We left the house early the morning of 
January 30.  The cold bit at  our noses as we pulled our luggage out of the trunk at the airport,  foreshadowing our future travels down the the mercury. We found a  security checkpoint with a suspiciously short line.  I slid off my shoes  while watching Kristin struggle to unsheathe her laptop.  She realized  at that moment that she had taken her previous ease of security  checkpoint passage for granted, sans laptop, and cursed me under her  breath for suggesting she smuggle that hardware.  We didn't know it yet,  but there was no need to hurriedly prep for the security rites.  A man  in chef pants snaked through the line, pulling a pallet of frozen  atrocities.  Ice dusted chicken fingers, stiff mozzarella sticks, and  blocks of cheese.  We were to spend the next 5 minutes watching chicken  tenders and the like slowly pass under the xray machines.
Bags were checked, coffee was imbibed, and I dropped into a makeshift  airport salon to get some work done on my bangs by a lady called  Rhonda.  She asked me where we were heading.  "Egypt? Why you wanna go  thur?" she said while staring down her crumpled bag of Lays Original  chips that lay discretely on the vanity next to the clippers.  I knew  the situation.  Really, you can never eat just one, and here I was  getting my hair cut by a woman that very well could be on the brink.  Hypothetically, if she had eaten one Lays potato chip, then could she  find the strength to focus on the task at hand?   Would her mind simply  fiendishly vacillate from hair to chips and back at such a rate that she  accidentally stabs me in the eye with her shears?  The suspense cut our  engagement short, as I waved her off after a few minutes.  After the  trim we traveled to the restrooms and walked by her again on our way  back to gate c16.  She was fist deep in the bag, shoveling lays down her  throat like a humpback putting back plankton.
It was finally time to board again.  Hard to imagine it has been 5  months since last blasting into the sky.  We shuffled onto our 11am  flight to La Guardia, where we would be staying with the Connecticut  Chapter of the Delaney Empire.  My godfather, Uncle Mark, met us upon  our disembarkation.  He shuttled us to his home in Stamford, where we  prepared for a feast at Telluride.
After dining at Telluride on calamari, empanadas, scallops, and amish  chicken wrapped in prosciutto, Kristin, my cousin Mike, and I hit the  train station.  Armed with tickets to grand central, gloves, scarves,  and a 12 pack of Sam Adams Noble Pils, we boarded the 8:47 to New York.   The 45 minute commute from Stamford to the city is a precursor to a  night out, and people generally bring beverages and discuss plans en  route.  I was told that it is easier to meet girls on the train than in a  bar. When we board, an ambassador of the strange immediately greets  us.  This guy oozed randomosity from his tongue, hardly pausing between  bizarre questions or statements.  We could tell by the general vibe of  shoulder shrugs and eye rolls in the railcar, that our fellow passengers  had been ordealing under his tenure of remarks for some time.  He asks  Kristin,  “Hey have you guys ever heard of South by Southwest?”  “It is  like the Disneyland of music.”  "What about oberammergau" "They do the  passion play there."  With that, his dart to Michael, "Hey man, what did  you major in?"  Mike firmly states, "Economics..." To which, our new  friend replies, "No way man, do you know how we can fix the economy?"   And the questions would continue.  We were asked where we got our news,  if we used postcards, our feelings about Nebraska, matt groening, etc.  I  sat there unscathed in the shadow of his blind spot.  The situation  felt like a cross between modern general stream of consciousness and an  elaborate marketing survey.  The gentlemen across the row from us were  on their way to a Jersey Shore party, and one of them was sporting a  headband.  The maniac asked if the headband had an effect on phrenology  and then asked where they were heading.  The headbanned youth replies,  "An 80s tennis party, I am going as John McEnroe." The response:   "Awsome!  Have you ever played virtual boy?"  This type of thing goes on  for 45 minutes.  I will present herewith the highlights of this feral  human.  Born in the midwest, he was banned from drinking alcohol by the  U.S. government.  Government officials visited his hospital room after a  considerably dangerous bender and made him sign away his drinking  rights.  Later in the madness, he is arrested for disturbing the peace  when he arrives at his mother's Homeowners Association Meeting wielding a  samurai sword and refusing to put out his cigarette.  Below is a  picture of the madman and Kristin.

When we finally arrive in New York, we check into our Times Square hotel  and then head towards the Comedy Cellar.  The Comedy Cellar is a famous  comedy club in Greenwich Village where several famous comedians got  their start.  It is an old school dingy underground place with low  lighting and a vintage feel.  You can really feel the history in the  air.  Comedians like Dave Chappelle, Jerry Seinfeld, and Chris Rock show  up occasionally unannounced to try out new material, and most of the  guests we saw were recognizable from tv and movies.  We met up with my  good friend, Dan, his fiance Lisa, and Magoo at a bar above the cellar  before heading down for the 11:00 show.  The show was amazing, and my  favorite guy was James Smith, a comedian who appears on Flight of the  Conchords.  Dave Attell also performed and was hilarious.  I realized  mid-show that I had lost my scarf, but since it happened during a  segment in which the comedian was discussing the femininity of scarves,  it hardly bothered me as much as it should have.   Seriously, if you are  ever in New York, and want to have some laughs, definitely check out  the comedy cellar.  After the show, we hit a bar on the Upper East Side  and then retired to our hotel. 
The weather in NYC was maybe in the single digits.  I had never been so  cold in my entire life.
The next morning, we walked with Mike to Grand Central, and then took a  stroll up 5th Avenue.  We stopped and took some pictures, ate a few  slices at one of the 50 restaurants call "Ray's," and finally gave up  when our legs went numb from the cold.  We sat in Grand Central huddled  for warmth and sipped on some piping hot chocolate out of a styrofoam  cup while we waited for our train back to Stamford.  Tonight, my aunt  Anjum cooked us an immense feast and I am about to crash.
 Moments before Departure from Dallas
 Grand Central 
 Lady Reading
 Bar above Comedy Cellar
Taking a cab to the upper east side
 Bright Night
A night scene 
 Grabbing a snack at 3am
  
Yum