For this assignment I decided to head down the block where I
used to live, 194th street and Marion. I haven’t been there in 6
years so I thought it would be interesting to see what has changed. I start on
top of a hill and look downward. Luckily the narrow streets and tall buildings
help block the sun. Cars pass by blasting the latest rap songs. The floor is
littered with wrappers, bags of potato chips and other pieces of trash. All the
small bodegas that I used to go to were still there. I pass a questionable man
and he asks me if “I want that sour.” I ignore him and keep heading downhill.
The further I go the more things seem the same. The beauty shops, Chinese
restaurant, laundry mat, pharmacy, it is all there. It seems not much has changed since I have
left except the block’s favorite pizza shop. About two months before I left pizza shop
closed down. It seems like nothing has occupied the spot and tried to replace
it since. Across the street from the shop is a supermarket. Six months before I
left the supermarket had moved in and since then, it has been easy to identify
who lived in the area and who didn't. People’s faces start to get familiar and
some people got friendlier.
Now I am at the corner at the last part of the hill. It is
not a surprise that the same liquor store is still there, with the trademark
bottle of liquor that rests in a brown bag outside the door. A few men hanging
outside and have their conversations in Spanish. I turn the corner and see
where I spent so much of my time as a teenager. I pass the bodega I have
visited nearly every time I went outside. I even see one of the owners who were
pretty surprised to see me. Outside of the door a few older people are hanging
out, laughing and making a ruckus. A few steps later I arrive just outside my
building. I notice a large black gate that sits near the spot I have spent so
much time loitering around. I examine the street and notice the old skellzies
board the block used to play on has now been paved over by a fresher black
street. The first floor AC unit is still there. The one that a friend and I
bent the blades to spell our name on it. A small grin creeps across my face as
I regain more vivid memories of the times I have spent outside on this street.
1 comment:
I liked that you picked somewhere you haven't been in a long time. You would be able to see the things that changed and the things that hasn't changed. There were also some funny parts.
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