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Showing posts with label Snapshots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snapshots. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Origami
I watched a girl about my age take a piece of patterned red paper out of her bag. It was the same size as a gum wrapper, but much denser. She began folding it, in half one way, then another, flipping and turning it in a entrancing rhythm of fold, crease, fold, crease. She knew the pattern well, so much that her field of attention picked up my staring.
"What are you making?" I asked, caught.
"A crane. If you make a thousand, you get a wish."
"Oh yeah, I think I've heard of that! How many do you have?"
"I think four hundred now."
"Have you been going a while?"
"About five months," she said, as she shaped the beak of the paper creature. "Do you want this one?"
Obviously I did. I thanked her profusely and examined it before tucking it in the pocket of my raincoat. It's beautiful, with the paper's bold colors intertwining along its creases, which are impeccable despite the nonchalance of the maker. I wondered about her 1000-crane wish as she walked up the stairs, her head tilted slightly to the left.
"What are you making?" I asked, caught.
"A crane. If you make a thousand, you get a wish."
"Oh yeah, I think I've heard of that! How many do you have?"
"I think four hundred now."

"About five months," she said, as she shaped the beak of the paper creature. "Do you want this one?"
Obviously I did. I thanked her profusely and examined it before tucking it in the pocket of my raincoat. It's beautiful, with the paper's bold colors intertwining along its creases, which are impeccable despite the nonchalance of the maker. I wondered about her 1000-crane wish as she walked up the stairs, her head tilted slightly to the left.
Thursday, May 5, 2011
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Like Real Stahs

I sat on the bench in front of this picture the other day waiting for a train. A man walked toward me, staring at the picture behind my head.
"Oh, wow! That's Davis Square! I nevah noticed that before. That's the old Somerville theater!"
"Yep," I replied.
"The train used to go right by there. And it musta been Christmas time! Look how they did those lights - they made 'em look like real stahs! How do they do that? Musta been a drive-by."
"Ha, maybe, yeah..." I decided not to point out that the people in the picture were wearing T-Shirts and that the twinkle lights were actually up year-round.
"The train used to go right by there. And it musta been Christmas time! Look how they did those lights - they made 'em look like real stahs! How do they do that? Musta been a drive-by."
"Ha, maybe, yeah..." I decided not to point out that the people in the picture were wearing T-Shirts and that the twinkle lights were actually up year-round.
"We used to see movies there for five cents! Now, it's unbelievable. I went to the cinema in Boston a few weeks ago. They musta chahged us like 12 or 15 bucks to see a movie! They're just robbin' us now."
"Yeah. It's $9 now, and that's even cheap for a theater!" I love commiserating about the prices at movie theaters.
"Yeah. It's $9 now, and that's even cheap for a theater!" I love commiserating about the prices at movie theaters.
"I remembah when I was in boot camp down in New Jersey - a packa cigarettes used to cost thirty-seven cents." He looked like he'd smoked his whole life. His skin was weathered and his cheeks were dark and hollow.
"Wow! And what is it now?" I asked as the train pulled up.
"Nine bucks. I still smoke, and I shoulda quit a long time ago for that price." We both headed into the train. He went left and sat down. For some reason, it seemed too intimate to sit right next to him. I started to go right, but then I realized there were no other seats. So I thought, 'what the hell,' and we continued our conversation side by side.
"Maybe that's the idea," I offered.
"Nah, they don't want cha ta quit. They just raise it little by little, so ya stay addicted, and then they just rob ya." He looked down at the lettering on my Ski Big Sky shirt.
"You from Montana then?" he asked.
"Nope, just went there a lot when I was younger."
"I went to Montana for work corps when I was a teenager. They used to tell us about the black bears in the mountains to keep us from runnin' off! Hah, I tell ya, I prefer the army to that place any day." I laughed. "So where ya from?"
"North Dakota."
"Wow! What brought ya out here?"
"School."
"Oh yeah? Ya in college?"
"Not anymore. Just finished, actually," I replied.
"What? You must be what, like, 20 years old?"
"Nope, 24."
"No way! You got a baby face, miss. Well, this is my stop. You take care. Be careful," he said.
"Okay," I replied. "Nice talking to you."
Be careful, baby face. Because sitting down with a stranger out of genuine curiosity is what we teach children not to do.
Be careful, baby face. Because sitting down with a stranger out of genuine curiosity is what we teach children not to do.
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Friday, July 30, 2010
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