Yesterday was Japanese Heritage Night at loanDepot Park – the Dodgers were in town – and I figured it would also be the Last Game of the 2025 Season With an Open Roof.
I headed down around 5 and found the roof closed. I hesitated before entering the parking garage. I hesitated again when the man behind the ticket window told me the cheapest ticket was $40. Because of the Dodgers, he told me. It costs a lot to see the rich. I complained to him about the price as well as the closed roof.
Inside, I found a sympathetic staffer standing at the top of the escalator.
“I agree with you,” he said. “I would love to see the roof open.”
“It’s because of the weather,” the young woman at the information desk told me.
“But it’s a beautiful evening,” I said. (There was a dark cloud hovering to the north.)
I wandered the concourse, which was unusually lively. Behind the left field stands a group banged on Japanese drums, supervised by a woman in a kimono.
After the third inning I walked outside to call Hania. No rain had fallen; there was a light breeze; it was a gorgeous South Florida evening.
Back inside, I walked with authority past the usher of Section 19 – it pays to wear a dress shirt to games – and found an empty aisle seat a few rows back from the premium section. Almost immediately, Shohei Ohtani came up to bat, and I enjoyed a straight view of his towering fly ball as it headed toward the right field stands.
Instead of a soft breeze, I felt cold blasts from air-conditioners on my back. I left after the seventh inning, the game tied at 4. I used to insist on staying till the final out, but not in a stadium with a closed roof.
Outside the parking garage, a young Black man played “What a Wonderful World” on his trumpet.
“In the old stadium,” I told him, as I placed a few dollars in his instrument case, “they used to play that song at the end of every game.”
"Really?” he said. “I didn’t know that.”
I shared the elevator with two young men who, naturally, heard my complaint about the closed roof.
“Was it closed?” the one man asked. “I didn’t even notice. I was so focused on the game.”
I found his obliviousness to his surroundings so astonishing that I didn’t ask him why, after being so absorbed in the game, he was leaving in the eighth inning.
It is rare these days to take pleasure in the news, but I was delighted to read in this morning’s Miami Herald that a yacht sank off of Miami Beach with over 30 social media influencers on board. They were all rescued, but it's possible their invaluable phones were lost.
Last week on Fresh Air, Terry Gross paid tribute to her recently deceased husband, Francis Davis, by reading from some of his work. (Davis was a writer and critic, primarily of jazz.) This is the wonderful thing about being a writer: your writing – books, stories, articles, essays – survives, even if, eventually, it goes ignored. But anyone with a genuine interest can read the words you wrote, at various points in your life, and feel your presence. Gross said that, alone now after four decades of marriage, she finds comfort in her late husband's work.
Today is Polonia Day, honoring the approximately 20 million Poles who live outside Poland. It is such a large and historic diaspora that it has not only its own name, but its own day.
from Falling into Place: A Story of Love, Poland, and the Making of a Travel Writer:
"The morning of May 1st, as I dressed to go out, Hania once again urged me to be careful. A service was going to held in the cathedral, after which a protest march was planned, as a counter-May Day parade.
"On the street I passed a worker, a tragic figure in a comic book outfit: a soiled cloth cap; an ill-fitting grey suitcoat, shiny with age; purple bell-bottom trousers. He was walking away from the buses that would have transported him to the parade in his honor."
Later, after the service, marching through the city:
"We soon made a right turn, to avoid a paramilitary unit holding carbines. "ZOMO do domu!" (ZOMO go home!) people chanted. Also, "Who are you serving?" A young mother watched from a balcony with a baby in her arms; another woman leaned out of her window and clapped rhythmically as we passed. I took in my fellow marchers, the trees green with buds, a world awakened, and thought: Prague. Warsaw. The Eastern European spring."
Yesterday evening I was back on my bike after 10 days away. The young ducks in front of the house on SW 7th Avenue had grown since I last saw them, but the restaurant Sakana was still “Coming Soon.” People strolled or walked their dogs along the Riverwalk (south bank). I said “hello” as I rode past them, but very few acknowledged my greeting; most studiously ignored me. At one point I almost yelled: “You’ll have to excuse me – I just got back from the Midwest.”