Nuts and Popcorn On The 7:41...
OK. I'm going to be honest here.
I had something I wanted to write about but I'm having a hard time concentrating.
A few months ago, I started doing most, if not all of my writing on the train. It's the only time, aside from late at night, that I have to myself. For the most part, it's been a pretty decent escape. Sometimes I write in the morning on the way to work. Sometimes I write in the evening on the way home. I usually sit with my tiny computer on my lap and stare at the screen the entire commute.
Typing.
I'm pretty sure I look like a douchebag and for the record, I don't agree with my spellchecker. Douchebag is one word.
I also get really self conscious of my fingers.
All the metaphors that have been used to describe the typical NYC morning commute, are pretty accurate.
"We're packed like sardines in here."
"It's like a herd of cattle."
You get the picture.
So at any given moment of any given train ride, I'm sitting approximately a pubic hair away from some, fat, smelly, stranger.
I'm pretty positive that most of the time, the person next to me can see exactly what I'm writing about. Today, my traveling companions happen to be particularly distracting.
I am sitting in one of those, 3 people face the other 3 people, seats. Except there are only 4 of us.
Why?
For starters, the woman across from me and to my left, is so big, that she is taking up two seats. That doesn't bother me at all. She is who she is and she seems pleasant enough. She's wearing a fine argyle sweater and brown corduroy slacks. She seems quite content but she's a nodder. A nodder is a person who drifts in and out of sleep throughout the commute and repeatedly wakes herself because of the sudden jerking motion of her nodding head. It's a frustrating feeling to experience but even more frustrating to watch. It's been going on for almost half an hour and I can't take my eyes off of her. It's putting me in a trance. I want to put her in a neck brace and staple her eyelids open. It's like seeing a car accident about to happen. I can't look away.
To her left and directly across from me is a young-ish guy. He's probably around 30 years old. Button down, Khakis and loafers. He looks like a poor man's James Spader. This guy is the reason I hate the train. He's sitting with his legs spread wide open and stuffing his face with an obscene amount of popcorn. At this very moment, there is a piece of popcorn stuck to his nuts. I'm not sure whether I should punch it or eat it. He's driving me insane. I can hear every bite, as if he were attached to my torso, in a giant Baby Bjorn and chewing in my ear. I am mad at him. I hate his big, fat, nuts that are practically in my face and I hate that he's a fucking pig. Damn you James Spader. Why must you torment me?
Lastly there's the guy directly to my left. He's an older gentleman and he smells like bagels and spit. He's got a white beard and he's fallen asleep, face first onto his briefcase. I don't want him to be dead. I would imagine that these things happen all the time. Please don't be dead. Just think of all the Sudoku puzzles you have yet to solve. Think of all the pumpernickel bagels that await you. Your white beard beckons them, like a spider's web beckons the unknowing fly. Oh, he just snorted. Thank God.
Women train conductors are hot.
Out-Numbered by big, fat, nuts and popcorn...
Shit. This is my stop. Gotta go.
I had something I wanted to write about but I'm having a hard time concentrating.
A few months ago, I started doing most, if not all of my writing on the train. It's the only time, aside from late at night, that I have to myself. For the most part, it's been a pretty decent escape. Sometimes I write in the morning on the way to work. Sometimes I write in the evening on the way home. I usually sit with my tiny computer on my lap and stare at the screen the entire commute.
Typing.
I'm pretty sure I look like a douchebag and for the record, I don't agree with my spellchecker. Douchebag is one word.
I also get really self conscious of my fingers.
All the metaphors that have been used to describe the typical NYC morning commute, are pretty accurate.
"We're packed like sardines in here."
"It's like a herd of cattle."
You get the picture.
So at any given moment of any given train ride, I'm sitting approximately a pubic hair away from some, fat, smelly, stranger.
I'm pretty positive that most of the time, the person next to me can see exactly what I'm writing about. Today, my traveling companions happen to be particularly distracting.
I am sitting in one of those, 3 people face the other 3 people, seats. Except there are only 4 of us.
Why?
For starters, the woman across from me and to my left, is so big, that she is taking up two seats. That doesn't bother me at all. She is who she is and she seems pleasant enough. She's wearing a fine argyle sweater and brown corduroy slacks. She seems quite content but she's a nodder. A nodder is a person who drifts in and out of sleep throughout the commute and repeatedly wakes herself because of the sudden jerking motion of her nodding head. It's a frustrating feeling to experience but even more frustrating to watch. It's been going on for almost half an hour and I can't take my eyes off of her. It's putting me in a trance. I want to put her in a neck brace and staple her eyelids open. It's like seeing a car accident about to happen. I can't look away.
To her left and directly across from me is a young-ish guy. He's probably around 30 years old. Button down, Khakis and loafers. He looks like a poor man's James Spader. This guy is the reason I hate the train. He's sitting with his legs spread wide open and stuffing his face with an obscene amount of popcorn. At this very moment, there is a piece of popcorn stuck to his nuts. I'm not sure whether I should punch it or eat it. He's driving me insane. I can hear every bite, as if he were attached to my torso, in a giant Baby Bjorn and chewing in my ear. I am mad at him. I hate his big, fat, nuts that are practically in my face and I hate that he's a fucking pig. Damn you James Spader. Why must you torment me?
Lastly there's the guy directly to my left. He's an older gentleman and he smells like bagels and spit. He's got a white beard and he's fallen asleep, face first onto his briefcase. I don't want him to be dead. I would imagine that these things happen all the time. Please don't be dead. Just think of all the Sudoku puzzles you have yet to solve. Think of all the pumpernickel bagels that await you. Your white beard beckons them, like a spider's web beckons the unknowing fly. Oh, he just snorted. Thank God.
Women train conductors are hot.
Out-Numbered by big, fat, nuts and popcorn...
Shit. This is my stop. Gotta go.
You certainly know how to put the reader in the scene. I'm glad I'm not really in the scene, of course, but moving through that piece, I was there for a moment. I'll stick to my 40 minute commute in my car, all by myself. Just me and the iPod. Maybe I'll play Chris Daughtry on the way home, as a tribute. Thanks for the entertainment.
ReplyDeleteOh. My. God. I have tears from laughing. "I'm not sure whether I should punch it or eat it." This will make me LOL all day, thanks!
ReplyDeleteLove it...much better than any train ride I have ever been on!
ReplyDeletedude that was awesome. you made me spit my tea back into my cup when you said "He's an older gentleman and he smells like bagels and spit." OH MAN...gone are the days of subway commuting. That's awful but thanks for the morning laughs. love u!
ReplyDeleteYou have a magnificent nose, because I had no idea that spit smelled.
ReplyDeleteJay, I literally laughed out loud at my desk at work. Great except I'm not supposed to be online. Thanks for the laugh.
ReplyDeleteDeb formerly Garriga
Love your scene setting. "I'm sitting approximately a pubic hair away from..." I'll have to remember that one.
ReplyDeleteYou're right. Douchebag is definitely one word.
ReplyDeleteWhat you should really do is leave your computer on the seat for the next person to continue the travelogue.
ReplyDeleteDAMNIT, I MISS commuting! NOT!
ReplyDeleteAll the more power to you my friend
Cheers!
Your life is wildly exotic in comparison to mine...
ReplyDeleteNever a dull moment, but I much prefer my short truck drive in my small town life.
ReplyDeleteAhhh, my 12 minute commute to Home Depot in my Convertible with the top down and my ipod glaring my favorite music is a far cry from my commute to NY on NJ Transit. Thank God! Good Blog!
ReplyDeleteThis is your best so far, I'm hysterical! Love you.
ReplyDeleteWatching the nodders make me laugh..... OUTLOUD.
ReplyDelete(what about when the nod hits it's most bottom point, ON YOUR SHOULDER??? Yes, I've been there too..)
Be thankful you don't take the 7.
the way they work that ticket puncher is magic!!
ReplyDeleteyes, women train conductors are hot.
ReplyDelete'I don't want him to be dead.' You're a saint.
ReplyDelete(and also very funny - I'm delurking and thought I should say that)
You should have told Spader to "put the mouse back in the house." Great entry.
ReplyDeleteI admit, I enjoy your tweets about the bizarre folks around you, and want to add that you should have punched the popcorn. Just my opinion.
ReplyDeleteI ride the ferry to work everyday. There have been several people who have fallen asleep and never woken up. Actually happened a couple of weeks ago.
ReplyDeleteYou need to figure out a way to sneak pics of your subway companions. You could start a second blog called "The People of the Subway," like "The People of Walmart," or like a weekly series, "Subway Sundays." That way, when you're so outnumbered your brain will no longer function, you can at least post some pics.
ReplyDeleteI don't know that I could ever write on a train. I would be scared it would come to sudden stop and my laptop would go flying.
This cracked me up. I've been on that train ride many a time.
ReplyDeleteMakes for great blog stuff! (-:
This post was different and was sorry it ended as quickly as it did. It brought back memories about my commute via LIRR when I had to work in the city. I'm kind of glad I don't have to be part of that rush hour scenario, anymore. However, I did get a lot of paperwork and reading done during those train rides.
ReplyDeleteThanks, for reminding me about that whole other world. It's a lot more interesting than driving on the belt parkway day in and day out.
Can't get my head past the popcorn on the nuts bit!!
ReplyDeleteLMAO on your commuting observations and... I agree with you, douchebag is definitely one word.
ReplyDelete