The NYC Commuter Experience. F*&% it.

Overheard #413

“I’m ready to kill! Kill-kill-kill!” Sings crazy man to a children’s song-like tune. F train to Brooklyn 4:05pm. Then he just keeps muttering “Ready to kill, ready to kill,” while doing a subtle march in place.
Also muttering “bleed bleed bleed,” and then louder “murder murder murder red rum! Red rum!” Gets off at Bergen.

#fuMTA Missed Connections Series: You Saw Me Get Nabbed By The Boys In Blue - m4w (34th st F train)

I was getting busted by the cops on the downtown F train platform at 34th st/Herald Sq. I looked up and you smiled at me, and everything was alright. You were wearing a Joy Division shirt and had a red drawing pen in your hair. You had a Pepsi patch on your backpack and I was wearing a burnt sienna jacket with a yin/yang button on it. We exchanged glances and smiles on the train and when I got off at the W4 stop I motioned for you to come with me. Maybe you had somewhere else to be. 

 

If you see this, and would like to go on a date, I won’t pay the fine I got and will spend the money on taking you out instead.


#fuMTA: Missed Connections Series

a story:

“Ladies and Gentlemen, there is a train crossing ahead of us, we should be moving shortly.” 6:07pm
[no movement. you are maybe reading, not paying attention to what is by now a commonplace announcement that means nothing.]
“Ladies and Gentlemen, there is a train crossing ahead of us, we should be moving shortly.” 6:14pm
[no movement. you look up, notice that seven minutes have passed. mild concern furrows your brow.]
“Ladies and Gentlemen, there is a train crossing ahead of us, we should be moving shortly.” 6:20pm
[no movement. you are confused. how could a train still be crossing in front of us for 13 minutes? or have we let several cut in front of us?]

“Ladies and Gentlemen, there is a train crossing ahead of us, we should be moving shortly.” 6:28pm.
[no movement. anger is now rising very quickly.]

“Ladies and Gentlemen, there is an emergency at Roosevelt Avenue, we will be moving shortly.” [A slight stutter forward. Stop.]

“There is train traffic ahead of us, we will be moving shortly.” 6:34pm.
[!!!]

Clearly, all of the above announcements are blatant lies. It has now taken you 20 minutes to go from 21st Street/Court Sq to…a dark tunnel (supposedly somewhere between Court Sq and Queens Plaza).

While you are waiting, an E train slides up right next to you on the adjacent track, sitting, waiting. You are monitoring it closely. Technically, you think to yourself, the F and E trains should be on the same track. Who will go first? Will your passive-aggressive F train finally stand up for itself and stop letting those seven other trains cross in front?
Your F starts moving first. Slow, tentative steps forward, as though it doesn’t want to tempt the MTA Fates.
Now the E and F are sitting across from each other at Queens Plaza. Neither is moving. Both doors are open. Minutes pass. Passengers are growing anxious, standing about, looking across the platform suspiciously. Everyone knows: one of these trains will be local, one express—unless one will just wait behind? Is it the E or the F? The E or the F?! No announcements. From either train. The station is tense with uncertainty. 6:58pm.
A woman suddenly darts across the platform to the E, abandoning the F. She provokes a handful of followers, somehow. As though she is the defining, completely irrational signal of which train will leave first.
Somehow she is right. The E train doors close. Train departs.
Now (NOW!?) the conductor decides is the right time to tell you that the F train you are on—the only one remaining in the station, by the way—will be running local from Queens Plaza to Roosevelt Avenue. HaHA! Good one, fuckers. GOOD ONE. The timing is SPECTACULAR—a feat of enormous ingenuity and precision. This is no slip-up. It is the perfect execution of a predetermined intention.*
Your train doors eventually close, and the train begins to move. You are now glaring angrily into the windows of the E train that is, for now, running alongside your F local. Then the E dips underground deeper to where the express track lies and you, on your ill-fated F, slow down, pulling into Thirty-Fucking-Sixth Street. Banality of Banalities. A stop you have never seen anyone enter or exit from.

Somehow, there must be train traffic ahead of you still, because the train is meandering through the tunnels, like a small child picking dandelions. This train ride is actually a scenic field trip you signed up for, don’t you remember? There’s that track rabbit—oh look! Another incoherent scrawl of spray paint right next to that pile of human shit/piss stain! Take your time, enjoy the views.

You mentally (or maybe even literally) smack yourself for thinking you could give yourself enough time. Time? What is that, even? A human concept. MTA is run by pirate robots. They have no concept of time—life is an infinite continuum of shit they’re delivering right into your lap. Enjoy! Enjoy this delay between every single station, this late arrival to work for the fifth time this week, which will cause you to lose your job; enjoy this fare hike/service cut; enjoy this SAME MUTTERING/MOANING/ROBOT STATIC OVER LOUDSPEAKERS despite fancy new trains with digitized subway info.

An hour and 15 minutes to get from Greenpoint, Brooklyn (literally a 10 minute walk to LIC, Queens) to Forest Hills. You could have roller-bladed your way faster—and safer, probably—on the BQE.

Old men are by now grumbling to themselves, women have terrified looks on their faces. Others have given up hope—or achieved Zen-like calm—by simply falling asleep or gazing out glossily: zombies. You think to yourself: The MTA is training us to be zombies…has this been their plan all along? To better control and subdue us? Shove our expectations of public transportation so far down and up our asses that we could shit for days and still never complain about poor service and ridiculous fares?

Somehow, your snail’s pace has been too much. F train is apparently creeping up on those trains ahead. Gotta wait for that “train traffic**” to pass, one more time.

Your train of thought grows more coherent: How can it be that they are reducing service—i.e. cutting the number of trains on the tracks—and yet trains are running…slower? Shouldn’t this lesser amount of trains equal less train traffic? And therefore, if nothing else, faster trains between the stations? Minimal delays?

…….
Oh, right. MTA is run by evil robot pirates. Nothing makes sense here except the absolute loss of any dignity you had as a human being. Who are you, asshole, to have a place to go? A destination? In a timely manner, no less? What do you think this is? Crazy son of a bitch.

The question now becomes: once you arrive at Roosevelt, do you transfer? Will there be a train to transfer to? No. Probably not… Should you wait for one? You sigh. Always a gamble. And the dice is always weighted against you. But you grow indignant: Must we resign ourselves to this fate? Is there nothing to be done? Has the MTA so successfully wrested control of the public trans—
Hoho! Look at this! Another F train, chugging along beside you! You examine the passengers on board: They don’t look too trampled upon. You decide to transfer at the next stop.

At Roosevelt Avenue, it’s the same E that you’d been playing tag with earlier, not the F you spotted. Strange. That E was supposed to have been way ahead of the F, seeing as it was the express that left first. Oh well. You get on it. Your doors close first. And you are…sitting in the station. And then just as the panic begins to manifest, you’re off.

You begin to feel mildly faint. You realize you have hunger pangs. Oh, that’s right. You left early so you could have time to grab some dinner before you taught class for an hour and a half.
Mistake #1: Relying on MTA to not rob you of dinner and general clear-headed/pain-free consciousness.
Pounding headache ensues. You look around. No seats.
Just a few minutes is all it should take, you tell yourself. You’re on the express, after all. Shit. You’re going to be late for class. 7:14pm.
Motherfucker. MOTHERFUCKER. A renewed sense of violation angers you and gives you the remaining strength necessary to survive the train ride and your class (should you ever even arrive there) on just the one cookie you ate several hours prior.

“Ladies and gentlemen, we are delayed because of train traffic ahead of us. Please be patient.” 7:18pm. The train is not moving.
Fuck. You.
There are actually kinkajous at the signal control panels.




*..to fuck your commute up beyond recognition
**train traffic=train operator (aka robot) watching robot porn (aka iPad tutorials)

Heading home on the F train. Surprise! I’m riding over the Manhattan bridge. Thanks F train, for taking me to parts of Brooklyn I haven’t seen lately. After a long day of work. Without my consent. Kidnap.

Never doubt the MTA’s impeccable consistency in its attempts to fuck you over.
Example # 342: The 4th Ave and 9th Street stop in Brooklyn. Nine out of ten (9/10) times, the transfer from the F train to the R train will add an additional fifteen (15) minutes to what could be a six (6) minute commute, due to skilled coordination of trains.
If you’ve ever had to make this transfer, you are aware that the station is built like an old, decrepit castle with dark, winding, putrid staircases, exits and entrances at the farthest ends of convenience. In short, a true MTA masterpiece of construction. Walking from the F platform down to the R is a good 5 minutes, and that’s if you’re a young sprite-ish thing. This makes it particularly tantalizing when you get off the F train to hear the R train arriving, and, as you descend deeper into the dank corridors of the MTA, you begin to see people who have just exited the R train. By the time you arrive on the actual R platform, all that remains are the empty benches and red signals, signifying a good ten (10) minute wait is incumbent.
On a one out of ten (1/10) day, a remarkably not shitty day, the entire ride can be a pleasant ten (10) minutes, if that.
But it’s dangerous to get on the train those days, for several reasons:

1. Your expectations rest at a higher standard, making you susceptible to severe depression and uncontrollable rage.
2. It means the Pirates have infected the train with rabies.

F train was designed by Pirates*

There are only three F trains running through the tunnels connecting 179th Street/Jamaica, Queens and Coney Island, Brooklyn between the hours of 11am-1pm. This is how it is possible, during “off-peak” hours, to wait 10-25 minutes for a train that will eventually arrive on a crowded platform and have only two vacant seats.

Of the three trains running at that time, one is conducted by a former graffiti artist, who prefers coasting at a leisurely pace along the tracks, so as to peruse old and new works along the underground walls.
The other two trains have no human conductors. They are battery operated, with a pre-recorded voice (now you understand who operates those trains that run over people).
These three trains are usually filled with the societal leftovers of New York City: the slightly mentally ill, the jobless/soulless, would-be housewives (minus husbands to give them purpose), pedophiles, abandoned elderly, and degenerate students.
It is a train ride tainted with gray sludge and greasy hair, a hangover of smells.
*Many people think the F train is their favorite train. They cite that it goes through all the boroughs (Bronx/Staten Island are negligible for MTA), and makes many convenient stops along the way. These are people who know nothing.
In fact, the F train is a grossly inconvenient train, that makes traveling from two seemingly close spots interminably distant and difficult. This is because a long time ago, pirates who controlled that No-Man’s-Land between Queens and Brooklyn, refused to allow the MTA to build tracks that would have made travel from, say, Jackson Heights to Park Slope, a mere 30-minute commute. They forced the MTA instead to build a winding snake track all through Manhattan’s most despicable neighborhoods. To this day, pirates still control the vast majority of territory in New York City, and continue to place ridiculous embargoes on the MTA, which is one of the key causes of the fare hike and the World-wide Recession.