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Is my family take care, too?
York car accident I had position on the way to new one in. Unfortunately, the other driver was killed. Fortunately I still had not wounded acute, mild. lacerated back, I returned home to my wife and my children in Shady Hill, where I live. I came home, no of them really surprised and happy about my arrival. Every time I tried to talk with anyone in my family, it was my daughter, son or even my wife, they all seemed overly absorbed in their own affairs. My son was with his video games, and my daughter was reading her magazine Cosmopolitan. My wife prepared Dinner, the phone when she talked with one of her friends from the neighborhood. I was in a car accident for pete's sake, and none of them had more than a few words about the tragedy I had experienced. I'm at a crossroads. How should I handle this?
They are in order so your family is back on the status quo. It is probably something they'd rather not think about it, especially if you are not in order. For you but you had a near death experience when the other driver died. It was be thinking more about your family, and how could you not go home. It's hard to face your own mortality and you think it makes for very deep thoughts. Before this happened, you probably had light unimportant conversations with your children and those dutiful to your wife, nothing earth movements. But now that you face you could have the death of you, you want to have meaningful conversations, most people never. It is understandable how you feel, but if you have never in too deep conversations were before your family does not expect this from you.
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Cosmopolitan $10.36 New in paper! Cosmopolitan: A Bartender’s Life is a memoir of the bartending life structured as a day in the life at Passerby, the bar owned and run by Toby Cecchini. It is, as well, a rich study of human nature—of the sometimes annoying, sometimes outlandish behavior of the human animal under the influence of alcohol, lust, and the sheer desire to bust loose and party. It’s not a pretty picture, but it’s always compelling through the gimlet-eyed gaze of the author. As his typical day progresses, from the almost pastoral quiet of opening the bar and setting up to the gathering rush of customers dropping in after work to the sheer madness of catering to a crazed crush of funseekers, Toby Cecchini muses over a life spent in the service industry and the fascinating particulars of his chosen profession. Topics touched on include dealing with regulars, both welcome and not; sex and the bartender; cocktail connoisseurs (and drinks he refuses to make); learning the bartending ropes of the Odeon when young and newly arrived in New York; the sheer man-killing pace of keeping those drinks coming at flood tide; and the manifold varieties of weirdness and bad behavior that every bartender has to learn how to manage. Cosmopolitan: A Bartender’s Life is the hip, behind-the-scenes look at the frenzied yet undeniably fun atmosphere of that great establishment—the bar—and Toby Cecchini is, by turns, witty, acute, mordant, and lyrical in dealing with the realities of his job, shedding plenty of light on the hidden corners of what people do when they go out at night. Toby Cecchini is part owner of the bar/gallery Passerby, located in New York’s far west Chelsea neighborhood. He began his bartending career in the mid-eighties at New York’s fabled bar and restaurant Odeon, where he began the Cosmopolitan cocktail revival. Cosmopolitan began as a series of acclaimed diaries in Slate. Cecchini has also written for The New York Times Magazine and the Times’s Style section. He lives in New York City. |