original post: Tuesday, August 17, 2010
It started as an unconscious homage to Florence.
During
the hot days, she, like many of our neighbors, would prop open her
front door and let whatever breeze existed waft in from the stairwell's
window.
With so many opened doors our different lives
would also drift up and down the stairs, the sounds and smells and
conversations, the T.V. going, all weaving in and out making a village
out of thirty-five apartments.
One night, decades later
in a much smaller apartment building, I opened the door during a
non-stop heat wave, and a breeze blew in and as it came in, the cat ran
out, the cool of 100 year old marble floors and walls too much to
resist.
And soon that door, like Florence's, stayed open as the cat and I,
wandering the stairs in the middle of the night, listened to our
neighbors sleep, hummed along with all the air conditioners in the air
shaft and sat in the still and the silence.
I
miss the normalcy of open doors during hot days and sleepless nights,
and when my door is closed because the neighbors are awake, I miss my
mother.
Co-Named Streets Commemorate Local Heroes
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We’ve all seen them: signs installed under the actual names of local
streets, recognizing a neighborhood notable with a “way,” “place,” or
“corner.” Whil...
8 hours ago
1 comment:
From Laurie, writer
I am loving your blog about summer. every year all of those memories come
back. in the burbs before a/c it was big (scary) attic fans that blew hot
air, and little ruddered fans that you had to stand in front of to get cool, but it was the opening of doors and windows that changed the landscape.
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