Skip to main content

You Are Here

Ginny and I rode the subway from Brooklyn to Manhattan. We exited the tunnel, burst into bright sunshine, and began to cross the Manhattan Bridge into lower Manhattan. Through the windows, we watched the city grow larger. Skyscrapers stretched to the scattered clouds above them. It was intimidating - miles of buildings - a wall of concrete and glass.

The river fell below and behind us. We plunged underneath the city and to our transfer point at West 4TH street. We walked off the train and looked around. The station had three levels of tracks - all underground. "Which way do we go?" I asked.

We climbed the stairs to the next level. Ginny pointed. "Look! There's a subway map over there." Ginny pointed.

"I see it."

We walked up to the six-foot high display with the map of the New York City subway on it. Colored lines, indicating the various subway lines, crisscrossed the map. It looked like someone had spilled multicolored spaghetti over the face of it. I found the dark orange line that marked the "D" train we'd rode from Brooklyn and followed it with my finger.

"What are you doing?" Ginny asked.

"I'm trying to find this station on the map."

"Do you think that big red circle with the 'You are here' sign in the middle might be a clue?"

"Oh! You could be right." We burst into hysterics.

That moment has been a joke between us for years. Whenever I'm upset over something I can't find, Ginny says, "Do you think the big red circle might be a clue." We laugh again. I relax and find my goal.

I recently lost my job. As I search the internet for work, I wonder where my map is. Which way do I go from here? Where's the red circle with the arrow telling me, "You are here".

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Idiom - Pot calling the kettle black - What it means?

Idiom -  Pot  calling the kettle black. A situation in which someone accusing another person of a fault is also guilty of the same fault. The Sara tried to criticize William for driving drunk, until she realized that doing that would be like the pot calling the kettle black, because Sara had been arrested for drunk driving two years ago.

Vernacular - Word Wrap

Vernacular –  Noun It's the way people really talk with each other, like how families  talk at home. The language or dialect spoken by the ordinary people of a  country or region. Synonyms:        Everyday language, Spoken language Colloquial speech Native speech Conversational language. Antonyms:         formal language Examples of  Vernacular  in sentences His  vernacular  identified him as a Frenchman. It is impossible to understand her  vernacular! When the clan moved away from their tribe, they created their own  vernacular. He wrote in the  vernacular  to reach a larger audience. He wrote in the  vernacular  and adopted a non-academic style accessible to the public. Suffix Vernaculars -  noun Vernacularization  -  noun Vernacularism -  noun The  Vernacularization  of African Languages after Independence. We also welcome papers that a

“goldbricking” mean

English Edification Enrichment- What is the origin of "honeymoon"? In the old days people wanted their marriage to start on a sweet note. It was therefore customary for newlyweds to drink mead for a month. Mead was a drink made from honey. The "moon" refers to the period of thirty days or one month that the couple was expected to drink the mead. After the first month, the couples came face to face with reality; they realized that their affection, like the moon, would wax and wane. By the way, the word "honeymoon" need not always be used to refer to the holiday that newly married couples take immediately after marriage. The term is now being used to refer to an early stage in any activity when people are happy with each other because everything is going smoothly. Here are a few examples. *   The President's honeymoon period with the press is over. *   The honeymoon between my boss and me still continues. *   The allegations made it c