Wednesday, June 4, 2014

I'd Like to Thank the Academy

As I sit in the home of total strangers in Barcelona, this memory popped in my head.  It made me laugh, so I thought I would share it.   

     I was in the mission one day, staying at my twin-best-friends' house.  They had left for the day, and I was taking my sweet ass time to get my day started.  I decided, as a gesture of good will, to take their charge (and my dog-friend) Medea out for a walk.
     While I was walking the dog on the usual loop around the city block, I saw a 10yo kid laying face down on the sidewalk with his arm draped over a skateboard. I asked if he was "catching some rays" and I kept walking. After I walked for a few seconds, some sort of feminine nurturing protective electric charge went off in my brain, so I turned around and yelled

"Hey kid! you alright?"
to which there was no response.  So I yelled again,
"You hurt?" to this, he responded with a low mumble,
"Yeah"
"What hurts?"
"...my back"

I looked him over, and found no scrapes or scratches, and he didn't appear to be seriously injured.  At this point, I realized I had been baited.  I recognized my dramatic brethren. I was a fish dangling on a hook with no immediate way out, so I just had to see this through to the end.
     I knelt down next to him and asked if I could call anyone, or if he needed my help getting home. He said he just lived a few blocks away, so I told him i'd escort him there safely. He moaned and groaned as he pulled himself onto the skateboard like a seal beaching itself on a dock, or a surfer pulling himself back onto his surfboard after a spill.  After fully situated on the skateboard, he started using his arms like paddles, his legs and shoeless feet extended behind him so as not to create more drag.  I began to walk him home while he scooted behind me, ready for it to be a few blocks away.        
     About two seconds after we started moving, he was pulling himself up onto the steps of a lovely Victorian mansion and was using his skateboard to pry the gate open.  He was staying in character really well, and I suppose he knew that a hurt back can affect your legs, because he was choosing not to use those.
   I, of course, knew that he was playing up his injury and didn't want to compromise his position as a forlorn and helpless victim, so I played along.  The hardest part was to keep from laughing, so as not to compromise my position as a concerned citizen. I understood this sort of drama, as I am a bit of a connoisseur of dramatic moments myself.
   
     When I was 9 years old, I lived in Juneau, Alaska.  My mother was attending the University of Alaska Southeast, and we inhabited the dorms which were on the top of a very large hill.  In order to get to the fishermen's docks near the water (where I would harass fishermen with questions about their catches, tactics, and other curiosities), I had to ride my bike down a long, steep, gravel-covered road that met perpendicular with a major highway.
     I remember riding my bike down this hill one day and toward the bottom, while braking to avoid flying into the highway, my wheels slipped on the gravel and I crashed my bike. I'm sure I had some road rash, but I wasn't hurt that badly (I had a helmet on).  I was about to brush myself off and carry on my mission to the docks, when I looked at all the cars passing and a light bulb went off.  I pulled my bike over to the ditch (so as not to get run over by a car driving down the hill) and  lay there, limp and lifeless.
     After what felt like hours but was probably five minutes a car pulled over and a concerned woman got out (women are such suckers for injured children).  The gravity of my actions hit me at this moment, because I realized that she thought that I was really hurt.  I thought "I could get in big trouble for this," so I really had to play up my injured-child routine (which was something I didn't normally do, as I was constantly crashing and smashing and cutting and scraping myself).  She helped me up and reluctantly left when I told her I was fine and didn't need a ride home.  I carried on to get my funny papers and Reese's cups from the corner store before hitting up the docks to hopefully see a King Crab or giant Halibut.

     I remembered this as I saw this kid lying face-down on the pavement, and I didn't mind that I had become a part of his experiment.  At least he knows if something were to happen to him, he wouldn't just lay there as another obstacle for passersby to circumnavigate.  When I was 9 years old and lying on the side of the road, I too was wondering if and when someone would stop for young, helpless me.  Sometimes all we need is a little attention, even if it is from a total sucker.

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