Tag Archives: Boston

Cherry Season

Some days I feel like I have been sucked through a vortex into an episode of my own personal sit com.  Sometimes, I drag my friends along with me. And it’s been happening for a long, long time.

Cherry Season, 1977, was bountiful.  In those days, summer fruit was available in the summer, not all year long.  So the different seasons were important.  And cherries season in New England is the best.  Warm, with a taste of summer and a hint of fall.  Magic.

Bonny, my then soon-to-be-roommate and I had plans for that perfect New England summer day.  We’d meet at farmers’ market downtown, buy cherries, bake a pie, and have a barbeque on the fire escape of my apartment, and top it off with our fresh-baked pie.  A simple, beautiful summer day.

Well, it should have been.  But you need to remember who the heroine is here.  And that anything can happen.  Mother Nature was involved here too.  And architecture.  So it really wasn’t my fault. 

Did I mention that Bonny and I didn’t know each other well?  It’s true.  We worked at the same graduate school, but were just acquaintances who each needed a new roommate. I thought she was WAY cooler than me, and I was still a little bit shy around her.  Reserved.  I kept my private side to myself, covered my ass.

We met at the Haymarket Farmers Market, in the heart of Boston.  It was crowded, as hundreds of people had the same idea that Bonny and I had — enjoy the day and shop outside!

Among other things, Bonn and I bought a large pallet of cherries – four quarts of the most perfect, dark red beauties.  We knew the pie would be magical.

But the pallet was heavy, so we headed off to my apartment, trading off carrying the cherries, stealing cherries along the way.  Off we went to the T – the Boston subway, cutting through Government Center.

Ever been there?  It’s an island of concrete, brick and stone in the middle of old Boston.  It seems devoid of people, like a lunar landscape. Paul Revere would have had no one to warn that the British were Coming.

Oh hell. Who am I kidding? Government Center is seriously ugly.  In fact, Buildworld recently voted it the 4th UGLlEST BUILDING ON PLANET EARTH.  I haven’t a clue who Buildworld is, but they’re right. Just look:

If you HAVE been there, well, you will recall that the winds that go through that lifeless brick and cement land are fierce.  In the winter, you want to die.  In the summer?  It causes wardrobe malfunctions.  At least it did for me.

You see, I was wearing my favorite summer dress.  It was a pretty blue and white aline dress; the fabric fell down from my shoulders and flared out at the bottom.  It was cool and comfortable.  I loved to twirl in it, as there was no belt or tightened waistband to prevent the skirt from flaring out completely.  I still miss that dress; it was perfect for any summer day outing.  Well, almost perfect; and almost any summer day.

The wind loved it too. 

As we got half-way to the T through Government Center, we rounded a corner and the wind whipped my dress up over my head, á la Marilyn.  Bonny was taking her turn carrying the cherries, and I fought with my dress.  But it was useless.  I’d grab the hem and pull the sides down, while the wind whipped up the back.  I’d catch the back, and the front would go flying up.  I was flashing my underpants at half the population of Boston.  I hoped they were clean.  After laughing uproariously, we soon we realized that we needed drastic action.  Teamwork.  Our non-existent military training took over.

I took the cherry pallet and held the front of my dress down with it. Bonny walked half-a-step behind me, holding on to the sides of my dress.  Progress was slow, as we couldn’t stop laughing.  I’m pretty sure Magellan circumnavigated the globe in less time than it took Bonny and me to frog-march across barren Government Center to the subway, guarding the public from the sight of my underpants. 

***

Bonny and I lived together for two years; we’ve been friends now for 46 years.  It seems that close friendships are formed when you work together to cover someone’s ass.

23 Comments

Filed under 1997, A Little Restraint, Perhaps, Adult Traumas, Assholes, Boston, Cool people, Curses!, Holy Shit, Huh?, Humiliation, Humor, keys to success, laughter, Oh shit, Oops!, Seriously funny, Shit happens, WTF?

Lovely Rita

Lovely Rita meter maid,
Nothing can come between us,
When it gets dark I tow your heart away.
Standing by a parking meter,
When I caught a glimpse of Rita,
Filling in a ticket in her little white book.
In a cap she looked much older,
And the bag across her shoulder
Made her look a little like a military man.

How can you live in America, be named Rita, and have never heard “Lovely Rita”?

It was 1979, and I worked at the office of the International Tax Program. (WAKE UP!!!! I’m not gonna talk about tax, I promise.) The ITP was a pleasant place to work part time, as I was in my freshman year of college. The people who worked there were an incredibly kind bunch of folks.

My desk sat right out front in the area immediately inside the doors to the ITP’s offices. My desk was right next to Rita’s, the receptionist.

Naturally from the moment I met her, and from the instant I walked into the doors of the office every day for a year, I could hear the song.

Lovely Rita, Meta Maid …

I often called her “Lovely Rita” which is unlike me, and was even more unlike me when I was 21. I hummed the song and sang it softly all the time. The ear worm lasted the whole year I worked in the office.

My lovely Rita was an older woman – about 40 at the time, which seemed as ancient to me then as it seems young to me now. She’d emigrated from Germany, some years before, and was not at all familiar with English-language pop music.

It was some months after starting to work there that I learned Rita had never heard her own song. How could that be?

Naturally I went home planning to take the record into the office. But I couldn’t find my copy of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Anywhere.  It had vanished.

Nobody in the office had it, either. Nor did any of my friends.

I searched a couple of used record stores in Boston, and enlisted the help of my roommate, Elizabeth who was a record-store junky. Somehow, there were no copies of the album anywhere.

Unwilling to be completely defeated, I enlisted some talented friends – folks I’d been performing with in amateur musicals. Together, me, Erik and Terry serenaded Lovely Rita with her song.

We sounded something like this:

Well.  Kind of like that.

My friend, my lovely Rita loved it.  For the rest of the time I worked there, she would hum along with me when I sang it.

*     *     *

This is my entry in Knocked Over By A Feather’s Beatles Contest.  The rules are pretty simple — tell a story using the lyrics to any one of several Beatles songs:  Across the Universe, Baby You’re a Rich Many, Good Day Sunshine, Hey Bulldog or Lovely Rita.  Guess which one I chose.

Go and enter.  It’s fun.

59 Comments

Filed under Beatles, Boston, Geneva Stories, Humor, Music