Author Archives: pk

Balcony Blues (4 of 10)

Note: another installment!

I finished my beer earlier today watching college football on TV, so I decided to make some green tea instead. I dumped a few spoonful of leaves into my mug and microwaved it for a few minutes. It seems to have worked because it tastes pretty good, although I keep having to spit out some of the leaves. I should get tea that comes in bags next time.

It’s raining outside today, so I’m holding an umbrella and a cigarette with the same hand while holding my mug with the other. It’s gotten a lot cooler lately, so it feels nice to hold this warm cup of tea while watching the rising smoke.

I had a thought earlier today about what it means to be successful. I must have realized this while watching the super athletic football players perform in front of thousands of people in sold out stadiums, their every move scrutinized and every score celebrated with great fanfare. To think that all these guys, no more than 22 or 23 years old, are being worshipped by millions of people around the country, their accomplishments touted endlessly by big-time publications and teleivison announcers – they seemed bigger than life. I was watching Roger Federer playing in the US Open the other day and was reminded many times of how he had achieved such greatness. Only 25 years old, he made me wonder – Gee, what have I accomplished in the 28 years that I’ve been alive?

But does it all matter so much? Would I necessarily want to trade places with him? Or with 21 year-old Lebron James? At least Tiger Woods is 30, so his success is more taken for granted now, although I’m sure millions of people still idolize his skills and riches. And how about outside of sports? The young twentysomethings who’re running successful tech companies, the actors who’re raking in big movie deals, even the young novelists winning prestigious awards? Forget about being young, how about anyone who receives great press, makes a lot of money, and is respected nationally, or even worldwide, for their success?

As much as I admire and sometimes feel envy towards such people, I couldn’t say that I would want to switch places with them. I’ve taken the approach, although sometimes I am forgetful about it, that much of the public’s attitudes towards these superstars is a function of the hype and glamor created by the media. The glossy magazine photographs, the flattering interviews, and the lucrative endorsements – these are as much a part of our admiration as what each person actually accomplishes. In the end, new faces are discovered, new articles are written, and companies need new names to push their products. We all die in the end.

That is why I don’t mind being me. I’m healthy, I’m not yet thirty, and I’m okay with doing my own dishes and taking out my own garbage. Plus, it’s not like these famous people are monopolizing all the pretty girls – there’s plenty to go around. Which leads me to think more about our overall intoxication with fame. Would I like to be interviewed in The New York Times Sunday Magazine? Would I like Dwell to come and do a piece about how wonderfully I’ve arranged my bookstores? Would I like to be stopped on the street to sign a few autographs and answer questions from fawning fans? Sure, but I don’t really need these things to feel happy about myself and what I’ve done with my life so far.

But it’s true – for those of us who haven’t had a taste of celebrity, wealth, or even notoriety, we sometimes dream or, worse, lament about the inequities of life: why not me? I’ve asked this a few times, and I sometimes find myself staying up late at night trying to figure out ways to expand my business, trying to get profiled as a young entrepreneur in Business Week, or wondering why I’m not invited to the more exclusive parties thrown for literary elites. Then again, my bookstores have done well, I’ve gotten to know some pretty accomplished writers, and many people seem to take my advice on several topics, including good books to read.

Growing up, I used to imagine that I would become a super CEO of a media mega-conglomerate, overseeing record labels, magazines, film productions, and publishing houses. Then somewhere along the line, I started to see how being CEO wasn’t the be-all, end-all of success, that they were often held liable by boards of directors and shareholders, and that the idea of running a big business wasn’t as freewheeling and maverick as I dreamt it would be. It’s okay to be a small-time shop owner, it’s okay to only have twenty employees, and it’s perfectly fine to take yellow cabs instead of limos. Some days, I can roll out of bed at 11am, take a walk through Central Park, read the New Yorker from cover to cover, and stop by my stores for an hour or so just to check up on things and make a few decisions. Would I trade such freedoms with a super athelete who has to keep a rigorous training regiment all year round or a high-power ad agency executive who can’t even spend time with his own kids on weekends?

It’s kind of like that half-full, half-empty idea I guess, but the point I’m trying to make is that the very idea of success is probably overrated and overexaggerated. Impressing a lot of people with a particular skill is great and so is making tons of money, but these things come and go, and in the big scheme of things – I may sound a bit cynical here – everything is pretty much meaningless. We’re just a bunch of living organisms enclosed in a bubble eating, pooping, sleeping, copulating, and when not doing these things, trying to keep ourselves occupied. And in our bubble, we decided somewhere along the line that we’re going to celebrate things that some people do, raise them to the status of idols, and perpetuate the idea that some people are great while others are just ordinary. Yes, I wouldn’t mind being an idol, and I would love to use that status to buy more things, sleep with (more) really pretty girls, and read about myself in general news magazines, but like I said, I’m doing alright as it is.

Okay, tea time is over. This stuff gets me hyped up way too much. I’m going to grab a six-pack.

Back from Maine

Just spent the past week in Kennebunk, Maine, where Melanie’s brother Geoff and his wife Vivian recently bought a nice house not too far from the beautiful coast of the Atlantic. Mel, Wook, and I stayed there for five nights while extensive work was being done to the house. The three of us made the most of the two rooms available upstairs and had a great time relaxing, eating, and goofing around. I ate enough lobsters to last me a year, and I also think I’ve exceeded my big breakfast quota for at least the next month.

Maine, by the way, is a very white place. My minority paranoia, some of it in half-mocking tones, was in full effect, and I always seemed to catch the little white kids staring at me with fascination. Anyways, the Bushes, including our unpopular President, came into town on Thursday and we drove by Walker’s Point, their posh summer digs.

I thoroughly enjoyed Maine and would probably recommend it to people who like non-exotic weather (it was breezy and cool), down-to-earth attractions (very New England), and a desire to associate with wealthy white folk. I’ve put up some photos from the trip too – almost all of them taken by Wook.

We Won’t Be Living There Anymore

note: a little warning – some nauseating sentimentality included!

My parents and grandmother will be moving to Atlanta in less than ten days, and this weekend, I found myself in Edison, throwing out and packing up all of the clothes, papers, and books in my room. It’s very difficult not to get sentimental or even nostalgic in these sort of situations. Although I have spent the greater part of the past five years in New York, I’ve always gone “back home” to Edison to visit my family and to get away from the city. Going through all of the things that reminded me of my past – the journals from childhood, the graded papers from high school and college, the photos and trophies from football, the overambitious plans to build my own mini media empire – I was struck by how quickly time has passed and how a memory of over five or ten years ago can be vividly recalled and yet also seem so distant. Reading through birthday cards from friends and letters from past sweethearts, I stopped to think of all the friendships and romances that have come and gone, and how in the face of such transience, my existing relationships seem that much more fragile and precious. It’s easy to get emotional when you begin to see familiar things disappear. The loss of a physical space, where I ate and laughed with my family, where we watched Korean dramas, and where we found comfort and quiet in our individual spaces — it’s the start of something new for me and a realization of my immaturity in such circumstances. Having been close to home during college and blessed with a stable, healthy family, I took everything for granted and hardly guessed that such a day would come. And though something as benign as a family’s relocation may seem trivial to those who have suffered worse tragedies, I can’t say that I won’t be affected or that I won’t be longing for the days when I could take the New Jersey Transit to Metropark and be at the dining table in five minutes, waiting for my mother to deliver the plate of meat and my father bringing out the bottle of beer.

My grandmother, ripe and energetic at seventy-six, sat next to me while I cleaned out my room. She wondered if we would ever again have the opportunity to sit next to each other alone for an extended time. “This is probably it,” she said to me. She told me how she had lived too long and was very much ready to die. “I wish God would take me away before I become older and sick and a burden to everyone,” she said. “I pray for it every day.” I could only tell her that she was so healthy and that she would have a good time in Atlanta. She told me that she was often bored and tired of living. “I had my fun raising you and Dawn. It was such a wonderful time, and look how well you two turned out. I can’t ask for anything for than that,” she told me. As the self-absorbed individual that I am, observing such selfless acts of devotion and caring makes me question what it really means to have lived a fulfilling and meaningful life. Individual accomplishments and recognition can seem so petty and weightless. Ambition and achievement, it seems, can only bring so much happiness and satisfaction – maybe that’s why we seek what we seek in our families, our significant others, and our friends. The conventions of society, deeply engraved and inescapable, have me feeling guilty, sad, and regretful. But as selfishly and childishly as I may have acted my entire life, I feel close to my family more than ever.

As I loaded up a rented car with the last of my possessions, along with a few of my sister’s belongings to store in my apartment, my grandmother finally convinced me to take a look at her many plants and to take them with me. A large 14 year-old tree sits in the front yard, potted in a big plastic cylinder with its sinewy trunk and many green leaves. It is a plant that my grandmother has cared for and revived many times from the brink of death. My father says it will be impossible to transport it to Atlanta. “Give it to someone you know,” he says. My grandmother talks about how a kkah wuh it is, an expression of regretfulness at having to give away something so valuable. She thinks she might ask a church friend or maybe the reverend to take it. I eventually take with me the majority of her plants, later figuring out where in the apartment they might look best. I asked my grandmother how often I should water these plants, and she doesn’t give me a straight answer. Her method of tending plants is by touch – she feels the leaves or the soil and waters the plants until she feels that they are nourished. “Not too often,” she says, “Just when you think they need it.” I will miss her garden, her nursery of plants, and the way she hoped for rain on stretches of dry days.

As I looked through my old tests and projects, I came across a folder of papers from my seventh grade English class, taught by a Mr. Stazko. He was an eccentric man – tall, thick-framed glasses, a prominent wart or two on the face, and a slick comb-over. He wore suspenders and colorful suits, and he hunched over slightly, sometimes giving his frame a slightly smaller presence. The year he taught our class was his last year as a teacher. He retired quietly at the end of the year with many of us having no idea of his retirement until much later. I did well in his class, scoring high marks and really wanting to push myself to read and write effectively. I was proud when I received the highest scores on some tests and was praised by Mr. Stazko as “Top Gun” to the rest of the class. He was supportive even when I foolishly chose a Herman Hesse novel to use for my book report essay, a book that was way beyond my scope of understanding at that point. I’d say that he was an influential and impactful figure in my development as a student. He helped to instill the confidence that would later guide me in my academic pursuits. And to wonder where he might be now – maybe enjoying retirement, maybe senile, or maybe no longer alive – more meditations on time and its movements. With every new gain, there’s always something else that’s bound to be lost. And with every new loss, we have all that we’ve gained to cherish.