“Crazy bastards,” my father used to say when he saw young people doing dangerous things—
like riding motorcycles or hot-rodding motorboats on the lake on hot summer days—this from a guy
who had famously water skied barefoot in his 20s. “Probably drunk,” he’d say, no stranger to a Manhattan,
though, as a responsible grown-up all about safety, he did not drink and drive—boats or cars.
My father’s condemnation swept through my head like a Delta breeze on the first day of July when
I read that two people in their early 30s on the actual island of Manhattan had needle-climbed
the Empire State Building’s 200-foot spire, unfurling a black flag that read:
When the power of love beats the love of power the world knows peace.
Even with the forgotten comma after the introductory clause (like this one—give your self-editor a rest, Jan),
my old heart softened, turning to moosh when I read that Ivan Beerkus had proposed to Angela Nikolau as they
stood atop the off-limits-to-the-public landing (duh!) before climbing down and being arrested (double duh!).
But what a story to tell their kids, huh? Or anyone, really. “We climbed 1,454 feet in a rebellious act of devotion,”
they can boast. The power of love, indeed. Crazy bastards, for sure. But oh, how I’m applauding
those two lovebirds, flying in their own way to a spot most of us mere mortals can only (thankfully)
imagine—all, yes, all—in the name of peace.
•••
If you’re up for a literal birds’ eye perspective, you can watch the video of Ivan Beerkus and Angela Nikolau’s Empire State Building spire-topping view here.
If you’d like to read The New York Times story, you can do so here.
Ivan Beerkus and Angela Nikolau’s atop the spire of the Empire State Building / Top photo: Adam Gray / Reuters ; (Photo above) Beerkus proposes to Nikolau on the spire / photographer unknown / Instagram
(for the original BFF, Dr. Susan Lester, upon her retirement as a veterinarian, Nevada City, California)
1. At age 9, sit in a circle on the floor with your best friend next door and her younger sister along with a cardboard box of month-old kittens.
2. Outside the biggish box, have a smaller box of fresh kitty litter waiting.
3. Lift one kitten gently from one box into the other.
4. Gently lift one of kitten’s front legs and direct it to paw the gritty surface.
Note: Some kittens will resist this. OK, most kittens. They will sniff. Some may, as babies do, try to eat the sandy stuff. Discourage this by picking up kitten and gently distracting it.
5. Return kitten to litter box. Try again.
6. Watch as kitten, quite on its own, figures out, scratching sand or not, that this is a place to go.
7. You and your de facto sisters heartily congratulate kitten—and selves— for a “job” well done.
All these years later, you recall that these kitties, along with every pet you met, were the ones who began to train you,
quite unaware, that you’d be spending much of your adult life with kitties and doggies, caring for thousands
of four-leggeds who, along with their two-leggeds, are beyond grateful to and for you.
Job well done, Dr. Sue.
Dr. Susan Lester winds up a 32-year career as a veterinarian, retiring from Four Paws Animal Clinic in Nevada City. (Photo / Jan Haag)
Rising early, for me, to see lamby clouds frolicking across a field of soft blue overhead, barely 70 degrees, and, stepping outside to retrieve and refill water and food bowls for those who stop by for drinks and nibbles.
I am stunned to see this pleasantness post-solstice, late June, when the rays of Hades often hammer us in northland of the great Central Valley of this golden state.
All signs point to a perfect day, and, before I can sink into gratitude, I wade in the mucky pool of what’s coming—the infernal heat and days when the famous Delta breeze has taken herself off to other parts.
But standing in the sunshine, empty bowls in hand, looking east over the tops of lanky sycamores with more decades on them than mine, I smile into the bright.
Soak it in, something in me whispers. This day with writers gathered around a table, with time later to stand in the yard, hose in hand, watering and marveling over what’s growing. Maybe I’ll even pluck one of the pearls of reddening tomatoes strung from lacy strands.
This day, perfect, truly, of many this summer to admire and cherish— as I’m reminding myself to do— with you, my beloved, at the end of it.
Watching Juliet, the tomato plant, grow tall and feathery of leaf, I’ve also been charting the emergence of her offspring, consulting Farmer Google— “How do you know when homegrown tomatoes are ripe?”—feeling a bit ditsy because, duh, when they’re red, right?
Which is true, apparently, but also, I learn, when they go glossy red and come off easily in the hand.
One does today as I water, bending to feel up a small cluster. Woo-hoo! Tomato No. 1!
“Good job, honey!” I say to Juliet, who, I’m pretty sure, blushes.
I gently hose this first harvest, debating: to eat now or to save? I’m tempted to pop it into my mouth, relish the squish, but I pause to take a photo, aware that if things continue this way, I’ll become a bit blasé, awash in small red ovals.
And though I know he already knows, I say into the ether, “Tomato, Clifford!” feeling his smile through the veil.
He grew them decades ago in this yard, the man who’d pluck a ripe one fresh off the vine, bring it into the kitchen and, as I watched, rinse and cut it into chunks, dropping one from his dripping hand into my mouth, then one into his, each of us grinning as we savored the squish,
full of faith on those hot days that felt like forever that there would be more, so many more, for summers and summers to come.
Juliet’s first tomato — Photographer / planter: Jan Haag
do rainbow flags hang over the bar. They’re year-round décor, part of the furniture with the pool table
and the barstools with concave centers that have held untold numbers of butts over the decades.
What stories those stools— and backsides—could tell, even if they weren’t there in 1969,
when the bar’s name became synonymous with long overdue resistance.
Where the sign hangs, framed, in the foyer, perhaps the one once nailed to the door:
This is a raided premises Police Department City of New York
The rainbow flags hang, though no one there needs reminding, as badges of freedom,
of people’s right to exist, again, in this moment, having to, again, insist on such a thing
on this day in June when resistance again flares its gorgeous mane, full of pride
in this modest little bar in Greenwich Village called the Stonewall Inn.
•••
On June 28, 1969, New York police raided the Stonewall Inn bar on the pretext that it was selling alcohol without a liquor license. It was the third raid in a row on a Greenwich Village gay bar—the second on the Stonewall in a week—and this time, outraged patrons didn’t disperse but gathered on the street and actively resisted police. The ensuing unrest lasted five days and inspired activism around the country. It was a galvanizing and symbolic event in the struggle for LGBTQ rights. On the first anniversary of the uprising, inaugural gay pride parades were held in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago.They have continued annually around the world ever since.
The Stonewall Inn bar is now a national monument.
The Stonewall Inn bar (top) and the foyer in Greenwich Village, New York, the site of the famous 1969 protest that was, while not the beginning, a turning point for the modern gay rights movement. (Photos / Jan Haag)