The SkyView Hotel (thank you, Andi)
Cherry Blossoms and Horses on Hillside at Twilight, Los Alamos, CA
06 Sunday Apr 2025
Posted in 2025, Road Trips
06 Sunday Apr 2025
Posted in 2025, Road Trips
29 Saturday Mar 2025
Posted in 2025, Coastal Cali, Road Trips, self portrait, Uncategorized
Tags
california, central, coast, limes, lines, m.t. karthik, road, trip, valley, Yestermorrow
The Lime of Yestermorrow follows the bells of the dreaded conversions of the Camino Real. When you see a bell, know it’s a white woman – before women could vote, in the late 1800’s – who campaigned to create those bells to mark the passage of the Spanish missions. Sigh.
and ends with ten minutes of surf sound
and point break surfing
29 Saturday Mar 2025
Posted in 2025, Road Trips, Sylvie
Tags
automobile, Book Review, books, car, fiction, Karthik, link, mtk, road, romance, Sylvie, travels, trip, writing
To sum up:
Last year I bought a 17-year-old used car in San Antonio, Texas. It’s a 2007 Nissan 350z, V-238, six-speed manual transmission, high performance sportscar.
The model was called the “Fairlady Z,” because the President of Nissan at the time of her creation, Katsuji Kajamata, admired the Broadway musical, “My Fair Lady,” which he had seen on a visit to New York in 1961.
I named mine Sylvie.
I bought Sylvie last March after months of searching for a suitable car. I used bots set to seek a car with: manual transmission, with fewer than 100,000 miles use, for less than 10,000 dollars.
After eight months of garbage hits (a the Thing, a ’72 BMW, other nonsense), I got a hit in San Antonio about Sylvie. It was on February 29th, because last year was a Leap Year.
I flew down and bought Sylvie, then stored her under cover until July, when I drove her across the Southwest – TX, NM, AZ – to California.
She turned 100k miles on the odometer on the trip. Sylvie received her California plates and registration in Palm Springs where she was also treated to a refurbishment and repair of worn parts and given a full tune-up. I planned in advance to do this in Palm Springs, because So Cal is car country.
I figured in the Bay everything would have taken longer (DMV would’ve been days instead of hours; repairs weeks instead of days) and been of suspect quality. I love San Francisco, but if you need anything done you have to leave the City and then you are in the private club of Nor Cal where you have to know somebody to get the best work done. I hear Manhattan is like that now. Palm Springs did Sylvie and me right.
This is Sylvie in San Simeon day before yesterday:

We drove the last stretch home last year stopping only in Pismo for a night. I pulled into SF and parked Sylvie in her new garage, rented in my preferred neighborhood, in SF.
So since summer of 2024, my car has a home in SF.
And, for the last nine months, I’ve been taking Sylvie on long drives – most recently to Cactus League, as Spring training for major league baseball is known in Arizona. I saw the preseason Giants play in their stadium at Scottsdale and at Surprise, Arizona, where they took on the Royals.
Sylvie and I drove down to LA along the coast back in January to catch a Lakers game at Crypto dot com Center, staying in Santa Barbara and SLO. On our most recent trip we stayed in San Simeon and Los Alamos, a little exploration of Central Coast California.
“My Travels with Sylvie,” an homage to both Steinbeck and Thompson.
18 Wednesday Sep 2024
Tags
autumn, baseball, beach, Boston, boston-red-sox, Fenway, Flushing, friendship, Hampshire, island, Lido, long, Massachusetts, mlb, new, open, park, queens, sports, summer, tennis, tom, travel, trees, U.S., USTA, woods, york
I’m out on Long Island, NY, where I’ve spent a couple of weeks visiting my friend, Tom, who was my neighbor in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, 25 years ago, when we were both childless, unmarried and young.

Well, I was in my early-30’s. Tom and his roommates were recent college grads, starting their careers in the biggest city in the world. NYC was spectacular and singularly massive at the turn of the millennium. We were intoxicated and alive.
Tom is younger than me by seven years. In the time since I saw him last, he climbed the ladder in two separate career paths that crashed due to financial crises and has now climbed the ladder in a third: wine and spirits. He is an accomplished and successful Director of middle management.
He’s raised three children and supported his mother, and theirs. His father passed away; and his brother, an Iraq War vet, committed suicide.
Tom tracked me down four years ago after his father died. He told me he thought a necklace I gave him, cursed him. It brought him so much bad luck.
I arrived in mid-January in sub-freezing temperatures, we spent a few days catching up, and I promptly threw the necklace into the ocean on the outgoing tide.
Close readers of this blog will remember when I threw the accursed necklace into the sea, but click the Tom and the Opera link and read about it if you haven’t.
When we reconnected, Tom and I had both just lost our fathers. His brother died some years before, and I have since lost my sister. We are brethren at mid-life. We often have half-hour to hour long phone conversations about enduring this world in our times. Since we reconnected, I’ve tried to give my friend a way to separate himself from his troubles.
In the last two and a half years, I showed up to help Tom move into his post-divorce apartment – when we went to the Metropolitan Opera for Rigoletto from center box seats. I flew him to Amsterdam for a four day vacation before the first ‘Thanksgiving and Xmas with split households’. And I paid for him to go to Africa to build a school with his daughter and her classmates.
I’ve also treated us to several lush meals in diverse locations. The latest was at Blackstone here on Long Island. We had really delicious oysters from Canada, tuna sashimi, a Vietnamese-spring-roll-style sushi roll, lump crab, and a tomahawk Wagyu steak. I had a beaujolais. Tom had the banana cream pie.

It’s a fine dining restaurant in an area of strip malls. The interior was made to feel old-school, wooden, warm. Yet, the exterior is contemporary suburban monoculture – sigh, I guess that’s everywhere now. Here though, they take things they want and put them together for the convenience and then make them at the highest quality available in the same place … good steakhouse and good sushi, has emerged. The fish was fresh, prepared very well. The steak, unique, delicious.

Spending time with Tom has been exorbitant fun, controlled chaos and a good re-bonding experience. I know we’ve been helpful to each other, though we don’t discuss it. I worried about him when things were looking bad, I don’t now.
Tom, like many New Yorkers, does for himself and his own, but won’t ask for assistance. He will take what’s offered without guilt and enjoy it lustfully, which I find fun and uplifting. Until it’s not. Then he gets arrogant and deaf.

I was walking through Golden Gate Park two weeks ago when my cel flashed, indicating my phone was ringing. Seeing it was Tom, I answered.
“Thought you were coming out this summer, ” he said.
I told him I got busy with a three week, 2200 mile road trip to drive my beloved car Sylvie out west. Tom said:
“Well, there’s only Labor Day pool party left, unless you want to come New Year’s Eve for Phish.”
I put the phone down, bought a one-way ticket to JFK, booked a hotel in Long Beach for a week, and bought tickets for Arthur Ashe Stadium at the U. S. Open tennis grand slam.
It had been a year and eight months since we hung out and I knew I wouldn’t make NYE in NY. I rationalized, too, that Tom wanted me to visit so I could see that he’s cool now and things are going well.
I had been trying to help get him away from it all to process his thoughts. That’s why I took him to Amsterdam and the Opera and supported his travel to Africa – to wholly extricate him from his own life as a break.
Our meals in Manhattan, in Amsterdam and here, are all, in part, a separation from our lives – to talk deeply about things that matter. I was thrilled to help him travel with his daughter and their class to Senegal.
The Labor Day Pool Party at Tom’s townhouse in Lido is the final party at the pool before it’s closed for the off-season. All the families and friends of families enjoy swimming, food, drinks, music, a raffle, and the most important events: games!
The table tennis and cornhole tournaments are highly anticipated and competitive. Yet from the moment I arrived, Tom told me, “I’m winnin’ that.”
He crowed to every neighbor we saw for two days that he was winning the cornhole tournament. It got so ridiculous, at one point when we were alone in the car, I said, “Yo, man, you are talkin’ a lotta smack about this cornhole thing.”
Now cornhole, like shuffleboard, requires team play. I know these tournaments use random selection for team mates. How could he possibly guarantee he’d win? But the thing about Tom is …
It was done and dusted.
That’s something Tom gives me – and I think he gives it to everyone he knows – chutzpah.
It was a great time. I saw Tom’s mom and family. We all jumped in the pool together at the end of the party, by tradition. The food was great. Lovely day, wonderful people. I felt welcomed.
So for my contribution on this trip, I took Tom to the USTA Center in Flushing for a match at the U.S. Open Grand Slam tennis tournament, something he and his neighbors would never do.
I grew up with tennis because of my Indian parents. Tom’s people prefer hockey, football, basketball and baseball. I know I expand Tom’s cultural landscape, as I know he expands mine.

Through luck of the draw we got a match featuring perhaps the greatest tennis champion ever, Novak Djokovic, and, in a stunning upset, Nolé was defeated by Australian Alexei Popyrin.
I concluded it was because of fatigue from playing in every previous Grand Slam Final and then meeting in the Olympic Gold Medal match that Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz, world number two and one respectively, were eliminated in the early rounds at New York.
Apparently the men’s endurance limit is four championship tournament finals. But it was pretty cool to see Nolé combat the Aussie Popyrin at Arthur Ashe Stadium.

By contrast to my material gifts, Tom has been generous with things that have no calculable value, including counsel and trusted conversation. He has picked me up, dusted me off and demanded I go at it again more than once.
On brief occasions, over the last four years, we’ve enjoyed food, wine, weed and travel as single men in mid-life.
We’ve shared meals and conversations and consulted one another on these occasions, separate from our responsibilities, to decide how we will make our way. He has lifted my spirit and confidence. This is priceless.
Tom has introduced me to his friends and family, who keep a tight circle. I am, for the first time, meeting his oldest friends and the people he has known for four decades, a community within which he is now the eldest surviving male of his family.
We both battle depression under the weight of our self-perception. We both do it in solitude, often not sharing it with anyone else.

Instead of staying in the city and visiting for a night, I’ve come out to LI to stay in Long Beach, with Tom for a couple of nights and in local hotels .
It’s now the season they call “locals summer,” when the tourists leave and the weather is pleasant and locals get to enjoy what the island has to offer before it gets too cold. It is a lovely, peaceful beach town now.

Long Island’s a place that has been described so often by others that it’s hard to put it in original terms anymore. From The Great Gatsby to Jaws to Everybody Loves Raymond, the literary, artistic, social, and now digital, presence of the place masks the reality.
The reality, which I am gaining an understanding of through Tom and his community and my extended visit to the area, is private, energetic, vibrant and physical. Long Beach is more diverse than I imagined. Other areas of Long Island are not.

Meanwhile, many helicopters and private planes still pass by the beach and overhead daily – shuttling the wealthy back and forth between the City and the Hamptons, or Montauk or wherever.
It’s half-September.
Many of my friendships have faded because all I do is get really close to people and then leave disgusted with where I am. For example, I could never live here.
New York remains a place that repels and attracts. I hate the way people look at me here for my long hair and wearing bright colors. I feel an almost constant basic racism of otherness. It’s a famously white and restricted place that demands you behave to belong.
My unwillingness to be treated less than for being exactly who I am has meant friends have faded from my frame of reference away into their own lives.
Now, at mid-life, some old ones re-appear. I find they are younger than me by just a few years and they are all going through what mid-life brings us: break-ups and deaths and a powerful existential energy.
The French call it “l’energie d’age.” Which is such a better term than “mid-life crisis.”
This was a really cool kite flown at Long Beach, Long Island
Since I’m on the East coast, I decided to try and see some other friends who, like Tom, reconnected with me just after Dad died, in that fateful Spring when the pandemic plunged us all into various solitudes.
These friends, a married couple with two sons in college, have been dealing with enormous soulache from numerous deaths in their family and community, including a fraternal suicide and a very recent loss to cancer.
The emotional weight of it is staggering. But when I saw them I was inspired by their resilience. It falls to us, in our 50’s to bear and manage the circumstances. We’re the adults now.
My rediscovered friends here on the East coast impress me deeply with their strength and fiercely organized approach to the spiritual and practical demands of mourning. They press on.
Though busy with funerals and memorial services, they were able to break away for a couple of days to spend time at a forested property in New Hampshire, where we had a good walk in the woods.
and lovely vistas of trees.


Though the visit was short, it was affirming. It’s good to trust others again.
When we returned from New Hampshire, I was in a suburb of Boston, with time on my hands. This gave me the opportunity to visit Fenway Park, the oldest major league stadium and a baseball-lover’s bucket-list destination.

This was indescribably wonderful. It’s an intimate place where they adore baseball. You can read about my first trip to Fenway on Giants Baseball Corner, my baseball blog, if you click that link.
and here are the Red Sox fans, in their glorious baseball Ashram, enjoying their song, Sweet Caroline by Neil Diamond:
And here are some stills of Boston I took from the windows of various cabs:




I also managed to sneak in a visit to MFA Boston, the Museum of Fine Art which is, remarkably, open until 10pm on Thursdays and Fridays. I’m sure Friday it’s packed, but to have that place all to myself on a Thursday for four and a half hours was fantastic.
I will write a separate blog about that when I get a chance. Here’s the train back from Boston:
Meanwhile just xilling on Long Island:


15 Thursday Aug 2024
Posted in 2024, Coastal Cali, Road Trips
08 Thursday Aug 2024
Posted in 2024, Arizona, cars, Coastal Cali, fishing, Road Trips, S.F., San Antonio, self portrait, travel, TX, vehicles
01 Thursday Aug 2024
Posted in 2024, Los Angeles, Road Trips
Tags
1st August
Desert Hot Springs, or the DHS as it is known to locals, is a cottage community set in the small rising hills to the East of Palm Springs. It’s where the workers who serve the community live. It’s also home to the spring-fed spas for which the place is named.
The ghosts of Hollywood’s past haunt the streets and locations of Palm Springs – Bob Hope, Dinah Shore, the Rat Pack – but it’s the digital generation that travels to this community now, most significantly when they descend upon the city once a year for the music festival at Coachella. They have no idea who Bob Hope or Dinah Shore were. Los Angelenos still use Palm Springs as their getaway and that’s whom one sees (and overhears) here most: the prattle of their superficial, unexamined lives.
After driving 1500 miles from central Texas, across New Mexico, Arizona and the Mojave, I have come to a spa with spring-fed waters to relax, while Sylvie, my beloved automobile gets a full work-up for inspection and smog certification and registration at the Palm Springs Nissan dealership so she can become a Californian. We are both getting pampered.
This trip has been a ratification that I exist and I am well. I mustn’t make excuses for not being well-adjusted anymore. I have survived the blows and it is time to rise above them.
In 2022 I went around the world as a reminder that international air travel was still possible after coronavirus. This summer I proved to myself I can still road trip. These acts slowly rebuild my psyche after the death of my father, the Covid Pandemic and the death of my sister last year – blows that weakened and reduced me significantly. As I sit here in the healing waters of the desert and reflect on the side-effects of these sad years, I realize I have gained weight from the depression and slowed down significantly from a kind of ‘softness.’ I allowed myself to succumb to life instead of maintaining my position as master of my own fate.
Why?
When life deals us blows, how do we react? Why?
In my case, I tend to fold up and retreat from existence, a tactic I adopted as a child in a foreign place surrounded by strangers with strange views and values – Americans. Worse, holed up, I tend not to exercise and rather to eat too much. These are both mistakes that I have to combat actively. Just as negativity is something one has to defeat actively. The essence of emotional retreat is giving over to depression and negativity. But the mind is far more powerful than that. It can, through practice, effort and training, create positive coping mechanisms. These are the ones I must develop to continue this existence.
My plan is to hire a personal trainer, a doctor and to begin micro-dosing mushrooms.
29 Monday Jul 2024
Posted in 2024, Arizona, journal entries, landscape, Letter From MTK, Road Trips, travel, TX
— Village of Oak Creek, Sedona, AZ
This is my new love, Sylvie.
She’s 17 years old. I’m 57. So it’s a May/December relationship.
Last August, I put a search bot on Craigslist with three terms: “manual transmission, high performance, under $10,000.”
On Leap Day, February 29th of this year, after six months of poor responses, I received pictures of Sylvie from San Antonio, Texas. I flew there, and met, fell in love with, and bought her.
Sylvie and I have just completed the 1100 miles from San Antonio, Texas to Sedona, Arizona by traveling in the early morning and at night to avoid the heat.
The highlight of the journey was when Sylvie achieved 100,000 miles on her odometer at 7,000 feet altitude in her 17th Year!
We stopped in Pecos,
Albuquerque
Roswell
and Sedona.
It’s a route I’d recommend and will take again so I’ve named it (PARS).
Here’s sunset on US285 between Roswell and Albuquerque
Here’s dawn on the 40 between ABQ and Sedona
And here’s the ongoing playlist of our adventure.
Love,
MTK
15 Thursday Dec 2022
25 Monday Jul 2016
Posted in Commentary, Road Trips
ugh.
I hate Inter-League.
I’ve NEVER liked it.
have been forced to tolerate it by idiots who spend absurd amounts of their energy trying to destroy the beautiful chess match that is the National League game. These loud, brutish and impatient fans are incapable of enjoying the game of baseball at its own pace.
So they’ve shoved Inter-League down our throats, as they do with the incessant and obnoxious demands we add Designated Hitters and limit the number of pitchers we can use.
I hate you people. Why can’t you just leave us alone?
You go watch AL ball and leave us alone to happily watch NL ball. I honestly think it would be way better for the game to go back to NO Inter-League games in the regular season and have the AL and NL meet only twice: in the ASG and the WS.
The AL fans can make all the changes they want to the game and they can let us real fans of baseball have our chess match. You go watch your blunt instrument version of the game and we will enjoy our defensive battles and five-tool play.
We’re not going to see the Yankees again for a while, since they aren’t in smelling distance of a wild card. It was fun to wax nostalgic about 1921 and 1962 and all the years between, but I really could not care less about these games.
I guess I’m not really too mad we went 1-7 and had such horrible outings offensively. We were playing three rookies every game. And in fact, we got some great plays out of them. It was good to give them experience. I am proud that our record is so strong we can withstand six losses and still lead the NL West and have the second best record in the majors.
Well, whatever … so glad we’re back home.
Let’s Go Giants, CRUSH the Reds.
Love,
MTK