Sunday, March 02, 2008

backwards in time

Deep down, I knew it had to happen, because I'd seen the reference to diapers and formula on the services description when I called to volunteer, but I'd hoped it was such a rare occurrence that I just wouldn't see it. I saw it today.

A boy, early twenties, came in with a baby this morning. At first I thought the baby was no more than three months old because of a faint head wobble visible under the fleece. But I think the baby was a couple of months older than that, just sleeping. He sat for a few minutes at a table, his back to me and the counter. I watched him sit with his head resting on the baby's head in that universal gesture, his fingers absently stroking the fine hair.

I imagine he just inhabited that moment, as I have so many times, every part of my being centred in the feel of my hand and face on this precious head, all soft and vulnerable. More likely, though, given where he was, he didn't have the luxury of just enjoying his child for a moment in between obligations and feedings and cries, more likely his head was full of all the circumstances that brought him here, in need of how much I have no idea. I'm guessing diapers and formula to start. I hope he has a home and I hope the baby has some relationship with the mother; I hope they're just having a stroke of temporary bad luck, a dry patch between paycheques.

I can't help but think, though, that that poor child, of whom I saw only a wisp of hair and a Michelin man outline of fleece, hasn't got a chance of seeing anything more than the insides of drop-in centres. I left the centre a bit early, my heart like lead in my belly and my eyes like sprinklers seconds before the spray.

* * *

A lit bit earlier, a woman I'd never seen before came up to the counter, after the first rush of lunch but close enough for me to offer her a meal. Her hair was bleached blonde and in a ponytail, and she had a thin line of black eyeliner on her lower eyelids. I noticed because not many women wear make-up here and because in high school I'd always wanted to get that thin line of eyeliner but never mastered it.

No, just a coffee, she said, I ate yesterday. I laugh, thinking it's just a figure of speech. But no. After a pause she says, wait a minute. Maybe I didn't eat yesterday. I was too stoned. She laughs and elbows someone standing next to her. I was too high to know if I ate yesterday. She drinks her coffee at a table and leaves without eating.

* * *

Earlier still, another woman I'd never seen before came to the counter. Her gray hair was shorn in a buzz cut, and she had a few very long rogue hairs on her chin. When I asked if she had a card and she started fingering through her change (we aren't supposed to give free coffee), her tongue kept unfurling from her mouth, mostly unconsciously I think. She spoke as if her tongue was too big for her mouth or like she had a hearing impairment, maybe both. I felt awkward serving her, I'm ashamed to admit, unsure what kind of behaviour to expect of her or how much she understood of me. I felt a little better when another volunteer called her by name, L, because they don't usually do that with the more unpredictable folks.

Some time later, L. was loitering by the counter, clearly wanting to be part of the conversation. A third volunteer, V, a woman who pretty much runs the place on weekends, starts talking to her. I hang about too, curious. Suddenly L. grabs V's hands and presses them gently to her cheek, her eyes closed for a moment in the bliss of physical affection. I love you, L. says. I love you too, says V. This is my sister, V tells me. After a few minutes, L tells me that she doesn't need to pay for coffee, and V. confirms. Sister Christine takes care of all her needs, coffee, hot chocolate, a meal, whatever. She doesn't need to pay. I took a moment to digest this crumb, then remembered that I had asked her for money and she'd paid. I told V. that I took a quarter from her and we gave it back. I didn't want to give her a hard time, L explains to V. She gave the newbie a break.

* * *

The tall bearded man who always has a joke told me a good joke today. His hands are red and swollen and look slightly frostbitten. I think it's because he washes his hands a lot but he never dries them, just lets them drip. His jokes aren't always funny, but they're usually off-colour and often sexist, not that I really mind. Today he asked me, What's the difference between an in-law and an outlaw?


An outlaw is wanted.

* * *
I'm becoming known, slowly. One man called me peaches and another introduced me as his sugar girl. I'm pleased to be included in the silliness.

* * *

Yesterday I did as Den asked and went out with my camera around 8 in the morning. And I'm glad I did. It was cold and snowing when I left so I had to put my camera inside my coat. Thanks, Den... these are for you:

snowy-tunnel019

stairs-023
I felt haunted by the person who wrote, "I lost my virginity here." I imagined some cocky and apathetic girl like I once was, feeling the need to mark her territory and commemorate the spot (isn't that really just blogging without the technology?). But there is only the merest scrap of comfort being out of the icy wind in this place that is all right angles and hard concrete. I started to think about the kids who come into the drop-in centre, and I started to question the nature of consent; if maybe in some cases it can look like consent and feel like consent, but perhaps it's not really? (This morning's baby and the drug addict seem to illustrate this question perfectly.) It is only when I got home that I realized maybe it wasn't even a girl who wrote it, maybe it was a guy and there was no girl around. Or, maybe, there wasn't even a virgin, maybe it was all a facade.

snowy-stairs-035
Something about the new snow collected in the corners of these steps just made me so sad, with everyone's need to record calling out from the concrete, I was here once, to mark out some permanence, even if it's just in a urine-soaked tunnel outside the bus station and under the tracks.

shovelling-2-061

21 comments:

Rhea said...

Wonderful pictures and capturing your daily life.

I see from your profile you like writing. I have a six-word writing challenge on my website right now. Check it out if you're interested.

http://rheahollan.blogspot.com/

crazymumma said...

You have hit a high note with this post.

Kyla said...

This was lovely. And the photos...just breathtaking.

niobe said...

Amazing photos. Thanks for getting up early and braving the cold.

And I would have just assumed that the person who wrote the graffiti about losing his/her virginity was making a drug reference. But maybe that's just me.

flutter said...

Sin this was incredible.

I think this is my favorite post of yours, ever.

cinnamon gurl said...

Oh, niobe, you're so smart! I feel much better (although like an idiot)... it probably was a drug reference. I'm so naive! That's all I could think today... I'm just so naive.

ewe are here said...

Wonderful post; you've captured everyone so well.

And the photos... brilliant. I especially like the first one, all those colors contrasted with the snow, and the last one...that lovely fence line in the snow.

Mad said...

This really was something, Sin. I'd say more but I am reading on the road--in the play room of a fancy hotel and so don't have any time for words. Still, this was indeed stunning.

Suz said...

Really beautiful...and somewhat sad.

Bon said...

wicked post, Sin. all the stories, the insider/outsider-ness, the sadness and time weaving through it all, and your concern.

and the photos rock.

Jennifer said...

Oh, wow.

Just wow.

alec's mom said...

Well this one spoke to me. For the last few days I have been watching episodes of a short-lived detective series shot in the mid-90s and, though I enjoy it, it has been leaving me with a rather perplexingly melancholy feeling. While reading your post I realized it's because, basically, I was there - in 1997 -alongside the characters in the series, smoking cigarettes in a room full of people also smoking cigarettes, listening to alternative music and not taking life very seriously. Needless to say, those days are gone - hence the melancholy. When I finished reading your blog, I picked up my main toddler-reference work and read the line "These years will pass in a flash and when they are over, you will miss them terribly". All this made me really feel the magnitude of my feelings of spending these early years with my son such that I can already deeply feel what I will feel when they are over. Nothing like it to remind one to live in the moment. Thank you.

Girlplustwo said...

the first baby is the hardest.

i love the pics.

Anonymous said...

Excellent post. You have an eye for emotional detail as well as visual detail. It's a powerful combination.

Christine said...

this is an amazing post. full of cin heart and love and some melancholy. beautifully written and very haunting. one of your best.


Running on empty

11111111 said...

Wow. Thanks, eh.
The wind in that first shot--geez.
And the colours contrasting with the snow. Perfect.

Run ANC said...

Oo, I love the shovelling picture! (I have a lot more to say about the post, but I got distracted by the pretty pictures. Damn sleep deprivation.)

Cloud said...

What an amazing post. I wanted to say so earlier, but work and technical issues got in my way.

At least that baby's daddy has the sense to go to the drop in center. So maybe there is hope there.

Janet said...

The baby story really got to me.

The pictures, too, in a totally different way. Stunning.

dawn224 said...

wow. I have no more words. just wow to read this picture of life.

Casey said...

Beautiful post.