Tag Archives: Metro

Good Friday

26 Mar

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5:01pm I am impatiently waiting outside for the bus, anxious for the arrival of my particular line. Since this stop caters to several lines, I am already covered in debris from other buses that pass by – a barrage of dust, leaves and small pieces of trash kicked up by their broad wheels. I fail to use a magazine to shield my eyes.

5:10pm I’m on the bus towards home. It stinks. It smells like sweat, fecal waste and curry. This is my Friday bus ride home. Fifteen minutes. It’s not a lot. It’s doable.

5:12pm It’s worse than I thought. There’s got to be a homeless man somewhere, I can smell the urine, but I can’t spot him. There’s a teenage couple speaking quietly, their heavy-lidded eyes dropping as they take turns swigging a bottle of water while protecting several bags of protruding luggage. The boyfriend keeps lifting up his shirt to reveal heavy tattoos and skinny muscles. She tells him to put his shirt down. They are blocking the entrance to the bus with their navy blue bags and oncoming passengers are having problems getting through. Uh-oh. We’ve pulled up at the next stop and the old ladies are making their way in.

5:13pm Decorum on the bus dictates that you must move for the elderly and handicapped. There are both ascending towards the door now, but the teens aren’t moving a thing. Or at least for the moment, are making no effort to move. I’m positive that the girlfriend will wrangle her tattooed, macho boyfriend away from the door, urging their bags towards the back, but as the old lady starts to push their cases from her path, they make no movement and someone starts to yell.

5:14pm Turns out the old woman is part of a couple – a Russian couple. Her husband is helping her move the cases away, so the teens make a move for the bags and start to haul them away as the old woman starts waving her hands and yelling in Russian, joined quickly by the tattooed teen who surprisingly yells back at her in Russian. They are fighting, the girl keeps calling the old woman ‘crazy old bitch!’ and sits down in front of them with one of her bags. She glares at the old couple. The old man starts yelling and pointing menacingly, and the boyfriend starts to explain to his girl what they are threatening. The boyfriend repeats ‘I can take you!’

5:15pm Oh holy hell! The bus driver opens the back door and starts bellowing. Someone has to get off. We wait for two minutes. No one is moving. The driver finally closes the door.

5:17pm This bus ride is already too long. Just close the goddamn doors and get moving. The fighting ceases, they are simply staring at each other while the young girl continues to oscillate glances between her boyfriend and the old woman, repeating quietly ‘crazy ol’ bitch’ and shaking her head. Everyone is silently glancing around, or staring out the window. I fantasize about every which way this situation could erupt further; several scenes involve guns. I look around at today’s passengers. What are the odds? I think I watch too much tv.

5:21pm I’ve located the smell. There’s a man with matted hair and crusty white eyes nearby. He is carrying a satchel with god knows what inside. I plug my nose.

5:22pm Good Lord I can’t even concentrate on the podcast playing on my iphone. It is a hot day, heat that augments even the slightest waft of crude aromas. It is retchingly putrid.

5:24pm Oh Hallelujah. I am a minute away. I see my stop, the fresh air, the freedom to move – and my dash for the door is the worst part of all. I must make my way out of the cramped and immobilizing vehicle to the exit, roughly and clumsily falling toward the door in heels because I cannot gain my balance while trying to play twister through the crowd.

5:26pm Ha. Freedom.

Like Skittles, Full of Color and Just as Fruity

19 Mar

I recently came across an article, in the wonderfully free newspaper and L.A. Times underling, Brand X, touting the adventurous rides of a certain blogger (not me) on L.A.’s bus lines. Though I applaud the author for sniffing out and highlighting the oft erratic and tempestuous nature of metro’s particular clientele, the worst experiences of this girl amount to a small hill of beans. When it comes to strangers, I’ve got former porn star turned tweaked out judge and dirty Jesus; she’s got stares and inconvenience. We are obviously not on the same stranger train.

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Wearing a neon Lululemon jacket, matching cap and sunglasses while carrying her to-go mug, we see our hero in action marching up the sidewalk to catch the morning’s ride. Though the article aims to present the eco-friendly purpose of public transit and the unexpected opportunities to help others out (when an old woman desperately cries out for change, the rider jumps to her aid) as well as providing a petri dish to mix with new people each day, by the end I’m left with the impression that though this chosen route often presents an occasion to observe severe juxtaposition of the city’s humanity – it’s older citizens with their life stories and shaky canes, foreigners trekking their way to Grauman’s Theatre and shopping on Melrose Avenue, Mom’s with kids and groceries, the homeless tied in sheets and mumbling, tired workers, hungry students – it all comes down to convenience. A car really would be better:

“Just to note, there are some pressing things about not having a car and riding the bus that I ponder at times. Like how long it takes me to get somewhere with the leaving the house early to walk the 15 minutes to the bus stop, to wait for the bus, to play stop-and-go down Wilshire. Or, when the bus is late. I mean, I know it happens but it really puts a kink in my schedule. Or, when you just want to listen to the radio and sing at the top of your lungs with the windows rolled down”

Certainly, the freedom of a car is wished for after several months on the MTA. Though the article is truly about “one bloggers Journey through the multicolored world of the MTA” it’s a pretty tame ride, and more like ‘one bloggers journey through the primary colors’ instead of a rainbow. I think given my experiences, and the visceral nature of time spent inches away from people’s faces, flattened against strangers bodies, there could have been more meat on those bones.

A Microcosm Interlude

14 Jan

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She used to work in porn. This is what the woman will tell me. She will also admit to being a bit of a gold-digger, say that girls with fros are violent, that no whites live in Africa and state that she borrows money from Jesus. This is what Tuesday, January 12th will mean to me. At five o’clock on the 217 bus, I will be audibly assaulted by crazy.

I’ve figured out (mostly) how not to become ensconced in conversations with strangers when I pay my $1.25 to catch a ride home. For starters, sunglasses are helpful. They obscure your focus, and everyone else’s gaze into yours. Naturally, a set of headphones help, for no one feels more invasive than interrupting your musical experience when you’re clearly enjoying a personal melody. Finally, if you are loaded with bags, shove a thick book in front of your face, sit facing toward the front and not towards others, and affect a certain abstinance from others by piercingly admiring the view from the window or aimlessly wandering your eye as to appear slightly awkward or cracked, then you’re on your way to avoiding the dreaded deranged conversation. I mean, all I want is to sit still for fifteen minutes to relax from my day and look forward to my puppy without idly nodding to someone’s maniacal dribble. Instead…

The man behind me is hissing audibly. It’s unstoppable, this hissing. I hear him mumbling, but I can’t make out any of his words, and they sound angry. Which leads me to believe he is either passionately cursing the bus driver or rattling a satanic verse; this last thought makes me shiver – with images of burnt candles, charred remains and concealing robes – but I’d curse the bus driver too (they are forever too early or too late, and never apologetic until you see the transportation authorities waving them down to check their arrival time (which does happen on occasion and definitely improves their accuracy for several weeks after)). With not a foot between us, he has decided that instead of occupying a free seat, he will stand next to me near the bus driver. A decision that leaves all incoming passengers only space enough to clumsily squeeze against my body, as I juggle a ten pound box, two wine bottles and my purse. I defend my right to stand at the front, because my stop is minus ten minutes away and pushing through twelve passengers to get to the door before it closes is hardly appropriate when you’re carrying weight. The old man hissing behind me is therefore despicable. There is no reason he should not sit down. But that’s what happened today. This is what happened yesterday…

I never caught her name, but she walked onto the bus while yelling at an elderly woman with gray hair and skin that sagged at the mouth. “OBAMA” was all I heard. Wearing an Ed Hardy hat, a red puffy jacket, tall laced boots and tight jeans that wrapped around her ample bottom, she took the space next to my seat. Not the seat, just standing. Next to me. I can be an easy mark as an open ear (it could be the female thing, or that I look so deflated at the end of the day). She starts looking around at the passengers, and promptly shakes her head. The old man beside me is muttering. “Oh, what a day. Oh, WHAT a DAY” he says. There’s a television on the bus that sits high in the front right corner, broadcasting local news and comedy segments. During the trivia portions of the program – questions from jeopardy and trivial pursuit pop up on the screen – he loudly reads the questions to himself, but his answer is always “I don’t fuckin’ know” and he presses his leg into mine.

The woman shaking her head looks at me and asks me where I’m from. “Originally?” I say, “Colorado.”

“What about you? Were you raised here?”

“I’m from West Hollywood.”

“So you were born and raised here?”

“I was born a black American. Illegal immigrants are the ones born here.”

Checkpoint reached. I’ve got eight minutes.

Later, when two young African-American High School girls enter the bus, she turns to me and says, “Those people are violent. I always have to fight them on the streets, but I don’t get physical with them, I just cuss them out badly. They’re just so violent. You have to stay away.”

Every two minutes, this woman frisks her head with rhythymic beats to her left temple. She is lightly smacking herself. She later says her head itches, but it looks too compulsive to be anything other than an obsessive or frequent tick. Her low speech continues. I cannot hear everything she says, but from what I can tell, she describes being a stay at home mom to two boys once upon a time; one of whom got into trouble with the son of a celebrity. The celebrity was someone she got involved with for monetary reasons.

“He suspected I wanted his money. I did. I won’t lie. I just wanted some of it, not all of it. Just enough for some liposuction, get my skin clear, my hair done, maybe a Jeep. You know, not all of it.” She seems anxious, and nervous and continues to look towards the back of the bus.

A tall man enters the vehicle. He looks like Jesus, or rather, the traditional portrait of Jesus. His long, dirty beard and scraggly hair hang past his shoulders, and the long white dress he wears – tied by a slight rope at his waist – is dirtied from his peripatetic wanderings down the Hollywood Walk of Fame and Fairfax Avenue. I can’t even tell if he wears sandals. The woman stops her pulsating head smacks and says hello to him. They are obviously acquaintences, but not friends.

She turns to me again. “I borrowed some money from him. I wanted to know if he got my repayment. I gave it to Spiderman to give to him, because I didn’t see him around. He says he got it back.”

Another dubious man, whom I’ve neglected to mention since he has not quite entered my narrative along this fieldtrip just yet, and who seems to be happy staring at strangers and then immediately laughing to himself while he smiles widely, sits two seats away with a rod, circled by bracelets he (I assume) is selling, resting on his lap. He yells “Jesus wasn’t a tall white man. He doesn’t look like that. But if I were a tall white man with a beard, I guess I’d dress like that too.” He laughs at his statement, and the imposter sits behind him.

There isn’t much time left here for me. The driver has turned the bus onto my street and I’m three blocks from home. The woman turns to me and says, “you probably won’t like me after I tell you this, but I worked in porn. Yeah, you should work in the entertainment business.” I stand up. “See, you’ve got the height and everything.”

I feel bad for her. Not pity, but sad. I really do want to know what her life is like and what she wants out of it. This is where my practiced social abstinance fails me. I can’t think of the right questions, and I don’t have enough time. I think of all the broken dreams here, and I shudder again. If we reach for the moon, and land in the stars, what happens then?

For a $1.25

26 Aug

Yesterday was a stinky day. A cantankerous and particularly odorous, crinkling nose, watering eyes, please move about five feet that way, kind of way.  Not myself of course, but the people on the bus ride home.  Particularly, on public transportation after 5pm, there exists the unforeseeable possibility that passengers on the metro will be pungent to an unsatisfactory degree with a chance of crazy. In the mix: Richard Simmons long lost brother and three dreggy peripatetic homeless; hoary, grayed, women with canes pointing at you to get out of their seat, lost tourists, local hipsters, kissing couples, ogling men, loud mouths, numerous packages, and foldable grocery carts. The homeless tend to waft heady combinations of urine and the decay of garbage, while others smell like a fresh bag of Fritos, and high-notes of sickly sweet perfume hang in the air. In total a physicality of hands, arms, and legs frisking against each other for lack of space. I only had three miles to go.

Fifteen minutes never felt so sleazy.

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Photo by Mariano Perez