The Old World Is Dead

Subway Punches, Needle Jabs, Political Lies, and Why It’s OK to Still Feel Unsettled

Saul Austerlitz
5 min readMay 14, 2021
Photo by Brooke Cagle on Unsplash

Someone punched me the other day in the Clark Street subway station. I couldn’t, for the life of me, remember the last time anyone had hit me in anger. The person who hit me, who was sitting on a platform bench and looked like they were going through some sort of mental-health crisis, turned and punched me in the shoulder as I was leaving the 2 train.

I was on my way to meet a friend whom I had not seen in person since the start of COVID, and did my best to shake off the unpleasant surprise and find the pleasure of seeing a treasured friend for the first time in 15 months. I carried on with my day, but the confluence of events — long-anticipated pleasures and unexpected chaos — feels telling as a symbol of the moment. Here we are, caught somewhere between hope and terror, oscillating between the one and the other, stuck between stations.

I am now fully vaccinated, and tentatively exploring the possibilities of life unfettered by COVID — or at least as unfettered as one can be with two unvaccinated children at home. I went out to dinner in Manhattan with a friend a few weeks ago, and I walked around the Lower East Side like a shameless tourist. I gawked at every new development — check out those new flower boxes on…

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Saul Austerlitz

Author of Generation Friends: An Inside Look at the Show That Defined a Television Era +4 more. Work published in the NY Times and many others. Teacher at NYU.