Tuesday, November 12, 2013



All Our Yesterdays,


 

An old stove leaked gas in an old kitchen.

 

I fixed it.

 

Three days before Thanksgiving Day, in the year of super storm Sandy that made many people lose homes to floods, the pipes of the sink burst in an apartment my mother had lived in since the last days of Watergate.

 

Then came a furious barrage of knocks on our door in the morning.

 

The new landlords told her to move to the other side of the building where long time residents were being concentrated. Democracy faded into the courtyard walls that were painted battleship gray or the gray across the waters called Riker’s Island Prison. We were practically shouted to move to one old apartment to another not rent stabilized. We were harassed constantly like being with sharks in a feeding frenzy in a small tank.

 

We had our bathtub removed for a week and a-half in the wintertime. For a month, we were cut off from the outside world when our mailbox was ripped from the wall. The tampering with Federal property happened two days after the landlords’ workmen saw a housing inspector in our humble home of broken windows and cracked ceilings that mirrored walls.  The official warned them not to barge in or else NYPD would be called.

 

Our complaints, added to a female US mail carrier, failed to motivate the landlord to fix the problems except to order the Salvadorian superintendent to knock on our door and dangled keys to another apartment devoid of stove and refrigerator.

 

Move in now and we’ll get them for you, I was told indifferently.

 

“Leave your furniture behind. I’m giving you bunk beds,” ordered a Dominican employee of Paradise Management. The last time I heard an offer of free bunk beds was in Schindler’s List, a movie that branded itself on my mind. I think of the scene where peoples’ belongings were thrown out of windows when our courtyard looked like the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island. We had to endure noises and smells of renovation on the building. We were surrounded by territorial strangers when the landlords brought in homeless families to charge the city 2, 800 $ per apartment.

 

My elderly mother pays 488.29.

 

Still a Dominican did promise 500 dollars if we moved quickly like the Indians that sold Manhattan for 24 dollars and trinkets. It was an offer better than the previous Italian landlords’ final solution of fixing the old building by soaking the rooftop with gasoline to collect on insurance money. Babies were spared by the intervention of Blue Angels.

 

Home is not far from Happy Land where over 80 human beings were burnt alive.

 

Across our bedroom windows, the Ortiz Funeral Home gets crowded with screams of those who lost loved ones. Where’s Jesus, a good Jewish lawyer?

 

On an eerily silent night, I opened the window and sensed a sickening light scent of cremation that drifted from the remains of the WTC.  It had lumbered miles on mild wind to remind us we are all connected as sure as the air we need to survive. 

 

I have a Ken Burns on the brain mentality.

 

“It was the worse of times…”

 

At an early age, I learned to tattoo words and watched them bleed in a paper garden of good and evil. The urban myth of hell was a real city of illegal guns and roses.  This is a mural for myself as well as afterimages of other dreamers. Optimism was our painkiller next to Saint Joseph’s Orange Favored Aspirin For Children.

 

When I was a boy, I carried Anne Frank while shadows of bullies and burnt-out buildings fell over us after school. At P.S 25, Mr. Marks, my white-haired English teacher, a grandfather figure slightly hunched with a burden of quiet grief, gave Anne to me to keep. “The torch has been passed on to a new generation,” said the country’s first Space Age president. This is my journal, an essay by images and painting by words.

 

Chapter 1: It was a dark and stormy night.

 

 “We don’t publish stories by minorities! Anything else,” a woman said before hanging up in a time of great prosperity for the country because of the newly invented Internet. I improvise with what she said like I did on golden trumpet in music class. Writing on old tech Word95&98 helped me recall a photographic memory in childhood. In an sixth grade English class at P.S 161, I made a wish to live life like a great novel, one that would read like the sci-fi of a great comic book.  It should be one that breaks the law that states there are no second acts in American lives and the lives of others around planet Earth. There are no great stories without heartbreak and no refunds for answered prayers.

 

I finally returned to my Fortress of Solitude where I saw Waiting For Super Man and Childhood’s End. This is The Hunt’s Point Public Library, a place of many endings and new beginnings. This is where I found The Lost Boys and A Winkle In Time. 

 

All Our Yesterdays, A To Z At The Library

 

This is the house of genius that helped me boldly go what I was vaguely dreaming of creating. This is a thanks for my mother who worked in a pen & pencil factory and drew my first smile. Now I fly in cyberspace and aspire to be like a mild-mannered reporter working at a great metropolitan newspaper. This story is really on finishing my homework assignment to make a tour book that draws the highlights of our town.

 

Truth, justice and the comic books!

 

Here’s to our public library in The South Bronx of America Where The Wild Things Are.

 

How To Pitch Nightmares To DreamWorks by Danny Aponte of P.S 161

 

The End and here comes sequel

 

I hope it’s great for you.

 




 





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