Most people do not live in New York City and many of them probably wonder why anyone does. There are more than 8 million people here of every possible race, religion, ethnicity, nationality, and gender. Often it seems crowded, busy, and hurried. But it’s never boring.
Because the city is so polyglot, we New Yorkers tend to be unusually tolerant. We are accustomed to living with diversity. Trump is an exception to that tolerance, but then he lived in a golden penthouse and didn’t have much to do with his fellow New Yorkers. Now that he has moved to Mar-a-Lago, we don’t have to dream up reasons for his ingrained racism.
I watched the “ticker-tape” parade in honor of the New York Knicks (on television, not in person). Around two million people lined the streets from Battery Park to City Hall, according to the NYPD. It was a world-class celebration, topped only by the unadulterated joy in the streets and neighborhoods on the night of the Knicks’ fifth game, when they overcame a large deficit and won the championship in the closing minute or two. As the New York Times recorded, people were dancing in the streets across the city.
NYC is filled with surprising and delightful moments.
Let me tell you about a recent day. We drove from Brooklyn to lower Manhattan to go book-shopping at the Strand, a four-story building at the corner of Broadway and 12th Street. The Strand is an iconic bookstore, the largest in the city, with some 2.5 million books–new, used, and rare. It was packed with customers, mostly young people of high school and college age. There were four or five cashiers to handle the long lines. It was a beautiful sight to see.
Then we walked to Veselka, a Ukrainian restaurant, a few blocks away and enjoyed borscht, pierogies, stuffed cabbage, and schnitzel. Authentic and delicious.
The week before, we invited a friend to go to an Austrian restaurant–Cafe Katja– on Orchard Street on the Lower East Side. I remember when the Lower East Side was mostly slums. No more. The streets were crowded, again, mostly with young people. We ate a meal whose highlight was white asparagus, flown in from Holland. Wow.
The street is lined with restaurants, boutiques, and artsy shops. While we were eating our lunch, a pick-up band began playing across the street. In a minute, the street was filled with people enjoying the music.
Another night we went to Broadway to see Mariska Hargitay playing solo in “Every Brilliant Thing.” She was wonderful. We love watching her on “Law and Order: Special Victims Unit.” As we walked out of the theatre, we crossed Broadway, which was aglow with neon lights and alive with visitors and tourists.
Only in New York!
There’s something about living in this city that is simply joyful. Time and again, we experience that joy and understand why young people in search of adventure will always come to big cities. Despite what you may have heard, NYC is very safe. And the possibility of joy is always around the corner.

One reason I enjoyed teaching ELLs in New York was the opportunity to meet young people from all over the world as it was a personally enriching experience. While most of my students arrived from Haiti, Mexico and Central America, I also had the good fortune to teach a number of students from every continent other than Anarctica. Working in a school close to the city was an enormous educational advantage as well since the culture, entertainment and museums are amazing in New York as are most of tolerant New Yorkers as well. New York City offers a buffet of field trips for schools that can raise enough money to go. Whenever I wrote a grant, I often included a field trip or two to a Manhattan museum.
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This is the greatest place I’ve ever lived, and I’ve lived quite a few places around these here United States.
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I grew up in West Virginia and came to NYC for the first time on a college trip when I was about 19. I fell in love with the city and have been ever since. I now live on Long Island and I recently took friends from Italy into the city for a few days of sight seeing. And while I love the city, I don’t navigate it well and had to ask directions frequently. The New Yorkers I asked were invariably kind and helpful.
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In my neighborhood in Brooklyn, there are often foreign tourists. They come to get a good view of the Statue of Liberty. I spot them when they are puzzling over a map. I always go up to them to offer directions. Any New Yorker would do that (said the girl from Texas).
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Ok–it’s the “Garbage & Rats Tour” (you can put it in your search engine)–received 100%/5-Star Reviews on TripAdvisor from 101 reviewers. If you’re planning a vacation, book soon–she is often booked solid during the spring & summer. Have fun!!
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