Good News! Bad News!

The repair place called: your camera is ready. I ran crosstown to pick it up, but the battery I had with me was dead, so I had to run home, recharge it, and it was at this point that I noticed that I didn’t have my earrings on.

I’d taken them off to swim this morning, and somewhere between the pool and home they were lost. I ran to the pool, asked if anyone had turned them in. No. Checked the locker room, not there. These are one of the pairs of earrings Nora made and sent me. I’m sick with grief. It’s always good news/bad news. I can only hope that someone found them and is now loving them as much as I did.

I took a few shots before a major storm hit. This is Hudson Street, on my way to the city pool to look for my earrings. Notice the different levels of outwear. We’re in a heatwave. The girl in orange is dressed accordingly. I don’t get the girl in the cardigan and I really don’t get the woman who is wearing what looks like a heavy jacket!

This is the garden at St. Lukes, which is a half a block up and across the street from the previous shot. It’s a lovely place to sit and read.

And this is me turning the corner for home, totally dejected about the earrings and just before the storm hit. It’s thundering now, as I type this.

What can I do to make someone cry?

Betsy sent this link to me: Pictures That Will Restore Your Faith in Humanity.

I loved them all, two made me cry (and they weren’t one involving animals, surprisingly). It made me want to do something so kind it made others cry. My new goal! Make people cry.

A picture from April. I was walking down the west side, along the Hudson River, taking “before” pictures of One World Trade Center. This was one of the rejects, but it has a dog in it.

Philip Glass Open Sing in Times Square


Or, what I am now referring to it as: Another Great Thing I Won’t Have My Camera For. NPR commissioned a piece from Philip Glass, in honor of his 75th birthday. Anyone who wants to is invited to come sing it in Times Square, this Thursday, at 6:30 p.m. Details here.

I’m going, and my friend who is going with me is very nervously allowing me to borrow his camera to take a few shots. I suspect he might change his mind. If I had my camera I’d be taking tons of shows and movies. Damnit to the infinity power.

This is a dramatic recreation of me practicing. (Nora, those are one of the pairs of earrings you sent me! I love them all, but these are great every day earrings.)

I Think My Brain is Shrinking

I feel like a part of my mind is lying dormant while I wait for my camera to be repaired. Also, I just read a pile of new articles about music and the brain, and clearly others parts of my brain aren’t getting as much use while my choir is on hiatus.

I took the shot below while in Boston researching composers Randall Thompson and Francis Boott. Every time I go to Boston I have to walk around Cambridge and Harvard Yard, visiting all my old haunts and the places where I once lived. It’s a nostalgia-wallowing thing that I have always done. This motorcycle was parked in front of my old apartment.

In case you’re having trouble reading what the note says, it reads:

F _ _ _ K you!
Meter Maid!
Because of your incomp-
etance at placing
tickets, I got 2 tickets
on my bike w/o knowing
of the first! Please
ask to be retrained!

It’s pretty well-mannered for an angry note. It would have been nice if there’d been a scribbled in, “I’m sorry,” in a different hand writing.

Happier Camera Days

A fun night from my past. I was the moderator for a panel at the 92nd Street Y about the paranormal. I asked and fielded questions for Dan Aykroyd and his father Peter, who had just written “History of Ghosts: The true story of seances, mediums, ghosts and ghostbusters.”

Okay, not my best camera work, but still!! Ghostbusters!!

Dan Aykroyd and his father Peter

Share via
Copy link
Powered by Social Snap