Tuesday

Another day of uncharacteristically warm weather and not going into the office.

Of course, today I worked from home and didn’t get out and about into the warm weather except to take the dog for a walk around noon. I feel slightly (weirdly) angry at the late-spring-like temperatures. If it’s going to be winter, be winter. I’ve already gone to the trouble of digging out the coats and the sweaters. Don’t make me start contemplating digging out shorts. It’s supposed to get colder later in the week — though not below forty — so at least I don’t have to completely rethink my wardrobe each morning.

Oh well. No jury duty tomorrow, so it looks like I’ll be headed over to Hofstra for a few meetings with professors. I’m close to getting done all the things I absolutely had to get done before the end of the year, which will soon leave me with all the things I probably should get done before the end of the year…but will actually get done sometime in early January.

When, presumably, the weather will be in the low ’80s.

The week that was is no more

Poor little tree. It’s definitely faced the worst of it these past two weeks, losing first one bough early in the hurricane, then another in the snow. It’s only been planted there maybe a couple of years. Hopefully it will survive.

I look at that tree and think, well, I don’t have it so bad. Which is good, because commuting to work has been pretty dreadful all week. I have some small hope that, with a number of people off for Veteran’s Day, Monday will be a little lighter. At the very least, I’m quite glad I won’t have to face the Long Island Railroad for at least a couple of days.

I plan to spend the weekend doing nothing more exciting than reading Kaleidotrope submissions and getting a much-needed haircut. I might go see the new James Bond movie; I haven’t decided. But mostly just enjoying not being on a commuter train.

Thursday

So it snowed. Quite a lot, actually, and it turns out we suffered more damage last night than during last week’s hurricane. Several large branches fell in the backyard, and the poor little tree in the front yard lost yet another bough. And you definitely wouldn’t have thought I’d shoveled the driveway at all last night.

Some estimates put it at a foot of snow.

That’s pretty unusual for us the first week of November, especially right on the heels of a devastating hurricane. We almost lost power again last night. They still don’t have power across the street. And the Long Island Railroad is still uncomfortably crowded.

It wasn’t so bad this morning. I caught a later train, at 7:28, and even though the LIRR did that thing again when they pretend a train is still coming, it’s just 20+ minutes late, it wasn’t as horribly uncrowded as last night’s. I even had enough room to open my book for half of the trip, which this week has been almost unheard of! And this evening…well, again, still ridiculously over-crowded, but I was on the same train as my father and we both managed to get seats.

And a lot of the show has already melted. I don’t know what that means in terms of power restoration for the rest of the block, or for my train tomorrow morning, but things could always be worse.

At least I didn’t have any webinars to go to today.

Wednesday

So today’s been a day.

I woke up at 5:30. I was going to get the 6:08 train.

That train was delayed, alternating between 23 and 25 minutes, depending, I can only imagine, on which way the wind was blowing at the moment or on some strange whim of the person announcing it. The time would change every few minutes as we stood around in the cold.

The 6:28 train, however, was apparently operating on time.

Does the Long Island Railroad really think they’re fooling anyone with that? Like one train is going to leap-frog over the other, or they’re both going to arrive simultaneously on the same track? “Sure, one train’s towing the other,” my father joked. (This was one of the rare times we were taking the same train. Even a week-plus after Sandy, there are still few trains to choose from.) If the 6:08 train is running twenty-something minutes late, and the 6:28 is on time, then there is no 6:08 train. The LIRR can call it “equipment trouble” and “delays” all they want, but the train’s been cancelled and we all know it.

Of course, the 6:28 was running late, too. Something like 6 minutes.

When it arrived, it was short, which is exactly what you want to do when you’re expecting huge crowds of commuters, crowds so deep down the aisles of each car that, after one or two stations, passengers can no longer even get on board. You obviously want to remove entire cars from that equation. Who needs that space? I mean, it’s not like you’re running a reduced schedule and presumably have other trains sitting around. Oh, it is? And you do? Well then you suck.

The train was very crowded when I got on. It became progressively more crowded, uncomfortably crowded, as it stumbled along. I think today was actually worse than Monday. We had three more stops, at each of which more and more people piled on, then another stop where some got on, some got off. And then “just for today,” we added another stop, in Woodside, which is about halfway between Jamaica, Queens, and Penn Station in Manhattan.

I shouldn’t complain about this stop, though, since a guy who was sitting down decided to disembark then and I got his seat. I did that thing where you hesitate briefly, to see if anybody else is going to take the seat, without directly offering it to anyone else. You know, for fear that they’ll actually take it. But nobody else made a move, and I was really the only one well positioned enough to take the seat. (When I say you could not turn around, I am not exaggerating.) So I got to sit down for the last 10-15 minutes of my morning commute.

I arrived at the office around the same time as I did on Monday, maybe only about a few minutes later. Let’s call it 7:30-ish.

And then I worked and worked and worked.

I had a break for an hour, when I had to sit through a webinar about our new time sheet system. I am not exaggerating when I say it made me miss the train.

Of course, the evening train…now that was awful. Even more crowded, no seats at all, and oh, did I mention it snowed several inches tonight? I managed to get out of Manhattan ahead of the worst of it, meaning I was only on the train for maybe an hour and a half (standing up, barely able to move, pinned in from all sides by other passengers), rather than getting stuck on a train like my father did about an hour later. (He had a seat, though, so there is that.)

Because what we really needed right now on the east coast was a nor’easter and snow.

Thursday? A likely story

There’s no way you’re going to convince me that today was Thursday.

This has been a very strange week, thanks largely to the storm and the devastation in its wake. We suffered relatively little of that devastation, or even too many days of inconvenience, and I’m extremely grateful for that. I still can’t believe the lights, on this side of the block anyway, are back on — although I’ll admit, there’s a part of me that misses having no distractions to keep me from reading all day and night. I am glad to have the heat back on; an autumn that just wouldn’t get properly started for weeks has finally kicked into high gear. With the heat on, you can probably manage short sleeves in the house, but Tuesday and yesterday morning I was thankful for extra blankets and fleeces.

Meanwhile, Tucker, our dog, seemed pretty much oblivious to the storm. Sure, the wind was loud and there was some rain when he went outside, but there was no thunder, which is the thing that usually worries him. In fact, I think he genuinely enjoyed the storm: when the power went out, the house was quiet (except for the aforementioned wind) and we all went to bed at a more reasonable (to him) hour. It was only yesterday, when trick-or-treaters started knocking on his door that Tucker seemed to be at all fazed. Except for the chilliness, and disruption in his schedule, I think he preferred living in a blackout.

Not so much me. I’m really glad it’s over, and that things are (slowly) returning to normal. I won’t be headed to the office tomorrow — I’m taking the vacation day that this past Monday was supposed to be, and I’m sitting out a still uncertain train commute until next week. But I am looking forward to things getting back to normal next week.