Timothy Monger Timothy Monger

Weeknotes: March 25-29, 2024

A warm spring evening invites a walk. Hands in tattered jean jacket pockets, eastward over the Forest Street Bridge, still partly under construction, but open to traffic. I wave to my neighbors who are crossing on the other side, then hop over a pile of debris where the unfinished sidewalk ends. Up the hill past the old ladder company and the brewpub. Daffodils that survived a frigid weekend skirt an old oak on the easement. A trio of kids lazily bobs on a front yard trampoline while their two dogs rush over to the fence to check me out. At first they downplay my passing, but the larger dog gives a sudden bellow and soon both are chasing me the length of their territory. I jaywalk south by the corner store where a man in a black tracksuit emerges swinging a plastic sack of beer. It's 5:00 and everyone is knocking off for the day. At a small white house a 12-foot Home Depot skeleton dominates the yard. With nowhere to store it during the non-October months, it gets dressed up in the costumes of each season like a concrete porch goose. They'd better remove its red beard and leprechaun hat. It's almost Easter. Across the street a young mom navigates her tiny, tottering daughter past the elementary school entrance that I mostly know as my polling place. The lost turtle signs are still up on several telephone poles. Ground zero for Ypsilanti's lost reptiles. 

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Timothy Monger Timothy Monger

Weeknotes: March 18-22, 2024

Waiting in the line at the bank. Snow flurries outside, another winter after a confused series of false springs. There are a handful of customers ahead of me and each of the three available tellers is occupied with a time-consuming transaction. To my left a young guy is either depositing or withdrawing his savings bonds. "This is a very grandparent thing to do, especially these days" comments the manager. The guy is wearing white New Balance sneakers, the kind with giant chunky orthopedic soles. He's already dressed like his grandpa. To my right a woman pulls her brother's death certificate out of her purse, hoping to close his account and withdraw the remaining balance. It's apparently too large a sum for the bank to handle this afternoon and she'll have to come back next Wednesday. Directly in front of me a woman in a corduroy fedora is silently involved in some unknown, but laborous business with her teller. A man wearing one of those black brimmed Stevie Ray Vaughn hats with silver bangles around it is sitting masked in one of the waiting room chairs. An electronic doorbell ding-dongs every time someone walks in or out.

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