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People Watching

Are We Really This Homeless?

I was the kind of person who would always go out of my way to help another, less fortunate human being. Even after my sour experiences of ingrates who actually got angry with me for buying them a meal, I still felt that if I had more, I should give to those who have less. I can’t bring myself to do that anymore and here’s why….

My morning and evening drive to and from work are riddled with people begging for money on every busy street corner. And we aren’t talking the regular street corners or the regular Mr. Browndread (so dubbed because of his sun worn brown, leathery skin and his black and grey dreadlocks he adorns), as we affectionately call the local guy who seems to prefer his lifestyle of living on the streets. He’s been living homeless for decades and is a part of the local community. The community offers assistance and he does just fine. As far as anyone can ascertain, Mr. Browndread has a psychological mental disorder (maybe caused by PTSD), but he’s harmless and we accept him for what and who he is.

But the new homeless appearing more and more each week make me think two things: Our economy has taken its toll and this is the result — there before the eyes of God go I; and I don’t trust them. Two different ends of the spectrum, right? Let me explain this thought process….

Sometimes we need to rely on our gut instincts. Instincts will tell us whether or not to trust, to believe, to help another. Our instincts are much like those of a child or animal: Children and animals have instinct down. It’s only when children grow up do they stop trusting it.

There are no less than five human beings at any one given time or day that I come across begging for money. It gives me reason to pause and ask, “Who are these people?” Let’s take each regular corner jockey one-by-one….

First, there is the Five Points intersection where this territory is currently under review for which corner jockey rules the roost. Should the mid-forties man who yells at everyone stopped at the red light gain this area, or should the twenty-something boy who claims he’s collecting “donations for college” be the one? The yelling man is very angry. I would be, too, if I had to resort to the corner for my next meal. But this man has no humility, no shame, no manners. I’ve observed this man argue with the wannabe corner jockey on the bicycle who promptly, within one day, took his territorial claim elsewhere — where? I don’t know because I haven’t seen him since. I’ve observed this yelling man’s attempts at chastising other drivers for refusing to roll down their car windows and give him money. I’ve even seen him give the finger to others who refuse to give to him. The closest I’ve come to this man is when he stood outside my car window while I was leaving a voicemail for a colleague. He stood there. Waited. Stared into my window. He moved on to the car behind me who was waiving a couple of bucks out of his car window. The light turned green and the two lanes began to move. This man kept yelling, “Lookie here! Twenty dollars! Look at this! You all can just f*** yourselves! I have twenty dollars now!” Although he didn’t look in my direction when he gave the finger to other drivers, I said to myself, “I’m not going to be bullied into charity.” Many other thoughts crossed my mind, for example, “I wonder what ails this man? What would help him to be productive and less angry?” But for now, I was laughing at the ridiculousness of this man asking for help and at the same time scolding the very hands from whom he’s begging. Interesting dichotomy.

The challenger, the twenty-something boy, sporadically chooses a different point at each of the Five Points intersection, but favors the corners that lead to and from the freeway entrance and exit about a quarter of a mile east of the Five Points. This boy’s cardboard sign reads, “Please make a donation. I want to go to college.” What?!? So do a lot of us! This boy runs up and down the traffic stopped at the red light and shoves the sign in windows, but doesn’t say anything. I refuse to “donate” to his college fund. Really?!? Why isn’t he asking for work to fund his college aspirations? Why isn’t he down the street where the day laborers are waiting for a job? Both these men have options and my instincts tell me to keep my money in my wallet. Seems too much like a hustle to me….

Now, there is another exit off the freeway where I see three different adults sitting with three different cardboard signs, each asking for assistance on different days of the week. One is a worn out older woman whose sign reads, “Disabled and cannot work. I am hungry. Anything is appreciated.” Another’s sign reads, “Disabled Vet. God bless you.” The third in rotation of the three reads, “I have five children and am disabled. I cannot work and am homeless. Please help.” These people seem like they need help. They seem mild and sincere. But are they truthful? I have empathy for these people. What happened where they feel they must resort to the kindness of others to survive? Why isn’t our society assisting these people temporarily so they can get back on their feet? How can I be a solution to this growing problem of people diminishing their self-respect to feed their children and themselves? I don’t have an answer to any of my questions. Should I feel guilt and shame if I don’t, or can’t give anything to these unfortunate? I barely get by myself, living paycheck to paycheck and supporting others in my life. The feelings of sadness, guilt, and even shame of having a job and working for a living overwhelm me sometimes. But why? Why should I feel bad that I worked very hard and physically labored (sometimes more than two jobs at a time), to get to this place in my life? Still, I have these emotions that battle each other every time I come across these unfortunate fellow human beings.

I’ve become hardened by these people simply by their own actions when I did show compassion. Here’s what I mean:

As I waited in the drive-through window of McDonald’s to get my partner’s meal (I’m not a fast food fanatic. As a matter of fact, my attempts at convincing my partner that he shouldn’t be wasting his money, were futile, thus waiting in the drive-through…), a man in his mid-thirties was asking for money for food. “Money for food,” I thought, “since I’m sitting here already, I’ll get this man a meal.” I asked the man to wait for me and I’ll buy him some food. I purchased the meals for my partner and this homeless man. When I came out of the other end of the drive-through, the man was gone. What was I going to do with this meal? I’m a vegetarian and refuse to eat fast food. I resolved to find the man for whom I purchased the meal. I was on a mission. As I drove down the streets searching for him, I finally see him in front of the liquor store with some other “homeless” men. I drove up to them and yelled out of my car window, “Hey! You said you were hungry. I got you some food!” He came over to my window. “Here. If you wanted money for a beer, I would’ve gotten you a beer! But don’t lie about being hungry for money and then leave when someone buys you food!” I was a little indignant about it; after all, he lied and I bought into his lies hook, line, and sinker. I gave him the bag of food and he thanked me and apologized for lying. Since that day, I stopped giving so freely, with one exception: the orange and flower corner jockeys and the mobile tamale cart pushers.

These salesmen and women are WORKING for their keep. There is no shame in selling oranges on the corner. You won’t get rich — each bag of oranges you sell for a dollar, you make ten cents — but you are working for that dime. These are the people to whom I give my dollars. I don’t ask for a product. I just give it to them. They deserve it. They earned it. I hope that my dollar makes a little bit of difference for these workers and their families.

The sign-holders, the beggars, the liars, the fake vets, the able-bodied…they can sell oranges on the corner to earn my respect and money. My instincts are telling me that we are not really this homeless and many of these corner jockeys are pulling the wool over our eyes and preying on our sympathies to make a buck. So, for now, I will keep trusting my instincts and keep my earnings closer to me and fight the guilty feelings I get when I drive by the sign-holding corner jockeys.

 

Watch Your Six

As much as I hate to complain (really, I don’t like when others do, so I try to avoid complaining as much as possible), I can’t help to bring something to the attention of all drivers — especially drivers in L.A.

First, let me start by saying that if you don’t live in Los Angeles and drive the freeways (yes, that’s what they are called, except if you buy your FasTrak pass to drive in the — once designated carpool lane — FasTrak lane on the 110, otherwise known as the HOV lane), you don’t know traffic. Sometimes I peruse through my IG account and see my fellow IGers taking pictures of their “traffic” in other states and I say, “Oh, you have ‘traffic?’ That’s cute.” It’s cute that anyone driving anywhere other than in L.A., the capital of single-driver cars and the 405 closures dubbed, “Carmagendon,” or, “Jamzilla,” believes he really has “traffic.” Here’s the rub: Driving the freeways and highways here is a super power skill, and one which is not afforded to everyone who gets behind the wheel.

The short article from Island 98.5 via Drop It And Drive (D.I.A.D.)‘s FB page sums up what is probably the biggest complaint we have driving in the fast lanes:

Introducing ‘The Passing Lane!’ – do you know the difference between a perceived ‘right’ to drive in the outside lane vs breaking the law?

It doesn’t matter if you’re going the speed limit. You may feel like you’re doing the right thing by slowing a speeder down, or you may feel it’s your RIGHT to drive in any lane you ‘darn well please.’

You’re not. It’s not.
And you ARE breaking the law.

Here’s how it is DESIGNED to work:
You’re in what you think is just like any other lane except that it’s ‘fast’. Someone approaches you from behind at 64mph (and you look down to see you’re going 57mph and you switch to your smug ‘justified’ face because the sign says 55). While rather close in proximity, the driver begs you to move over.

Oh, how you should.

But you don’t.

The driver tries to be patient and now cars start lining up behind both of you. There’s a quick flash of the brights, (Which means the driver would like to pass) and if you look up from your phone you either move over, or your ego decides that you’ll be stubborn (and in some cases actually slow down ON PURPOSE). In most cases you don’t even notice the signal (flash to pass) but you just start complaining about the guy riding your bumper.

Now there’s four or five vehicles lining up behind you while you have a LOT of distance ahead of you and enough room to move over. Now the sixth vehicle back finally jets across two lanes of traffic to go around not only you and the cars behind you, but but also around the slower cars in the two lanes to your right, only to find that there’s no GOOD reason for you to be IN THE WAY.

Note that he used the ‘SLOW’ lane to do this in and dangerously passes on the right.

Move over. You don’t have to be stubborn. It’s not your lane. You don’t have to be self-righteous. Please be part of the solution. Don’t cause traffic jams and contribute to road rage.

I like to pride myself on being a safe, offensive and defensive driver. I’ve been driving since I was about 12 (my big brother would take me to the mall parking lot and teach me to drive in his blue Ford pick-up truck and taught me how to maneuver the ski boat hitched to the back, too) and learned how to drive a manual VW Bug at age 16. I like to drive fast. I like to be in control behind the wheel. I like to drive like a…well, ur, uh…a dude! Not an SOB dude, the kind that will never admit that he doesn’t, in fact,  own the lane in which he is slowing down, or the kind that wants to “teach a thing or two” about driving too fast in the fast lane. No. I’m more like the confident dude. The one that actually recognizes motorcycles passing and one that acknowledges when another driver pays a courtesy to me. I know it’s a sexist statement and I’m the first to be in the forefront of gender equality on the job and such, but most of us females drive like…well, ur, uh…girls. And women are either extremely rude or extremely polite drivers, but most are just oblivious that they are even behind the wheel of a ton of potentially dangerous and fatal hurt if they make one wrong move.

Before my two daughters began to drive at 16 years old each, the one thing I made sure that they learned, among knee steering and blind spot checks, was my mantra, “Drive faster, or get out of the way.” Both my girls know this. I’ve engrained it in their brains, “OK. Now, if someone is behind you while you are in a left lane, and he flashes his lights, or is tail-gating you, make sure you pull over to the right lane and allow him to pass you.” I would add that on a two-lane highway, to be sure to double check your lane lines (broken is safe; solid is not) and the on-coming traffic, and ALWAYS thank the driver you’re passing. Acknowledge the driver’s passing lane etiquette. When my girls and I would drive together while I’m behind the wheel and we approach a slow car in the fast lane, I’d ask them, “What do you say, girls?” They’d repeat my mantra on queue, “Drive faster, or get out of the way.” Perfect. They’ve got this.

I feel good about making sure my girls are not going to add to the ongoing traffic congestion and the slow-thinking, slow-reacting, slow drivers in the fast lanes. I made my contribution to society: Two well-trained female drivers who know how to keep up or get out of the way. I believe that this traffic mantra has translated to a life mantra, too. So, there. Two birds, or life lessons, with one stone, or one mantra.

While I don’t want to advocate unsafe speeds, I do want to advocate the necessity of knowing lane etiquette and watching your six — you know, the cars behind you. Is it going to be so awful to “get out of the way?” Will you lose face if you acknowledge that you aren’t going to drive over 55? Just move. Just move.

And don’t even get me started on Prius owners….

The Elevator Spaz

It always amazes me, although it really shouldn’t, that people do not know elevator etiquette. Let me see, here: Before I proceed onto the elevator, I wait one second to make sure that nobody is attempting a quick get-a-way off the elevator. To me, waiting that one little second is completely normal behavior. After all, I can’t get where I’m going until the people on the elevator get off to get where they’re going, right? Wrong. That logic is faulty at every step of the thought process. We ride the elevator at our own risk.

So often, riding the elevator is a scary adventure. I ride the elevator of a 29-floor, downtown, “business” building at least four times a day. (Air quotes for the word, “business,” will be explained at a later date.) Let’s relay the action here, shall we?

Begin work day, sevenish in the morning. There are no less than 16 elevators from which to choose. Don’t walk straight to the set of eight elevators you first see upon entering the building unless you are prepared for the E-ticket ride straight to the 22nd floor, or unless you want to end up on the 22nd floor and you ride the limited edition elevator that only goes to the 11th floor. If you want to ride to floors 19 through 29, you need to veer left to the second set of six elevators. When I first began working here, I made the mistake of riding the wrong elevator and was 20 minutes late to work. Now, though, I direct traffic in the lobby for the unaware and first-timers. I’m the elevator queen. I can self-declare Elevator Queen. I took the time to ride each and every elevator to each possible venue of the building. It was an interesting and thought-provoking two hours of my life.

This morning, I took the elevator down to the first floor, where, if I turn right and walk down another flight of stairs, I can quell my craving for a small or medium coffee. As the elevator stopped at the first floor, I looked to move forward, when… the Elevator Spaz attacked! She looked harmless enough — small frame, business skirt, sensible heels, and a red blouse. But don’t let her appearance fool you. She’s a thoughtless, hyper, walking-through-life-with-blinders-on type of woman. In other words, a spaz.

Now let me stop right here and be the first to say that I am a self-proclaimed spaz, and a prime candidate of the ADHD poster child (squirrel!), but somehow, I’ve become the ADHD kid with manners and etiquette. I am blessed with having etiquette in many different settings; Thanks, Mom and Dad, for sending my sister and me to etiquette classes at a young age (we even learned the skill of walking with books on our heads with our hips thrusted forward, looking straight ahead). So, I know another spaz when I encounter one. Enough said about my non-politically correct use of the English language… (shiny red ball!).

The elevator spaz charged right at me, head down, with the force of a just-speared bull, charging at his nemesis’ red cape. “Whoa…” I said, “excuse me, please?” “Oh!” As if she were surprised that anyone would dare to be coming OFF the elevator, and at the first floor lobby area, for Pete’s sake. How dare I? She kept right on charging in before I could even take my first step forward off the hydraulic-induced mini-cabin. Being a larger framed woman, I figured, “Spaz powers, IGNITE!” and forged right passed her while I said, “Wow. You can’t wait for others to get off before you get on?” I know that there’s no use in my saying anything to the monster, for she speaks my language of Polite not. But it kind of made me feel better knowing that others heard me and may be giving this creature the malocchio (evil eye) to ward off her evilness inside. I was fortunate to escape her grip. Phew! Being caught by one of these Elevator Spazes is never pleasant.

Two weeks ago, though, I was caught. I was caught by a male version of the species. My flight up, this time, was aborted at level ten, short one floor, and I picked up another passenger. We re-engaged our trip upward. Eleventh floor (instructional products, operations wear, and nursing guides!) I was balancing a cup of my morning coffee along with a snack sized bag of tropical trail mix for later snacking. Boom! Crash! Pow! Yikes! (Yeah, I’m a product of the Batman syndicates.) The monster smashed into me without even a thought (do they think?) and my coffee spilled all over the spaz and me with violent splashes. Most of the coffee was on him. Serves this Elevator Spaz right for being born into this category of funless, thoughtless, mannerless species and not having any elevator etiquette. To add insult to injury, the monster didn’t even apologize for his gross miscalculation and misinterpretation of others living in the world.

The next morning, I began, yet another, ascension on the elevator. I was alone. Two men were watching me as the doors began to shut. I pressed the door open button and waived them both into my domain.

“Oh, thank you for holding the elevator for us.” With a big smile one of them said.

I responded, “Of course I held the elevator for you. Why wouldn’t I?”

They both laughed and the other gentleman said, “Right? You never know sometimes. People are always in such a hurry.”

I motioned to the door close button, pushing it fiercely, “Oh, I’m sorry! I didn’t know you wanted me to hol…[fade to oblivion as if falling down a dark well]. They both laughed again.

One said, “I really don’t know why people do that, but I know they do. Maybe they just want to be alone.”

“Yeah,” I said, “They’ve been holding in a huge fart and as soon the door closes, ‘P-p-p-th-th-th-wrrrrrupt!'”[squatting down to emulate the process of such a person].

The boys break out in hilarious laughter, “You just made my day! Thanks!”

“Anytime. My pleasure. Have a wonderful day, guys!”

The two get off at the 10th floor, giggling. See? Was that so hard to be a human being for 30 seconds? In fact, it made my day better, too.

Is being at work so all-consuming that you forgot we existed? Have we forgotten how to say, “Good morning,” or, “Have a great day?” Did we forget that one second of your life can be used to put thought into others besides ourselves? We did. Unfortunately, this type of behavior performed by this species is common place and the diseased things have infected the human population. I first believed it had to be a bad etiquette gene that created this species…but it’s worse than what I imagined. It is contagious. Don’t become infected. Don’t morph into this grotesque excuse of a breathing animal. It’s become an us vs. them elevator mentality and I refuse to give in. Put on your Elevator Spaz boots and night vision goggles. You don’t know who the next victim of bad elevator etiquette will be. They strike at a moment’s notice, or no notice at all. Beware and be kind. 

 

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