I thought that living in NYC would be as glamorous as it is on Sex and the City.
Who doesn’t want to look stunning, spend a night dressed in designer heels at an upscale bar adorned with elegant decor, followed by a morning with friends and martinis? Sign me up!
The reality is that NYC is not glamorous in that way. It is actually expensive. It is dirty. There are piles of trash on the streets. The streets are filled with rats the size of raccoons and the incessant melodies of sirens all hours of the day and night. Yes, many people are actually mean, and I have been flicked off more times in the last eighteen months than I have in my ten years of spending three hours a day on I-55 when I lived in Chicago. Lovely, right?
None of that got to me as much as the scaffolding did.
There is scaffolding EVERYWHERE in the city! I mean, there is probably more scaffolding in the city than there are people. It’s atrocious, bulky, grey and takes away from any chance of sunlight touching your skin in the summer. Just the word makes me shudder and I worry that I will have an anaphylactic reaction to the word once I leave.
As I was walking home from a friend’s house tonight, I maintained my seething disgust of the scaffolding. Halfway home, I realized that this was probably one of the handful of remaining times I would be taking this exact walk home, for as long as I lived. Don’t even think about it! I’m not Buddha.
I didn’t stop and have an enlightening moment of oneness with the universe, and started feeling at peace looking at the scaffolding.
I really don’t think that is written in my stars. Ever. If I ever do write or say something like that, please call 911 or come check on me because I must be gravely ill or severely drugged.
What I did notice, is that I have taken this walk home probably dozens of times, but couldn’t tell you anything else that stands out to me about it, other than where the scaffolding is.
The ugly scaffolding that has really been the bane of my NYC existence, the same scaffolding that my friends in San Diego, Chicago, Philadelphia, New Mexico, DC, and NYC have heard me complaining about, was in many ways, a marker of where I exist in the city. It served as a geographical compass for places that I have frequented in my time here. It served as my umbrella when I left mine at home, and the only place Scruffles would walk when it was raining. It’s were I stood waiting for the Uber and Lyft drivers, and it’s also been a welcome and familiar sign that I am entering the building of my home.
When my time in a place nears the end, I realize that the things that I once despised, I want to immortalize.
I develop an urgency and desire to preserve all the details I can. The beautiful and ugly ones. Isn’t it funny how that works? Scaffolding, in my mind, only exists in NYC. I know that is not true at all. I have never seen more of it in one place in my entire life, and I certainly hoped that I would never see it again. But now that my time here is winding down, a part of me doesn’t want the scaffolding to disappear. I find myself wanting to keep the wonderful and incredible people I have met here, an integral part of my life, even if that means, I can’t hate on the scaffolding.
Sometimes, things are special because they don’t last.
Walking home drunk on laughter, wine, and good company… Fully knowing that I only a few of these walks left, for the first time ever, I found beauty in the scaffolding.
