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‘I Asked the Driver to Take Me to a Place That Was Seven Blocks Away’ - The New York Times

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A short cab ride, a new place in the West Village and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.

Dear Diary:

After hailing a cab one night, I asked the driver to take me to a place that was seven blocks away.

For some reason, I felt compelled to explain why I wasn’t walking. I said it was because it was drizzling and also because I wasn’t wearing walking shoes.

“No charge,” the driver said.

I laughed.

When we got to where I was going, I asked him how much the fare was.

“I said, no charge,” he said.

— Barbara Baum


Dear Diary:

For the first 22 years of my life, I lived with my parents and my older sister in apartments in Flushing.

When it was time to move into a place of my own, I found a very large, reasonably priced studio in Forest Hills and moved there. Then, after five years in Forest Hills, it was time to make a move to “the city.”

After a short search, I found an apartment on 125 Washington Place. It had one bedroom, one bathroom, an eat-in kitchen and a living room with a large window. The West Village location was ideal.

Finding the apartment was very exciting, and I wanted to tell my parents all about it. When I called them, my father, who was quite reserved, answered.

I told him that I had found a place and gave him the address. He began to laugh.

It was not a normal reaction for him, so I asked why he was laughing.

He told me that in 1925, he, my aunt, my grandfather and my grandmother had immigrated to New York from Russia. Their first apartment had been at 118 Washington Place.

Look straight out my living room window into the apartment house across the way, my father said, and I would be able to see into what had been his first home in the city.

— Lorraine Rosenblatt


Dear Diary:

maimed angels

tumble
through sun-fired shafts
into valleys of glass

the sea rides tidal fields
clashes with squalls
climbs over people

in this self-made labyrinth — this uterine center

there’s this precise angled gyration

to every day

& every day — it unfolds

tall buildings unfold
the sky unfolds

& shoots up from its hidden bunker & leans

imperceptibly on its sculpture of stone

so what now — you prepare a meal
& a mouth snaps open

& an ancient animal latches on

a woman loosely robed

pulls a sword from her throat

a man lights a newspaper
watches it burn

people on fire run into the sea

— Iain Britton


Dear Diary:

It must have been about 1957. I was 15 and my younger brother 7. It was Christmas vacation, and we took the subway from Brooklyn in Manhattan and enjoyed the usual holiday sights.

When it was lunchtime, we headed to the Automat to get a bite to eat. In those days kids like us were fascinated by the automatic self-serve cubicles. We both grabbed trays and together we picked out one serving of macaroni and cheese and another of franks and beans.

I wanted pie for dessert, and my brother wanted to show me how grown up he was by going get it all by himself.

“Whatever you do, get me no mince pie,” I said.

A few minutes later, he came back with a slice of mince pie.

”Didn’t you hear and understand me,” I said.

“I looked at all the pies and couldn’t find no mince pie,” he said. “So I got mince pie. Figured it was close enough."

— Bill Goldman


Dear Diary:

I was living in Westchester County and commuting to Manhattan for work. I also belonged to the Canadian Women’s Club of New York City at the time. In addition to our regular meetings, we had lovely functions that I would attend after work.

One such dinner was at a nice restaurant that I cannot remember now. I walked there from my office on Fifth Avenue.

As many women did then, I wore sneakers for the walk and had my dress shoes in a tote bag. When I got close to the restaurant I stopped at a black iron railing. There was a light shining into the basement apartment behind the railing.

As I was pulling off my sneakers, the apartment door opened and a man came walking out in my direction.

I was a bit frightened and also somewhat embarrassed to be standing there with a shoe in my hand. I muttered something apologetic about changing my shoes.

The man walked up to me and handed me a bottle of lotion. He said it was a gift.

“Oh, wonderful,” I said.

He turned and went back inside.

— Myrtle Burton

Read all recent entries and our submissions guidelines. Reach us via email diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter.

Illustrations by Agnes Lee

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