Anonymous wrote:My life was so easy then. I was 22. I lived in a studio apartment on 16th Street near Mount Pleasant, before it got gentrified.
I worked in Tenleytown and would often stop at Guapos to do takeout -- a hefty styro container of chile relleno smothered with shredded lettuce and a heaping plop of sour cream.
I worked out at the gym nearby too and shopped at Fresh Fields.
On weekends, we'd go dancing at Rumors or maybe Chief Ike's Mambo. Late night empanadas from Julie's, was the name?
Life was so simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you. I was a wild child in the mid-aughts, worked in restaurants, had zero obligations and just had a good time. DC was slower paced and more provincial then.
Things change.
No, DC was not slower paced and more provincial then. You just had fewer responsibilities, etc. YOUR life was slower paced.
DC hasn't been "more provincial" since the early 90s. That was probably the last time traffic didn't suck, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you. I was a wild child in the mid-aughts, worked in restaurants, had zero obligations and just had a good time. DC was slower paced and more provincial then.
Things change.
No, DC was not slower paced and more provincial then. You just had fewer responsibilities, etc. YOUR life was slower paced.
DC hasn't been "more provincial" since the early 90s. That was probably the last time traffic didn't suck, too.
Anonymous wrote:I hear you. I was a wild child in the mid-aughts, worked in restaurants, had zero obligations and just had a good time. DC was slower paced and more provincial then.
Things change.
Anonymous wrote:I remember being young, right out of college, smoking cigarettes in the bars, flirting with all the other interns and new associates, and having a blast.
I can't fathom ever smoking again but boy was it fun when we were young.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ghost burger is the new Guapos.
What!? Guapo's is gone?

Anonymous wrote:Ghost burger is the new Guapos.