About the Author
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Before she was a New York Times bestselling author, Andi
Dorfman starred on Season 10 of The Bachelorette and was a
finalist on Season 18 of The Bachelor. She is currently
living—and dating—in New York City. She is the author of It’s Not
Okay and Single State of Mind.
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
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Single State of Mind
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my life has officially be—again
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It’s been a mere two hours since I boarded this plane, said
farewell to life as I knew it in Atlanta, and took the terrifying
first step toward my new life. All my goodbyes have been said, my
tears have been shed, and now only a few thousand feet stand
between me and the world of a single woman living in New York
City.
The pilot comes over the loudspeaker to announce that we are
making our final descent into the New York area. I return my seat
and tray to the upright and locked position so the flight
attendant doesn’t yell at me, lift the window shade up, and look
out at the sheet of white clouds below. As the plane gets lower
and lower, the sheet becomes thinner and thinner, until finally
all the clouds have disappeared. And there it is. New York City.
Dozens of mammoth skyscrapers are grouped in a large cluster,
with the newly built Freedom Tower reigning supreme. They sit
strikingly along the water beside picturesque bridges. It’s
marvelous; majestic, even, like a kingdom right out of the pages
of a fairy tale. And though I’ve seen this kingdom a dozen times
before, it feels as if I’m laying eyes on it for the very first
time. My vantage point, both physically and mentally, has me
seeing this glorious city so differently from how I ever have;
it’s bigger, bolder, and more mysterious than ever. It’s as if
this city is speaking to me; it’s as if it’s begging me to come
and play with it.
“Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to LaGuardia Airport, where the
local time is three forty-five and the current temperature is
thirty-three degrees . . .” Damn, thirty-three degrees! I think
to myself. “On behalf of our entire Atlanta-based crew, we’d like
to thank you for joining us and look forward to seeing you in the
near future. For those of you who are visiting, we hope you enjoy
your stay. For those of you whose final destination is New York,
let us be the first to say welcome home.” A grin washes over my
face. I realize I am one of those passengers in the latter
category. This is my final destination. I am home.
It’s not long before I’ve deplaned and am nearly skipping with
eagerness through the terminal and to the baggage cl, where
the first of my two suitcases, bearing the embarrassing neon
orange HEAVY tag, is coming around on the conveyor belt. As I
struggle to lug it off, a middle-aged man helps me. I thank him
and wonder if this is the first of many more damsel-in-distress
moments I’ll play in the future. I haul my two suitcases behind
me as I make my way toward the giant yellow sign that reads
TAXIS. The instant I walk through the double doors, a gust of
bitter cold New York air greets me. I take a whiff. It smells a
tad like garbage, with a hint of urine and maybe a note or two of
sewage. But it also smells like freedom. I close my eyes for a
moment and smile. Somehow this putrid, -chillingly cold air
is the best I’ve ever felt.
I make my way through a zigzag of steel barricades and wait in
the taxi line behind a handful of other passengers. I look
around, noticing how similar everyone looks: phones out,
headphones in, all-black ensembles. Meanwhile, I’m wearing the
Sorel snow boots that I borrowed from my best friend, Kelly, a
marshmallow-looking puffer coat I found on sale at Forever 21
just yesterday, mittens, and, to top it all off, a flamboyant
faux-fur-lined trapper hat. My entire outfit instantly brands me
as a Southerner who can’t handle a measly thirty-three degrees. I
make a mental note of how to fit in here: black on black on black
. . . on black.
It doesn’t take long until I reach the front of the line and am
greeted by a man directing the long line of waiting taxis. “Where
to??” he asks.
“New York City,” I say proudly.
“Where in New York City??” His bored tone had suddenly acquired a
hint of .
“Oh, sorry, of course—the West Village, please.” I’ve said it in
such an excessively overconfident and slightly pompous tone that
there’s no doubt he knows I’m just a typical tourist pretending
to be a local. He scribbles on a pink slip of paper that he hands
to me before pointing to the second cab in line. The driver gets
out, hoists one of my suitcases into the trunk of the yellow
sedan, looks at the second one before telling me it’s not going
to fit and puts it in the backseat. As I’m buckling my seat belt,
the driver without so much as a flinch of his head back toward
the plexiglass that separates him from my oversized suitcase and
me shouts, “Where to?”
“The West Village,” I reply.
“Where in the West Village??”
“Umm . . . Grove Street, please.”
“Grove and what??”
Shit, I can’t remember. I pull up the confirmation email and
shout out the number.
“Lady, I don’t need the number, I need the cross street.”
He rolls his eyes as I scramble to plug the address into my
phone’s . I haven’t even left the airport, and already I’ve
managed to annoy both the man directing the taxi and the man
driving the taxi. Finally, the loads, and I shout
victoriously, “Bleecker and Grove. Between”—I zoom in—“between
Seventh Avenue and Hudson Avenue.” Though on closer look, it’s
actually Hudson Street, not Hudson Avenue, and Seventh Avenue
isn’t that close to Bleecker.
“Which way do you want me to take??” he asks.
“Excuse me??”
He gives a second eye roll accompanied by his first audible moan.
“Lady, which way? The FDR, Midtown Tunnel, or the bridge??”
Rather than succumb to being outed as a tourist, I channel what I
think a New Yorker would do and pretend not to have heard him the
first time, before rolling my own eyes and telling him to pick
the fastest route as if that should have been obvious.
He starts the meter. I slump back and rest my head on the greasy
leather seat, knowing it’s only a matter of time before I’ll be
home. I guess that’s not entirely true, since where I’m going
isn’t my real home, but just a three-week rental. Long story
short, I tried to find an apartment back when I was still living
in the land of Depressionville, also known as Atlanta, but with
thousands of options in dozens of different neighborhoods, it was
more than my broken heart could handle. I couldn’t commit to
something unseen again, considering the last time I did
that, I ended up on a reality television show where I got
engaged, which didn’t work out and left me so devastated that I
bought a one-way ticket to a city I knew nearly nothing about. So
to avoid being the village idiot yet again, I decided to take
baby steps and go with a short-term rental while I searched for a
more permanent pad. I settled on a cute place that was only
slightly out of my budget in a neighborhood called the West
Village.
As the meter hits eleven dollars, we emerge from a dark four-lane
hole and out into the light. With my face pressed up against the
smudged window, I find myself transfixed by my surroundings. The
gray buildings are so high that their tops are invisible. Mounds
of brown slushy snow are piled up along the streets next to
sidewalks crowded with people moving quickly in their black
peacoats and headphones. They weave past one another with an
aggressive sort of ease. Backed by an occasional siren, horns
blare from every direction, including from my own taxi. It’s
everything I imagined New York to be and more. There is an aura,
a vibe, an energy that’s impossible to describe. It’s permeating
so deeply that I can feel it from within the cab.
Finally, we arrive at Grove Street. The owner, whom I recognize
from his Airbnb profile picture, is standing outside a
nondescript brownstone nestled between what appears to be a
German garden and a small grocery store. I pay the fare, a
whopping forty-eight dollars not including tip, before getting
out and meeting Jay, who introduces himself with a flimsy
handshake. He’s much slimmer and shorter than he appears in his
profile photo. He generously offers to help me carry my suitcases
up the two flights of stairs.
“Well, this is it,” he says as he opens a red door.
There’s a glass side table immediately to the left of the door,
on which I place my purse. Instantly, I realize that not only is
Jay smaller in person, but so is the apartment. He begins giving
me the tour, starting off with the alcove kitchen to the right,
which is very . . . how shall I put this . . . it’s very . . .
vintage. There’s a rusted stovetop above an oven that looks like
it’s from the seventies, next to a matching microwave. A
makeshift butcher’s block has mismatched coffee mugs, plates, and
glasses stacked on it. It’s a far cry from Kelly’s ostentatious
kitchen equipped with a Viking stove and a Sub-Zero fridge that
I’d grown accustomed to while living there for the past two
months.
The alcove kitchen opens up to the living room, which is much
more chic. A large L-shaped light gray couch, adorned with a
plush cream-colored blanket and coordinating colorful throw
pillows, is positioned in front of the fireplace. A white shaggy
rug lies below the lacquered white coffee table, where a vase of
fresh peonies sits, along with a Diptyque candle and a stack of
GQ magazines. Jay must be gay. That, or he has a stylish
girlfriend who’s too busy being fabulous to have time to slave
away in a kitchen. Next, he shows me the coat closet, which is
jam-packed with wool trenches, a few furs, and one eye-catching
silver-sequined jacket that could only belong to a fabulous gay
man.
“Sorry there’s not a lot of room. My partner and I, well, what
can I say, we love our clothes.” He raises both hands and wiggles
his fingers. Gay Knew it!
Next, Jay leads me to the bedroom, which barely fits a queen-size
bed, but which is equally as chic as the living room. The
bathroom is small; white subway tiles line the walls of the
bathtub, and there’s a ceramic pedestal sink next to the toilet.
It takes all of forty-five seconds for the tour to wrap, and Jay
and I find ourselves back in the alcove kitchen.
“So, a few things to go over. There’s no garbage disposal; food
goes in the t. And no dishwasher, but there’s a sponge and
soap.” He points to a bottle of Mrs. Meyer’s dish soap and a blue
sponge. “So . . . I’ve cleaned out the fridge for you. The stove
and oven work fine, though I won’t lie, we don’t really use
either. And by don’t really, I mean, like, never.” He laughs in a
please-don’t-judge-me kind of way. I laugh back in an
I-don’t-plan-on-cooking-much-anyway kind of way.
“Hmm, what else??” He taps his Gucci loafer on the hardwood floor
as he thinks silently. “Oh, the t gets picked up on Tuesdays
and Fridays, so you can just take it downstairs and outside to
the bins. There are tons of amazing restaurants around the area,
and the neighborhood is great. Super safe.”
“Awesome. One question, where’s the washer and dryer??”
“Oh, girl.” He tucks his chin into his neck and curls his lip.
“There is no washer and dryer. I wish! But there’s a
wash-and-fold place just on the corner. That’s where we go, and
they’ll pick up and deliver for free.”
“Oh, perfect. Yeah, that’s what I usually do, too.” I lie so Jay
won’t know that I don’t come from the land of Gucci loafer
sophistication where it’s customary to send your laundry out and
have it delivered.
He hands me the keys and tells me to call him if anything goes
wrong. I thank him and hug him goodbye. I’m not sure why I hug
him, considering he’s a complete stranger. Maybe it has to do
with the Southerner in me or the sequined jacket that I will
undoubtedly throw on the second he leaves. He’s taken aback but
out of courtesy follows my lead and, unbeknownst to him, gives me
my very first New York hug.
I lock the door behind him, and just like that, I am alone in New
York City, for the first time ever. I collapse on the couch,
taking a moment to look around and process the small but charming
apartment. I look at the kitchen, or lack thereof, and figure I
can manage without a dishwasher or a garbage disposal for now,
because, let’s be honest, I’m not planning to cook. Nothing reeks
of depression like a single girl, alone in New York City, burning
something in the oven. Though on second thought, it would be a
good way to check out the local firefighters. I decide that for
my real apartment I’ll definitely be needing a bigger kitchen, as
well as a washer and dryer. I can’t afford to send my dirty
clothes out every week, nor can I afford to gain a reputation as
the Southern single girl who smells. I’ll also need more square
footage, along with more closet space and an updated kitchen.
Additionally, I’ll need a dishwasher and a bathtub and a garbage
disposal. Though this place may not be perfect, it’s a roof over
my head, a bed to in, and, most important, it’s miles away
from the shit memories of Atlanta. Plus, I am living in fucking
NEW YORK CITY!
Speaking of living here, I can’t forget that I have some
apartment showings tomorrow. As I’m setting reminders on my
phone, my mom calls. Shit, I forgot to tell her I made it here
safely. Come to think of it, I’m shocked that she hasn’t called
me a dozen times by now, considering the last time we talked was
more than three hours ago.
“Hi, Pookie! How was the flight??” she squeals.
“Hi, Mom!” I tell her that the flight was fine and I’ve made it
to the apartment.
“Ahhhh, yay! How is it? Faaaaaabulous??” She sounds like a
white-mom version of Oprah.
“It’s really cute. Really small but cute.”
“Have you heard any sirens yet? Is it freezing??” The rapid-fire
questions continue, and I’m beginning to wonder who is more
excited about this move, Mom or me. Not only is she the
quintessential type of mom who calls every day, usually at the
worst moment possible, but she’s also the kind of mom who loves
asking impertinent questions when she gets excited about
something. It’s funny, because my mom was actually born in
upstate New York, but she moved to Georgia to go to college and
never left, so she’s this rare mix of Yankee-meets-Dixie. She’s
super-friendly and talkative but avoids confrontation like the
plague.
“Well, I told you everything is small in New York. I remember
when Nanny used to live there. She just had a tiny little studio.
It was on Bleecker and—”
“Christopher. I know, I know, you’ve told me a million times,
Mom.” In addition to being a Chatty Cathy, my mother also has a
habit of repeating stories, not just once but dozens of times. It
must be a parental thing, because my dad does it, too. Only every
time he repeats a story, his exaggerations grow. The first time
he tells the tale, he caught a fish that was a foot long, and by
the tenth time, I swear, the fish has somehow morphed into a
great white shark.
“You have to go see her place. It’s right near where you’re
staying. I can’t remember the apartment number.”
“Mom, I don’t think I can just walk into a building and randomly
ask to see a place.”
“True.” She’s in the middle of asking me what my plans are for
tonight when she abruptly cuts off the entire conversation so she
can be on time for her daily mah-jongg game at the country club.
I hang up the phone and stare at my suitcases, which are still
zipped with stuffed clothes inside begging for air. I know I
should unpack, but I’m too excited. Instead, I grab my puffer
coat, slip on Kelly’s snow boots, and take my very first voyage
out into the neighborhood. As I’m walking, the air feels colder
than it was a mere hour ago, but it’s crisper. With no scent of
garbage or urine, it’s chilly but refreshing. The neighborhood is
far less crowded than the streets I passed on my way here. It’s
antiquated yet enchanting at the same time, and the of the
bare trees lining the streets have me imagining just how
beautiful it must look in springtime. I envision myself twirling
around these same streets one day, only in a ruffled dress and
heels instead of these snow boots. As I turn the corner onto
Hudson Street, an overwhelming aroma of pizza pervades the air. A
generic white and red sign that simply reads PIZZA has my mouth
watering. I walk in and approach the counter, which displays a
dozen different types of pizza.
“What’ll ya have??” a man in a white apron shouts at me.
“Two slices of cheese, please.”
“For here or to go??”
I look around at the dingy interior with its few dirty tables and
a metal countertop. “To go, please.” I make my way down to the
register.
“Four seventy-five.”
I hand him a five, leave a quarter in the tip jar, and within
minutes, I’m that chick. The one walking around the West Village
in a trapper hat with a pizza box in hand. I’m tempted to devour
it while walking, but the pleasant of a small wine shop
distracts me. I pop in. Forty dollars later, and I find myself
headed for home. My first day in my new home has come to an end.
And with nightfall looming, it’s time for me, my two slices of
pizza, and my two bottles of wine to have our very first date in
New York City.
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