsically good is shattered. Why would these men try to kill our child? We are haunted by the what-ifs.” – WMUR

Windows

Kristoffer Balintona
March 4, 2022

Beauty Rarely do moments of clarity arrive: ephemeral gifts recognized only a beat too late. As an exercise in free association, my memory draws, once again, to that thunderstorm. It materialised slowly yet caused me little alarm, not unlike my relationship with my dear window. I think its gradual pace is the reason why I didn’t notice it. But what I did notice was a feeling. An intangible awareness. The winds shivered ever so slightly, a seemingly imperceptible turbulence in the air. I find this feeling akin to a fun-fact I read years ago. Buried in a forum thread is a comment that reads something along these lines; I work as a paramedic. I have a lot of experience with these kinds of situations. From my experience, we have some sort of inherent sense that something is wrong. When a patient tells me they’re going to die, or they have this intense fear in their eyes — not the normal kind, but a deep, infinite kind — something bad happens very soon. Something fatal like a heart attack, for instance, strikes minutes later. The human body just knows. I can’t corroborate this fact or the anonymous tale, but its veracity is irrelevant — I entertain a faith in this phenomenon. Almost like a dog instinctively barking at a brewing tornado, I felt a compelled certainty. Entranced in my chair, I watch the flash seep everywhere. It confirms my gut instinct. With it passed, and my brain rebooted, I recognize this as a familiar yet confusing scene: Shouldn’t there… CRASH! The off-beat thunderclap shook me. In this tiny space, I feel, for the first time, like I was living in more than just the room I call mine. The label of ‘room’ became inappropriate. It was at this moment, from a mere open window, that I learned sensations could be so raw. Such an oceanic largeness on its other side; an immensity that demands humility. I wondered: Why have I just now noticed this? Discomfort The season: Summer. The temperature: Scorching. The consequences of that heat are especially urgent on my soles. Not the entire flat of my feet, just two spots: one where my first and second toes wrap around the wire of my flip-flops, and another near my heel where the wire inserts into the sole. These particular points dig into my skin at every step. Jutting from the landscape of my East Coast campus are spurts of hills and plateaus. Unfortunately for me, Google Maps apparently demands the pain of managing uneven terrain perfectly conducive to the pricking of soles. The twists and turns in these narrow, one-way streets don’t help either. “My god, why is Providence so damn hilly…” I can’t help but feel disadvantaged for having been raised in Chicago, the land of ‘unchanging-altitude.’ That’s the acute discomfort. Demanding my focus chronically is the humid stickiness that permeates every surface of my body. At this point, my clothing feels more like soggy paper. The household walls across the street and close to my right are high, variegated, and annoyingly bare. With no passerby in sight so far, there is no escape. I am alone in this mundane struggle. The only saving grace from the incessantly burning sun is the relief of my first in-person class. I’m not bubbly or giddy, just expectant mixed with a tinge of nervousness. I welcome the sun’s immense and uncomfortable pressure. It’s too good of a coincidence that the heat advisory warning overlapped with this momentous occasion — already delayed by two weeks, in fact. I tend to entertain myself with my own humor nowadays. I think it’s a habit I developed who-knows-when during that swath of solitude. All-in-all, I consider the sun’s grace a harsh “welcome back.” Inquiry I admire it. My window has an audience. A picture frame of a poem gifted as an off-to-college present from my mother; a duet of flasks, one tall and skinny, the other short but wide; a metal cup with a handle, perfect for tea and water; my ivy plant, whose leaves number more than seven times the initial five it started with when I brought it to Brown. Behind the main characters of the stage — the foreground you could say — is the unsuspecting setting. Unclear glass muffled from fingerprints and residue. A pure guess, I assume that the frame is wood coated with white paint. Contrasting the aged glass is this wine-like wood: age evident but not distasteful. A grid screen sits just behind it. It stops the bugs from getting in, and me from falling out. Most of the time the pane is lifted more than a foot above its closed position. How wonderful such a simple change has been. Shallowly, this story is about the way my window has dyed the color of my first year of college: positively. Deeply, on the other hand, is a commentary on our sheltering, which twists sanctuary into captivity. What have we isolated ourselves from? Without Someone I knew once said, “I started playing chess when I was five.” “Oh, is that why you’re so good now?” “I’m not that good.” “Your rating is literally 1800!” In Freshman year of high school, I met someone who had been a gymnast since the third grade. One of my close friends had been playing piano since kindergarten. It’s a usual occurrence for these outliers to broadcast themselves on YouTube or Instagram — a knack for art paired with an intractable sum of dedication. That isn’t me. My idols, none of which I’ve actually met, tend to have a childhood filled with something. I did not. Vacuous is how I’d describe myself. But this description is all retroactively applied. I say this now with the knowledge of a bigger world, filled with more stresses and joys alike. I picture my young environment as hollow because time didn’t really exist. My memories of a time when urgency was an undefined sensation are fond: such a stark contrast to life now. That basement and even tinier living room was my world, my detention. Existence was what was immediately in front of me: the TV. “Today on How It’s Made, we’ll learn about how erasers first…” “The Kid’s Next Door!…” “But Finn, you can’t…” Although I reimagine myself as being silent and unnoticed, it was the other way around: the world around me was unnoticed. Unnatural. That infinitesimally small space was only so because I couldn’t see something larger. I couldn’t see more of the world — physically and metaphorically. There was much, much, much more beauty to behold. So much more chaos and serendipity. So much more to appreciate and wonder and stare at. When your world is the only one you know, you can’t see anything but that. Comfort DRRRING!!! DRRRRRING!!! DRRRRRRING!!!… There are things that cannot be done when you are in a rush. Waking up is one of those things for me. Waking up is tormenting. My mind resists being rustled. Far too easily, I shove my late-night reminders behind the warming luxury of blankets. In my struggle, a break in the clouds becomes apparent. Literally. I listened to a podcast a few months ago about how light rays, especially those that hit your eyes directly from the sun – those not refracted and scattered through a window’s glass – are essential to the wake of the body. I keep my left eye a tenth open but the right completely shut. The left one can’t even do that for much longer than a few moments before its accumulated nocturnal debris grows too troublesome — but it’s enough for me to find the outline of a certain black rectangle. I need to shake it because I use a special alarm clock app. It’s a preventative measure for a chronic over-sleeper. All that matters is that it’s been doing its job. The fact that I’m conscious enough to have this thought proves my point. I couldn’t help but notice the unfettered rays peering through the opening. Stopped a foot above the windowsill is the bottom of my blinds. I’m reminded of my foresight last night to lower them so that my present self’s retinas wouldn’t be burned. I mentally pat myself on the back for it. I then laugh at myself for mentally giving myself a pat on the back. At any rate, the sunlight demands my attention. It is bright but balanced by the darkness of the crevices it cannot reach on my messy table. The area is bright enough to stir yet dark enough to soothe. I’m surprised at how natural this feels — was it always like this? No, my old room didn’t even have a window in the first place. In my trance, I realize the coherency of my thoughts. I rather quickly raise my upper half from under my tempting sheets, rub both eyes with either hand, and check the time. Unnoticed If your second semester in college was unexceptional, then yours wasn’t so far off from mine. Mostly monotonous weeks passed until any novelty arose at all. But only an inkling, a turning ambiance: an inappreciably small shift. I stand at a distance, across the room, far from the window. Peering through it produces in me a feeling I never knew I yearned for. Even as I type this paragraph several weeks later, I sense a radiating, motherly familiarity. An inanimate object, this window reminds me of our fickle randomness. Unappreciated. Unmoved. Unnoticed. Our myopia dawns on me. We stumble through life, deceiving, loving, becoming learned, then sputter out within the span of a dozen tree rings. What possesses you? Is it your career? Your homework? Money? Has gasping for breath at the workday’s close become routine? Reflect on your day-to-day: has a moment ever penetrated into you as much as this window has into me?

Once You've Wrestled

Sam Hawkins
February 28, 2022

“…Everything else in life is easy.” – Dan Gable A ref’s whistle is not swayed by how much work you put in. It cannot read the horror on your face as you step on the mat, cannot register your strong humility against an opponent’s weak arrogance. It only knows the wind from the ref’s mouth: the anxiety-ridden starts and the ego-brutalizing ends of each ruthless period. Coach gripped his belly and tucked it around his seatbelt so he could turn to see my bruised face in the van’s wrestler-cramped back seat. “Could he beat you in chess?” Hell no he can’t beat me in chess. “In checkers?” Coach, if I could beat him in chess, do you really think he could beat me in checkers. “Can he beat you in school?” You act like you didn’t hear him speak – the kid’s GPA is probably negative. “Uh… in writing? On the cello?” Yeah, my creative talents really helped when he was crushing my windpipe between his bicep and his knee. “How about… how about, in social interaction?” I get it coach – “Yes, coach, I got it, thank you.” I decided to cut my losses and just shoot a blast double. But it was not a “shot” as shots usually go – it was more a half-assed attempt at a lunge where half my body went forward and half my body stayed put. He laughed. He literally laughed, stepped out of the way, and as my center of gravity rose again by a single millimeter, he eliminated me. Goodbye. He had me on my back, my neck in his elbow crook, pulling my shoulder blades to the mat. But I refused to quit. I’ve eaten next to nothing in the past 24 hours. I weighed in 3 pounds underweight, stupidly. And I’m tired. I’m nervous, and hungry, but so damn nervous, about to get beaten up in front of hundreds of people, I can barely think, barely process – For about a full minute straight, he just bullied me. He sat heavily on my back with his knee in my spine, wrenching my left arm behind my back so my left hand rested where my right pocket should be. He actually giggled as I squirmed beneath him, unable to shift my weight anywhere. I should’ve stuck to cello, I thought to myself. I hated that whistle. It only ever blows when you don’t want it to. It blows when you or your opponent’s shoulder blades kiss the mat; and after the ref spits saliva-breath through those horrible plastic holes, he smacks the mat with an open palm, just so you’re doubly sure that you lost. Just in case your crushed ribs weren’t enough of a tell already. The kid’s waist was invisible, and his quads looked like anacondas wrestling and suffocating one another up his entire leg. His calves somehow equaled the width of his legs. And then across from him there was me, the guy who had never squatted once, who had spent the summer exclusively bench pressing and bicep curling in the hopes of scoring girls’ attention at the beach. Wrestling meant something more to me than those other things. It’s a different kind of pain and endurance that even the worst of wrestlers has to bear. It’s flexing every muscle in your body for six minutes straight, contemplating both your defense to his offense and your offense to his defense, considering complex techniques while your mind is drenched in adrenal-fear, your heart maintaining a steady 210 bpm, your lungs exhaling too rapidly for you to inhale – all this while you stand there as close as humanly possible to buck-naked right in front of all your best friends. I hooked my elbow onto his. I shifted all my weight to my right, and threw our tangled bodies into a vicious sideways roll. Finally this bout was turning in my favor. I could sense myself on top, could see my points on the board – yet as we spun, I realized we were spinning too far, that he was making us spin too far, and it hit me that he had rolled my roll. I did not know this was possible. “I’m sorry — what, coach?” “What else can he beat you in?” The ref smacked the mat. I checked again for my singlet. Yeah, of course I remembered it. That’s why my entire body itches. Goddamn singlets. Wrestling itself is humiliating enough, and then they want us to do it wearing a fucking onesie. Wrestling was good for me because I never would have learned discipline without it. As a cellist you just frantically practice to figure out some piece in order to impress the teacher your parents pay for. With wrestling you don’t practice and your skull gets caved in by some man-child taking out his childhood anger on your sorry ass. So you learn to practice. One shift of his weight, and my neck was back in his elbow crook. Somehow my right foot was next to my right ear, and my throat let out a sad, choked-out yelp of distress. I was able to hold off the pin for approximately one second, which angered him immeasurably, pushing him to cut off my airway completely. The whistle blew. Of course I get stuck with the number-1-ranked 182-pounder in all of New England as my first damn match of the tournament. “Uh oh,” Coach muttered. Alright, well… game plan, I guess, is survival.

Let me show you the (SUB) way

Gabby Sartori
February 20, 2022

Ah yes, the city that never sleeps. “Fuhgeddaboudit,” so they say- how’s my accent? Do you know where I am yet? You guessed it, “New Yawwk City” baby. There’s so much to see and do in the Big Apple, from visiting the Empire State Building to taking a leisurely stroll through iconic Central Park. Maybe you want to visit the Statue of Liberty, walk across the Brooklyn Bridge or take in a Broadway show. You really can’t go wrong in New York. However, you need a way to get to these places. I really don’t recommend an overpriced taxi that’ll charge you ten bucks for going one block over. The best mode of transportation is the only one thing that keeps New York’s wonders connected and in touch. What if I told you this transport was a magical place beyond all these fantasies? A place that provides all their splendor and more in one place, that’s right ONE PLACE. What I proudly present to you is the most extravagant ride of a lifetime, more riveting than any amusement park ride you’ve ever been on: the New York City Subway. For a brief overview, riding the subway is like riding a bike; it’s scary at first but you get used to it after a while. If you can read a map or use the Google Maps mobile app, you can use the New York City subway. Officially, the subway is known as MTA or Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Each train line has a color-coded letter or number. There is even a large map on the wall of every subway station, and upcoming stops are easy to see when you are on the train. It’s recommended that you use Google Maps or another good map app. The app will give you step-by-step instructions for getting from where you are to where you want to be, using subway trains, buses, and your own two feet. Underground subway stations are probably the first thing people think of when talking about this mode of transportation. It’s much larger than expected and busy at all times. These Manhattan stations generally have several entrances and serve multiple train lines on multiple levels. If you know the train you want and the direction you want to go, it’s pretty easy to follow the signs to the correct platform. Subway trains in Midtown Manhattan may be crowded every day, all day long, hence why they call this line “Midtown Mayhem.” At rush hour, there is no personal space. Everyone just squeezes in because the next train won’t be any better. The subway is the most iconic, accessible attraction we have. It’s our premier people-watching spot. At the end of the day — or rather, all day long — millions of people from every pocket of society navigate a system where the rules are simultaneously never-changing and constantly in flux. It’s like a cocktail party where everyone’s invited and only half of the guests are drunk. You haven’t really experienced New York City unless you’ve swiped a MetroCard, whirled through the turnstile, and grasped a pole to mitigate the sudden twists and turns that can make getting to your destination feel like a tightrope walk in high winds. When riding the subway, you are quickly greeted by the sights and scents of the station itself before departing. As you peer over toward the rat whisking away its own New York slice, smells fill the air with roasted chestnuts complimented by the occasional urine and marijuana combo as you catch a glimpse of the doting New York commuters enslaved by their 9 to 5s. Here’s a tip, don’t talk to them because they most certainly will bite. “Excuse me, when’s the next stop downtown?” Now, you may be a little startled by your response, but a typical answer would be “Go fuck yourself.” Don’t worry, that’s “New Yorker” for “have a nice day!” The subway might seem like a lonesome place, but I promise you it unifies people only under certain circumstances. Riders all have a common enemy and it certainly tests the survival of the fittest. This challenge is known of as the beast itself; the mechanical train door. New Yorkers will use their newly shined shoes or bare hands to try to stop the mechanical doors from closing when they see someone who’s sprinting to catch their ride. Folks wrestle with steel doors even as conductors implore them not to, because we all know what it feels like to have left the house early and still wind up late to a job interview, a doctor appointment, or any relative place that involves punctuality. No, these doors aren’t as sympathetic as elevators who give you a second chance and reopen when you stick your hand out of desperation. Just like that New Yorker who was willing to bite you before, the mechanical doors do the same. Only this time, they won’t hesitate- you stick out your arm and you find yourself wrestling with an alligator’s mouth. We’ve all had to take the gamble and if you fail, the next train might show up in time to get you to your destination- or it might not. The breathless latecomer to the train car who has just single handedly held up hundreds or possibly thousands of people will draw eye-rolls, but they can’t lie, they’ve all been that person. And even though their successful sprint adds one more silhouette to a car that’s already full to bursting, it’s that shared experience — no matter who you are, no matter what stop you’re getting on at — that keeps them from killing each other and may be the closest thing to unifying New Yorkers. As we continue our voyeuristic journey through the underground, the enclosed train car is populated by people who will just have you scratching your head wondering what is going on. I now present to you the people who really keep New York up and running; the Subway Creatures. Now, when I say “subway creature,” I’m not referring to the mosquitoes gnawing at your ankles as you’re drenched in your own sweat on a hot summer day from just making your train. I’m talking about the guy next to you who decided to reenact his pole dancing routine on one of the safety bars in the middle of the train car. Don’t believe me? See for yourself: You probably won’t get that lucky with a free show nowadays due to the new warning signs that at least attempt to stop people from doing so. Don’t believe me? See for yourself: Aside from the shenanigans ensuing all around you, the journey on the outside is one worth encapsulating. Each station, each train, each route has its own sights and sounds. On a letter or numbered line, heading uptown to downtown, east to west, and into the outer boroughs, the subway is a means to an end. In New York City, the subway is the best mode of transportation we’ve got. Every commute has its problems, but every line also has its dazzles. One of the most interesting subway rides is the F train to Coney Island. In Manhattan, the ride is that of a standard underground variety. However, a couple of stops into Brooklyn, the train emerges and rides high in the sky. If you look to the harbor, you will get a view of Lady Liberty herself. The station at Smith and 9th Streets is the highest in the entire subway system. The elevated stop has one of the best views of the city. If you take the downtown-bound 6 beyond Brooklyn Bridge/City Hall, you’ll pass through a beautiful abandoned station. And Hoyt-Schermerhorn, which hosts the A, C, and G trains, is just kind of fun to say. As you embark on your journey from Smith, the train dips back underground, only to emerge again. This time, you get authentic views into the various back yards from neighborhoods in Mid-Brooklyn. The train terminates at the Stillwell Avenue station, which is designed to be environmentally friendly for the most part, its cleanliness is satisfactory. This could feel like a long ride so if the ride’s got you hungry, no need to fret. Right across from the station is Nathan’s Famous. Get a couple of franks with mustard and sauerkraut and celebrate a wonderful ride. Hit the boardwalk, ride the Cyclone and enjoy the ocean breezes. The beautiful sights may very well be the stops of some A-listers you’ll be lucky to ride along with, having an opportunity to scope out a celebrity or two. Known for traveling public transport are the stars who look to laid-back Brooklyn neighborhoods to get away from the chaos in Manhattan. One of the most star-studded areas in the borough is Brooklyn Heights, where John Krasinski and Emily Blunt, Matt Damon, Jennifer Connelly and Paul Bettany, Mary-Louise Parker and Paul Giamatti all reportedly have homes and have in fact traveled the subway system. The subway is a memory-making machine. It’s a place where marriages have been officiated, where lives have begun, where you might just share a seat with a soon-to be platinum singer-song writer, and where, even if you’ve only paid the price of admission once, you’ll leave with your very own tale to tell. Sure, weddings, births, and errant celebrity sightings are as rare as the screaming, cautionary headlines on the opposite end of the transit teleprompter, but when an obvious tourist or apparent recent transplant successfully swipes through the turnstile on the first try, pauses to applaud a subway creature, or perks up when the train pulls into a station adorned with an unexpected army of rats, it reminds us to take a moment to appreciate those things. It’s a beautiful thing to see when a new commuter is about to experience the ride of a lifetime. So sit back, and take in the beauty and chaos all around you. It’s a pleasurable ride for the most part, just as long as everyone stands clear of the closing doors.

Flags

Caroline Sassan
February 14, 2022

My Nan tells me about a plant she was given by her friend Joanie. Some people say they ain’t good at caring for plants, she says, and I know she’s shaking her head on the other end of the line, but I always tell them: Just keep watering your flowers. She has no such problem with caring for things. When her new plant bloomed, she says, It was like Joanie every day. There is absence and there is distance and there are the things that fill the gaps. When I answer her questions about the rest of my family, she holds onto my words in that particular way people hold onto wishful truths, wringing them out along the sidewalk without ever needing to loosen their grasp. She is among the ranks of old persons who have an exceptionally strong grip–even keeping a hand on the possibility of death, if only to make it seem like less a fact of inevitability and more a question of when she concedes. I am among the ranks of human beings who like to touch everything at once, if only to find some guaranteed presence in the point where my fingers meet something solid. As if a place of one dimension is somewhere you could ever survive; as if that one dimension–a certain scent, striped moonlight through the window–could ever constitute a place at all, let alone one high enough for you to stand. If a thought is merely a point of departure, then it is a place to which we never return again. If life is spent accumulating distance, then there is no way for you to understand this story. The light changes just as I turn the corner. The flowers flutter as if to fly out the window. The leaves flood green over the wide road and I think to myself that I do not know what makes a place a thing you can inhabit. *** When I was young, my mom gave my brother and I buckets and gloves and sent us into the yard to pick weeds. She particularly wanted us to go after the dandelions, incentivizing their capture with five cents per flower we picked. I wound up kneeling in the grass with a flower cupped in my hands, leaning close to listen—the flower was alive! Humming with energy even after the plucking! I opened my hands to add it to the bucket, and out flew an undoubtedly angry bee. It circled me once, twice, and then was off. I wasn’t stung that day and haven’t been since. I was recently informed that dandelions are hydrophobic when they go to seed. What this looks like when a stem is plunged under the water is: every seed equidistant from the center. I thought for a while that when you are yourself, you are a sphere, which is to say that you are someone whose every part is equally distant from their center. Maybe when you are this spherical self, maybe with the water pressing in, there forms a membrane of what can be seen on the surface and spun any which way to always resemble the whole. If this is true, then the integration of your being is mostly composed of that distance between the center and the things it reaches out to touch. I’m not sure. Regardless, I no longer pick dandelions. When I left home, my mom packed five tubes of sunscreen. She insisted on buying a wedge of asiago from the grocery store even though I rarely eat cheese. She inspected the bathroom once, twice. She talked over and over about the best beaches in Rhode Island. I only knew beaches, real ones, from family vacations long ago. She has some infatuation with the shoreline from childhood days spent at the cottage in Maine. On our family trips, she would always sit back in her white sunhat, reading a book or a magazine with toes sunken into the sand while I dared myself to go farther into the surf. She surveyed the scene with a contentment I didn’t then understand and now am too far from to picture clearly. In the times she let me drag her out to the ocean, I felt safe enough to swim out to the bigger waves, safe enough to stop my paddling and put my face up close to hers to see through her brown tinted sunglasses. I’m losing track of the story. Let me try again. I’m driving home. The flowers are fluttering, remember? To my right, a man raises a flag from half mast. I never find out why the flag had been lowered. I think about it from time to time, along with the image of your face in the moonlight asking some perpetual question. I’d charcoal in the moon to dust over your superstitions, but how do you begin to forgive the things you cannot see? I cut the flower stems diagonally like you taught me. They are sharp at the bottom, but this way they can take in more water. Using the present indicative is maybe a way of getting closer to acceptance, just like tricks of the light are maybe a way of getting closer to home. *** The stone skips on the water because it has something to say, but it says nothing but look. That’s all I can give you here. I grew up in a house with a mother who loved me in ways she doesn’t remember and said things I’d rather forget; with a father who hid things in the back of the cupboard and always liked watching TV for the knowledge that thousands of people were watching at the same time. Sometimes there were flowers on the counter. For my Nan’s second wedding several years ago, I made a bouquet of origami flowers: paper that would last forever. But flowers, I think, are in a forever way of leaving. I was younger then, anyway. She keeps the flowers on her desk, and when the sun strikes through the window, all I see is the dust folded between each layer of tissue. When I return home for the first time, I find that even a homecoming can be a way of moving farther away. My favorite scabs to pick began to heal when I wasn’t looking. I pass streets I have no need to turn down; houses on corners with porches to which I can no longer walk up and knock. The flag still remains at full mast, but I didn’t stop by to tell you. I was somewhere else, thinking that if I fall away from every person I want to address in the second person, maybe I’ll fall into myself. Distance, by definition, is the length from here to where we began. What does it ignore? A final memory I offer you: I am small and my mom lets me choose the plants for the little garden patch right beneath my bedroom window. I’m standing with the hose showering that pine bush, the one perpetually dying with half its needles red and dry. We kneel among the coneflowers and dogwood and sprawling tree with the soft little buds on it, and she explains why we have to cut back the lamb’s ear, trimming its lushness to some arbitrary margin; the gangly offshoots will stretch farther away and steal more and more water from the original plant. Still, she smiles to see me sitting in the grass, clippers cast aside, with the softest of leaves between my finger and thumb. Sometimes I look at a flag and see a distress signal. Someone raised it from the froth of peonies, tumbling over each other in a way that we call blooming, because they have reason to want to return home. Sometimes I look at a flag and see you, waving your white hat from somewhere further down the beach.

A Tale of One City: Pawtucket’s Old and New

Nicholas Miller
February 10, 2022

A giant mural decorates the main concourse at Pawtucket, Rhode Island’s McCoy Stadium, the abandoned home of the Boston Red Sox’s former Triple-A affiliate, the Pawtucket Red Sox. It displays a green box score with 33 innings in commemoration of the longest game in baseball history, played at McCoy in 1981 by the PawSox and the Rochester Red Wings. Next to the mural is a photograph of the PawSox’s Marty Barrett scoring the winning run. The caption reads, “A Moment in Baseball History.” But now, not just the photograph, but the entire stadium is a relic of the past. The PawSox, a part of the Pawtucket community since 1970, left for Worcester, Massachusetts in 2018 after a long and emotional fight to keep the team in the city failed. McCoy has been largely unused since then. High tufts of grass pop up unevenly in the outfield. Section placards rest in the stands, having fallen from the walls. Pawtucket, a 70,000-person city 20 minutes northwest of Providence on the banks of the Seekonk River, is filled with these memorials to a former time, which are decaying even as the city shows signs of an evolution. It was in Pawtucket that the American Industrial Revolution began in 1793. Samuel Slater, the superintendent at a British mill, fled to America with stolen textile factory designs and established the country’s first fully mechanized cotton-spinning mill at Old Slater Mill, a site just 400 feet from Pawtucket’s current city hall. It was the beginning of the city’s prolific manufacturing career, which would remain prosperous through the 19th century and into the 20th. But eventually, in the mid-20th century, much of the city’s textile industry closed or moved elsewhere. Together with the later construction of strip malls outside of the city, this development led to the decline of Pawtucket’s downtown economy. Further, the construction of I-95 through the downtown area, allowing travelers to whizz past the city with their dollars unspent, meant that the city became passed by both literally and metaphorically. When former city councilor John Barry III, 72, was a child, he couldn’t walk in the downtown during the Christmas shopping season because there were so many people. “There was not a vacant storefront. There were clothing stores, appliance stores, hat stores, and bakeries. That’s all gone,” he said. Instead, what remains are old buildings with empty storefronts and “For Rent” signs and, fitting with the city’s aged aesthetic, a collection of apartment buildings inhabited by the elderly. Even one of the businesses that does exist is a call back to a former time. Stillwater Books, a quaint bookstore owned by husband and wife, Dawn and Steven Porter, sits on the corner of the city’s central intersection and supplies a clichéd representation of the sense of the past that hangs over Pawtucket. But while Stillwater is a charming piece of nostalgia, just across the Seekonk River looms the Apex Building, a futuristic, pyramidal monstrosity that shows the ugly decay of Pawtucket. It was built in 1969 as a department store for the Apex Company, with its huge ziggurat design allowing for the company to broadcast its name to I-95 drivers while avoiding billboard regulations. But the company faltered in the early 2000s and the building has been mostly empty since 2015. The Apex served as the cover for Business Insider’s list of the ugliest building in each state, and while perhaps intended to seem sent from the future, its sci-fi-like pillars and pyramid crown only convey a lamentable architectural style of the distant past. The city’s proposal to keep the PawSox in the city would have torn down the Apex and built a stadium in its place, which Dawn Porter hoped would revitalize the “sad and depressing” downtown. The PawSox had agreed to a deal with the city and state to pay for half of the 83-million-dollar stadium, more than any other minor league team has paid for their ballpark. Former Pawtucket Director of Administration Tony Pires was part of the effort to build the new stadium, and said the deal, which also included new hotels and houses, was a “home run,” and would’ve raised significant tax revenue for the city while also energizing the declining downtown. However, many Rhode Islanders were wary of significant statewide investment after the Rhode Island legislature had sunk $75 million to bring to the state 38 Studios, a video game company that quickly went bankrupt. “There was always resistance from the general public [in Rhode Island],” said Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien. He said he understood public hesitancy but that keeping the PawSox and developing around the stadium would have meant “more taxes, more jobs, more revenue in the long-term for the city.” “It’s hard to explain that to people,” he said. After a public outreach campaign to try to win support, the bill to approve the spending passed the Rhode Island Senate in 2018, but in the House, Speaker Nicholas Matiello never put the bill to a vote, citing worries about the legislation’s state bond guarantees, which would have left the state on the hook for the money if the team defaulted. Matiello proposed a new bill, without state bond guarantees, but without that security, the cost of building the stadium would likely have spiked. The new bill, introduced the day before the legislative session ended, passed both the House and the Senate, but the lack of state bond guarantees seemed to be a dealbreaker for the PawSox owners. On Friday, August 17th, the owners held a press conference to announce their agreement with the city of Worcester, and suddenly, the PawSox, after 48 years, were set to leave. “My heart was broken,” Pires said. “I think a lot of people’s hearts were broken.” “It was such a good vibe in the neighborhood,” said resident David Lithgoe of having the PawSox in Pawtucket. “To see families, little kids excited with their glove… it was real, real nice.” “Everybody was happy,” said resident Diane Proulx. “Now there’s nothing.” When the PawSox left, they joined the city’s Memorial Hospital and beautiful Leroy Theatre as community institutions to depart in recent decades. The hospital was built in the early part of the 20th century, and went through a number of expansions, serving a large portion of Rhode Island and Massachusetts. It began to have financial difficulties in the mid-2000s and closed in 2017. The Leroy, a lavishly decorated movie theater, was built in 1923 and destroyed in 1997, even after it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. “It feels like Pawtucket is losing everything,” a customer of McCoy Market–a convenience store next to the baseball stadium–told me. “It’s like the wild, wild west.” It’s a harsh description, but I know what he means. Walking through Pawtucket means taking note of the creepy deserted warehouses, office buildings, and stores. At one point, I walked into the shadow of an abandoned school building that towered over the sidewalk. It had a symmetrical brick structure, with the roof forming a sharp triangular peak in the middle. “St. Mary’s School” was carved into a stone patch on the front façade, with “A.D.” and “1890” chiseled on either side, and a crumbling stone sculpture of the Virgin Mary above. All the windows were wide open; many had holes in their glass panes. Behind the spiky, metal fence, the front yard contained ugly, overgrown vegetation. And of course, there was a graveyard right next door. But beyond the occasional horror-movie feel, the deserted buildings are indicative of a more serious reality. The Pawtucket of today seems an artifact of the past, a sad collection of remains from a better, more prosperous time. But there is also another, more hopeful side to Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The most obvious piece of evidence sits on the western bank of the Seekonk River. For now, the site doesn’t look pretty. Three yellow excavators rest beside mounds of sediment in a mini-wasteland surrounded by green brush. But in a year and a half, the site, together with its counterpart directly across the river, will hold new shops, restaurants, apartments, a riverwalk, a pedestrian bridge, and the chief feature, a brand-new 7,500 seat soccer stadium, which will host Pawtucket’s own professional soccer team from the United Soccer League, U.S. soccer’s second tier. Labeled “Tidewater Landing,” the project, with a $284 million price tag, will be the largest development in Pawtucket’s history. The idea for the project arose when the city listened to development proposals for the deserted McCoy Stadium shortly after the PawSox left. While nothing has come to fruition for McCoy, out of those discussions, the city established its relationship with project developers, Fortuitous Partners, and began conversations about Tidewater Landing. Grebien said the city didn’t have the intention of replacing the PawSox with the new project, but added that the loss of the PawSox made the state government more willing to help out Pawtucket. They “realized something needed to be done,” Grebien said. For the Tidewater Landing project, the state will provide $50 million in incentives, including a $36 million loan that will be repaid with future tax revenue. The stadium itself will be entirely privately financed. Rhode Island’s Department of Commerce estimates that the project will create 2,500 construction jobs and 1,200 permanent jobs, and Grebien said that over the next 20 years the project is expected to bring in an additional $800 million in tax revenue. And while some residents and business owners I spoke to questioned how much new business the soccer team will really bring to the struggling downtown area on the other side of I-95 from the stadium, Brett Johnson, founder of Fortuitous Partners, argues that the development will “lift the collective boats in the broader region.” More corporations and investors will want to take advantage of the increase in economic activity, Johnson reasoned, and that will lead to new ventures located in the areas beyond Tidewater Landing, including the downtown. Compared to the failed PawSox stadium, “It’s a much bigger, better project,” Mayor Grebien said. And by investing in soccer, the city has an eye to the future. “Baseball is a slower sport” mostly watched by the older generation, Grebien said. “You’ve got the younger generation that wants soccer….It’s an up-and-coming sport.” In addition to Tidewater Landing, the city is also building a new train station that will be completed in the summer of 2022 and will connect to Providence and Boston, an idea that has been in the works since 2005. City officials hope the train station, while making it easier for residents to commute, will also draw both visitors and new residents to the city, and therefore, promote business investment. But beyond these plans for economic prosperity, Pawtucket’s social dynamics also invoke the coming of a new age. One of the reasons the city government and developers are so confident in Tidewater Landing’s success is Pawtucket’s demographic mix. The city has large immigrant communities from Cape Verde, Portugal, and Latin American countries, for whom soccer is very important. But Pawtucket’s immigrant population—25.85% of the city’s population was born outside the U.S.—does more than just supply sufficient interest in soccer. It positions the city as a representation of the future of the United States, where the immigrant percentage has tripled since 1970 and is only continuing to rise. While walking to the Tidewater Landing construction site, I passed a community garden with signs written in three languages in addition to a trilingual school. When knocking on residents’ doors in search of interviews, I had to on multiple occasions awkwardly apologize and slink away when I realized my potential source didn’t speak English. In this way, Pawtucket, while representative of the American manufacturing town fallen from its prosperous past, also symbolizes the future American community in which diversity is high and English as the primary language is not taken for granted. Pawtucket’s connection to a new America also reveals itself in the city’s politics. In the 2020 city council election for the city’s fourth ward, Alexis Schuette, a 34-year-old progressive, queer woman from North Carolina defeated Barry III, a 72-year-old, 30-year incumbent. One of Schuette’s first actions was to remove all gendered pronouns in city council procedures. “Pawtucket is an amazing place,” Schuette told UpriseRI. “It is progressive.” In her conversation with me, Schuette showed the idealistic positivity that defines progressive youth in America. She expressed intense excitement about the potential for Tidewater Landing, and when I asked about the current state of Pawtucket, she spoke with remarkable passion and pride about several small businesses that have thrived even through the pandemic, and others that have recently opened up. “I don’t see it as a city in decline,” she said. “I see it as a city that has room and potential to grow.” Barry, who, in addition to his political career, spent nearly five decades working for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, is less optimistic than Schuette. He thought the new soccer team would provide some enjoyment for people, but questioned how much the soccer stadium would really help the city’s businesses. “I think people will go to the game and then get in their cars and leave,” he said. Regardless of who’s right, the transition of power in Pawtucket’s fourth ward seems not just a harbinger for new, progressive policies in the city, but also a representation of a new optimism and energy. Still, amidst these changes, reminders of Pawtucket’s sad aging process remain prevalent. In addition to the decaying McCoy Stadium and Apex Building, both of the city’s high school buildings are over 80 years old, and the city hall building was constructed in 1933. All three will need to be replaced soon, Tony Pires told me. Many residents also expressed continued anxiety about the departure of Memorial Hospital. One woman told me the hospital was where she gave birth to her two daughters, and she said was worried about how far people now have to go for medical care. The closest acute care hospital is now Kent Hospital, about 25 minutes away. Even as the city awaits the arrival of a professional soccer team, the loss of the PawSox still pains the community. A woman who lives behind McCoy Stadium told me the city has too many memories of the PawSox for the soccer team to make up for the team’s departure. Even Mayor Grebien agreed, saying of the PawSox leaving, “We’re losing part of our history, part of our being. So I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to replace that.” At the construction site for the new train station in the northwest part of the city, behind an excavator, black rubber tubes, and mounds of rubble, an attractive stone brick wall rises partially completed. While the new station takes shape, just a half-mile away, Pawtucket’s historic former station, constructed in 1916 and closed in 1959, is crumbling. It is covered with trash and graffiti; it attracts squatters and drug abusers. Once considered for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places, the miserable condition of the building’s structure means that it now is a significant safety risk. “This building has fallen into such disrepair, and it is disheartening,” Mayor Grebien told The Providence Journal. The two train stations seem a representation of the Pawtucket of today, where residents celebrate the burgeoning of an exciting future while at the same time mourning the demise of a cherished past.

We're Going on a Coronacation

Gabby Sartori
February 4, 2022

Rhode Island might be the smallest state in the country, but this place is simply unapologetic from day to night. It’s Saturday, approximately 7 am on September 11, 2021. I’m a recovering insomniac feeling the wrath of the night before that left me with burnt retinas. I had a god-awful sleep and, if I’m being honest, I don’t think I closed my eyes for more than 2 minutes. What do you expect? You can’t get a good night’s sleep on a typical Friday night in Providence. You think New York City is the city that never sleeps? Fuhgeddaboudit. Tell that to the Thayer Street motorcycle brigade that hums their motors in hopes of catcalling college girls two times younger than them at midnight. That’s not even the worst part. The entirety of my time in my brand spankin’ new apartment has involved the same construction starting at 5 in the morning. The construction is so close that I actually made friends with one of the construction workers from simply opening my blinds. At least I know that if I ever feel alone, I can simply open my window up to be greeted by my non-English speaking companions. Oh, and the neighbors screaming across the way from what you thought was a party being thrown? Yeah they didn’t shut up either, sick invite by the way. The temptation to march across the hall in my pajamas was at an all-time high. Luckily someone else was bothered by the fear of missing out and took matters into their own hands. Yes, I’m talking about the one of many skunks on Brown’s campus that broke into my apartment complex, not all heroes wear capes. Ah yes, that 7 am wake up was sweet. The morning was bright with a solid 70-degree breeze that was creeping through my half-cracked window. It was reminiscent of the same morning 20 years ago before all hell broke loose. I guess September 11th has a tendency to mislead us with a good day ahead. My nose has been burning for the past 48 hours, as if I took a spoonful of wasabi and shoved it down my throat. I feel so worn down without motivation to do as much as lift my head off my pillow. “This is the best way to wake up before a 90-minute lacrosse scrimmage,” said no one ever. It’s this type of adversity that really bodes well for the entirety of a student athlete’s college experience. Aside from all this, the morning routine is plain and simple. Checking my phone and seeing that there’s 20 plus unopened emails is my new love language, especially the Healthy Verily account that is so desperate to know if I’m alive and breathing. There’s nothing quite like going through a “check all that apply” symptom survey and submitting “none of the above” for each question. No, I’m not on the brink of death. So why should I even address my ringing head that’s completely congested and scratchy throat I have persevered through for the past 24 hours? I finally get out of my bed, drink the occasional pot of coffee I doused with half a creamer bottle, and munch on a crumbled Kind Bar that laid on a bed of fruit and yogurt. Instead of a typical grandpa’s sit and read of the morning paper, my go-to is always a verse of the day from my Bible app and then the newest edition of “Today@Brown.” Huh, an 82 percent increase in Covid cases on campus has been confirmed within the past seven days? Don’t worry, they’re all asymptomatic. Meh, if it’s not me, why should I even be remotely concerned? Departing for the two-minute trek to the athletic fields has officially commenced. It always starts with the warm welcoming of a Kelsey Shea smile waiting in the elevator to pick you up, because just like girls having to go to the bathroom with a buddy at a party, Kels needs me to hold her hand and help her cross the street for any lacrosse practices. I constantly have a bone to pick with Kelsey. She always leaves temporary tattoos on my arms after practice. Of course I am referring to the absurd number of bruises that make my skin tone blue, purple, and green. As a defender, Kelsey loves leaving her mark (both literally and figuratively). I mean she is a captain; she has no choice but to do so. Of course me being an attacker, I avoid going against Kelsey and rather than apologizing for the hits and bumps that are simply illegal, you’d think she would apologize, right? Nope. A casual “Suck it up Gab, you bruise like a peach!” is her response. Preparing for the scrimmage took longer than anticipated. I was in the locker room suiting up in the pinny I own covered in blood stains and while doing so, caught my hair on the bathroom stall door. Not to mention, I was also battling the constantly spammed calls from random numbers that made my phone jump off the wazoo for 10 minutes straight. At this point I’m really questioning my existence and really wish I had a hard copy of “Ned’s Declassified School Survival Guide.” Stepping on the turf and actually having the opportunity to play a real game is sacred these days. As a junior, I have half a freshman years’ worth of athletic experience from missing out on two seasons. And the kicker? I’m referred to as an “upperclassman.” I have yet to experience an away game and have to pretend to assert dominance on freshmen and sophomores, when unbeknownst to them, I have the same confusions about the season as they do. Continuing on with the trend of today’s misfortune, I regret to inform that my team was absolutely demolished by the other team. I don’t know what hurt more; losing, the check that left a swelled-up golf ball on my left arm, or the wrist that wore my Apple Watch. Not that I was checked it or anything; I just had to keep slapping it to turn off the ringing that persisted from yet again, more prank calls from numbers I am probably going to block. It was a hard-fought scrimmage from both teams, leaving everyone sweaty and smelling like according to one of my teammates, “a wet dog.” However, I heard this comment and simply couldn’t comprehend it. “I can’t relate,” I said. “My nose has been burning all morning and can’t even smell it. Guess I have corona haha!” Yea, let the film scratch marinate here for a minute. Let’s just say this is the last off-color comment this story has to offer. Brace yourself, shit’s about to hit the fan. I was in so much pain after the scrimmage that I was craving an ice bath that would succumb my entire body in frost bite. Of course, I had to walk a good five minutes bare footed on the cement and sidewalks to get to the nearest bath that was inevitably closed. I guess that’s okay, at least I was stopped by President Paxton and her dog, Cooper, on the trek back to the locker room. I wish Cooper Paxton got to decide on whether my last season could’ve been cancelled or not. When I petted him, I told him to put in a good word to his mother. Can’t blame a girl for trying. After arriving back to the locker room, I discovered that the showers were of course out of service, which left me no choice but to shower at home in my lavish off campus apartment (yes, the same one that can’t accommodate my sleep needs). Since I’m heading back toward Andrew’s, a spontaneous overpriced yogurt bowl has to be secured. I’m not on meal plan, so the very thought of even walking into a dining hall this semester had yet to cross my mind. What better way to celebrate the worst Saturday morning in a while than with a guest appearance in a place I haven’t been in since freshman year? Not to mention in broad daylight looking like I just walked out of a Peloton class drenched in sweat. I finally understood why this was the first I stepped into Andrew’s in a while. The line was FAT. How was I supposed to hush the rumbles my stomach made in hopes of catching my attention? It was a valiant effort from it though, but my phone’s constant badgering officially made me crack. WHO IS CALLING ME NOW? The one call that I actually had the energy to answer had a name on it. My trainer was calling. Did I not submit a form? Why on Earth is she calling me when I was just at the fields? If it were that important, she would have taken me aside. Since time was slowly going by on the Andrew’s yogurt line, maybe whatever she had to say would fulfill my need of entertainment. Upon answering the call, I was mid-completion of my yogurt concoction. I felt bad having to tell my trainer some of my order…“Hi Kendall, how’s it going – Wait just a sec – Yes, I’ll take some honey and extra strawberries thanks.” What I thought would be a friendly conversation quickly turned into an exchange no one ever wants to hear, especially in the midst of a highly populated dining hall. “WHERE ARE YOU RIGHT THIS INSTANT,” Kendall screamed at me. I mean did she really have to make her voice blare like I was on speaker? When asking her if she could hold on for a second while I settle down and mix my yogurt bowl at a table, her voice started getting frantic. I mean spit it out already, the suspense is killing me! Well, after her next sentence, I think it’s safe to say that not every story has a happy ending. She screamed at me: “YOU. HAVE. COVID.” I mean ouch. She couldn’t have asked how my day was going or what I was up to for the weekend? I don’t know who was more alarmed by her words, the two short dudes behind me who overheard the call and abruptly got up from sitting at the table next to me, or the actual person that had corona. Yes, that being me. The funny thing was that I was in so much denial that I started pleading my case saying I didn’t have it since I had no symptoms. Then again, perhaps I shouldn’t have read the “Today@Brown” statistics that showed the number of asymptomatic cases had increased by 82 percent increased. Instead, I should have opened the test result I received at 6 am this morning telling me I had tested positive. Swearing to my trainer that I had a negative test persisted, trying to change her mind on the news she broke. I mean how hard would it have been for her to say: “Gabby, you don’t have Covid. Why? Because you said so.” One question remained with me after hanging up the phone with my trainer. Why was she the one to relinquish the news to me instead of Health Services, which is what’s supposed to happen? Well, after reviewing my missed calls and recollecting on the annoyance I’ve had with over-the-phone pranksters all day, let’s just say I’ve had this virus longer than I’ve been awake and people attempted to inform me… I really didn’t know what someone was supposed to do right when they find out they’ve been diagnosed with the virus responsible for being the deadliest pandemic in history. I mean, this thing just passed the influenza pandemic of the early 20th century with a higher death toll. Since I could not be bothered with the stress that was sure to ensue, I simply sat in the corner room of Andrew’s in complete isolation, put “My Way” by Frank Sinatra on full blast to really feel the magnification of my situation, and simply ate my yogurt bowl. Ahh, peace at last. The undefeated streak of negative tests was breached and the ego I expressed toward this virus was humbled at last. It really was reminiscent of the same feeling I got when my brother acquired Boardwalk in Monopoly; game over, there’s nothing else to do but surrender. Don’t take this the wrong way, but if someone had to get the coronavirus, it had to be me. Not once did I give the virus any credence for its destruction, no way this thing was real. How is this beast still up and running, hasn’t it taken enough? A freshman college experience? Gone. My best friend, personal confidant, also known as grandma? Gone. The entirety of my sophomore lacrosse season? Gone. And just because I never believed in its power, let alone refuse to receive a vaccination until Brown’s ultimatum, it was time the virus seized the final thing I had left: my pride. I finished my yogurt, savoring every last second taste I may or may not have within the next couple days. It was now time to alert the authorities, or as some people call her, my mom, on the breaking news. When I told her of the illness, she did not even bat an eyelash, responding in a way that made it seem like I lost a peewee soccer game and came home with a participation medal. “Ahh okay, that’s unfortunate. Well, that didn’t take long,” she huffed at me. “Okay, I’ll get the Amtrak and ferry ticket, see you home in four hours.” What do you mean “see you at home?” Thayer Street is my home, now I have to be nomadic? I can’t just leave like this. I just had my first week of class. Not only that, but my lacrosse fall season just commenced. God really does have a sense of humor. Five months of being on Long Island during the summer wasn’t enough, so luckily for me he was gracious enough to bless me with a solid ten days extra. Well, after telling my unphased mother of what transpired, it was time to tell those who really needed to know: the potential contacts. This elite list of people included the following: my boyfriend; three roommates; Kelsey Shea; Christine and Cooper Paxton (tried emailing her, hope she sees it eventually?); and my coach who would alert the teammates I just had full contact with at practice less than an hour ago. My boyfriend was the first one I called, but, of course, no answer. After spamming his phone like mine this morning, I started to head out of the dining hall. Fully masked out in public and still maintain that post-practice glow, I think I saw just about every single human being enrolled in this school. Like I mentioned before, I was known for my distaste for covid and anything it stood for, including mask mandates. Therefore, when people saw me walking down Thayer Street with a mask on, some were confused, but others were quick to realize what was going on. All except the one person that I wished understood what was going on: my boyfriend. The one time I see this kid on a walk by, it’s when I have full blown corona. He finds me and attempts to give me a hug, but I quickly back up. “DON’T TOUCH ME,” I shouted. Pretty sure people mistook him for attempted assault with the way I delivered this shriek of fear in the middle of the street. I simply started tearing up, sat on the curb and once again embraced the sense of defeat from this damned virus. You can take as many seasons of my lacrosse career as you want, but cutting off the embrace from loved ones is where I draw the line. Because of this stupid thing, I haven’t had a hug from my late grandmother for the past two years. Now I can’t even get one from a guy that gives them out like free candy every day. That wasn’t even the worst part. If anyone was going to be at risk from me acquiring this virus, my boyfriend is number one on the hitlist. I gave him the warning, wishing him luck with what’s to occur within the next 24 hours, and even devised an escape plan for if and when he was to receive a positive test tomorrow. Although a Marriot might be nice since he lives on campus, Ratty grab-and-go doesn’t compare to a homecooked meal on Long Island. Thankfully he was showed mercy, an absolute miracle that he tested negative. My coach and roommates wished me well and safe travels for the journey I was to embark upon. The last contact to notify was Kelsey Shea, who was traveling the same time as me, currently in Philadelphia’s airport fresh from landing for a bridal shower. I felt like a federal criminal going on an Amtrak and Ferry with corona, but I guess just keep the mask on and stay away from everybody? I tried hard being as non-discrete as possible, but how could I when I was fully conversing with Kelsey, explaining I had a virus in the middle of an Amtrak? Oh, and in the quiet car no less. Yeah, I would’ve kicked me off too. Kelsey landed in Philadelphia just so she could immediately fly back to Providence after I broke the news. It was a race between the two of us now to see who got home first. Well, let’s just say a plane is certainly faster than a ferry holding a dozen cars across a bay. Within four hours, I was back in my childhood bedroom, resuming online school like I never left it. My taste and smell disappeared instantly after my last taste of a Long Island Italian ice. I shoved an onion up my nose just to feel something. Nothing. At least I could save money on coffee creamer since black coffee tasted like warm water. I was bedridden for days, feeling so weak that at one point I felt like a corpse. How special am I to be probably the only symptomatic case the campus had at this point? Needless to say, my days of underestimating Ms. Rona were over. There was nothing else to do but lay, sleep and, like the Red Hot Chili Peppers say, “Dream of Coronacation.”

A Pandemic Ended My Relationship (with New York City)

Peter Zubiago
February 2, 2022

The Metropolitan Museum of Art stands regally on the line between one of the most important urban parks in the United States and the glorious brownstones of the Upper East Side. Looking at it from the outside is breathtaking – you wouldn’t even be able to tell that the façade used to be completely different when the museum was first conceived. Of course, that’s been papered over now. Similar to other major art museums, like the Philadelphia Museum of Art, this one looks like a palace, as if it were too perfect to be marked by anything happening beyond its walls. Like the rest of New York City, it is here to prove only that it can be. That everything it contains is ordered and quantifiable. That it is a monolith because it was created out of nothing beyond sheer will. On the steps leading into the shining edifice sit flocks of young people, crowding around the artistic treasures commemorating multiple cultures and multiple generations. Nearly all of them have masks pulled tightly under their chins, ready to be pulled up to their face when their reservation finally begins. To adapt to the numerous public health standards, the Met – like nearly everything else in New York – has decided that the best way to keep crowds limited within the museum at any time is to require people to tell them when exactly they will be arriving. I was one such guest. I respected this caution. The more infectious Delta variant now accounted for about 97% of all cases in the city and I was desperate to avoid it. In the city, the average number of cases on any given day was about 1,900, which was too high for my comfort. I did not want to add to that. Nonetheless, I had received both doses of the Pfizer vaccine in May and felt like there was no need to completely quarantine myself anymore. But I would go out of my way to follow every guideline imposed upon me – I had no intention of getting the coronavirus, even if I ended up with a mild case. As I walked towards the entrance, I was overcome by the sheer amount of noise surrounding me – cars rushed along the road, a street performer loudly blew into a trumpet at the base of the steps, fountains throughout the courtyard resounded with their glorious displays of splashing water. I had to choose what to pay attention to. Carefully pulling into the line, just two minutes after our reservation began, I pulled the mask I wore around my wrist over my nose. A worker at the museum was coming through the line, asking for IDs and vaccination cards. Her voice cut everything else out of the way; she was doing her job. Having forgotten that most places in New York City required proof of vaccination, I pulled up a picture of mine on my phone, which felt like an inadequate substitute. I also pulled up my reservation to prove that I was being a goody-two shoes and did everything I was told. The museum’s rules seemed to indicate that visitors had to, no? Apparently, not. Most lines have a starting point and an ending point, but that wasn’t the case here. People were being let in at the front of the line as one would expect, but as the staff member approached me and I showed her my documents for approximately one second, I was told to go past the front of the line and enter the museum. She was doing the same for everyone that stepped into line. I almost asked her about my reservation, but she had moved on to another group by the time I looked back. Baffled, I made my way up some more stairs, then looked back quickly. The line was fragmenting, with some people (like me) slipping by the others waiting in the bureaucratic queue. I slipped inside, with barely any staff doing a substantial check to make sure that I was who I said I was. Wasn’t the point of the rules they set in place to limit the number of people in the museum to a documentable number so that it would be easier to trace who may have come into contact with someone infected by the coronavirus? Weren’t the rules that New York City had set in service of rooting out the disease? Where was that happening here? I expected it to be harder to get in. I wanted it to be harder to get in. But stepping in the grand entrance hall, I forgot all about that chaos. The first impression the Met makes is grandiosity. With enormous vaulted ceilings and a spattering of Ionian columns, it appears classical and austere. The scale and craft on display impressed itself on the guests too; it was eerily quiet for the number of people packed inside. Were they also taken in by the monolithic space? Perhaps it was the ability of the museum to seamlessly blend the old and the new, as projectors beamed text written in carefully stylized fonts onto a big marble wall, thus tying modern technology into the old architecture. The building itself seemed to be pleading its visitors that it was worth coming back: Attendance in 2021 is about only half of what it had been in 2019. International visitors used to account for a third of visitors, but now form only a sliver of the visitor percentage, which greatly impacts the economics of the entire operation, since non-New Yorkers must pay $25, while city natives get to pay what they can. The stakes are higher now; visitors need to be impressed in order to come back. The design of this remarkable entrance hall – which previously might not have drawn so much attention – now begged me to trust the museum again. Naturally, there was another line to wait in to buy tickets, so that’s what I did. This one kept its structure. It moved relatively quickly (and groups mostly kept six feet apart), as the system churned out happy people with maps of the halls, but I nonetheless got the chance to inspect the careful grandiosity of the space. The floor was slick and smooth and I felt that the building implored me to call it impressive. A vague echo through the hall made every word sound like it came from the voice of God, and each utterance carried the same message: There is order here. I allowed myself to delight in the ostentatious touches that made the hall what it was. But when I looked behind me, a man stood with his mask fully off. He was standing with another man, who had his secured over his nose and under his chin, but this guy confrontationally had it off. He wasn’t scratching his nose; he wasn’t drinking water. The mask was nowhere near his face. It wasn’t even in his hand or on his wrist. I noticed other people noticing in the line. This was simply not done. Not here, not in New York, this beautiful city. He broke the contract and nothing was happening to him. It was clear that no guests had the courage to say something to him – I certainly didn’t. But it took a while before a worker summoned up their courage to tell him to put his mask on. Thankfully, he did, without a fight, but the glare with which he stared at the worker as they walked away was deathly. The spectre of danger raised its head, and though the course was corrected, it could only be so long before it happened again. I saw him later in the modern art exhibit, next to a block of cheese with hair on it (meant completely unironically, by the way), with his mask boldly pulled completely under his chin. July 2021. Delta Rising. I’ve always seen New York as a place of great refinement. Fifth Avenue, for example, practically begs you to fawn all over it, with the decadent window displays and fancy skyscrapers. Of course, not every part of the city can be so elegant. The subway system that sits underneath all the luxury is a testament to this. And though it has never been a particularly lovely part of New York, the coronavirus pandemic has made riding on the Metropolitan Transit Authority even more uncomfortable, sharpening the disconnect between the life lived above ground and the one traveled through below. In these pandemic times, no matter where you are looking when you’re on the subway, you will always see a sign that tells you that masks are required and must be worn correctly. Most of these signs are bright yellow, with cartoon faces drawn over them. These little faces are surprisingly cute – the folks over on Madison Avenue did a good job on the design – but there’s a strange harshness to it all. For one, the masks really do look like they’re suffocating the animated faces, especially the faces that are double masked. There’s secure and then there’s muzzled, and these pictures come way too close to the latter. One variant of this ad campaign completely betrays the sincerity of the public health crisis. It depicts two people talking without masks underneath a caption that says “Bad.” Fair enough. The next scene shows two people talking, but wearing masks securely. “Better,” the caption reads. To close out the sequence, the two people are silently looking down at their phones or books. The caption: “Best.” Great. While it is a relatively harmless ad, it speaks to the wide disconnect between the enforceable, rigid policies that the city and state governments are trying to enact and the mundane manner in which people go about their lives. It’s bold of the MTA to assume that people are willing to give up talking to each other for the sake of preventing the spread of the coronavirus. It’s not even like this is a particularly dangerous situation – although the close-quarters of the subway are not at all conducive to social distancing, if people are wearing a mask, why tell them that they can’t talk? Why even put an ad out there that even suggests muzzling yourself when you put a mask on? The ads are a parody of themselves, so convinced that they’re showcasing safety on a subway, when they’re actually parroting a strange reality that maybe suggests that communicating with others is not allowed. I wouldn’t mind, but they also seem to be failing to inspire subway riders of anything either. Masks are supposedly required to ride on the subways, yet on any given ride, there are two to three people forgoing that requirement. After all, who’s enforcing it? In a city of rugged individualists, who am I – a mere weekend visitor to this metropolis – to tell them what to do? The city certainly can’t afford to hire workers whose only job is to make sure every passenger on the subway is following the rules. Besides, there is evidence that public transportation is not a serious Covid-19 risk, provided that riders are masked and subway cars aren’t stuffed full of passengers. There’s not a threat of the subways becoming that packed for a long time – ridership on subways in the city is still only at about 50% of pre-pandemic levels. So what’s the use of me sticking my neck out to call someone else out? It’s easier to make peace with the fact that the rules aren’t always going to be followed. In July, I was taking the train downtown to get on a ferry to Rockaway Beach. A large white man entered the subway car without a mask on. When he took a seat across from me, I tried hard not to make eye contact. He was a big guy and clearly knew that he was an outlier on the train. Apparently, that status was a hard pill for him to swallow, because he looked just about ready to fight anyone that dared to challenge his lack of mask wearing. Confusingly, he was wearing a Boston T-shirt and a New York Yankees hat. I guess he was just conflicted. Regardless, I didn’t know what to do. Signs everywhere within sight said that everyone was required to wear a mask, regardless of their vaccination status. This man just knew that that didn’t apply to him. But should I say something? A quick look around the train told me no. No one else even batted an eye. When in Rome, I guess. The silence surrounding this guy sucked all the energy out of the train car. It wasn’t quite so much that he was going to ignite a super spreader event (he probably wasn’t, at least, not right now) as it was that he willfully balked at the rules set to protect public health. This guy – yawning and making faces into his phone – was upending the social norms of New York City. And all he did was ignore some words, some ideas, plastered as bright yellow warnings on the walls surrounding him. He’s no hero, that’s for sure. But he proved so succinctly the falsity of the promise that lies at the heart of this metropolis: People will not, in fact, conform to order. June 2021. Light at the End of the Tunnel? I ate at a restaurant in Midtown called Chop-Shop when cases were low. I walked there directly from the shiny new Moynihan Train Hall, a cosmetic upgrade to Penn Station (even if it was probably an unnecessary one), with my girlfriend at the time, Caroline. It was raining, so even though it wasn’t exactly far – maybe half a mile or so – the two of us were drenched upon arrival. We were meeting some of Caroline’s friends, Anna and Gigi, there for her birthday celebration and they had initially planned a whole night out, but since they had all been activities for outside and it was currently pouring, it had been pared down to just dinner. I was excited to have a lux (though not luxury) meal in a restaurant, since it had been over a year since I had done so. Chop-Shop is a tiny little place, with perhaps 10-12 tables in the front section and perhaps half that number in a back section. An old street sign from a trading post in Chinatown hangs on the wall, looming large over the small room and giving the whole place a feeling of history. I got the sense that this restaurant’s roots go very deep into New York’s Asian community. As I looked at it, it left me thinking about the time I went to a restaurant in Boston’s Chinatown with my sisters, where we were embarrassed to be the only people in the restaurant that spoke English as our first language. From there, I flashed back to when I walked through San Francisco’s Chinatown with my mother and, for the first time, saw a wet market. It made me think of another wet market in Wuhan. But I was spiraling down a rabbit hole of generalized, probably racist associations that led me to one of the most pressing social disruptions the world had ever seen. The tight intimacy of the small place was nice. I was shocked by how much I had missed being in a restaurant. The smells wafting in from the kitchen, the dim clatter of forks and knives on dishes, the animated conversations that people get carried away in – all of it enveloped me in a warm embrace, like a warm blanket wrapped tight during a thunderstorm. I felt thankful that this place had made it through the worst of the pandemic over through the winter. Now, people were starting to get vaccinated and everything was safer. This was going to be a flawless dinner. Apparently, there was no table for us when we arrived. So, I guess it wasn’t going to be flawless after all. We waited about 15 minutes for a table large enough for our group of four, even though we had a reservation. As we waited, I started talking with Gigi, who struck me as a highly social person. It might’ve been the fact that she took it upon herself to say hello to everyone that walked into the restaurant and looked at her for a second too long. Her parents owned a restaurant in Worcester, Massachusetts, so she was being very patient for the restaurant to get itself in order. She asked me about myself, wanting to know what I did, what sort of circles I ran in, what I wanted to do with my life, all that jazz. As I spoke with her about myself – something I hate doing and had, thankfully, been spared from because the pandemic had made meeting new people extremely difficult – Anna and Caroline were commiserating over how frustrating it was that there were no open tables, despite having a reservation. Anna was standing quietly, with her arms crossed across her chest and assuming a stance that said “You messed up” to the waitstaff. Eventually, a host came over while Gigi was explaining the musical she was currently writing and led us off to a table. When we were seated, we looked over the menus and quickly debated what we should get. Should we go for fried rice? Or curry? What about lo mein? Nothing on the slate sounded anything less than delicious. I proposed getting pork dumplings as an appetizer, not realizing that Anna and Gigi were vegetarian and the idea was scuttled, until Caroline proposed vegetable dumplings. Not a crime, but a disappointment. I had forgotten what it meant to be beholden to others when ordering for a group. A waiter arrived and we ordered some drinks, but needed more time for the food. When drinks arrived, none of us could agree on which ones were good and which ones were not. For my part, I liked the beer I had ordered and Caroline’s Moscow mule, but was not particularly enthused by Gigi’s cucumber gin and tonic, which was otherwise a big hit. Anna seemed to take personal offense to my taste in drinks and told me that I had a simplistic palate. I think it was meant as a joke, but I couldn’t be sure. Eager to avoid rocking the boat, I took great care to not say anything controversial (i.e. share my opinions about anything) for the rest of the night. A new group was seated near us while we waited for our food to come. They were an especially loud group and it was very easy for us to overhear what they were talking about. We listened all night. Unfortunately, they mostly talked about politics, and, suffice to say, they had different opinions on matters than anyone at my table had. However, what was more uncomfortable was how clear it became that one of them was vaguely sick. There was an irregular, but throaty, coughing emanating from one of them, and each time that she did it, the four of us looked at each other with a little panic. Our food could not come out fast enough, so we could eat and move away. And when it did, it actually did not. A waiter mistakenly brought us another table’s dishes, though the matter was quickly sorted out without any fuss. As we continued to wait, Caroline, as is her custom, blew out the candle on our table, negating its warm glow. Something was lost then; the whole project of going to a restaurant with a group suddenly seemed less appealing than it had just an hour earlier. The food arrived to save me from solipsism. We all ate voraciously, trying each other’s dishes and licking each plate clean. The fried rice I ordered was satisfying to the extreme – the savory saltiness forced me to continue plunging my fork into the deep dish. I was, however, even more impressed by the curry Gigi ordered at Anna’s suggestion, which was perfectly absorbed by the white rice that accompanied it, making a warm, richly spicy feast. I told Anna that she had good taste, in an effort to smooth over the tension that had been percolating all night. She scoffed, but I think she appreciated my effort. It was hard to talk with her. All in all, I proclaimed to the table, this had to be one of the greatest dinners I had ever eaten. Everyone – even Anna – agreed, and I felt that the two of us had finally found some common ground. If only there hadn’t been an ominous coughing emanating from the neighboring table. With each belch all four of us stiffened, our bodies physically unsure of whether we should rush through the meal or drop everything and leave. Was the risk of the coronavirus really worth the excellent food? To say that felt disingenuous, especially when the restaurant business has been so hard hit by the pandemic. New York’s dining scene has been impacted even more than in other places, with 54% of restaurants saying in January 2021 that they could not survive the next 6 months without federal aid, compared with 34% nationwide. Nearly 1,000 eateries had been closed since the beginning of the pandemic in the city alone, and that number is almost certainly an underestimate. But in spite of the plight of restaurant workers and owners, I was uncomfortable sitting in a tightly packed, small restaurant. The city closed down sections of some avenues uptown to let restaurants build outdoor seating on the weekend, but that wasn’t a possibility down here, and though it wasn’t a weekend, the rain made it undesirable too. There was so much effort put into making dining out seem safe, but it wasn’t exactly working. It just looked like effort. When the bill came, the four of us decided to split it. Naturally, there was debate as to how to do so. Anna, who had ordered one of the more expensive meals, wanted us to just split the meal four ways, but I didn’t think that was fair, given that my fried rice was not nearly as costly as her poached salmon. The one thing about eating out that I never for a second missed was splitting up payment. It always hurts somebody, usually the person who bought the most expensive things. It was no different this time, with Anna leaving a little mad at the rest of us for not covering her meal. We split off into pairs after that meal, since Anna and Gigi wanted to meander around midtown for a bit, while I was eager to put my things down and relax. I took the C train with Caroline to 109th Street, and we walked through the city thinking about how odd the concrete skyscrapers looked as they intruded into the night sky that floated high above us, vast, formless, dark, and free. March 2020. The End of the World. I had a ticket to see Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? – my favorite play – on Broadway on March 25, 2020. It was going to be the first time I would have been in the city by myself. I was excited to explore the vibrant, bustling place and get lost in the concrete jungle. I wasn’t even going to have to pay for a hotel – an old friend of mine was going to let me stay with her. It was going to be perfect. Then, I got an email, one that still sits in my inbox, even though I compulsively delete everything. It arrived in my inbox on March 12, telling me that I would not, in fact, be seeing Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? on Broadway on March 25, 2020. In truth, I had known such a message was coming, since by that point it was clear that the world was folding in on itself. My heart sank anyway. But I was not to worry, the email said, because “performances beyond April 12th are still on sale and are expected to play.” As that date kept getting pushed back, 51,000 members of the Actor’s Equity Association lost their jobs. In the television and film industries, nearly 295,000 (including movie theater workers) people lost work. The performing arts – long centered in the Big Apple – withered. Nearly a year and a half later, Broadway made its big return. It has since been marred with cancellations and restrictions, as cast and crew members continue to contract the coronavirus. Some productions haven’t been able to manage these cancellations and have had to close. It’s no longer a draw. It no longer feels safe, even if it is. People suffered, lost their jobs, and were told it would be fine soon. It is still not fine. Governor Andrew Cuomo made the directive to close down Broadway. At the time, he seemed like he was doing a pretty great job containing the coronavirus. In releasing a message on March 12, 2020 that all but admitted the city was unsafe, however inadvertently, he shut off the lights of New York City.

Cool As Quahog

Alex Waxman
January 26, 2022

The operation was set up with one white regatta tent outside the main mail office on the University campus. From a distance, it seemed as if it were another school-board sanctioned activity, like a food-truck festival, or any of the other bread and circus acts they allotted the undergraduates over the course of the year. Upon further inspection, however, the rag-tag, hastily put together construction, coupled with the man carrying a clipboard on the lookout for campus security, told a very different story. The tent was loaded with clothing: black and turquoise snapback hats, chuck tees, and all manner of jackets both appropriate and otherwise for the tepid mid-autumn climate. Students milled in and out, a crack of laughter rising from pairs trying on clothes? They had no thoughts of purchasing, and serious fashion collectors pawed through hangers as if they were handling gemstone necklaces in a jewelry store. I went up to the man serving lookout and took note of the clean sweatshirt he was wearing from Tyler the Creator’s designer line, GOLF, his Nike sports cap, and the fanny-pack he had repurposed over his shoulder as a cash bag. Once it became clear my intention was not to turn the operation over to the administration, he visibly relaxed, telling me that his name was JP. He couldn’t answer questions while handling the mock-register, so he called over his business partner, JC, another young man wearing faded blue jeans and a NASCAR branded long sleeve white tee-shirt. He told me that they hit up universities across the northeast with their moving thrift store. I asked him what he liked about thrifting, which he laughed at. “I don’t thrift,” he said, beaming, “I curate.” I considered the pop-up scene for a while and wondered what this meant for the secondhand clothing market at Providence, including the Providence flea market I had attended a week prior. I had been excited to learn that Providence, Rhode Island was home to a Sunday flea market. Better yet, it was one described to me by the liquor store owner as “very weird.” Providence was first described to me as being “weird.” This quirkiness is in part an artificial operation. There are local campaign slogans which read “Keep Providence Weird” and “Don’t Let Normal In.” Regardless, I was very excited for the Providence flea market. I adore thrifting. I should be clear. I love the idea of thrifting. When I look in awe at torn jean jackets and collared shirts with pearl buttons, I can no longer admire it with the same certainty that I once had that the indie (usually bearded) person wearing the attire got their look from a tiny speakeasy in Brooklyn. The aesthetic of “thrift” has become an antithesis to itself. What once existed as a pragmatic solution for finding cheap and good-looking clothing has become idealized and copied. Though people wanted to look as if they had taken those sweet jeans off a secondhand dealer, they don’t really want to smell like it. And sure, it was a nice enough idea that you were going to go to that little shop downtown someone tipped you off for, buuut, that Urban Outfitters is much closer, isn’t it? Admittedly, I am guilty of faux thrifting myself. I have a propensity for buying jackets with pre-worn qualities: green fabric frayed, but in the softest most manufacturable way. But still – in the wake of questionable authenticity – a flea market then is the ultimate thrifters’ pleasure. The crafty coupon-collector pinches savings from hand-me-down booths. The voracious haggler gets to demonstrate their business acumen. The environmentalist is filled with the pride of upcycling. Finally, the antiquarian finally gets the missing piece to their private museum of eccentricities. Truly, flea markets are bug traps for the weirdos, oddballs, and edge residents. That’s not even mentioning the sellers! The Sunday flea market officially begins at the start of a pedestrian bridge in a neighborhood called Fox Point in Providence. In actuality, it languishes out before and after its intended area. Whether this happens by logistical errors or by the addition of unregistered tents would be hard to say. As if they were a line of ants determining the best way to cut up and carry off a leaf, potential customers and window shoppers enclosed the perimeter of the market. When the ants move around their query, it gives the impression that the market were in motion – always marching towards you. The bazar took up a small patch of grassland which separated asphalt road from one of Providence’s brackish canals. Most of the tents were white with the odd black or beige colored tarp. While clothing sellers took up the majority of the stalls, another joy of the flea market was the endless supply of knick knacks also on display. Necklaces, candles, furniture, records – the flea is a nostalgic love-letter to the renaissance of yard sales before the economy of random item-selling was swallowed by Facebook marketplace. One of the best skills I learned in going to markets is to never buy anything the first time around. As with Farmer’s Markets, many people feel uncomfortable passing through stands, picking up this, sampling that, while at the same time knowing that they will not be dropping a dime as they do so. However, the buyer’s remorse that one feels after committing to three pints of mediocre cherry tomatoes, only to find a pallet of in-season heirlooms, feels far worse and is a quickly correcting force. Anyways, touring the stalls with an air of indifference can be a powerful thing once you’re past shame. The large open markets of New York City are apathetic to your existence while you peruse. While preparing to match a similar energy to what I was familiar with, I was surprised when the proprietor of each stand in the Providence Flea smiled happily at my gaze. Some even went so far to answer questions I didn’t ask: “They’re made from real cast iron,” or, “The deal is for everything on the shelf.” I noticed that the visual uniform of the different stalls tended to lean into the idea of progressive, dark rebellion. That is to say, a majority of the hobbyists’ tents boasted tarot cards, books on wicca, and plenty of “I’m a witch and a democrat” pins. It was unclear if the outjie boards were representative of the approaching October holiday or whether Providence was just simply a spooky town. What I didn’t fail to notice, however, was the diverse array of patrons who perused the aisles of the different haunted figure sets. As is often the case, there was my expected mix of goths, style icons, and neighborhood residents making up the general crowd. However, there tends to be something of a code for these groups. The goths get the occult stands. New couples get the scented candle outlets. Environmentalists lug their bucket of mystery compost into the drop off point, then they leave without doing anything else. These archetypes keep to themselves, and when they pass each other, they do so quickly and quietly with the purpose of people with places far better to be than near each other. The status quo is preserved. In the flea market by the waterfront of Providence, this couldn’t have been more untrue. Grandparents picked up crow skulls, admiring their weight. Record junkies smiled at stamp collectors. Pastel colors embraced a shadow, and I realized a goth was being hugged! By someone in tie-dye! I tried to express my concerns to one of the more niche store owners: a man selling antique travel booklets and maps. He laughed. “There’s so many weird people here,” he told me. “They just like each other.” And they were weird. It was impossible to explain. Small mannerisms and ticks, clashing color combinations, and off-mainstream greetings exchanged. Even the layout of the event itself was weird in retrospect. Although the outermost parts of the tents faced the adjacent canal, the middle section of the tents followed no pattern at all. It appeared that they had been thrown in haphazardly with walls only as much as they felt like putting up. I realized that this effectively created the rotating movement of bodies that I had observed before. There were no straight paths or roads to get from tent to tent; one moved by their interest and their fancies. There were no cordoned sections for this thing or that. In a way, you are forced to explore and to meander beyond your interest. It was more than mob psychology which moved the people around the tents cyclically. The strange phenomenon was, in fact, promoted by the venue. It was strange. No, it was weird. Why belittle the “weird?” The weird is just the authentic unrecognized. I don’t mean weird in the “quirky” sense. I mean it in the bizarre sense, the lifestyle decisions which turn heads. Weirdness is tenacity. It’s spontaneity. It’s a man selling records, but he’s a photographer, so he’s transposed images of his black and white photos over the records, rendering them useless and unplayable. I passed by the photographer and asked him for his prices. He didn’t have any. I don’t think he sold anything that day; he was just there for the ambiance. Rhode Island itself is a weird state, I suppose. It’s 1/173rd of a Texas. It was the last state to ratify the constitution. Just living in Providence is to be a part of an inside joke. While they maintained a certain tackiness, there was also an unabashed genuineness to these stalls which hosted images of Lovecraft and road signs pointed to the fictional town of Quahog from “Family Guy.” I viewed them first as tourist magnets: something like an “I ❤ New York” shirt. I hung out near one of the booths selling particularly egregious Rhode Island swag and asked anyone who bought anything where they were from. Every one of them said “somewhere nearby”. Here in Providence, the peas and carrots mixed. The grown-up versions of middle school cliques somehow came to terms and ignored ancient and unwritten laws of separation. Furthermore, the concept that you do not buy your city’s tacky souvenirs was disregarded. The flea market did not regulate itself to sell items with necessary value. Really, many of the crafters didn’t even intend to sell! They came out for the crowds and the weirdness of them, offering their own little corner of abnormalities to the curious. Despite an aura of a niche and frugal market, research shows that second-hand sellers are on the rise. According to a survey conducted by GlobalData, 33 Million more people purchased clothing from second-hand vendors in 2020 than the prior year. Besides the economic incentive of purchasing used goods, environmentalists have long praised the beneficial impact of thrifting. By buying previously owned clothing, consumers are able to keep excess fabric out of landfills and reduce the carbon footprint of the fashion industry, a notoriously large contributor to CO2 emissions worldwide. There are many factors that could be attributed to the rise in second-hand consumerism – notably the COVID-19 pandemic forced many indoor retailers to be shuttered and caused buyers to search for alternative shopping options. However, many predict that the second-hand market will continue to grow post-pandemic. Data shows that thrifting is more popular with Millenials and Gen Z than older generations, and thredup’s (an online second-hand clothing distributor) 2021 Fashion Resale Market and Trend Report expect secondhand clothing sales to more than double in the next five years. In numbers, that would mean going from $36 Billion in 2020 to $77 Billion in 2025. Remember, this is only in garment sales. Clearly, there’s real money to be made in thrifting. JC told me that he used to be a construction worker doing 40 hour shifts in construction. He met JP in a thrift store (of course), and having quickly hatched a plot to sell to college students, they set up shop and split the profits. JC made more in one day than in a week of construction. Upon hearing this, I also noticed that there was a distinct difference in the price tag of their goods than that of the flea market. Whereas a jacket at the flea would cost $10 on the pricier side, JC and JP were selling hats for $35 a piece. Yes, all their stuff was pristine, but I wondered if something was lost in that. They didn’t have weird little pins, and the student cliques that moved through the merchandise kept a wide berth. The only real difference between their tent and a fashion retailer was brick and mortar. Theirs was a pop-up situation, soon to move on to the next college and then onwards in another city. Maybe JC was right. Maybe it was a different kind of thrifting; maybe it wasn’t thrifting at all. On my way out of the market, I noticed that I had yet to purchase anything from the vendors. I had spent so much time looking at the different people and taking in their foreign personalities, I had made a full four circles through the place without taking a single item to the counter. I looked over at a flag and handkerchief tent. While mainly centered around feline prints, the store showed off the same pride of weirdness that I’d come to expect from the location. I walked into the interior of the store and checked if there was anything I might want for whatever reason I could think of. My eyes passed over a flag, nearly flush on the ground, showcasing a goofy clam wearing sunglasses with the absolute cringe-worthy slogan “Rhode Island: Cool as Quahog.” The flag was stained and a bit wrinkled. I laughed, turning away from it. I thought about how utterly outside the item was from the design of my room, before slowly turning back. There was a quality of strangeness to the thing – an outlandish essence of ridiculousness and shameless local love that I felt a newfound attraction to by the end of my trip. I paid the man at the front of the tent for my clam flag, and to this day it hangs above my bed.

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