If you ask me I'd tell you, without a moment's hesitation, that I am a City Girl. That's right, with capital letters.
As such, I've lived in several cities, something I aspired to when I was stretched across my bed at age 16, dreaming up what I wanted to do in my life. I've visited many, enough to move about easily when I go, which was one goal, but I've actually lived in Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, Paris, New York and now Houston.
The cities I like best are ones with abundant public transportation, because I like getting around on foot, flagging a cab, or taking a bus or train or subway. That would not be LA. I didn't love LA, but that's a whole other story.
I like the action. I like sweaty, sticky summer nights, walking through the streets hearing a distant sax riff carried on the breeze, which seems to always happen in the village in New York. I love cobblestones, intricate doorways, dusty bookshops, crowded sidewalk cafes, funky one of a kind stores tucked away on a side street and mom and pop coffee shops with writers and readers that sit for hours and are regulars, ones you can get to know if you sit there long enough yourself.
A really great thing about city life is the people who leave their blinds and drapes open so those of us on the street can get a glimpse of their lives as we pass by... and more than a glimpse if we pause. Whenever I have moved into an apartment, I go to the window to check out who my neighbors are. Just like when you see people doing things in their car, forgetting everyone can see them from all sides, so too are the folks who live in their apartments in a big city (my shades were ALWAYS closed).
City life offers so much culture-- plays, art, music, dance, food, flea markets, movies, gyms, stores galore --and interaction with people (and often their pets) from every walk of life. When I moved to Houston, most of that disappeared.I guess it was exaggerated coming from New York, which probably offers more of the above that most cities in the entire world. I was not looking for Houston to duplicate my NY lifestyle in the slightest, but I didn't know I'd struggle so much to find any of these things. The one thing I was looking forward to at some point in life was getting back to nature. Little did I know I'd find that I'd find it here, the 4th largest city in the US. It's just about the only thing I've found here that enriches me, but it's an absolutely marvelous surprise. And it's not in the form of horses, cacti and tumbleweeds, which might be your first guess when you think TEXAS.
This blog will tell the tales of my adventures in nature. I'm not promising it will always be a fascinating read. But it expands my joy to take notes when the experiences are fresh... and I can have them for a time when I may move on from here. Hopefully there will be some appeal to the bona fide out there who love all things animal, weather, plant and sky.
Sunday, June 10, 2007
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