Fifteen years

I lived on 91st St and Lexington Avenue, in a 4th floor walk-up apartment a block from both the renowned 92nd Street Y and the bus I took to Columbia each weekday morning. I liked my route. An M bus snaked north into Spanish Harlem and then west along Central Park's top edge before turning north again and toward my stop at 116th and Amsterdam.

I loved watching the City go by: power commuters pounding the pavement with a bagel in one hand and a phone in the other; nannies strolling children to school or the playground; the bodegas raising their steel bar doors; neighbors greeting each other; vendors selling Greek paper cups of coffee; the regulars hop on and off the bus. 

That Tuesday morning, I felt like a regular myself. I was seated on the left side of the bus, in a single seat if I recall, and it was a beautiful day. Blue skies, leaves starting to change colors, a nascent fall crispness in the air. I got to work just before 9:00 am. Our permanent offices were in Hamilton Hall, but renovations meant we were in a temporary building then, two to an office. I was sharing space with one of my favorite colleagues, Peter.

I don't remember if I'd heard the news before I arrived-cellphones then were flip, data-free ones-but as soon as I walked in, I knew something was wrong. We all gathered around a screen and watched as the second plane slammed into the South Tower of the World Trade Center. I remember gasping, looking around, everyone in disbelief. Classes had just begun, new student energy was still buzzing around campus. It was a perfect New York day. I'd just felt like a regular.

It was all utterly dissonant.

And then the South Tower collapsed. Just 56 minutes after being hit. A 56 minutes that felt at once glacial and like warp speed. I can't adequately describe what it was like to watch that mighty structure crumble in on itself. To watch people jumping from windows, to watch the smoke and fire juxtaposed against the blue sky. To watch replay of those planes flying so purposefully and directly into a monument to a vibrant, wholly unique city. 

The North Tower collapsed just 29 minutes later. Meanwhile, the Pentagon was hit. And some spectacularly brave passengers forced a fourth plane to crash land in Pennsylvania instead of into another DC target. 

And still we gasped, mouths agape, shellshocked expressions on our faces. Few people could get a phone line; those who did started phone trees, and family and friends called other family and friends and even strangers to let those loved ones know each of us was alright. If memory serves, my mother was one of those called.

Some parts of my memory of that day are so clear but others are as hazy. I don't remember anything of the sounds, but I do remember the smells. 

My friend, Jessica, and I walked home together that evening. Public transportation was at a standstill, and as we picked our way south and through Central Park and back to the East Side, I noticed shellshocked faces everywhere, all of us woozy with stupefaction but kept from going completely numb by the smell. 

If you looked south down any of New York's avenues, those sturdy aortic drags connecting the bottom of Manhattan to the top, you'd see a thick gray shroud butting up against whatever blue was left in the sky. It was a shroud of the thickest, densest weave, and its seismic perfume reached up and up and up more than a hundred blocks right into our nostrils and windows and doors and bedrooms.

The gray shroud reached like hands towards the living, reminding us for days after the Towers fell and thousands died and people were so brave and unified and generous just what had been forced onto the City. 

I remember being in bed that night, safe and wrapped in clean blankets, and thinking "it's in here with me, that smell and all the particulate debris it carried up here in its wake." It was an unbelievably strange sensation.

Perhaps you lived in New York too, or read about everything that day and afterwards. If so, you know what strength and spirit and resilience the City showed in response to the grotesqueness foisted on it. 

I remember making donations at our neighborhood fire station. Remember seeing posters and photographs of missing loved ones. Remember the flags beating proudly in the wind. Remember the smell finally dissipating. 

9/11 didn't terrorize me or even mark me much. But that's because I was a lucky one (and because I'm white), and for that I am ever grateful. I didn't know Tom then but he worked in DC and remembers where he was when he heard that the Pentagon had been hit. You can still see the differential colors in the Pentagon's west side: the gray of the original stone versus the gray of the stones used to repair the gaping wound left by the hijacked airplane. I notice it every time I drive by.

Seeing ourselves through other's eyes

I have spent parts of today sincerely gobsmacked. Last night, as I was looking through photos from the first day of school, I decided to update my Facebook cover picture -from last year's 1st day pic to this year's-and then figured I might as well change my profile pic too as I no longer feel like this:

In insane-rugby-player-Wondy's place, I posted this quick photo snapped by Amy, one of my dearest college friends and one of the group (love y'all, A, T and P) with whom I spent five days in California in early August.

I have no make up on, and my hair is pulled back in a tired ponytail. If memory serves, I'd worn that shirt three times that week. Hence it being so wrinkled. I don't know why I chose this photo, really. I think I liked the smile.

Amy and I were at breakfast, on the morning of our last day together, and I was rested and happy. I suspect that last night those things resonated with me. That despite the crow's feet and laugh lines, mascara-free eyes and jewelry-free everything, I liked the snapshot because of what it told me. Because of what it made me remember and feel grateful for.

In any case, I certainly did not think that anyone would notice or care that I'd updated my profile picture. I really didn't. I just felt that barbaric Wonder Woman was a better pic for a relatively fleeting time, you know?

I awoke this morning to a swath of comments that made me blush. I look just like I did in high school? I radiate love? I have a natural beauty?? 

Y'all. As I write this my mouth is agape once more. Beyond flattered, I am struck by the difference-often a gulf-between how we perceive ourselves and how others perceive us. There is a lesson here.

I consider the photo pleasant. It is of a woman who is happy, pleased as it were, to be where she is. But, as so many of us do when analyzing our own images, I also see the wrinkles, the ever-so-slightly crossed front tooth, the lightly-chapped lips, the bit of my part nearest my forehead where I swear the hair used to be thicker. 

What if I instead looked at this picture as I would were it of someone else? As so many friends looked upon me?

What if instead of homing in on and rueing the traces of aging and aggregated fatigue I simply saw a woman confident enough to go out to breakfast without make up (in tony Montecito, for petes sakes!), without bling, and in a wrinkly shirt she might have worn thrice? What if I focused on that honest smile and valued the evidence of it having been made so many times? On the eyes sparkling with friendship and laughter rather than the lines around them and the shaded half-moons underneath?

What if we all looked upon ourselves with such kindness?  

Thanks to everyone who helped me do just that. It was a powerful shift in perspective, and one for which I'm so appreciative. I hope you'll try the same.

Mille bacini a tutti voi!

Hours of cooking, beautiful food, misc

I tell you, spending hours picking fruit will surely keep you accountable in terms of not letting it go to waste! It's a race against time when you have fresh produce ripening in real time, and when you go slightly overboard with poundage schlepped home, well, get your cooking hands ready!

I was too slow for about a sixth of my blackberries, but the rest are safely frozen, jammed, or pied, and today I finished the raspberries. Lots of straight-up raspberry jam and also some raspberry-Grand Marnier. I'll be honest, y'all, while Grand Marnier is a heavenly substance, the plain old raspberry jam just can't be beat. I'm glad I made a majority of that.

I'm about half-through the peaches -which are scrumptious by the way- and have so far brandied seven pints and made a gorgeous pie. I'll deal with the rest tomorrow.

Also, tomatoes. Y'all know how I feel about summer's star. It's true love. This evening I made this caramelized tomato tarte tatin with slow-roasted Romas, caramelized onions, and puff pastry. It's like summer thinking of sliding into fall via cast iron pan. 

Tonight was a tough'ish night of parenting, and I was glad to have two episodes of The Americans to settle into when finally the boys' bedtime came. It is such a good show- Matthew Rhys and Keri Russel have delicious chemistry, and Frank Langella...Oh how I adore him. What an actor. 

Tomorrow I'm taking the boys to see Cirque du Soleil. Have y'all seen one of their performances? I never have and am looking forward to it!