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The Write Side of 59

~ This is What Happens When You Begin to Age Out of Middle Age

The Write Side of 59

Monthly Archives: June 2014

Sleeping Patterns Post 50: Erratic and Unpredictable

04 Wednesday Jun 2014

Posted by WS50 in Concepts, Travel

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Nap time, Sleeping patterns

Catching a few zzz's midday

Catching a few zzz’s midday

By FRANK TERRANELLA

Most of the people I know who are over 80 take naps every day. That’s something those of us over 50 but still working don’t have the luxury to do. Although I don’t usually nap even on days off, I think that one of the benefits of retirement for me will be the ability take an afternoon nap if I want to.

It used to be part of the culture in Europe. I remember being in Europe back in 1972 and being amazed that many businesses shut down for lunch and an afternoon siesta. This was especially true in the warmer Mediterranean countries. Now, due to our pernicious example, many Europeans have adopted American working habits. But there’s a lot to be said for recharging the batteries and avoiding the midday sun.

While I don’t get to nap in the afternoon, my commuting does have the advantage of giving me at least 30 minutes of nap-available time on my bus trip home. I take advantage of that opportunity fairly often. To me, that’s one of the prime benefits of using mass transit.

Before I started working in Manhattan, I commuted to various New Jersey locations by car every day. Many were the days when the commute was more tiring than the job. Now, in exchange for a monthly payment to New Jersey Transit, I get to leave the driving to someone else and take a nap. I find that when I get a chance to take a nap on the commute home, I feel refreshed for my evening. But when I don’t, I often find my eyes closing as I watch television after about 9:30. On those days, it’s bed by 10:00. I recognize this as a result of age because I never had trouble staying awake before I hit 50.

The other change in my sleeping patterns that has emerged since I turned 50 is that I awake at sunrise no matter whether it’s a work day or not. Years ago I could just turn over and go back to sleep. But now I find I am physically uncomfortable staying in bed. So even on vacation I was up at 6 and in bed by 10.

Apart from the issue of sleep is the fact that in recent years I find that whenever I sit in a darkened room my eyes close, even if that darkened room happens to be a movie house or a Broadway theater. Billy Crystal speaks elegantly of this phenomenon in his book, “Still Foolin’ ‘Em,” which I wrote about on this blog last October.

In his case, it’s particularly embarrassing because people recognize him as he nods off at a Broadway show. For me, at least there’s the anonymity of just being that old person nodding off. But this nodding off syndrome has nothing to do with being tired or even the time of day. It has to do with the dark, and being over 50.

Oh, and it may have something to do with all the medications I have been taking since I turned 50. So as I make my way to old age I know that I’ll be sleeping more and more all the time. The timing may be a bit off because while my grandson Bryce still sleeps most of every day, he’s sleeping less all the time. Soon he’ll be awake more than me. And that’s OK. I’ll need someone to cut the lawn while I nap.

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Kara Walker’s Sugar Babies in Brooklyn

03 Tuesday Jun 2014

Posted by WS50 in Art, Opinion

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Brooklyn, Domino Sugar Factory, Julie Seyler, Kara Walker, Williamsburg

Metropolitan Ave. and River Place. Brooklyn, N.Y.

Metropolitan Ave. and River Place. Brooklyn, N.Y.

BY JULIE SEYLER

A couple of weeks ago I took the L train to Bedford Avenue, the first stop in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. I became enchanted. It reminded me of a time past, before things became so homogeneous in Manhattan. It has the vibe of the East Village, 30  years ago, when I was someone who finished the night at 5:00 AM with scrambled eggs at Kiev. However I am definitely late to the Williamsburg game and whatever vibe I sensed is no doubt on its way out as Brooklyn morphs to the dance of money.

In any event, I had a mission. I was in search of the Domino Sugar Factory, once the processing source for DOMINO brand sugar, and now, an unused warehouse with one last purpose to fulfill before it undergoes semi-demolition. It is currently home to the artist Kara Walker’s show:
The Marvelous Sugar Baby

En route, I discovered the Metropolitan Pool, a lap lane pool built as a Public Bath in 1922 that is still in use today, and got a close up gander of the Williamsburg Bridge, which opened in 1903 with the distinction of being the longest suspension bridge in the world.

Williamsburg Bridge

After 20 minutes of meandering, I found my way to the sugar factory. This 19th century tome to the production of sugar, immense and obsolescent, is a work of art in itself. From its chipped and peeling paint to its rusted pipes there is texture, color and form to take in, and while a part of it is doomed to redevelopment as condominiums with riverside views of Manhattan, the exterior of the central refinery is landmark protected.

This is not the landmarked part. I just loved the way the blue paint curled about.

This is not the landmarked part. I just loved the way the blue paint curled about.

As soon as you walk inside, you smell sugar, even though it has been 10 years since the building stopped operating as a refinery. Your eyes adjust to the dimness of the natural light streaming in through the windows of this 90,000 square foot space and you take in sculptures, about three to four feet high, made of resin, with a shiny translucent reddish cast. Look closely and you see the cherubic, angelic faces of children. What registers is dissonance because the sugary benign-ness of their expressions underscores the horror that once it was a fait accompli that children were put to work, all day, picking sugar cane under a blazing sun.P1240394

When you turn to the left, you see that the sugar baby children are overseen by a gigantess, a Mama Sphinx, made entirely of sugar, lying with her haunch in the air.Sugarbaby 1

The immediate association is ancient Egypt, not only because the size and pose of the work evokes the Great Sphinx at Giza, but because her mien is as inscrutable as a Sphinx. However, she cannot be confined to the world that existed 4000 years ago when Egypt’s grandest monuments were erected on the backs of slaves. She is also an icon of pre-Civil War America, when a great deal of commerce and trade and growth in the American economy was accomplished because it was legal to own another man, woman or child. What I see in this sculpture is that the Mama Sphinx may have been a slave by circumstance, but she was never a servant. She is regal and rules with serenity and fearlessness.

Kara Walker has captured history and beauty, sweetness and bitterness, in a way that I have never seen before. It is an amazing show because it works on so many levels. There is the sheer technical artistry and then there is the simplicity of the lines and the fullness of color created by an absence of “color”, the symmetry and the way the space is filled. Even the title, “A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby, an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant“, is packed with layering.

The show made me think and reflect and ponder, and even now I keep finding new and different connections. A work of art so powerful that it requires nothing from the viewer but to be astonished, moved, and educated is fabulous.

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A Film Noir Quiz

02 Monday Jun 2014

Posted by WS50 in Art, Movies

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Tags

Double Indemnity, Film noir, movie quotes, movies

Fred and Barbara. Mixed media. Julie Seyler

Fred and Barbara. Mixed media. Julie Seyler

Every year the Film Forum, located on West Houston Street between the Avenue of the Americas and Varick Street, runs a series focusing on the twisted crime dramas with great hijinks known as “film noir”. Double Indemnity, directed by Billy Wilder, from 1944, starring Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray, is the noiriest of all film noir films. It is a movie that never gets old.

This year’s series, scheduled to run from July 18-August 7, is called “Femme Noirs: Hollywood’s Dangerous Dames”. The Film Forum puts out a calendar that provides a synopsis of each film in the series, and it’s fun to peruse because the programmers highlight a few of the best lines from some of the films.

Since we at WS50 have tried our hand at the pithy one liner, we have utter appreciation for these quotes that capture a scene, a character, the mood of a gray shrouded night in a sentence.

So here’s a quiz. Match the quote with the movie and email your response to loandjule@gmail.com. Drinks at Rolf’s on us for anyone that gets them all right. (Answers will be posted on Friday).

The Quote

1. “I caught the blackjack right behind my ear. A black pool opened at my feet. I dived in.”

2. “Nobody’s all bad, deep down. She comes the closest.”

3. “Give me a kiss or I’ll sock ya.”

4. “If I’d only known where it would end, I’d never have let anything start.”

5. “Whichever way you turn, fate sticks out a foot to trip you.”

6. “If you shoot, baby, you’ll smear us all over the road.”

7. “You’re not too smart, are you? I like that in a man.”

8. “I will not be ignored.

The Movie

1. Fatal Attraction. Adrian Lyne (1987).

2. The Lady from Shanghai. Orson Welles (1948).

3. Dead Reckoning. John Cromwell (1947).

4. Murder, My Sweet. Edward Dmytryk (1944).

5. The Postman Always Rings Twice. Tay Garnett (1946).

6. Detour. Edgar G. Ulmer (1948).

7. Body Heat. Lawrence Kasdan (1981).

8. Out of the Past. Jacques Tourneur (1946).

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