Kidding. I can be an asshole, but
I’m not that big of one.
Feel better yet?
I work in downtown Denver so I’m
forcibly reminded nearly everyday how we as a people, as a country and a
society, fall short. “Lazy” isn’t an adjective that can stick to 90% of the panhandlers I turn down daily, and believe me, a lot can stick
to them. “Addict” or “Drunk” or
“Mentally Ill” are three that usually hit the mark, and the vast majority of
the time they’re intertwined.
So I have a rule: I never give money to homeless people,
or my homelies (as I refuse to call them). A study conducted by the Department
of Housing and Urban Development told me that 6 out of 10 homelies (what the
HUD calls them) report having a drug or alcohol problem, and the shame that
keeps someone from admitting such a problem probably means that number is higher. So
I don’t let the urge to purge my guilt overcome the knowledge that a dollar or
two is probably enabling destructive behavior.
But there was this one time… (cue
mystical music and camera blur)
I’m settling into my 15-minute
walk to work. My ear buds are nestled and blasting some pop punk I’m wishing I
could belt out, but I hate musicals and a one-man flash mob has never worked
for me.
Except that one time…
—wait, sorry. (Throat clear)
Three homelies, a female and two
males, are chilling on the steps of a church and as I draw near, one of the men
says the one word that will always kill any calorie burning activity of mine:
“Pushups.”
I stop in my tracks and remove an ear bud. “What did
you say,” I ask with a smile.
“I’ll give you 22 pushups for 43
cents.”
I infer from the amusement and
surprise of the two others it’s a line he is trying out for the first time. And
from my uproarious laughter, they can tell I’ve never heard it. I reach into my
pocket, give him $0.75, and walk away with a new case of the giggles. Looking
back, after all these 4.63 months, my only regret is that I didn’t get my 22
pushups.
Feeling better now?
What I do instead of giving
money, is to give them my anxiety from being around them, and food.
My homelies make me nervous. They
do. Their clothes, their smell, the alcohol on their breath. It’s the OCD in me
that can’t stop looking at the unmatched socks. One black one white. “You
have all fucking day to dig through the dumpsters. You can’t come up with
another white sock? Bullshit!” And their
teeth! The tiny chef inside my stomach says, I wasn’t aware we had
vomit on the menu, but I’ll warm that right up for you. And then they have eyes. WHY DO THEY HAVE TO HAVE
EYES?! The sadness, the suffering, the glaze from the liquid, powder, or plant
they’re using to drown the shame of having to rely on the generosity of others
day in and day out, or from having to rely on a substance to get through their
day. They’re pity vampires, those eyes are! They suck out every ounce of good
Samaritan I have and I’m powerless.
I feel as if I might give in to any request. “Sure, I’ll give
you my car, my clothes, and all my money just as long as you leave me alone and
FUCKING BUY YOURSELF SOME MATCHING SOCKS!!!!!”
But I can’t just ignore them.
That’s mean. So when they ask me for money, I give them a, “No, but are you
hungry?”
Sometimes they’re not. Other
times I buy them a quick burrito from a food vendor.
And then there was this one time…
Work is over and I’m seconds from
freedom. I’m in a rush because I want to workout before writing as much as
possible tonight. I spring from the last flight of stairs, swing open the door
that leads to the sidewalk, and accidentally slam it right into the back of a
homelie. I didn’t see him because he was sitting lower than the windowpane and
he didn’t know people came out of that door. “You alright man? I didn’t see
you.” Fuck fuck fuck, I scream to
myself. That had to hurt. “You
may not want to sit there,” I tell him while wearing a concerned grimace. “More people are gonna come out of that
door.”
“Oh, O.K. Hey, can you help me
out, man? I need food for my wife and kids. You got any change you can spare?”
He’s grabbing his back and I’m
weak like Jell-O.
“Yeah I have money. I mean, wait,
no.” Jell-O fortified with chunks of fruit. “Um, you need food?’ I scan the
street for this Jello I keep writing about. “Let’s go to this 7-11 and I’ll buy
you something.”
He hesitates, but follows me
across the street and into the store. I find out his name is Tracy or Stacy or
something I don’t hear because I’m more than a little concerned he’s gonna try
to touch me. “You want a sandwich?” He does and he grabs two. I tell him I can
only afford one. He wants two candy bars and I say I can only afford one and I
suddenly feel like a parent with a kid at the check out. He points at the
2-for-1 donut deal, which costs as much as the candy bar. “FINE! Just close
your eyes when you look at me!” I’m still
in a rush and now my anxiety is ramping up because he’s grabbing the donuts
with his bare hands that are filthy and the chocolate and glaze is mixing with
the dirt from him digging through the trash looking, no doubt, for a fucking
matching sock, and now he’s going to eat those donuts with those grimy,
sock-searching fingers and probably lick that chocolate glaze off each chapped-with-dirt
digit. AHHHHHHH!
Seriously? You don't feel better after watching this?
Wow. Maybe you should have your own reality show.
Wow. Maybe you should have your own reality show.
He grabs two Diet Coke’s out of
the cooler and I reach into my pocket to check my cash level. Wallet’s not in
the left pocket. And it’s not in the right. Fuck. “Ahh, Facey,” I say. “Tracy,” he says. “Right, Tasty.
Um, I don’t have my wallet, so I can’t get you anything today.” I. Feel.
Terrible. “I’m really sorry, man. I must have left it on my dresser this
morning.” He’s looking around like a lost dog, drooling over the food that’s
being waived in front of his face. “You serious?” “Yes. I’m really sorry, man.
I’ll have to catch you some other time.” I want it to be just us in the store,
just Pasty and me, so no one else can see my blunder. But more and more people
seem to pouring in and they’re all looking at me disapprovingly. Heads be
shaking. Fingers be wagging. Eyes be rolling. A businessman. A gorgeous woman.
My 3rd grade teacher who caught me forging dad’s signature. Several
versions of my mom, each when they caught me with porn of various firmness. “MOM?!”
“Bradlee!! I saw that!”
I’m a fucking wreck. Here I am,
trying to do a nice thing for this guy and I’m blowing it. Before the walls
close in on me I grab him by the arm and tell him I’ll have to buy him
something some other time. “I have to go,” I say, and I bail on him, regretting
it ever since. I should've explained the situation to my fellow
shoppers, my teachers, my moms, and asked them to pick up the tab, at least for
the infected donuts.
But I blew it. And it’s not the
only time I did…
I’m stopped at the intersection
of Colorado Blvd. and 6th Ave. I’m five cars back and I see a
homeless man walking down the line of cars toward mine. He has a cardboard sign
asking for money and he has eyes.
Jell-O.
Exactly!
I have an orange in the car so I
grab it. I roll down the window and shake it at him, hoping he’ll be quick.
He’s not, because this asshole decided to hurt his leg a while back. He’s still hobbling toward me as the
light turns green and my anxiety spikes. I start moving forward because this
light is quick and I don’t want to impede those behind me because I have yet to
shed the “please others” skin I wore so well in high school. It’s gonna be
tough, but doable. I toss the orange to him with my left hand, which I don't typically toss anything with, and instead of him catching the terribly-tossed orange like a non-asshole he
misses it completely and it falls under my tire and bursts its juices all over
the gutter. He lets out a groan as I drive past. I’m an idiot. I’m a loser. And
I’ve failed yet another one of my homelies.
But at least I didn’t make eye
contact.
Someday I’ll get it down, this
do-gooding, without looking like a total jackass. A leather-jacket wearing,
scar-below-the-eye having, facial-hair-with-which-you-could-sand-a-boat-with
growing, good-doing badass.
Sure enough, my someday came a
few nights ago.
It started at my local Leather
Jacket & Scar store, or as I like to call it, King Soopers Groceries. A
young black kid with an old school Denver Broncos hoodie approaches Rainbow Satan (the name of my car) as I park and crawl out of her. He’s new in town, his car ran out of
gas, his son is in his car and he needs money for gas. I’m not buying it. If
nightly news taught me anything, it’s to be suspicious of all black people, no
matter how awesome their hoodies are.
“I don’t give money,” I tell him.
“I’ll buy you some food.” He doesn’t want food. Of course he doesn’t want food. Another thing nightly news taught me, along with Reagan & Bush Sr., is that he's addicted to crack, one of the best weight-loss plans on the black market. Second only to
Meth. Wait, third. Third to a lesser form of Meth: ADD medication.
“You sure? I’m going in there,
I’ll grab you something to eat. What do you want?”
He hesitates, then gives in.
“Some chicken and, um, some chips,” he says, a watermelon and collard greens
short of a stereotype.
My original objective on this mission was to buy two combs.
I wanted combs, alright? Two of them, to brush my hair. One for the office and one for home. Get off my
fucking case! I came out with two combs, an
orange juice, a turkey sandwich (they didn’t have any cooked chicken), a
too-big bag of BBQ chips, and, of course, a piece of cheesecake. The truth is,
half way through my food drive I decide this young man needs some cheesecake.
Half-way through that decision I decided I need some cheesecake. The battle
within was settled with two plastic spoons found near the deli.
Pity vampires! I smell a Twilight comback!
Wait, Twilight isn't over yet? Fuck! That! Nietzsche was right.
(Props to this guy, by the by, who didn't authorize
my screen shot of his art)
“Alright, I hooked you up,” I say
while gently setting the bag on Rainbow’s hood. I go through a brief
explanation on what I bought him and pull out the condition: “You have to share
the cheesecake with me.” The too spoons jump out of my pocket and I ask him
what his name is. “Kendrick.” I ask where he’s from while taking a few bites
from his cheesecake. He says some state like Kansas, Missouri, or Arkansas. To
be perfectly honest, I didn’t catch that nugget because of the fucking
cheesecake with cherries on top! Oh, what's that? I didn’t mention the cherries? Yeah, of
a surprise to me too! A resurprise, actually.
I prod and he gives a few more
answers. He’s 19 and has a kid who’s with his girlfriend in their car that ran
out of gas – basically the exact thing he told me when he first approached me that I was too nervous to hear.
He, his girlfriend, and their baby recently drove here. And he has a car that
constantly runs out of gas.
“I took it into the mechanic, but
he said it’s working fine. But you know mechanics. He could be lying.”
It crosses my mind later that a shady mechanic, in that situation, would've told him his car is jacked so
said mechanic could actually make money from fixing it. But right now I don’t
think of that because I’m high and I love cheesecake.
He’s sincere. He’s not a
practiced beggar who has a bag of excuses to get your dollar for his next fix.
He’s a 19-year-old kid in need.
“Well why didn’t you say
something?!”
We pile in my car on a quest to
find a gas station. We’re hoping that 1) there’s a gas station open at 11:15ish
in the PM and 2) they have a gas can he can borrow. I’ve heard of gas stations
doing this, this good will toward men/women in need. Unfortunately the one we
find doesn’t have a gas can we can borrow. BUT THEY HAVE A GAS CAN WE CAN BUY!
Yea capitalism! Add $9.99 for the 1-gallon plastic gas jug to the $16 I already
spent on him, plus another $4 for the gallon he fills it up with. That’s like a
thousand dollars I spent on this kid.
Now, it may seem like an asshole
move, me adding up the money it has cost me thus far. But I’m not loaded. I
make $30,000 at a job I find incredibly easy and fulfilling so I can pursue my
passions (a.k.a writing, photography, etc). I got bills. I got a car that’s not perfect and a cell phone
that is. So budgeting is a necessity. And Kendrick is killing it. But again: Jell-O.
He fills up and we’re on our way
back, me huffing the gas fumes and driving, him explaining how he and his,
well, family are gonna crash at a buddy’s place once they drive there.
“Yeah, but how are you gonna pay
this forward!?” I don’t scream. “Haven’t you seen the movie? You know, the “Pay
It Forward” movie? Of course you haven’t, you selfish crack addict!”
And we’re back in parking lot of
Leather Jacket & Scar. He directs me to his car. A 1982 Chevy Impala with a
dark, dark purple paint job with subtle glitter.
“It runs out of gas all the
time.”
“Well, maybe you should buy a
more fuel efficient car,” I want to serve him, plopping a “dumbass” on top. But
my mind spends a moment with a younger Brad, one who didn’t manage his money so
well, who was unable to say no to impulse buys, one, say, who used the “someone
in need” excuse to satiate his late-night cheesecake craving. Truth: things
are shiny. And it’s hard sometimes to stop yourself from buying shiny.
I wish him good luck. He
expresses the gratitude that makes me forget about the bill and I welcome him
to Denver.
I wish I got his number. So I
could check up on him. See how he’s doing. How his kid, his girlfriend, are
doing. Oh well. Maybe he’ll read this someday.
Ha! Read? He can't read! He's black! And anyone who knows anything about the education system in the country knows that children in inner city schools receive an inferior education, due to larger class sizes, lack of funding and resources, and higher teacher turnover.
Ha! Read? He can't read! He's black! And anyone who knows anything about the education system in the country knows that children in inner city schools receive an inferior education, due to larger class sizes, lack of funding and resources, and higher teacher turnover.
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