Our Saturday correspondent, Caren Jeskey, is back on her feet, and returns with her regular report, sharing a surprising development:
I collect quotes of the day— sentences I repeat in my head or aloud to myself that conjure up fun images. or otherwise bring me delight — and this one was it.
“A wall with two doors.” My life, once again, is a French movie. (An artistic ex used to remind me that all we have to do is choose to see the world through the eyes of Amelie or another acteur dans un film d'art et d'essai if we want to soak up the deliciousness). As I moved on, I smiled and gazed up at the stark bare trees on this glorious winter day. I was hoping to see an eagle, or a hawk at least. I settled for a giant crow, cawing majestically from the very top of an impressively aged elm.
I headed in the direction apple cheeks pointed me to, and found myself on 10th Street. I turned right to head the mile or so to my destination. A couple walking a graying black lab named Fiona cautioned me that the sidewalk was icy. I wanted to walk in the street but feared the wrath of drivers. I’d chance the messy sidewalk. I yielded to a man wearing black Adidas sneakers with crisp white stripes. As he passed me I warned him about the ice ahead.
I stayed a virus cautious 20 feet or so behind him. Sure enough, he misjudged the situation and I watched him tumble into a hard fall, his arms flailing about and his messenger bag flying into the snow. The first thing he did was look back at me from his flat on the back position— I’m not sure if it was out of embarrassment or camaraderie. The two of us just trying to get some exercise in the dead of a Chicago Winter. I called out “are you ok?” and he said “yes!” He got up and brushed himself off. I suggested that we retire to the street, drivers be darned. He agreed. Again I gave him about 20 feet of space and we walked single file towards Central Avenue.
At the end of the trek we chatted a bit. He thanked me for my support and the warning that he had not heeded. I reminded him to take some ibuprofen as soon as possible, for I knew he’d be bruised and in some pain when the adrenaline wore off. I had wiped out on the roof of Mariano’s myself just a couple weeks ago, and again when I forgot that Yaktrax are not ideal for a dark foyer with concrete floors. These little coils that slip over your shoes work great on the ice, and I highly recommend them, but please be careful on surfaces other than snow, ice, or nubby concrete when you have them on.
Adidas and I parted ways. I passed an old wood-framed house with a porch that’s made for sitting. I passed the bell that was originally rung to gather Wilmette residents to the town square many moons ago, and the Lutheran church with the banner reading “Black Lives Matter to God and to Us.”
I stepped into Torino and ordered a citrusy ramen to go — double masked of course— then I headed to Central Station Coffee & Tea. I left there with an oat milk latte with their homemade raspberry syrup. Small paper shopping bag of noodle soup in one hand, coffee cup in the other, I gingerly made my way back to my new rental home a mile and a half west.
A mere two weeks ago I was miserable and sleep deprived since loud neighbors had moved in on December 1st. The stress of it all put a damper on my holidays, my career, and my well-being. Today I sleep in a place so quiet I can easily forget anyone else is around at all.
Three weeks ago a neighbor was carjacked in her alley in my old neighborhood of Ravenswood after dropping her child off at school. A woman was carjacked on the 5100 block of North Broadway three weeks ago today. She had just gotten her car back from her last carjacking the previous Wednesday. I am very concerned for her. I had to stop reading a local neighborhood group’s Facebook posts since the outrageous number of shootings less than two miles from where I was living, on a weekly basis, were impossible to digest.
A savvy friend commented “I knew you’d end up in the suburbs” because I was so craving a quiet home to live, rest, and work in. If I am to show up for my burgeoning caseload of clients I have to have peace and safety myself. I sincerely wish everyone on this planet could have the same.
Just before I moved, a neighbor snapped a photo of an eagle in a tree near Wilson and the river. There is beauty and delight around every corner for all of us, but only some of us have the good fortune to be able to enjoy the wonders of this world. For others, life is a daily exercise in survival.
Glad you found your people Caren. All the best in your slice of leafy suburban paradise
ReplyDeleteWhat was the wall with two doors in it?
ReplyDelete"The Wall with Two Doors" sounds like the title of some subtitled import Netflix series, but in fact I knew instantly where you were, because I grew up less than a mile away, and passed there every day on my bike to and from high school. I cannot imagine too many other places in the area that could be better to "live, rest and work in," and when my father had to go into assisted living, my family offered the house to my newlywed son for a few years while the happy couple save for a house of their own. He's now working full-time in an office he's set up there.
ReplyDeleteI should mention that the banner you saw was on St. Augustine's Episcopal; the Lutheran church is elsewhere, but it's easy to mix them up as there as so many around town. Just at the intersection of Lake and Wilmette Avenues alone, you'll find four within sight of each other.
Odd details abound. That big Methodist church you passed served as the exterior for scenes in "Home Alone." The restaurant Depot Nuevo that you probably walked by occupies an 1873 railroad station that's been moved not once but twice in its lifetime. Following many decades of ho-hum businesses downtown, the village has rather reinvented itself as a dining destination, restaurant after restaurant all around the downtown area near City Hall, and on nice evenings you can sit outside and just not want to go anywhere else.
Welcome to my old stomping grounds. I lived in South Evanston for twelve years. Remember me when you get to the Bahai Temple, which took 41 years to complete. Although they laid the cornerstone in 1912, work didn't begin until the early 1920s, and was delayed through the Great Depression and World War II. Construction picked up again in 1947, and the outdoor landscaping was done in the early Fifties. The temple was dedicated in a ceremony in 1953. My day camp took us there for a tour, a year later.
ReplyDeleteAs a pre-teen, I would ride my bike up to Wilmette, and stroll around the grounds until I felt at home. They were an escape from suburban culture--and Judaism. I even went to a Sunday afternoon service there, at fourteen. Seemed like a good idea at the time.