Friday, November 28, 2008
Day 4
A much more laid back day, thankfully. We took the train into the city again, then rode the subway out to Battery Park to see the Statue of Liberty. Unfortunately the line to get on the ferry was HUGE, and we would have been in it for a couple of hours at least. So we opted just to take pictures from very far away. Maybe I'll still get a chance to see her up close, but I don't know. Instead we got back on the subway and headed to Canal Street for some shopping. Lots of people. Lots. It was a good exercise in shoving my way through crowds while keeping a good hand on my purse. At one point I got rubbed up against by a cop, and I'm fairly sure he swerved deliberately to do it. It was odd. I felt slightly violated. :-) The other strange thing was that people kept whispering in our ears about watches and handbags. We'd just say no thanks and they wouldn't push it, but it was so weird to suddenly have this whispery voice in my ear offering me name brand stuff. From Canal street we went to Chinatown for lunch in a restaurant recommended by a friend of the aunt's. It was really good, as evidenced by the long line we had to stand in just to eat. I think we were in line for 30-45 minutes (still better than trying to see the statue!). Oh, and the guy in front of us was super cute and he was totally making eye contact. I think he might even have been flirting. I'm never sure, I think my radar sucks for that sort of thing; he might have just been being nice. But, I also wonder, why don't men in my own state make eye contact and flirt? Of course, this man also didn't know my profession... Anyhoo, after an afternoon of shopping we came back to New Jersey and went to worship at Temple Emanu-El. It was really nice to worship when I was in charge of exactly nothing. And most of the time I wasn't even sure of what was going on, so I didn't have to analyze the liturgy like my brain normally insists on doing. The temple has 2 rabbis, a man and a woman and tonight the (ahem) "lady" rabbi led most of the service and preached, which was really fun. She was also wearing kick-ass boots, something I always appreciate! Oh, and not one person talked to us the entire time we were there. I wasn't expecting much, but not even the ushers said a word. Not hi, not nothing. It was awkward, and it was nice of the aunt to indulge me by going with. I did take the initiative and introduce myself to the associate rabbi after the service, so at least we talked to someone. And now we are home.
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I bet the "lady" rabbi didn't have people asking if she was going to be a nun...!...or maybe she did, although that would be even more weird that when people said it to you!
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