What New York Was Like
Matt flosses (heh) in a Mercenaries t-shirt. This has absolutely nothing to do with anything, I just thought it was funny and had to post it somewhere.
When I was a senior in college, I had completed my requirements, I was pretty sure I was going to be admitted into grad school, and I had a scholarship that paid for my dorm and my meals. This was a recipe for awesomeness.
I decided to treat my year as if I were attending summer camp. I took the goofy courses like Psychology of Love, Nature Writing, and Stress Reduction, made a bunch of short films, and spent a lot of time hanging out. This behavior seems to be a recurring theme in my life.
Nature Writing was the ONLY class I took as a second semester senior. It consisted of reading great outdoor books such as Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, Walden, and Deliverance, going camping, and journaling about our experiences.
I will always remember this girl named Jill in that class, not because I was crushing on her, but because of a journal entry she wrote, in which she said: "I want to wake up and spend the day. I want to truly SPEND it." Ever since I heard those words, they've rung continually in my head ever since. I even incorporated them in more elaborate form into The Last Whatever.
One of my favorite feelings is the one that comes at the end of a day I have spent. It's not an easy thing to accomplish. Spending the day does not mean you grind the day away with productive busy-ness. Nor does it mean you allow leisure to steal the hours away.
It's about finding the proper pace, the proper amount of engagement, the proper quantity of stimulation. It's about the most proper way to move through the entire day, from moment to moment, as if you're a citizen of a small town in Holland, and you just had a some tea with your friends and now you're going for a canal ride at sunset, and later you'll light a fire with wood you chopped yourself.
That's what New York was like. The pace was absolutely perfect: meandering from place to place, leaving one friend and meeting another, sharing meals and conversation, pausing to see the sights.
Definitely one of the best trips I've taken.
Coming up:
- A list of the things I ate
- More photos
- Greater detail about the time I spent with Matt and Danielle
- The Whitney Biennial
- Why I'm Staying In Los Angeles