Monday, August 09, 2010

My Bold Bonus Life


Have embarked on my 18-day life-within-a-life in New York, the one I promised myself as celebration of turning 60 a year and a half ago. I hadn't yet figured out how to work it out (pay for it) and then this marvelous house-sitting arrangement fell in my lap and suddenly I'm here.

And it's thrilling. I arrived yesterday on "the Chinatown bus" -- an express overnight trip from Grand Asia Market at home in NC to Canal Street in Chinatown (a $30 trip, can you believe it?)

We rolled in at 10 am and then, sweat-drenched, I rolled and toted and subwayed my monstrous suitcase (housing computer et al)to a lefty church service where a former client of mine is minister. Got there just in time to hear her preach, and meet her afterwards. I'd never even met her; being several states apart, we'd communicated only by email. Her sermon was inspiring; about making important changes by shifting your weight in the desired direction, a little and then a little more and so on. Music was gorgeous: a piano and flute performance of one of Satie's Gymnopedies, and then a solo by a woman with a Broadway style voice (rather different from most of the church sopranos I've ever heard, no warble)

Then uptown to my home for this bonus lifetime. Wow! it's terrific. A sunny studio on the third floor with a glass atrium at the back that has been made into a sunlit office that then opens onto a large third floor terrace in a breezy canyon of trees within the center of the block. (see terrace view in photo)

Also, the owner, whom I've never met, (daughter of a friend of a friend, and oh, what nice people) is 28 years old with a glamorous career, Audrey Hepburn taste, and an excellent book collection. I am happy to be twenty-eight again for the coming weeks.

In the afternoon, I went first to the Manhattan Dominican Day parade.
Continuous dance music and everybody dancing. (I had no idea that 90% of New York was Dominican.) Then to the E. 60th Street Fair, and more walking (my favorite thing in New York) and sudden exhaustion: back to the apt. Ate the owner's mother's homemade pumpkin bread and leftover white wine on the terrace at dusk. (I was asked to eat up all the leftover perishables or get rid of them)

How did I get such a miracle opportunity as this? By telling everyone I knew.
And I didn't even do it to look for an opportunity, just out of excitement. But the results convince me more than ever: if you have a dream, start making it real by making it public.

Feel free to announce any dream(s) of your own here in the comments.





Add to del.icio.us - Stumble It! - Subscribe to this feed - Digg it

13 comments:

billie said...

How absolutely wonderful! How was the bus ride? That price is astounding.

Anonymous said...

COOL ! BARGAIN BUS TOO--GOOD IDEA TOO, TO TELL TO ALL YR DREAMS--GETS U KNOWN & WHAT GOES AROUND...
AIKI

Peggy Payne said...

Thanks, Aiki, And the ride was fine, Billie. I was lucky to have an empty seat beside me; there were only about two vacant on the bus. I slept about five hours, I think, and felt fine the rest of the day. Slept 11 hours the next night, though, and caught up.

kenju said...

Winning the lottery would answer a lot of dreams for me!

Peggy Payne said...

I'm glad you have that out in the open now, Kenju. It's bound to happen.

cfmajors said...

Almost sounds magical as you unwrap your first day. I look foward to your next virtual postcard. The view, the church service, the magic bus ... set the tone with awe.

Peggy Payne said...

You named it: magical. That's how it feels to me.

Also a bit sweaty out on the street, but that doesn't interfere with magic.

Renee said...

Very cool, Peggy! Be sure to find lil' hole-on-wall noodle shop in Chinatown for some duck noodle soup. As for my 'dream goal,' the Universe keeps nudging me towards opening my own martial arts studio. Never really thought of doing such a thing but it seems that teaching others the old traditional ways is what I'm supposed to do in this lifetime. Have fun in the Big Apple!

Peggy Payne said...

Renee,I hope you do open your own martial arts studio. I think that would be wonderful.

Hugh Newkirk said...

Great stuff! I was wondering where you were gonna park? You must be a good packer with gear 4 18 days in one suit case.

Peggy Payne said...

It's an enormous suitcase, Hugh, but most of the clothes I brought are the wrong stuff for spending a lot of time hiking on the pavement in the August heat. There sure wasn't any need for me to bring more of them.
I should have figured that it would be like your part of the country outdoors in August. Pretty hot, yes?

Peggy Payne said...

It's an enormous suitcase, Hugh, but most of the clothes I brought are the wrong stuff for spending a lot of time hiking on the pavement in the August heat. There sure wasn't any need for me to bring more of them.
I should have figured that it would be like your part of the country outdoors in August. Pretty hot, yes?

Wayne-n-Kim said...

Hey Peggy,
My daughter is moving to New York next month for her own grand adventure. I forwarded your blog site to her. She is very excited and I am sure she will love reading about your trip. She made a similar short trip last year and fell in love with it. Gets to see now if it is more than just a nice place to visit.