A many-storied life

This morning, I took the train to Mineola, to pick up my parents’ car, which had been in the shop for its yearly inspection and some repair since Saturday. My father would have picked it up, but he took pretty ill with a stomach bug yesterday and is only now really recovering. Plus, I was going out after work in Manhattan this evening, and it’s always easier to get a train to Mineola in the evenings. So I paid for the repair (admittedly, with my father’s pre-signed check) and parked the car, then caught the next available train into the city.

It was a pretty normal day after that, although I still dealing with this cold, which just won’t let go, and whose accompanying cough has gotten phlegmier and worse as the day’s gone on. I feel bad that I probably gave my father this cold on top of his stomach bug, but since yesterday I’ve been worried the stomach bug was going to hit me. We really have no idea what caused it, and there’s little that he ate that we didn’t that might have caused food poisoning. So I’m still on the lookout for germs, nervous when noon rolls around and I decide, nah, I don’t really feel like eating lunch. (I think it’s the cold, screwing with my appetite, especially since I was hungry by around 2:30 and had no real problem with dinner.)

Anyway. This evening, I attended An Evening With One Story Magazine at Symphony Space. Thanks to Heather, I’m a subscriber to the magazine, and I’ve long been a fan of Selected Shorts. Tonight’s event, with four actors reading stories (and all four authors in attendance) was really great, and I definitely plan on checking out more of their work in the future.

I’m really bad about keeping up with reading One Story issues, but they do some fine work.

Oh, and then on the train home a pair of drunks sat down next to me, obviously just from a game — probably hockey at the Garden — and being really obnoxious. I got up and switched cars before it turned into anything, since I just wasn’t in the mood — when is anyone? other than when drunk themselves, that is? — but I was…I don’t think amused is the word, but it was interesting when a police officer stopped me as I left the train and asked, “Did that guy say something to you?”

“No, he’s just an annoying drunk,” I told her. Which was true. He looked like the sort of guy who would have continued saying something, maybe even done something, which was why I moved.

Right into a car with a young woman who’s cough, amazingly enough, sounded worse even than my own.

Ah, Wednesday.

It is Wednesday, right?

How Presidential

It was Presidents’ Day here, so I spent the day mostly reading, mostly comics.

I’ve also recently been going through some old photographs — mostly so I can do pointless things like this — and trying not to wallow in nostalgia. I discovered, with some surprise, that my old boss at Penn State recently retired. Aside from an exchange of Christmas cards that first year after I moved back to New York, we haven’t kept in touch, nor have I been back to University Park in all that time. (I don’t regret the move, even if I’m still not convinced New York is my preferred long-term solution, but I’d be lying if I said there weren’t some things I missed about Pennsylvania.

Anyway, I’m not really wallowing in nostalgia, just feeling twinges of it. And it really is pure nostalgia: a fond longing for what was, but not a desire to return there now.

Though somehow, I did seem to wear a lot more hats there than here. And you know what they say about hats.