Saturday, January 24, 2015
The Good Neighbor
The first time I went to what is known (in the carnival world) as the livin' lot for Thanksgiving, Smitty was kind enough to offer me a bunkhouse room. He had a few extras at the time and fortunately I was given his old one which had been remodeled the season before. I was grateful as it would save me paying for a motel room and offer more time to actually shoot pictures instead of driving back and forth. Relieved, I also knew there were no roaches there because in his words: "My wife doesn't do roaches."
Smitty did not tell me that he was hot natured and had maintained the air conditioner in that bunkhouse to run at an even 55 degrees. Everyone who lived there was aware of this fact however, and had keenly, many of them, plugged their vents with toilet paper, t-shirts, and duct tape.
As night fell and the bay breeze of late November passed through, it did not even occur to me that I was about to endure a night when I'd make more than one deal with God, in an effort to stay alive (or so I perceived at the time). I fell asleep quickly in a bunkhouse room and woke up thirty minutes later in a refrigerator to an argument that I thought at first was a dream. My face was numb.
A bunkhouse (for those that aren’t familiar) is a trailer that's split down the middle and then divided into what are basically closets big enough for a mattress and a foot and a half of walking space. Some rooms have one bed, some have bunk beds and others in the fifth wheel, have an elevated bunk with a little more room to move around. There is little privacy and if there is substantial movement in the bunkhouse, everyone is aware of it.
I awoke to realize that the couple in the room next to me were practicing domestic violence. It had escalated into them hitting the paneling so hard that it buckled to the top of my pillow. I hoped then that God would spare me from the imaginary bullet I envisioned bursting through the paneling wall at any moment which, if it missed me, would no doubt make it through at least two rooms and maybe half another before landing in a pile of someone's dirty laundry. I closed my eyes and tried without success to deny an overpowering need to go to the bathroom.
There were portable toilets only a short distance away but I didn't want to let go of the covers let alone open the door. I contemplated just standing up wrapped in the blanket but somehow knew it would cause me to trip off that second step on the way out. Teeth chattering I sat up and spent the next five minutes putting on many of the clothes in my bag, trying hard not to pee my pants.
When I got back the room was colder than before. I thought of people I'd known who'd slept on concrete sidewalks and told myself to get over it but the next three hours went by slowly and at 5 am I was asking God again to spare me. A little after dawn I quietly opened the door; stiff and exhausted and sat in the doorway, lighting a cigarette like everyone does, and put my shoes on over dirty socks.
At the livin' lot, if you want coffee in the morning you have three choices. Your own coffee pot is the preferred method with coffee and a cup to put it in. Friends that rise early and invite you to drink their coffee is another option but there's always the chance that those friends will have gone to bed only a short time ago. The third choice is a gas station that is almost half a mile away. Four lane highway, rush hour traffic, not the best way to wake up but certainly practical.
Just as I was beginning to hear my own headache, a woman I had never seen before opened the door of a trailer across the lot and waved a cup of coffee at me. My first thought was that it was a crippling hallucination of some kind. Then she said "You want this cup of coffee don't you?" I levitated off the steps and closed the door behind me, nodding hard and waving with my whole arm, like some rescued kid. For a few minutes that morning, a woman I'd never met became my favorite person in the universe and I knew I'd be forced to like her from that moment on.
She handed me the steaming cup, and smiled, a beautiful, wise "old soul"- kind of smile and said:
"Hi Sue, it's great to meet you. I'm Bonnie."
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Tearful Old Men
Harry had a gigantic fan club. This is Denise and their daughter Casey. He spent pretty much his whole adult life working on the carnival. He dodged my camera for a long time but finally gave in around the time this baby was born. Babies give you a whole new perspective. Harry died of a heart attack in Alabama, in September of 2008. Or was it 2007? I can't remember now but I remember very clearly being the one who inadvertently told Pops. It was three days later. I assumed he knew.
Some of you may already know this but for anyone who hasn't had the experience - when you accidentally tell an eighty-year-old man that someone he loves has died - he's going to cry. And so are you. And so is anyone else who happens to be there. Doesn't matter how big a bad ass they are. Tearful old men: one of the world's great equalizers. Rest in peace Harry.
Monday, September 2, 2013
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Breaktime
Just transferring a few old stories over to this space from the (now defunct) Cliffhanger blog. The fair is in town this week but the good people who inspired this particular ramble have long gone. They're on Facebook now, which is awesome, but not the same.
So you've been working twenty eight days in a row and it's about a hundred degrees in the shade only you don't have any, because your awning blew to smithereens during a thunderstorm.
Two spots back.
You got a two hour break coming up as soon as Popeye gets back, that S.O.B. (always an extra fifteen minutes behind) but after that you can go over to the popper and get a discount lemonade from that red-headed girl, the one with the pierced lip, the one who looks right through you; and head on over to the bunkhouse, lie down for a while, on that thing they call a mattress.
Again today, you won't get to do laundry because the laundromat closes at midnight and two hours isn't enough time for you to walk there, do the clothes and then walk back. You think maybe tomorrow you'll be able to catch a ride up there anyway, with the ice man and hopefully get it done before tear down this time, instead of after.
You lean on the fence, waiting for customers and notice across the midway, that hose that Billy said wasn't leaking has turned the grassy spot in front of the doniker, into a quagmire in ten hours and just as you're studying it, a kid falls down ice-cream-cone-first in the whole mess and you can't help but laugh as he seems now, stuck there like one of those suction darts.
You light a cigarette, knowing you'll have to put it out as soon as someone comes around, and hope that the three you have left will last until you get off work.
An hour and thirty seven kids later, you make it to the house.
It's like opening a freezer door and it almost makes you queasy for a second but you adjust and crank on that piece-of-shit CD player that Cowboy sold you two weeks ago, for fifteen bucks. It kicks and sputters, so you hit it with the heel of your hand and miraculously, that fixes it and you say 'I'm The Fonz' to no one in particular. You sit on the edge of the bed, being careful not to bang your head again on the upper bunk and wonder what the chances are of getting a room in the fifth wheel. Maybe you decide they are nonexistant since you told Smitty to stuff it back in winter quarters and, he still remembers.
You open the bottom cabinet, remove your shower bag and manage to find the last pair of clean socks, stand up and open the door again. The thick heat rushes in and the bunkhouse does its little rock as you step off the second step. Just as you put your key in the dead bolt lock, J.T.'s old lady strolls right behind you and into the shower. This, you believe, could take an entire forty five minutes so you go back in mumbling, and lie down on the bunk alongside someone else's graffiti and wonder for the third time, if Lisa really is the bomb.
You turn over. Twice. And as your wet shirt starts turning cold in the air conditioning, you close your eyes spend a good, long minute, wishing you were HERE.
Breaktime
So you've been working twenty eight days in a row and it's about a hundred degrees in the shade only you don't have any, because your awning blew to smithereens during a thunderstorm.
Two spots back.
You got a two hour break coming up as soon as Popeye gets back, that S.O.B. (always an extra fifteen minutes behind) but after that you can go over to the popper and get a discount lemonade from that red-headed girl, the one with the pierced lip, the one who looks right through you; and head on over to the bunkhouse, lie down for a while, on that thing they call a mattress.
Again today, you won't get to do laundry because the laundromat closes at midnight and two hours isn't enough time for you to walk there, do the clothes and then walk back. You think maybe tomorrow you'll be able to catch a ride up there anyway, with the ice man and hopefully get it done before tear down this time, instead of after.
You lean on the fence, waiting for customers and notice across the midway, that hose that Billy said wasn't leaking has turned the grassy spot in front of the doniker, into a quagmire in ten hours and just as you're studying it, a kid falls down ice-cream-cone-first in the whole mess and you can't help but laugh as he seems now, stuck there like one of those suction darts.
You light a cigarette, knowing you'll have to put it out as soon as someone comes around, and hope that the three you have left will last until you get off work.
An hour and thirty seven kids later, you make it to the house.
It's like opening a freezer door and it almost makes you queasy for a second but you adjust and crank on that piece-of-shit CD player that Cowboy sold you two weeks ago, for fifteen bucks. It kicks and sputters, so you hit it with the heel of your hand and miraculously, that fixes it and you say 'I'm The Fonz' to no one in particular. You sit on the edge of the bed, being careful not to bang your head again on the upper bunk and wonder what the chances are of getting a room in the fifth wheel. Maybe you decide they are nonexistant since you told Smitty to stuff it back in winter quarters and, he still remembers.
You open the bottom cabinet, remove your shower bag and manage to find the last pair of clean socks, stand up and open the door again. The thick heat rushes in and the bunkhouse does its little rock as you step off the second step. Just as you put your key in the dead bolt lock, J.T.'s old lady strolls right behind you and into the shower. This, you believe, could take an entire forty five minutes so you go back in mumbling, and lie down on the bunk alongside someone else's graffiti and wonder for the third time, if Lisa really is the bomb.
You turn over. Twice. And as your wet shirt starts turning cold in the air conditioning, you close your eyes spend a good, long minute, wishing you were HERE.
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