The private mood of New York City

It’s a chilly grey day here, with flags whipping in the wind, and the sidewalks quiet and sparsely populated. I love Manhattan on a Sunday morning. It’s like a different city altogether. Wrapped in on itself, in a private mood, people going about their lives, quietly, sensibly, doing nice Sunday things.

Sometimes on Sunday mornings, I wake up early, take the bus into town, just so I can meander through the empty streets, the vendors setting out the flowers, or the fruit, random people jogging by, most storefronts locked up behind the grilles. I love the quiet. Meandering empty yellow cabs driving up 8th Avenue. In a weird way, it’s peaceful.

Went to Easter Mass at my church on 36th Street. I love it there. It’s one of those old cavernous urban Catholic churches squeezed in between storefronts. You walk through the wooden front doors and suddenly find yourself in a vast echoing space, you can’t believe how large it is, judging from how cramped it appears from outside. I’ve been going to St. Mary’s for about a year now, and I really like it.

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3 Responses to The private mood of New York City

  1. mitch says:

    NYC on a Sunday morning is wonderful. Last time I was in Nyawk – December of ’03 – I came into the city right after the “blizzard”. Totally different than the NYC I knew – which is best summed up “Wednesday Afternoon…”

  2. red says:

    Man, I remember that blizzard. A couple of my friends from the northern wilds of Canada had come in the day before it hit, to stay with me for a week … and then this enormous blizzard came … and we just were laughing about how they brought the weather with them.

  3. Sunday Morning

    Red has a lovely post on the quiet of a Sunday morning – and in this case Easter Sunday morning. This, plus a comment from Gaelgurl put me in mind of an R.E.M. song. But instead of “Losing My Religion”…

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