Mo’olelo of the Stinking Onion
Summary
If I were to compose a map of Chicago, for instance,
There would be a pin here at my first apartment
Where I felt adult because I could sit on my countertop at 2 am and eat a pb&j sandwich
Where Dewey almost got guillotined by the old window crashing closed
There would be a pin over there at my next apartment
Where I could hear the sounds of the Cubs hitting home runs
Where we once awoke to our squeaky fan slowing to stop in the heatwave of 95
There would be a pin at the next apartment called the Land of Boz
Where life-sized cardboard cutouts of Captain Kirk and Michael Jordan stood sentry
And our couch housed anyone who needed a place to stay
And the pin over there would be my last apartment on the South Side
Where Tim’s Grandma gifted us a free start to our married life
Where I found her one day packing her belongings because she thought she had to move
You’d see listed in the index
The place where I got proposed to, just on the other side of Navy Pier
The theater where I first directed a tie-dyed 60s Midsummer Night’s Dream
At least eight places where my car died and I needed to be rescued
The intersection of Fullerton and Lincoln where I popped a bubble on the forehead of the Dalai Lama
The track near Ohio Avenue where I wore a fuzzy cow print hat when I ran into Oprah Winfrey
The rocks near near Montrose Beach where I once sat and cried for no reason
The trail we forged through the city on a drug-fueled New Year’s Eve
The Chicago Academy for the Arts where I first stood at the front of a classroom
The room where I hugged Stevie Wonder
The hotel where I worked to pay for my theatre habit
The Improv Olympic and the Second City where I learned more than I did in school
The Blue Rider Theatre… or at least where it used to be… where I sat outside and ate bananas with Booker.
The Halsted Street bus where I took my last ride as a resident.
Chicago. The Stinking Onion. The City of Big Shoulders. The Windy City. A place I inhabited and a place that still inhabits me. A place where snow was more than snow; it was a quieting blanket that forced us to bundle up and settle in. A place where the rattling metallic cacophony of the El was more than a subway; it was a live beast whose back you’d ride to get anywhere in the city. The River was more than just a waterway; it was the arterial flow of willpower and urban pulse where if you push hard enough, you can reverse the flow of the water.
"A place I inhabited and a place that still inhabits me."
This comes through as the center of your piece, to me.
Kevin