That’s right. It’s only a matter of time before I’m swatting at youngsters with a shillelagh, yelling at cops when they pull me over for doing 40 in a 100 zone, and testing the limits of Depends Undergarments with great relish.
This realization hit home on a recent trip to New York City. I should have half expected it in the wake of what happened between me and Montreal this past summer (we had a falling out), that and the fact that I couldn’t drive three hours without getting sleepy (and I loooovve long road trips).
But it wasn’t until I caught myself saying “It’s a nice place, but…” that I fully realized how set in my ways I’ve become. That expression, in my mind, has always been reserved for crotchety people who never stray far from the resort shuffleboard tables. I never thought I’d be using it, especially about NYC.
It’s a dynamic city, plain and simple. Be you in Park Slope or Chelsea, the place is alive and bustling with activity. I could go on with a multitude of clichés about the Big Apple, but let’s just say that I’ve always harboured a not-so-secret desire to live and work there.
Until last month that is. There was a point – I think it was when I was almost knocked of my feet – a second time – by someone sprinting to make a light, or when I paid 20 bucks for an art exhibit at MoMa that consisted of a bunch of naked, screaming people (something that was often provided me gratis by the patrons of the Orgasmic Alphabet Orgy at the Gladstone Hotel – the ungentrified Gladstone, mind you) that I realized that I’m not 20 anymore – heck, I’m not even 30 anymore –and I no longer have the determination, resilience or romantic ambition to live in a place simply to live there.
Also, I think there’s the fact that I am an agoraphobic urbanite. I love your presence, but leave me and my cappuccino alone. I hate it when someone walks behind me for more than two blocks. When that happens I start to give twitchy glances over my shoulder, like when someone is kicking the back of my seat in a movie theatre. Now, imagine me in lower Manhattan with five people shuffling behind me, all chatting on their cells. It would be a matter of months before I’d be having meaningful conversations with myself in bus shelters.
As well, there’s the roommate situation: I can’t go back there.
I am a creature of habit and routine. Running out of 3-Minute Quaker Oats in the morning puts me off for the entire day. I hate surprise and change in equal measure. In Toronto, I was lucky enough to have spent most of my renting years with a solid roommate, but his mere mention of the possibility of moving elsewhere caused no shortage of anxiety for me.
Such is not a good quality for one who wants to live in NYC.
The city’s rent levels demand that if you don’t want to live in a cardboard box, you have to have at least 10 roommates, all with varying levels of hygiene, mental stability and musical taste. I’m at the point in my life where I spend a lot of time peering through my blinds and muttering about what the neighbour is doing next door. I have a habit of sitting on my front porch with a bottle of wine and grumbling about the youths and the lack of decency in their clothing style ( I stand by that still – tights aren’t pants, ladies!). Having to wonder who’s been using my bar of soap, or having to hunt down roommates for arrears on bill money due to the fact that they’ve spent it on Sonic Youth tickets, simply aren’t my kettle of fish. The situation would most likely end in tears, gunfire and bloodshed.
There was a time – a small window – when I could have moved to NYC.
I had enough energy, freedom, and hostility towards social norms that I could have dug in and carved out a niche there. But as fate would have it, I wound up in Vancouver, reading Adbusters, hitch-hiking about, attending raves, anti-logging protests and poetry readings. In the end though, I found my way back to TO.
Who knows, maybe I’m just finding away to justify my lack of adventure. Then again, financially, and not including time spent on my tenants, I can get by on 25 hours of work a week in Toronto, giving me plenty of hours to write, travel about, and work on my dandelion garden. Can working double or triple that amount of hours just to pay rent be considered an adventure?
I’m old now. Which, as it turns out, isn’t such a bad thing. I’m looking forward to causing no shortage of trouble for my kids and grand kids. And in the meantime, NYC will always be a nice place to visit. Who knows, maybe if they ever get a Dark Horse Espresso Bar, I’d reconsider.
yeah, or someone asking you a million questions first thing in the morning, trying to get you to put maple syrup in your coffee. You really do sound like an old fart when you talk about how happening park slope is… heh. Anyway, looking forward to your Eightysomething poem and my 70something response… we can debate whether the price is right has gone down hill.
the problem is you’ve been in toronto too long, plagued with the mindset that if you leave for someplace smaller and/or more stimulating with less hassles, your life will be over! cmon rocco you’re only in your mid-thirties! it’s not you! it’s toronto churning out cynics and cranks!
nothing wrong with getting older, but getting crabbier is another story – getting older requires a lot of freakin patience especially with the new ways, the young ways…
the most surprising thing about your article is not that you are getting crankier but you mentioning having children and grandchildren, which is the first time i have ever heard those words coming from you and used in that context…now there’s nothing wrong with that of course, it’s about time actually – just thought i’d point that out! :)
its those moments at Bass Lake, or the northern highways that call out louder. I believe we all need to run to the urban lands to recharge and enjoy the human condition. nothing to do with age.