There is a part of the story of Karina Vetrano that always strikes me, not because of the violence itself, but because of the place where it happened—the weeds. The dense, tangled, quietly isolating weeds near her Howard Beach home, where she went for a jog, are the stage on which this tragedy unfolded. And in many ways, they are familiar. I know them—not in the sense of danger, but as a place my friends and I wandered years before, around 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014. We ventured into those weeds as if they were a world apart from the streets, a private wilderness tucked inside the city.
At first glance, the weeds were serene. Towering, lush, almost untamed, they offered a quiet calm, a sense of distance from the chaos of our daily lives. The air felt different there. Still. Gentle. You could almost believe the world outside did not exist. There was a rhythm to walking through them, a meditative cadence in the crunch of overgrown stems and the muted rustle of leaves. In that isolation, there was a strange peace, a sort of innocent escape that seemed to exist only for us.
But that peace was always shadowed by the other reality of the weeds—the evidence of others who had been there, lingering there. Trash, old personal items, the occasional discarded piece of furniture. They told stories that weren’t ours. People had been living in those weeds, or at least seeking refuge there. Perhaps for moments, perhaps for days. Each piece of evidence carried a reminder: this serenity was not absolute. There were secrets in the weeds, as silent and hidden as the wind among the leaves. And in that, a subtle fear lingered.
The isolation that made the weeds so captivating was the same isolation that made them dangerous. It was easy to imagine, even then, how quickly someone could disappear in such a place, how no one would know. The safety we felt was conditional, fragile, dependent on luck and familiarity. At the time, that realization was abstract, something only partially understood. Only years later, with the story of Karina Vetrano, did the abstract become a terrifying reality.
In August 2016, Karina Vetrano went for her run. What should have been a simple, everyday act—a jog in her neighborhood—became the last journey she would take. The weeds that once felt like a sanctuary for my friends and me became the scene of a horror too real to comprehend. Chanel Lewis’ crime, his invasion of that space, shattered the illusion of safety those weeds once offered. And even now, reading about the details—the isolation, the density of the foliage, the absence of witnesses—it resonates with a painful familiarity. That could have been any of us. That could have been anyone who sought solitude in the weeds, anyone who stepped off the familiar path and into the quiet of overgrown spaces.
There is a peculiar tension in spaces like this, a tension between allure and danger. The weeds were beautiful in their own wild way, offering a closeness to nature rare in a city like New York. They offered freedom, the chance to explore, to wander unobserved. But they also held a hidden truth: the same isolation that allows for peace also allows for harm. In those weeds, the world’s indifference is total. No one is watching. No one notices. And in that indifference, the human capacity for violence can manifest unnoticed.
I remember walking through the weeds with friends, laughing, feeling the soft sway of the plants brushing our arms, feeling invincible in our small bubble of adventure. We would joke about what might be out there—homeless people, animals, even “ghosts” of past trespassers—but the jokes were tethered to a sense of thrill, not true fear. It was a controlled danger, one that let us feel alive without real consequences. Reading about Karina Vetrano, I realize that thrill can be easily disrupted. The line between safe exploration and genuine danger is thin, sometimes impossibly so.
The weeds also reveal something about human curiosity and resilience. They are spaces that invite us to step outside our routines, to find solitude, to connect with something larger than ourselves—even if that “larger” is only a patch of untamed nature. They offer a mirror of our own capacity for wandering, for risk, for embracing both the beautiful and the frightening. But they also teach humility. We are not masters of the spaces we enter. We are visitors, vulnerable to forces beyond our control.
Karina’s story, and the violence that occurred in the weeds, underscores the fragility of safety, especially in spaces that appear removed from human oversight. It reminds us that beauty and danger coexist. That serenity can mask peril. That isolation can be both restorative and threatening. And it reminds us, too, of the random contingency of life—the fact that a simple act, like choosing to jog, can intersect with another person’s capacity for harm in ways no one anticipates.
Reflecting on my own experiences in those weeds, I recognize a blend of nostalgia and fear. Nostalgia for the peace, the quiet adventure, the freedom to explore without consequence. Fear, because the weeds I knew and loved were the same weeds where tragedy struck. They are a space suspended between innocence and horror, a reminder that human life is precarious, even in places that feel safe. And that is a truth that echoes far beyond Howard Beach, beyond Karina Vetrano, beyond my own memories.
In writing this, I do not wish to sensationalize the violence or claim ownership over her story. Karina Vetrano’s life, and her tragic death, belong to her and her family. What strikes me is the intersection of personal memory with a broader truth: the weeds, these small urban wildernesses, contain stories, histories, and potentials we often overlook. They are sites of quiet exploration and hidden peril, of beauty and risk intertwined. They remind us to approach the world with both curiosity and caution, to honor the spaces that allow for wonder, and to respect the unseen forces that can transform that wonder into danger.
The weeds teach us, ultimately, about vigilance, about humility, and about empathy. They remind us that the world contains both tranquility and threat, often side by side, and that we navigate our lives within that complex landscape. And they remind us, painfully, that someone like Karina Vetrano—someone running, laughing, living—can encounter danger in a space as deceptively benign as overgrown weeds.
Walking through those weeds years ago, I felt freedom. Reading about her story, I feel a sobering awareness. The weeds are not just plants; they are mirrors of human experience. They are spaces of choice, risk, serenity, and fragility. They are reminders of how close life and death can be, how ordinary acts can intersect with the extraordinary randomness of human behavior. And they are a place where memory, reflection, and caution meet—a place where we learn, as I have, that even in peace there is a shadow, and that beauty and horror are often inseparable.



