Garbage-Pail Kids


On the mean streets of cities across our country illegal drugs continue to be a scourge. Last month, as I was exiting a coffee shop in Queens, on its doorstep, I spied the pictured single use drug container colloquially known as a garbage-pail. Dan identified it right away. Who knows what it once contained. Meth?   

This encounter launched Dan along memory lane. Back when he was living in LA, he met his friend Jenny, who owned a pug named Lupe. Dan loved that dog. Jenny traveled a lot and Dan frequently sat for him. Jenny also had a sister who had a drug habit and when she passed, Dan was dragooned into helping Jenny clean out her apartment. It was during one of these occasions that Lupe found some meth and snarfed it up. A visit to poison control ensued. Once having tasted meth though, Lupe developed a taste for it. On trips to a downtown LA park, he was able to sniff out additional scores. Lupe is an old dog now, both deaf and blind and no longer lives in LA. So, his drug dealing days are likely done, but I’m sure that he still has that itch.

As part of this conversation, Dan recounted one more encounter. Also in LA, Dan was having coffee streetside at a cafe. A rather bedraggled homeless woman asked for his help as he sat there sipping his coffee. Her hands were all cut, bandaged and bruised and she was unable to open her garbage-pail. Dan did the chore, and she thanked him so profusely that he felt gratified for his deed, even if it was not the best thing to have done.

MoMA

Equal, Richard Serra, 2015

On Friday, we made it to NYC. Ploughing I-80 all the way, eleven hours total. Braving snow, gale force winds, seiches, mountains, trucks, salt trucks and wide loads along the way. When we arrived at Dan and Britt’s place all we were up for was delivered pizza. The next day though, we went out for brunch to Rolo’s. Good food! Then we took the train to Manhattan and then uptown to MoMA. High art of the modern variety. Pictured are Dan and Anne adding scale to Serra’s sculpture Equal. Each block is about six feet square, solid steel, weighing forty tons. That is a total of 320 tons of Corten steel sitting there.

Saturday night brought dinner at Phillip and Patty’s house. Always a treat. The place was decorated to the nines for Christmas, including a real tree with at least 10,000 lights. In addition to Britt’s parents, we dined on fine homemade Italian with her sister Clorinda and middle school friend Veronica.

Today featured brunch with Ashan, Allen and Elijah at Court Square Diner. Then another MoMA facility, PS1, a former public school, with its more edgy modern art. This museum was made better with Dan to interpret everything for us.

Tomorrow, we head to Boston.