Advertisement
METROPOLITAN DIARY
Help with a hamburger, getting a look under a stranger’s hood and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
Image

Hamburger Helper
Dear Diary:
One of my favorite spots in the city to get a bite is a gas station on Eighth Avenue. The gas is expensive, but the food is well worth the price.
On a recent visit, I found that the line was unusually long. As I waited, I began talking with another customer. He told me it was his first time there and that he was looking for recommendations.
I said I normally ordered the classic burger with no toppings but had heard good things about some of the other options.
“What about this one?” he asked, pointing at a limited-edition item listed on the menu.
I had never tried it, but the ingredients looked good, so I told him he should go for it.
“Are you going to get one too?” he asked as he stepped to the counter to pay.
I stopped to think about it. As a college student, my budget was tight, and the burger he was getting was double the price of the one I had planned to order.
“Sure,” I responded hesitantly. “Why not?”
He smiled, leaned toward the cashier and paid for both of our orders.
As I thanked him, I noticed that his ears were badly swollen. When I asked about them, he told me he was a professional fighter.
“I just wanted to help somebody out,” he said.
— Jack Bulik
Image

Under the Hood
Dear Diary:
I was returning from a free ear-acupuncture clinic on a balmy spring day a few years ago, leisurely walking along Fifth Street on my way to the East Village.
I was feeling relaxed, so relaxed that I when I passed a man in his 60s who had his tools spread out on the sidewalk and was working on a car that had definitely seen better days, I did something out of character: I stopped to talk to him.
We chatted for a little while about the repair he was making to the car’s engine, and I peeked in under the hood.
“But,” he said with a straight face, “you should see the body in the trunk.”
There was a moment of silence, and then we both laughed and I walked away.
— Bonnie Rosenstock
Image

Passing Through
Dear Diary:
I had had an emotionally dense week in Connecticut selling off my late father’s belongings to pay for his funeral. I was stopping in New York to see my sister and some high school friends before heading home to California.
I dragged two large duffel bags down the stairs of a subway station in Harlem, one filled with what had been treasures of my father’s and now belonged to me.
Seeing a train about to depart, I resigned myself to missing it. I had no idea how to navigate the turnstiles with all that luggage.
Just then, a younger guy kicked open the gate so I could pass.
I followed him onto the train, where he let his foot hang in the doorway to make sure I made it. He caught my nod of thanks, put in his earbuds and jammed away.
Many hours and pints with my friends later, I was standing on a different platform at 2 a.m., fueling up on coconut water and Doritos before retreating to my sister’s air mattress.
Two punk-looking guys crossed my path.
“Hey,” one of them said, “you look like you’d be a really good dad.”
Somehow, New York always knows what you need.
— Peter Mackell
Image

Jamaica Avenue Memories
Dear Diary:
Since moving away from St. Albans, Queens, many years ago, I have carted around an old wooden clothes hanger that I “inherited” from my grandparents.
It is stenciled with the name of a shop on Jamaica Avenue that closed long ago, B&B Clothing Store. Now that I live in the Midwest, it’s a quirky reminder of my New York City roots.
Recently, I met a woman from Oklahoma, another Queens transplant, and impulsively shared a photo of my hanger with her.
To my surprise, she had a picture of her own New York keepsake: an identical wooden hanger from the very same Jamaica Avenue store.
— Thomas Piché
Image

Cab Chatter
Dear Diary:
In 2015, my then-husband and I visited New York City for the first time.
After getting a cab at LaGuardia to go to our hotel, my husband, a loquacious sort, tried to chat up the driver about where he was from, how many fares he picked up in a day and so on.
The driver never answered with more than two or three words.
When we got out at our hotel, I tried to apologize for my husband’s extreme chattiness.
“Don’t worry madam,” the driver said. “Texans always talk too much. We never listen.”
— Nancy Burks
Read all recent entries and our submissions guidelines. Reach us via email diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter.
Illustrations by Agnes Lee
Related Content
Advertisement