Monday, July 20, 2015

My Love of a New City

I constantly see people walking around the city with their headphones. Sometimes I think about bringing my white Sony’s that were gifted to me by a friend, then I sit in the sound of the city and realize that I would never want to tone all of that out. I love walking down the street and hearing the soft pad of my work flats on pavement, the honking of impatient drivers. Few things to me are better than walking down Newbury and listening to the bands outside of storefronts, playing their music as one band’s sound bleeds into the others, at first sounding jumbled, then clear, just to become convoluted again.

Everything about the city is a sensation. Walking by stores where the A/C pushes out more hot air or stores whose A/C is working over-time to try and cool the few patio tables, so a person walking by, for a few steps, is in a cloud of crisp, cool air, before treading back into the sticky heat.

I don’t want to miss the obnoxious catcalls from men who are probably already scoring their first high or drink of the day at 10 AM. Watch the groups of seemingly homeless make bets and dares as one walks into traffic, forcing the delivery truck to slow down.

My music is the sound of breaks squeaking on garbage trucks and jogging across the street as I Jaywalk to avoid being hit by the UPS van and sedans barreling down the road. Listening to the college kids talk about their music theory class or the latest party they went to as they finger their neon green electric guitar. Angry phone conversations by men wearing full suits in the humidity while they storm through groups of tourists. The screeching of the Green Line on the rails at Haymarket Station.


I never thought I could love a city as much as I love Seattle, and maybe I don’t love Boston as much as I love home, but it feels pretty close.