Friday, May 22, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

VIRUS DIARY: Goodbye to NYC, and to its unforgettable sounds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jul, 2020 07:02 PM
  • VIRUS DIARY: Goodbye to NYC, and to its unforgettable sounds

The last few weeks I spent in New York City, the soundtrack of my days went like this: police helicopters circling, firecrackers startling, uniform chants for justice rising into the air.

The noise was constant — particularly following what had been months of silence as the city that never sleeps went into a deep slumber. Since mid-March, the only sound we'd heard came from ambulances carrying the thousands of people who would become victims to a startling virus as the city became the epicenter.

I had dreamt of living in New York City since I was 13. I had come here from Southern California for the first time with my middle school choir class. We stayed in a hotel near Times Square, and I remembered the noise — the constant, looping sound of a city in motion. The subway rumbled underneath our feet as New Yorkers existed outside, creating a cacophony.

It was beautiful. I remember thinking: This is what life must sound like.

Now, more than a decade later, my time with New York is limited but also, somehow infinite. The days now have no beginning or end. We are not working from home but, rather, living at work. And now I find myself with too much time to recollect about a whirlwind romance with the only place I have ever felt at home.

In a 1967 essay, “Goodbye to All That,” Joan Didion wrote: “I am not sure that it is possible for anyone brought up in the East to appreciate entirely what New York, the idea of New York, means to those of us who came out of the West and the South.”

In many ways, I am so lucky. I got to have New York City for three beautiful and challenging years. For some, that may seem short, but I came alive here. I moved into a 300-square-foot apartment in the East Village in the summer of 2017, and life as I knew it changed.

I attended my dream school in New York. I met the girl who is now my best friend at a coffee shop near Washington Square Park. I fell in love for the first time while waiting for a table on the Upper West Side. I had my first national byline on the third floor of 30 Rock. I experienced my first heartbreak in an apartment deep in Bushwick. I graduated with my master’s on a blistering hot summer day at Yankee Stadium.

I moved to four apartments in three years. I cried on every train line in the city's subway system but one. I truly lived in New York. And now, as the city is battered and broken down, as buildings remain closed and most stores are boarded up, I am leaving. Not because of the virus, but to start a new job.

Like many, I have spent these past three months mourning the life we had before this virus. The memories and lives lost. But I am also mourning the noise of a city in motion. And now, I wonder, will the sidewalks of New York ever be filled to the brim again? Will there be a day when the neighbourhood barber shops, restaurants, and dive bars are busy again?

I don’t know. But I know one thing. The other night, as protests erupted in each of the city’s five boroughs, a beautiful sound poured into the corners and crevices of my Brooklyn neighbourhood. It interrupted the chants, the helicopters and the fireworks. It was the sound of Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have A Dream” speech.

It echoed off the brownstones and spilled into the bodegas. It was the new soundtrack of a city in motion.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Visit Florida To Pay $73,000 To Ceo After Rapper Kerfuffle

Visit Florida To Pay $73,000 To Ceo After Rapper Kerfuffle
Florida's tourism agency agreed Tuesday to pay its outgoing president and CEO $73,000 amid the fallout from the state's secret deal with rapper Pitbull and a video for his song "Sexy Beaches."

Visit Florida To Pay $73,000 To Ceo After Rapper Kerfuffle

Menopause For Killer Whales Involves Mother-Daughter Conflict: Study

Menopause For Killer Whales Involves Mother-Daughter Conflict: Study
VICTORIA — A study released today says mother-daughter conflicts over competition and co-operation are helping explain why killer whales go through menopause.

Menopause For Killer Whales Involves Mother-Daughter Conflict: Study

Canuck Cliche? Are Canadians Really As Nice As Meryl Streep And The World Insist?

Canuck Cliche? Are Canadians Really As Nice As Meryl Streep And The World Insist?
The notion that Canadians are extra nice is an enduring stereotype the Seattle-based writer wholeheartedly buys into, and it would seem a lot of Americans do, too.

Canuck Cliche? Are Canadians Really As Nice As Meryl Streep And The World Insist?

Emotional Portuguese PM Recalls His Father's Love For Goa

Emotional Portuguese PM Recalls His Father's Love For Goa
Costa, who is the first head of government of Goan origin, said he was honoured by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's invitation to visit India.

Emotional Portuguese PM Recalls His Father's Love For Goa

Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case

Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case
VANCOUVER — A former Mountie convicted of perjury in relation to the death of a Polish man at Vancouver's airport in 2007 has lost his appeal.

Perjury Conviction Upheld For Former Mountie Linked To Dziekanski Case

Girl Gets Back Special Teddy Bear Lost In Airport Shooting

Girl Gets Back Special Teddy Bear Lost In Airport Shooting
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Yards from where workers finished the cleanup from the Fort Lauderdale airport shooting, a girl was reunited Tuesday with the teddy bear she left behind while fleeing.

Girl Gets Back Special Teddy Bear Lost In Airport Shooting