Blowing hot air

I’ve written here before about how one tends to get really close to strangers in New York. From having to dodge someone else’s projectile vomit to ducking from nail clippings flying your way on the subway, you see most things that people deem ‘private’ in other places, publicly on display here. Usually people just turn their heads the other way and keep going about their daily business, but every once in a while it someone else’s public behavior accosts you in a way that is just too, uhm, in your face to avoid.

This recently happened to me. The subway was packed as I was heading downtown for dinner in SOHO and as the mass of people got off the train and shuffled towards the exit of the China Town train station, the pack slowed down – as it invariably does when the group reaches the stairs. One thing about New York subway stations is that most of them are underground and very few have escalators. In the Big Apple we mostly rely on our feet and legs to carry us up and down the stairs, streets, tunnels and bridges. So when a big throng of people all head for the stairs at the same time, there is invariably someone at the front of the pack who is at a slower speed than the rest of the crowd, so the group always…slows…down…

I was caught in the midst of this slow group and we started ascending the stairs up into the open air. Picture this – the stairway is pretty steep and when a group of people are on it, you move pretty slowly. For at least five seconds, you are literally nose-to-butt with at least one stranger directly in front of you while the upward shuffle continues. Now let me paint the picture for you. There’s me, nose-to-butt with some small Chinese man. I’ll slow this picture down even more. I don’t have my ipod in my ears (which is strange, because that’s my usual subway-getup…it protects the soul from the noise and the crazy people) and I’m inhaling the fresh air after being stuck underground for the past 40 minutes, tunneling my way from the Upper West Side down to trendy SOHO. A slow muffled pffffffffffffffffttttttttt makes its way into my ears, but before my brain have the time to register what it is, my nostrils are accosted by a smell too purid to describe in detail here.

The little Chinese man had just farted in my face. It was possibly a fart that he’d been holding on to for a while, not wanting to be mean to his fellow train passengers. Upon smelling the fresh air, the little Chinese man must have thought that it was finally safe to let that prisoner escape and he did. Straight into my face and up my nostrils, the sickly green smell reverberating off my sinus cavity walls and landing on the back of my tongue, making me pretty sure that he had some sort of fried pork for lunch that day.

The SOUND! I should have been a little quicker, just a little more ‘with-it’, but I was, for the moment, too caught up in the fresh air, the throng of people and thinking about the fact that I had a small Chinese man’s butt in my face, wondering about whether these types of things ever happened when it did. It actually happened to me.

I still get palpitations thinking about it, and it’s been a while since this happened. Soon I might even be able to talk about it. For now, writing will be my therapy.

Waving is not that much fun by yourself…

Google WaveThis morning I opened my gmail account and was ecstatic to see that I had finally cracked an invite to join the new Google Wave! (Oh man…how much of a geek have I become?) I put everything else aside and prepared to be amazed – Wave, for those of you who do not yet know, is meant to change the way in which we communicate and share information online. Everyone who is anyone in social media has been Tweeting and raving about it and I had to get in on the action as soon as possible.

So I logged in and…nothing. I only have five contacts (and I don’t know three of them, to be honest), and the two that I could interact with were too busy to play, sorry, wave with me. What a let down! To make matters worse, I had not received any invitations to forward to my friends, so I feel completely at the mercy of Doctor Wave!

After much deliberating, I decided to annoy my two contacts (which I clearly did as neither of them really responded to my desperate waving much) and then I gave up. I guess, like all good networks, we’ll have to wait a while for this one to fill up before we’ll truly be able to experience the bliss that is the wave.

Until then <insert my hand waving right here>…

Indian Summer

It’s been strangely warm over the last couple of days. I say strangely because last week this time we were wrapped in blankets, huddling closer to the radiators and sleeping with closed windows to try and keep the bone-chilling cold at bay. Not so since about Tuesday this week, though. Forget about wearing those new sweaters or boots you’ve gotten for Fall! It’s all about unpacking those summery things and, for the last time, baring your toes and wearing deodorant!

This strange phenomena has happened every year since we’ve been here and I finally decided to look into it. Not surprising, there is a name for it! They call it ‘Indian Summer’ and it is, according to wikipedia, “is an informal expression given to a period of sunny, warm weather in autumn in the northern hemisphere, typically in late October or early November, after the leaves have turned due to an onset of frost but before the first snowfall.”

Sue is going GREEN!

Sue is going GREEN!

I don’t really care what it’s called…I’d just like for it to stick around as long as possible!

That said, there are some mixed emotions that come into play here. I finally bit the bullet and invested in a pair of (green!) Hunter Wellies to keep these African toes dry during the upcoming snow / sleet / rainy season and I’m dying to break them out of their fancy Scottish box… Strange to be this torn between two seasons. But I think the wellies can wait while we enjoy this amazing summer…

Yellow Fever Madness

John and I are planning a trip to Brazil in November and investigating various options for a trip into the Amazon (I know!!). One of the main things that we have to do one month in advance is to get a Yellow Fever shot (and also take Malaria tablets while we’re there), but the key to the Yellow Fever shot’s effectiveness lies in getting it administered one month prior to exposure. Now we’ve all heard stories about how broken the healthcare system in this country is, right? Yesterday I experienced it for myself (and while I realize I could be figuring this out while dealing with a life-threatening illness so I should really consider myself lucky, it still annoyed the living daylights out of me!).

Only a handful of doctors in the city are licensed as ‘Travel Doctors’ and thus allowed to administer a Yellow Fever shot. I called five of these doctors to schedule an appointment for two shots and the conversation with almost every one went as follows (Consider this – we have ‘good’ healthcare coverage):

Sue: Hello, I’d like to schedule an appointment for my husband and I to get Yellow Fever shots, please

Person: Well sure. Just so you know, Yellow Fever shots are not covered by health insurance and neither will the office visit be. When would you like to come?

Sue: Uhm, okay. So how much will the visit and the shot cost?

Person: Well, seeing as how you’ve never been to this office before, you’re looking at $250 for the office visit and about $200 for the shot.

Sue: <GULP!> Okay, so $450? Is that for both of us?

Person: No m’am. That is per person.

Sue: So our Yellow Fever shots will cost us more than our flights to Brazil?

Person: (Without remorse) Yes m’am.

Sue: Uhm…is there an alternative? Perhaps a clinic somewhere where we can go to get this shot administered that won’t charge us $250 just to see the doctor for three minutes?

Person: No m’am. This is it.

Sue: Uhm…okay. Let me get back to you……

Is this not the most ridiculous thing you’ve ever come across? I’m furious, frustrated and just absolutely gob smacked. I think at this rate John and I could probably fly my mother (a doctor) in from Namibia for a visit and get the Yellow Fever shot AND Malaria tablets imported from there at a fraction of the cost!

What to do? Do we miss out on the one chance we have to go explore the Amazon jungle because of stupid costs? Do we risk getting Yellow Fever and go without the shots? Any advice will be hugely welcomed! Once again I’ve been silenced into submission.

The dinner that was All The Best…

Over the past couple of months I have been lucky enough to get to know Ronda Carman, the founder of All The Best Blog. After initially meeting at a blog-convention in the city more than a year ago, I was blown away when she emailed me a ‘nice to meet’ note before the PR girl got the chance to send one. We’ve been friends ever since and meet up whenever Ronda is in town. (She’s a former Texan now based in Scotland). Her blog is truly one of my favorite reads – from the Sunday Soup recipe to her list of ‘must-know’ designers, she is always one step ahead of what is hot ‘n happening around the world.

Ronda Carman, Paul Hooker and me

Ronda Carman, Paul Hooker and me

So when she got appointed as a ‘blog brand ambassador’ for the luxury linen brand, SFERRA, you know that something’s up! Last night I joined Ronda and some of New York’s hottest designers (Hello, Michael Devine!) at dinner with the president of SFERRA Linens, Paul Hooker. It was an evening filled with great wine, delicious food and really solid company. And it gave me such hope to hear about the great charity work that Paul and his company does. Here is the President of a really successful American-owned company that find the time and money to help those less fortunate by building two wheelchair-accessible playgrounds, getting involved in the Project Smile and countless other initiatives – while also keeping his staff happy! What a guy.

If you have never read Ronda’s blog, be sure to add it to your list of favorites – she is not only the hottest blogger out there, but also someone I now consider a friend. And that makes me a very lucky girl!

Riding New Jersey

The biggest thing we did for ourselves this past summer was to invest in some seriously cool bicycles. Mine was an anniversary gift from John and I have to say that this trumps pearls any day!

John has been taking his bike to work almost every day and we’ve gotten into the habit of taking them out when we go for brunch on the weekends or out to dinner at night. We’ve cycled over the Brooklyn and Manhattan bridges to go visit Marcel in DUMBO and owning these bikes have really had such a positive impact on our lives over the past couple of months.

Dodging the yellow cabs and pedestrians in the city? Now that’s a whole different story!

Eri, John and Alice on their bikes

Eri, John and Alice on their bikes

On Saturday we took our bikes on the train for the first time and headed out to New Jersey to go meet up with Eri and Alice (our US ‘mom’ and ‘dad’). Over the past two and a half years we’ve been out to their house plenty of times and the rule is always ‘Do whatever you want to entertain yourself’ – sometimes we’ve hung out at the pool, other times we’ve just had a BBQ on their lawn and on Saturday we decided to meet up with them and go for a long small town cycle.

This witch got her vacuum all tangled up!

This witch got her vacuum all tangled up!

We met Eri at the train station after a 40 minute train ride (and some hairy escalator ups and downs to navigate with the bicycles) and drove over to their place to meetup with Alice. After a long patio coffee catch-up, they took us on a tour of some typical small American towns with a local farmer’s market where the Halloween pumpkins were out in full force. Many of the houses already have their spider webs with jumbo creepy crawlies, witches, pumpkins and ghosts on display and I particularly loved this house where a witch had clearly lost her way and managed to navigate her vacuum cleaner into a tree!

Eventually we stopped for a lazy lunch and then it was back onto the train for the weary bikers. As we were saying our goodbyes Eri gave me a papa-bear hug and said, “I love you so very much”. For me, that took a really good day to the level of absolutely wonderful! And what’s not to love about that?

Published

Often when I write this blog it feels as though I’m writing into the big black void of cyberspace with probably no one other than family reading these random events and crazy thoughts that I share on here (thank you family, for putting up with me!). But every now and again someone completely random will leave a comment or will mention to me that they are such fans of the blog and it always takes me a little by surprise!

SA PromoImagine my surprise, then, when the editor of a South Africans-Living-Abroad magazine contacted me to offer me the opportunity of a profile piece in the October issue! I was delighted to participate and even more delighted that they published it without any changes! I’ve also had comments from friends in the UK who have mentioned that they’ve seen me in the magazine and it’s a little like my now-famous Big Brother sister’s 15 minutes of fame – on a much smaller scale, of course! The only thing I was not so sure about was them listing my hometown as Klerksdorp…I was born there, but to be very honest, haven’t been back since I left in 1985!

Thanks for the opportunity SA Promo! Be sure to pick up a copy if you live in the UK, and if you don’t, point your browser here for the full feature.

Waking up to Love

Our bedroom faces onto a community garden, which has been an absolute blessing and curse combined. (Blessing: Waking up in New York City with a view of trees and hearing birds chirping early in the morning) (Curse: Trying to catch an afternoon nap while the homey’s or loud old men have one of their daily conventions / boxing fights / bong puffing sessions / yelling bouts right outside our bedroom)

The best thing that this garden has yet yielded, though, was this spectacular image. It was the first thing I saw when I woke up and that feeling of love stayed with me for the entire day…

Leaf

Oh Panton…how I love thee

Having worked in the interior design business in New York for almost two years now (albeit as somebody who publicizes beautiful work, rather than one who actually creates it), you can’t help but get influenced and inspired by the beautiful products and design you see. One design in particular has had me salivating (yes, I admitted to salivating over a piece of furniture!) is the Panton Chair. Made from a single piece of plastic, these pieces are the epitome of incredible design – to me at least!

The Panton Chair

The Panton Chair

Retailing at about $270 each, I never actually thought I would own any of these beauties – I mean, that would just be a little too steep for my budget-minded self to get over.  Imagine my absolute joy when I discovered that one of the largest showrooms here that sell these chairs were having a major clearance sale. This was it…our chance to finally own an original piece of art. (Yes, yes, I realize it’s only a chair, but still!)

John offered to go to the sale and brave the masses while I waited at home to accept delivery of our food order (we now order our groceries online – it’s pretty damn convenient!) and I really did not have my hopes up. I knew that the sale would be a madhouse and I knew that these chairs (if they were even up for sale) would be the first to go. John got there just after 9am and stood in line with Marcel, waiting for doors to open at 10.

At ten o’clock on the dot, the doors swung open and the madness started. Within 20 minutes it was all over – everything sold out! But lucky for me my incredible man managed to get in there, point to six white Panton chairs and go, sold, sold, sold, sold, sold and sold!

Fast forward an hour and I was smiling from ear to ear – six white Panton chairs at our dining table…Life is GOOD!

(Now I have been tasked at recovering some of the costs by selling our old Ikea chairs online…any takers?)