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It's Ghetto-Fabulous

 
When you tell someone whereabouts it is that you live… you usually want them to show some basic familiarity with the area. “Okay, I know where you’re talking about. My doctor’s office/childhood friend’s house/favorite little café/grocery store is not too far from there.” When I tell people where I live, they say, “You know you live in the ghetto right?” or something about “the hood” or “not nice” or “rough”.

When I first moved there and people started telling me that, I refused to believe them. What did these people know about ghettos? Yeah, I’d say, It’s urban, but it’s not a bad area really. It’s kinda poor, but not dangerous or anything.”

My first sign was really the lady with the shopping cart who comes and
takes the aluminum out of our trashcans early on Saturday mornings. You don't really get that in the nicer parts of town. I was willing to accept her since my friend Andrea has the same homeless woman steal her aluminum cans and she lives in a completely respectable area. One morning I gave her an extra hash brown from McDonald’s and after that I felt a sort of connection with her. She was no longer a potential sign of my neighborhood being “bad”. She was the nice lady I ate breakfast with that one day who loves to recycle.

One night I went to Speedway to get myself a pack of smokes and a map. When I walked into the store, some man was wandering around mumbling to himself. That isn’t that uncommon in any little store. I was looking at the maps, trying to decide which would best serve me on my journey through seven mid-western states that weekend.

Then the man went up to the counter and started screaming about money. I really though I was going to get shot. Suddenly, it was becoming clearer that maybe this wasn’t such a “nice” place.

It turned out that the man was just some friend of the cashier and he
didn't realize I was in the corner looking at the maps. He apologized
profusely.

Gas stations are robbed all the time though. It was so easy to rationalize myself out of the moment when I thought I might die and suddenly maybe it wasn’t a safe place to be.

Later, I was telling a friend where I live. I explained that it's between the train tracks and the drive through liquor store. The liquor sign flashes on my bedroom floor. I told him about the band that lives and practices upstairs. He called it "that apartment". You know, the one you read about/see in a movie that epitomizes living in the ghetto. I saw his point.

Still, though, I refused to believe that the area was really that bad. My coworker tried to tell me there were prostitutes and drug dealers out on the street just a few blocks away. I told him he didn't know what he was talking about. I drive there all the time, and I hadn't ever seen one.


Then my car died. Suddenly I was riding the bus every day. I was walking around within my neighborhood. I saw more of it than the nearest gas station, the liquor store and my parking lot.

A police officer even stopped me one day to let me know it wasn’t safe for me to be out walking where I was. I would guess I was less than five blocks from my home. The bus drivers always seem surprised when I get off where I do. I have even been asked by my neighbors what I was doing out in “this part of town”.

I have lived in and around Lexington KY for almost six years now. I kept telling myself there was no way I could have been here that long and not known that this area was the ghetto.

I remembered when I was looking at colleges. I crossed Transylvania University off of my list, because it’s “in the ghetto”. My neighbors (the band) are Transy students. I also remembered my mother telling me it wasn’t a dangerous area, it just looked bad. I decided I now agreed with my mother.

All of this rationalizing ended suddenly one night. I was waiting for the bus. Standing on the corner. It was about 11 PM on a Saturday. The drive through at the liquor store was hopping. Right when I arrived, a car came and stopped by where I was standing. The driver rolled down his window.

“Hey, baby, do you need a ride?”
“No thanks. I’m waiting for my bus. It’ll be here any minute.”
“Oh. You’re real pretty. You waiting for someone special?”
“I’m waiting for the bus.”
“Are you sure you don’t want a ride. I can drop you off wherever.”
“No thanks.”

This happened two more times while I was waiting. I was only standing there for about ten minutes and I didn’t actually feel unsafe. There were so many people waiting for the liquor store drive through that I knew if I screamed I would be noticed.

The third guy said something about “picky bitches” and “overpriced”. Alarms went off in my head. They thought I was a prostitute! I was wearing gym shoes and jeans and an old corduroy coat. I didn’t even really have on any make-up.

Obviously those men thought that any girl standing on that street must be an easy target. Either the place is crawling with Johns or I would be a particularly desirable prostitute.

Either way, I have now come to terms with it. I live in the ghetto.



mary ann is a silly girl who makes an epic journey of just trying to get to work every day.

3/15/2002 (0) comments


My Mom's Death

 
my mom died when i was 2. it was a car accident. on the way home from grandma's. i was in the car. so was the rest of my family. my dad broke his leg. i got a piece of glass through the eyebrow. my 6-month-old sister broke her leg. my 4 year-old-brother was bruised. my mom suffocated under the dashboard. she drove straight underneath a truck. it was the other person's fault.

i often listen to the song "last kiss," the pearl jam version. i wonder if that's how it was when my mom died. did my dad hold her hand, crying, saying things like "i love you" and "everything will be fine, you'll be fine."? did he know? was he concious? was his first priority his 3 children? was his first priority his pain? i wonder if she said anything to me or any of us before she died. did she know? was she concious? what was her last thought of? was it of me? was it of my dad? was it of the pain? was it "oh shit"?

for the most part my mother took all the pictures when i was young, so pictures of her, especially ones with me in it, are very very scarce and precious. but the day she died, everyone tells me i refused to leave her side. i wouldnt let her put me down for more than 3 seconds. and someone took a picture. i have it. but i cant let my stepmom see it. she would kill me. i dont know why.

i also have letters she wrote to my grandfather and aunt about me. and somewhere my dad is hiding her journal. that is all i have. that is all i know.

the green woman

3/12/2002 (0) comments

Tiny american Flag

by smallvoice
 
How are you gonna represent your nation with a tiny
flag you bought at a gas station and put on your SUV.
There’s a part of me that wants to key your car.
Because by far the thing I hate the most is those who
boast of something they don’t understand. The flag is
a brand. It’s time to take a stand against this
patriotic fad. And it’s kind of sad that our nation’s
station is to support corporations that sell their
patrons their deaths. And I have no regrets at this
point but I anoint my words with hate to make them fly
straight into you because these things bother you too.
And if red white and blue are the colors that define
you then I’m sorry to disrupt your worldview but
someone’s got to. So why not let it be me that makes
you see that America has flaws and it’s laws are not
perfect and you understand that this land was not
made for you and me but stolen from a peaceful society
and given into the hands of corporate policy. Freedom
is a fallacy and between you and me I can already see
the end of democracy. The aristocracy of this country
has been made too complacent to care where we attack
just that we fight back. And terrorism is about as
hard to track as political leftism. Remember
McCarthy? An american Nazi. The house committee on
un-american Activity. Liberty is not something to be
approached with levity it’s not funny to me when I
look on tv and see no enemy in this war? Didn’t
anyone read 1984?

Fuck you all.


3/05/2002 (0) comments


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