St. Vincent’s Hospital and Triangle Shirtwaist Survivors

I spent part of the morning reading interviews of Triangle Shirtwaist Fire survivors. Prepare to have your heart broken.

From survivor Mary Mary Domsky-Abrams. Why isn’t this story more known and these men lionized for losing their lives trying to save others??

A group of men made a human ladder of themselves in an attempt to make it possible for girls hunched in fear at the windows not yet on fire to cross over to the next building, to which there was a small bridge (or passage.) But all the men, about 10 of them, fell down, not being able to bear up under the weight, and were killed together with those who tried to save themselves. We were all deeply moved by the heroism and tried to kiss their bodies as they were being removed to the morgue.

This one also demolished me, to get that close to making it out alive (this also brought me back to 9/11, and Father Mychal Judge). From Josephine Nicolosi.

When we came downstairs, the firemen were not there yet but the first thing we saw were girls lying on the sidewalk. We thought they had fainted and one of my girl friends said, “Thank God we are not like them, we’re alright.” She went over to one of the girls lying on the sidewalk and bent over her and she was hit by another falling body and killed.

The survivors who needed medical attention were taken to St. Vincent’s, a hospital near me that was criminally closed down in 2010 and demolished. Doctors and nurses at St. Vincent’s also waited in vain for survivors of 9/11. I’ll never forget that, all the people who congregated there, waiting and waiting for friends and family to be brought there alive.

Across the street, in its place, is Lenox Health Greenwich Village. I went to drop off a box of insulin syringes there yesterday which they refused to accept. They were technically within their rights. If you don’t have a medical waste container you’re supposed to put them in plastic soda bottles, which are hard to puncture. I don’t drink soda so I put them in the cardboard box my paper toner came in. It was made of very thick cardboard and it was also inconceivable to think any of the syringes could puncture it. But they wouldn’t take it.

I couldn’t carry a box of syringes with me where I was going to so I had no choice but to throw them away. I don’t know what I’m going to do in the future. Thanks for nothing Lenox Health Greenwich Village. You could have been more accommodating.

Lenox

Apartment for Rent on the Corner

There was a postcard in my mailbox advertising an apartment for rent on the corner of my block. $3,700 for a one bedroom apartment. So insane. That’s typical for this neighborhood, and even in the low to middle range, if you can believe it. When I moved into my first apartment in this neighborhood my rent was $600 a month, and that was around 1981. At the time, that rent was considered on the high side, but still very reasonable. The landlord could have gotten more for the apartment but they were nice people and wanted to be fair. (Really!)

This is the building with the $3,700 apartment. I found pictures of the inside online …

92 Perry

Here’s a peek inside. It’s a nice apartment but really nothing special, except I do love the sliding barn door. There are two pictures of the kitchen below. I wonder which one is accurate?

Perry1

Weirdly, the less finished one seems to be the most recent, but that can’t be right can it? Would people rip out nice cabinets and take them with them or something?

Kitchen1

Oh wait, the cabinets are the same, they are just painted black in the picture above.

Kitchen2

Good Giant Doggie!

I had a great dane growing up so I am drawn to them. They are generally great big love bugs who want to curl up in your lap. Always funny. This one was huge. The top of his head came to about the middle of my upper arm.

GreatDane

Unbroken Brain

Maia
Maia Szalavitz’s new book, Unbroken Brain: A Revolutionary New Way of Understanding Addiction is out today!

“… a new way of looking at drug addiction that offers a fresh approach to managing it. [Salavitz] writes frankly about her background …. In a heartfelt manner, she exposes her own fears and pain … A dense blending of self-exposure, surprising statistics, and solid science reporting that presents addiction as a misunderstood coping mechanism, a problem whose true nature is not yet recognized by policymakers or the public.” –Kirkus

“As more professionals realize that addiction isn’t really a disease, our challenge is to determine exactly what it is. Szalavitz catalogs the latest scientific knowledge of the biological, environmental and social causes of addiction and explains precisely how they interact over development. The theory is articulate and tight, yet made accessible and compelling through the author’s harrowing autobiography. Unbroken Brain provides the most comprehensive and readable explanation of addiction I’ve yet to see.” –Marc Lewis, author of The Biology of Desire

Congratulations, Maia!!

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