Tagged: las vegas.

Unoccupied Balconies

I drove past a balcony the other day that was remarkable for two reasons: first of all, its beauty (it was the kind of balcony that begs for dinner parties, the kind of balcony that turns people into smokers, the kind of balcony that inspires the purchase of comfortable patio furniture, the kind of balcony that makes all kinds of weather seem more moderate), and secondly, its emptiness. 

This made me think of human eyes, and the places they don’t go. Earlier that week, I was on a different balcony, high up in a restaurant overlooking the Las Vegas Valley. Why I was there is a story that’s somewhat related but has already been told, so I’ll make you click the link to read it. As one of the most glorious sunsets I’ve ever seen burned through the sky slowly like a cigar, a couple came out onto the balcony, which had been previously unoccupied save for yours truly. Awesome, I thought to myself, someone else looking to bask. Rather than taking seats and gazing at the sky with me, though, they went on to point out all the landmarks they could spot (the only landmarks Las Vegas has to offer are streets and hotels) and left after five minutes.

“An appreciation of beauty, even if it is sexual beauty, is a great gift.” – Raw Water, Wells Tower

Why are balconies so underused? Why, in this age of fleeting and expensive pleasures, are the most basic ones forgotten? Is the appreciation of beauty just a gift that’s coupled with being a writer? If people are not looking at beauty, where are their eyes going? If most people don’t notice beauty, does seeking it out make me more human or less?

Saturday night, lightning approached the city from the south. It raged beyond the mountains like a war. Was I the only one who drove around in circles watching the sky? There are more of us, I am sure of it. Perhaps, all over the city, people stepped out onto their balconies, or watched from a chair pulled up to the sliding glass door, since even battles seen from afar can be scary. They were parking their cars with the hoods pointed south, leaving the windows rolled down in order to provide the view with a soundtrack. Not many of them, no. But some eyes were seeking out the same things mine were.

The downside to all this is the wanting other eyes to see what you see. It’s in feeling others are missing out, looking at the wrong things. And really, it’s none of my fucking business, is it? If you want to admire the beautiful architecture of The Orleans Hotel and Casino, by all means, stare away. The downside is that sometimes I catch myself thinking that I am right and they are wrong, which feels like it’s true but isn’t really. The downside is that I often look at the sky alone.

But the upside? The upside is that I don’t always watch alone. The beauty of it all? That others’ lack of appreciation does not diminish mine. That despite whatever else may be around, the beauty is there, to be seen or not to be seen, to be enjoyed by those who enjoy it and ignored by everyone else. 

Balconies and sunsets keep each other company when humans don’t. 

06:39 pm, by somewhereoverthesunnovel 19

We Are Filled With Riches and Wonders

As the fog climbed up the shower’s glass door, I thought of an adventure I had. 

On our first date, we left Vegas at sunset. Her shirt was red and polka-dotted and she smelled strongly of her sandalwood hand lotion. The moon just hung around us throughout the drive, and I sometimes think that it would have been better to pull over the car right away rather than wait to kiss her when we parked at the movie theater in L.A. But the memory’s a pleasant one after all this time, so there’s no sense in ‘if onlys.’ We made it in time for the previews, and after the movie we ate at a Lebanese restaurant at two in the morning. I have not since eaten at a Lebanese restaurant at two in the morning. 

On the drive back, she fell asleep on my arm, not just holding my hand but hugging it. How could I possibly move it away, safety hazards notwithstanding? I think that’s when my hand became conditioned to always, always hold a significant other’s when in a car. I was nodding off, changing songs on the iPod, feeding myself Starbursts and taking sips of soda, all one-handed. The symmetry may seem phony, but I dropped her off at her car back in Vegas at sunrise. 

Though the air beyond the bathroom has been lacking in adventure, nothing is empty here. 

09:11 pm, by somewhereoverthesunnovel 7

Day #1

Sunrise, September 3rd (6:11 a.m)

After a housewarming party and a sleepless night, I drove down the slightly-less-than-abandoned 5 a.m. Vegas streets headed northbound, the sky lighting up to my right. Music sounds louder, more unrestrained at five in the morning, I think.

Loaded with coffee and a battery-less camera, I directed my car up the six floors of UNLV’s parking garage. My friend Edgar showed up a few moments before the sun poked out from behind the aptly named Sunrise Mountain. Sunrises are never anything short of incendiary, although the cloudless Vegas sky kept the spectacle modest, if such a word can be applied.

Sunset, September 3rd (7:05 p.m)

Unaccompanied and basic, but sunsets aren’t the worst time for solitude. It’s funny that it isn’t customary to stop everything you’re doing during these daily occurrences and just watch the sky. I, for one, refuse to pretend that there is nothing special about the sky’s chromatic transformation, just because it happens all the time.

Barring unforeseen complications, the sun will rise again tomorrow, and I’ll be there to say good morning. I recommend you give it a shot too. You’ll be surprised how beautiful the city you’re used to living in is when painted in dawn’s unfamiliar light.

09:46 pm, by somewhereoverthesunnovel