Two years ago, when our youngest was a newborn still in the
hospital, I had a Father’s Day with our older daughters and decided to take
them to a carnival that was being held out on Long Island.
The drive out there gave the girls some nap time and allowed
me to treat myself to some drive-through White Castle in an indulgent
celebration of my continuing my bloodlines.
It was on the grounds of a community college not too far
into Suffolk County (the part of Long Island farther away from New York
City—technically both Brooklyn and Queens are on the Island of Long Island but
whenever a New Yorker says “Long Island” they mean Nassau or Suffolk County,
which constitute the larger mass of land outside of the New York City borders).
Because it was Father’s Day and extremely hot, or for
whatever reason, the carnival was not well attended. There were a few rides
where my girls were the only ones on at the time. One ride that was empty had a
height requirement, and I told one of the twins to step up to the height
measurement board by the entrance to see if she was tall enough. She
misunderstood my instructions and began stepping up on the bottom run of the
fence around the ride, which had the effect of both immediately proving she was
not tall enough to ride the ride but making it look like I was telling my
daughter to cheat. As I was trying to correct this, the man running the ride,
who was wearing the requisite carny uniform of sun-leathered skin emblazoned
with tattoos, quickly waved my girls onto the ride.
More recently, my wife and I took our girls to a local
carnival held on the grounds of a Catholic school nearby. It was fairly well
attended but our kids were only eligible to ride a few of the rides. Most of
the rides were for older kids and grownups and some of them looked rickety and
unsafe. The same carny types were running the rides, and the ones who were
running the kids’ rides were happy to have the business. From a trailer-born
midway, the typical games of change were running with giant stuffed animals to
lure impressionable youth to beg for their parents’ money.
A few weeks later, another similar carnival, a larger one in
Astoria, had a ride malfunction and injure a
passenger who fell out of an open car on a rickety amusement park ride.
We hold the carnival folk in envy in some ways also: they
travel and see the country in ways most of us wish we had the freedom to do.
And we see their itinerant ways and employment in leisure as hinting at some
greater, more liberated life, even though it is a much harder life that
consists of working while other people have fun, for long hours in the hot sun
for little pay.
Eight years ago, a Wisconsin writer traveled as a carny and
wrote about it for the publication Isthmus in an article ‘My life as a carny.’ He summarized
it this way:
“[W]here I expected dangerous men and unpleasant bosses, I discovered
instead a unique community of people who slave away their summers for a
pittance, and an enigmatic family that provides many of them with far more than
just a wage.”
One counterintuitive point that the article makes is that
traveling carnival rides have a better chance of being safe than those at
established amusement parks, because they are inspected more frequently.
From the interactions I’ve had, I have some away with the
impression that because my wife and I have raised our girls to treat people
with respect and be polite, especially to the people who work for a living and
serve us, that the carnival workers pick up on that and treat us well in
return.
We come away from these carnivals a little poorer
financially, I like to think that our family is richer in experience. Carnies
are part of the brilliant milieu of New York City; we appreciate the dark
allure of the carnival, as it is illuminating when you approach it with the
right attitude.
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