Purrrrr Puss, Part II
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This was the start to our trip. Revaz’s sister had bought tickets to the Broadway showing of Avenue Q, a puppet show with a sex scene. We had heard good things – too many – and so we hopped on the subway, marched through the always-anti-climatic Times Square, and walked up the steps of the old theater to our high altitude seats where the po’ people consume their culture. Avenue Q was written by Robert Lopez and Jeff Mark. It follows Princeton, a recent graduate with a B.A. in English, who moved to Avenue Q in New York City with the hope of finding his purpose. It’s funny. And it’s funny because it’s true. The first song? “What Do You Do with a B.A. in English?” True. As it always is for a traveler, the most common question was, “so what are you doing in New York?” After a couple days of practice, my response became, “what am I not doing in New York? It seems like this is where everyone is.” So many of my friends – sadly, more than I was able to see – have come to this metropolis for one reason or the other. Or maybe they all come to this city precisely because they have no reason. Either way, I wanted to find out, so this became my line of questioning.
Moreno (cigarette wedged above his ear, another dangling between his lips): “Jive this oso man, this here, it is like the cosmic centerness where the beats be happening, you dig? This be the crossroads, the karmic Mecca where tales are told. And by tales I mean, you know, bunny tales. And by bunnies I mean … you dig oso man? Oso (legs crossed, as per usual, poet style, the way that elicits, “why do you sit like a fag” in junior high) “I’m not quite sure I follow. I mean, there’s gotta be something magnetic about this city right? Why do so many people come out here as soon as they’re done with college? It’s like the official graduation rite of all my friends. What are they looking for? What are they getting out of it? I mean, you guys never even leave Brooklyn.” Moreno: Come on, little bear man, wutchyu gettin’ at? Why would I leave my slick barrio when the world comes to me man. Look around, you got a little of everything. You’s got the Jewish cats, the Polish cats, these fine looking Japanese cats here, and that happy-as-fuck Black man strummin’ all those Beatles tunes in the subway stop. Fuck, I like me the Beatles little bear … Where was I?
Rochelle’s is an experience that I think most of us can relate to. It’s not like career path confusion is something that didn’t exist prior to the 90′s, but she’s right, these days there is an unavoidable indoctrination of do-gooding idealism at the college-level before they throw you out into a job market where doing good almost inevitably translates to “grant-writer” or $20,000 a year office slave at some human rights organization. Twenty-three to twenty-eight … those are the years spent “seeking purpose.” That is, stalling. Until you have to either sell out (easily justifiable these days with en-vogue neoconservativism and libertarianism) or settle on grad school or teaching. As the end of our purpose-seeking stint comes upon us, it’s been interesting to see which of my friends end up doing what. Financially speaking, some of them have made out pretty nicely. Others are broke, but still dreamy with optimism. And yet others have put off the ugly decision for another 5 – 6 years as they scratch their chins in various grad schools around the world. But the overarching sentiment that they all share is that this isn’t what they want to be doing in the long run. This isn’t their purpose in life. They’re just not quite sure what is. |












Interesting post. I’m a couple years ahead on the timeline, but it seems to be much the same, and essentially true for my experience. The “twixter” ratio of my peers starting declining a few years back. However, there was never a large percentage in the following groups:
1) First gen kids. I usually attribute this to the hard work & expectations put in by the parents. However, this can be driven only by culture – usually of the support-your-parents variety.
2) Oops I had a kid, kids. Married or had a kid early, dependencies put the nose to the grindstone.
3) I’m po’ & motivated not to be, and/or debt-that-could-choke-a-horse, kids. No outside support to “savor the pleasures of irresponsibility”.
For me, #3 was the reason to get started on a career. When I was finished school, loans decided my path. At the time, I wasn’t particularly happy about that. But looking back, I can see there were benefits to this path.
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The last two paragraphs are awesome. It’s so damn true. It is comforting to know that I am not alone…pienso lo mismo.
trying not to sell out but its a more attractive option than returning be an office slave at any nonprofit.
Sell out early, buy a house when you’re 30. It’s a helluva lot easier than waiting.
Anon is right, I am just lazy… now Happy Birthday Gabo!
Thanks for getting my thoughts out there Oso and more importantly thanks for generating some thought provoking responses.
It’s funny because living in NYC, I find myself confronting the same dilemma over and over again: Should I pursue a career for money/security or STRUGGLE with a career I REALLY like/want. During the past 2 weeks I have been on 4 interviews in fields that are very diverse:
1. Executive Assistant= high salary, but totally and completely admin.
2. Production Assistant=low (and that is an understatement) salary, but totally up my alley.
3. Sales and Marketing= somewhere in the middle of my first two options
4. Temping for the rest of my life.
Thus, in the next few weeks I will again attempt to tackle the same question. I was recently given the advice, “as long as you are learning, making money, and having fun, in that order, that’s really all that matters.”
For me, somehow it is tends to be a bit more complicated…
Austinites are renowned for doing both: living the creative life and having the 8to5 job for the bills.
I have to agree with Moreno. New York is the center of the universe. Period. I have a Nepalese friend who grew up in Kathmandu. Now he lives in Brooklyn and refuses to ever leave NYC. It is hard to even get him to come to Jersey.
PS, another vote for Moreno. NYC is *the* city.
“What do you do with a BA in English?” Leave the Land of Sellout Opportunities, try to fund your love of travel/adventure through teaching, end up being broke most of the time, but with dreamy idealism intact.
Coincidentally, I was rejected by the NY Teaching Fellows for overqualification last year (apparently you can’t have any kind of prior teacher training).
Yes, well doc, you are actually doing some good there in Monterrey now. I was (we were) teaching uninterested business managers for multinational companies … which didn’t really have me feeling so idealistic.
Why doesn’t anyone ever tell me I’m overqualified for anything?
I feel like such a fraud at times because I’ve never explored NYC. I always seem to continue on towards Barcelona, and every single time I say the same damn thing…“I’ll stay in NYC for a few days, then go to Europe” NYC I do crave thee!
dear lord i feel this entry. i’m trying to find a job until i am ready for med school…and the world, the job world too, well it sucks.