"Happy hour" drinks that cost $25. Missing the C train by one second and having to wait 30 minutes until the next one. Your landlord texting you for weeks that someone is "definitely coming" to fix your $1,800-a-month apartment's plumbing. If you grew up or lived in New York, went to school in New York, or just binge-watched too many episodes of Broad City, you already know what's going on here.
Start spreading the news: living in the Big Apple kinda blows sometimes. You recognize, in theory, that there's so much to love about the city. Bodega cats, your favorite falafel guy, the privilege that your favorite band will probably always stop here on tour. But nothing says living in NYC like frequently broadcasting that you need to move out of here, like, yesterday.
And nobody shits on New York more than people who know the ins and outs of all its weirdness. Those same people are also its most ride-or-die defenders. There's a type of casual cynicism that comes from wanting your favorite place in the world to do better dammit. That unique feeling is captured perfectly by the Twitter account @ineedtoleavenyc.
Tweet may have been deleted
"I think everybody who lives here has at least some beef with the city," says the INTLNY creator (who wishes to remain anonymous for a "sort of Pretty Little Liars/Scarlet Letter kind of vibe") in an interview with Mashable.
"Even if you love it (which I very much do sometimes), everybody has those moments where you wonder: 'Why do I live here?' Maybe this is true for living anywhere, but that feeling, like most things in New York, is exaggerated because of the environment."
Tweet may have been deletedSEE ALSO: Untouched In-N-Out Burger abandoned in NYC street, over a thousand miles from nearest In-N-Out
INTLNY writes all the posts on Google Docs during their commute. "God bless getting a door-leaning spot on the train so I can type with both hands," they joked. Every tweet is either born from personal experience or friends’ experiences, expanded into a "gross caricature" that they believe people can relate to.
Like a collective quarter-life crisis, the feeling of needing get out of New York strikes every resident with pointed accuracy at some point in their young lives. You might feel it as the sweat runs down your back in the tunnel of a sweltering subway station in the middle of summer as the MTA beats on about "further delays." Or, it might strike when the $1 pizza hits your lactose-intolerant stomach on the middle of the dance floor at an overpriced club. Maybe when you're in at loft party in Williamsburg getting your tarot cards read and you think to yourself, "you know what, I have no idea what 'typical Virgo behavior' means."
My own personal moment came from the good ol' 1 train itself. Once while riding the subway in the wee hours of the morning, I was blessed over the loudspeaker with this interaction: "the next stop is 18th street, and thank you for riding NJTransit —FUCK," before the voice cut out abruptly. Hey, maybe it was the dude's first day on the job. Or maybe he just really missed NJ. Can't imagine why.
Tweet may have been deleted
When asked what was most frustrating about the concrete jungle where dreams are made of, INTLNY said "$1 pizza that’s too hot when you buy it so you have to wait thirty seconds and just stand there." But for a legitimately frustrating reason, they dislike the city administration’s "handling of car culture."
"I’m fully onboard with the growing trend of anti-car activism/car ban proponents. Better for the environment, pedestrian safety, etc. Bikes and public transit (yes, even the subway) forever!"they said.
But it's true that living here is a dichotomy of experiences. "I can feel New York actively ruining every place I will live in after because of the sheer access to amazing and diverse experiences. It’s just that sometimes you almost slip in a puddle of vomit when walking to one of these amazing experiences." Quite literally, sometimes. "One time I was on a train and there [were] two people vomiting simultaneously on either end of the car," they replied.
But the lows never last for long, though. After all, there's a reason why every tweet ends with a contradicting statement, "Why I can't leave New York." There's a reason why we stay, why we put up with things. Maybe we're just gluttons for punishment. Maybe it's the bagel water.
INTLNY said that for every "psycho out on the street playing a broken stereo system at 4 in the morning," there were twice as many genuinely kind, fascinating, cool and talented people. "There is a distinct camaraderie you build with one another in dealing with the same endless list of small problems."
Tweet may have been deleted
There are two hard-and-fast rules for surviving, though. Number one, never pay "more than $8" for iced coffee, and number two, "no more than $18 [for cocktails], which is the same amount of money it cost for my friend and I to spike an extra large movie theater soda with a flask of Jameson last weekend. Highly recommend."
Tweet may have been deleted
So in the wise words of DCOM legend High School Musical, "We're all in this together." If you can make it here...well, you how it goes.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
'INeedToLeaveNYC' shows how living in NYC can be a mess of contradictions-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
7239
浏览
412
获赞
3
What is Parler? Everything you need to know about the conservative social network.
UPDATE: Jan. 8, 2021, 6:47 p.m. PST Parler has been removed from Google's Play Store for not havingWhy Elon Musk is skipping around on stage for Donald Trump
Why has Elon Musk, whose Twitter/X is reportedly bleeding ad revenue, gone all in on supporting misiMost dominant shark of the deep sea tagged at depth for the first time
Dean Grubbs thinks great white sharks are boring. The veteran shark scientist, who has researched dShark skin may get corroded by the acidifying oceans
When shark scientists handle sharks, they often come away with "shark burn." "It will give you an abGoogle buys Fitbit for $2.1 billion
Apple Watch needs to watch out.Well, that remains to be seen, but the competition is about to get a61 polar bears amass outside Arctic village because sea ice is pitifully low
Back in the 1980s, the Arctic's Chukchi Sea would have been largely frozen over by early December. BPolar bears at the Cincinnati Zoo are pooping glitter for science
Fighting extinction is a daunting and demanding task, but it does come with some quirky perks for thBest Prime Day laptop deals still live: Shop record lows on Apple, Asus, LG
UPDATE: Oct. 10, 2024, 9:35 a.m. EDT This story has been updated with current pricing and availabiliLyft dips toes into food delivery for first time
Lyft has added e-scooters, e-bikes, car rentals, and other services to its original ride-sharing appElon Musk tweets a pic of 60 satellites, the first for SpaceX Starlink
The first seeds of SpaceX's Starlink project will soon be planted.On Saturday, Elon Musk tweeted outBest Amazon deals of the day: Samsung Galaxy Watch 6, Galaxy Ring, AeroGarden Harvest, and more
Check out the best Amazon deals of the day as of Oct. 16: OUR TOP PICKBernie Sanders has a colossal climate change plan
Bernie Sanders' climate plan, one of the biggest of the already big climate plans, dropped Thursday.Xiaomi Mi 10T Pro has a 144Hz display, 5,000mAh battery
Xiaomi's flagship phones have been following the same pattern for years: Low price, top specs, few cApple's new Mac mini has a power button in the most unusual place
Apple's new Mac mini is pretty amazing. It's a machine I dreamed about when I was a kid: a quiet litWild, harsh world of the fat bears is revealed in a new wildlife book
When Mike Fitz first arrived at the remote Brooks River in Katmai National Park and Preserve, home t