Sunday, July 9, 2023

"Walk like you belong.”

I got a demonstration that what I'd written about entering a room as if no one cares about you works in other situations...

Supershopper Louise walks to and from work down the alley where the drug– dealers and users hang out. She's an old Black lady with health problems, and she uses a walker for distances. She'll load the walker like a donkey with stuff she's bought from the store--(she's a re-distributor)––and sometimes the people in the alley lift her heavy walker over the curb for her.

The other day as a few of us were leaving work, a fight broke out by the alley.  The others went on to their cars, but I said to S'shopper Louise, "My bike and I will walk with you."

"That's okay," she said. "I learned a long time ago, living in slums, walk like you belong there, and they'll leave you alone."

"Smart," I said. "But I'll come along and keep you company."

I walked her a couple blocks home, no problem.

The next day, she thanked me.

"I figure we should look out for each other," I said. "Though I know you're fearless."

"I'm not fearless," she said. "I let them do their thing, and I walk on the other side and I haven't had any problems. But I appreciate you walking with me."
__________________

Speaking of walking, this made me laugh:
I got out my notebook from my second Camino (in 2011, I didn't sketch much), and on the last pages I'd written that I ("Frex") had wept because "I hate that this is done".
Then I made bink & Marz witness that I would NOT do it again in ten years, when I would turn 60 in 2021.
Walking a second time turned out to be beyond unnecessary--but was I was doomed to walk it every decade, as I had at 40 and 50 years old…?


(‘Monte de Gozo’ is just outside Santiago —it means Hill of Joy. Bocadillos are the sandwiches commonly available along the way, usually of plain Spanish bread (like a baguette) with only white cheese inside—monotonous and hard to swallow.)

There's a cognitive bias that applies to travel—we forget long, dull, even painful stretches and only remember the highs. (And this applies not only to travel.)
Do not fall for this ! 😆

Maybe I would have—a longing to go hit me when I turned sixty—
but Covid weirdly saved me by closing the Camino. By the time it reopened, my madness had passed.

3 comments:

  1. When I was in the Peace Corps, our trainers advised us to "walk with a purpose" as if we know exactly where we're going, even if we didn't, in order to avoid harassment. I've never forgotten that and it has always served me well!

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  2. STEVE: That's it! Self-defense classes teach the same thing: don't look like a mark. And that applies to friendly social situations too.

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  3. spending over 12 years in dc i learned to always walk like i knew where i was going and never pull a phone or map out to figure it out. i would look up the location and often write down the exact way to get somewhere and memorize the first few steps.

    i've always walked with the "don't f*** with me face" which keeps people at a distance or the 1000 foot stare or the hardened face. i learned quickly who to give money to on the street and who not to and how to have money ready or not ready for persons begging.

    i will say there was a gentleman near my work whom i would see at lunch. he would always ask in a polite voice -- any spare change. most times i would give him something or if i said no, he would tell me "maybe tomorrow." one day he didn't show up and a few days later i found out he had died of a fungal infection in his toes. he refused to sleep in a shelter and slept outside under the georgetown bridge. i would often see him with a very clean white t-shirt and found out later that someone in the neighborhood would wash his clothes for him.

    kirsten

    ps keep on walking!

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