Thursday, January 6, 2011

Choosing Dearth

With the economy such as it is, I am approached with much greater frequency than before by a man with a story of his family, just in from Alabama in search of work, who only lacks 13.00 needed to keep from being booted out of Motel Six. I am slowly learning more about this man than he ever intended for me to know.

I will call this grimy fellow, and all like him, Cain.
Cain is not the minority: the people who had good jobs and lost them. I am talking about career paupers. Despite their chicanery, I know some things about them. For instance, they are liars.
I know they are probably lazy, most likely alcohol and drug addicted, and definitely unmotivated. I know they would be doing much better if they had only the smallest smidgeon of an industrious spirit. I know they have abandoned the American dream, and now they are pleading with me to give up mine, one small scene at a time. They are undeniably dirty, unquestionably disruptive to my routine: a complete nuisance. They have the freedom to become anything they could imagine and they turn their backs on this American feature in favor of pan handling.
Oh, did I mention that I was one of them? I was never homeless, but I could have been. I was in debt, earned a low wage, and lived paycheck to paycheck, which by the grace of God, kept trickling in. If I had been laid off, which could have easily happened, I would have been destroyed by next week. If I had lost my apartment, I would have quickly become dirty, smelly and unable to function well enough to satisfy most critics. I was just like them, only employed. I did not see any way out of my circumstance and was convinced by the combined forces of reason and faith that no salvation was forthcoming and there was no way for me to save myself. I suffered a severe case of spiritual insomnia. I knew about the American dream, but I did not know how to dream it. I accepted the fact that I would never be happy or successful. That I was destined to die a miserable pauper was a painful truth that made perfect sense.
How could I do any more than I was doing already? I had scored an irreplaceable job: low pay, overtime allowed. I worked 70 hours per week at a fast food establishment, alongside a bitter middle aged shift manager named Brenda-lee. I told Brenda-lee I wanted more. She informed me that I would be right there beside her ten years from now and to get used to it. I did get used to it. I accepted it. I knew it instinctively. Though I didn’t mind the tasks of the job, and even found them delightfully challenging around lunch time, I despised the idea that this was it: my future.
From that view, I could not see any way out. The idea that I could become a doctor or a lawyer, a businessman, or even a courier, seemed unthinkable. I did not know how to do it. Without a miracle I could never get through college and if I did, I would exit with a useless degree because I did not have it in me to put forth the effort needed to go after more, when I knew that my reward lived in the distant future if it existed at all, and that I was destined to suffer for years, grasping at the hope of this faraway blessing. Keep this in mind: years of suffering was the best case scenario. On the bad end of my prospects was failure or the possibility that my efforts would fizzle out for whatever reason or that they would be obstructed by some pernicious force I had yet to identify. Even if I could overcome all of this, I probably could not really make it happen. Finances, time, my level of intelligence: something would be in the way. The possibility was just not real to me.
I equated success with money at the time; not because that is how I saw life, but because a total lack of financial freedom enslaved me. I would tell people that I didn’t know how to do anything about my situation, that I didn’t know how to make money, that I was doing all I could. This was the absolute truth. If I had taken my rightful place among the homeless, I would have been no more capable than they of finding my way out.
The surface of my head is an infertile garden. Kim, a Vietnamese stylist, is responsible for maintaining my memory of this once magnificent head of hair. Her job gets no easier as the yard grows smaller. I am constantly demanding that she do something to keep it alive. Brimming with optimism she tells me about implants and ointments and assures me that I only need a little more personal discipline to solve my own problem. She charges me a handsome sum for this advice and the landscaping services she provides. From a studio attached to her upscale residence, she caters mostly to upper class clientele. I am a rare exception who happened upon her in a time when there was still hope for the garden. She came highly recommended, and I yielded to extravagance in this one all-important area.
Kim once told me that she could not understand how anyone is unable to succeed in America. She noted how easy it is. Her parents fronted her money for her studio and, in a fit of entrepreneurial courage, she abandoned her career in finance, put out her shingle and the rest is history. When I was impoverished and hopeless, I remember well that I did not know how to cut hair, nor was a career in finance an option for me, nor do I remember having any other marketable skills to substitute for these. I also don’t remember believing that I could become marketable if I just applied myself. It is easy, if you are Kim. She cuts hair and collects an exorbitant fee. See? How hard is that? I would like to explain this to her: I do not now, nor have I ever known, how to cut hair; but I doubt that I could make her understand. I fear she would pick up a pair of scissors and say: Like this, as she sliced away a lock I cannot risk sacrificing at the alter of her demonstration.
What Kim fails to realize is that all people are not created equal. Individuals: That is what we are. We are not all Kim. She is blessed with virtues that scatter invisible seeds of serendipity and opportunity all around her. There are other individuals, the lower class, as we call them. These outcasts may lack any of the following tools for success that Kim takes for granted:
  1. Kim has faith that with hard work and dedication, she can make a difference.
  2. Kim comprehends that what happens in four years or more matters today (if your life is easy, it is easy to see, but if you struggle, future relief seems less real).
  3. Kim was socialized to honor education and thirst for knowledge and to assume success.
  4. Kim believes that others see her as useful.
  5. Kim has confidence that she can excel in whatever she undertakes: college, seeking a job, carving out a suitable place in this world for her to exist.
Problems Kim never had to overcome that Cain takes for granted:
  1. Cain is extremely bored by things that could lead to success, such as academics.
  2. Cain intimately knows of the relationship between how daunting a task is, and how confront-able it is. If Kim sees a task as doable, she will confront it. If Cain thinks a task is virtually impossible for him, then mustering the energy to commit to it is equally impossible.  
  3. Cain has faith that he is not intelligent enough to become truly educated.
  4. Cain’s belief that change is not possible denies him enough motivation to act.
“Life is just what you make it,” my mom used to say; and then follow up with “blaaaaaa.” There was bitterness in that “blaaaaaa.” It was guttural and angry and really said it all. One does not make life. We call this container in which our spirit lives, our life. As we bounce around inside it, we are both cause and effect. We create it, reshape it. It is doing the same thing to us. Some people are fortunate and frequently visited by serendipity; others are graced with strong facilities of intelligence, social acumen, and talent. These attributes are not present in all of us, and certainly are not distributed evenly to any of us. They are the tools we use to shape our container, and to defend against it, as it tries to reshape us. Kim certainly had more tools that I did and I did not even know about the ones I had. We see those with fewer mental and physical resources all around us and we can hardly contain our disdain for them. We blame them for their lacking. They choose dearth.
I grew up without a father. Though I am sure he knew me at some early time in my life, I have never met the man. My mom was an extraordinarily hard worker who always went beyond the call of motherhood to tend to my needs and the needs of the rest of her family. She was mother and father and best friend. Forfeiting any joy she could have conjured up, she gave every waking moment to the cause. Still, she could not rise above who she was. All her diligence sought to maintain, to survive, never to grow. In her mind, this was the contribution she could make and anything beyond it was not real. She did not believe change was possible. The necessary ingredients were not there and being an American citizen with the American dream dangling above her was not enough.
I am often more capable than Cain. It’s wrong to judge him by the same standards used to judge me. From his depressed state, he does not have the same tools for success.
  1. Cain does not study well.
  2. Cain does communicate well.
  3. Cain does not understand what he reads the way I do. He finds most things too boring to follow.
  4. Cain does not believe his efforts will ever result in a relevant difference in his life.
  5. Cain cannot imagine a way to even start trying to fix things.
  6. Cain is not analytical.
  7. Cain is depressed.
  8. Cain is despondent.
Do I pity Cain? Do I merely sympathize with him from a safe emotional distance?
I regard Cain loathingly: “Get off the streets and go to school.” It is easy to say, with my attributes and my talents and the roots of my education behind me. It was not always easy, though, back before I was homeless, when I was made of the same fabric as he is; before our fates were sealed, when fortune dispatched me in one direction and him in another. It’s natural to feel scorn for those in need. They want what is ours and they don’t seem to want to work for it, the way we did. That is how I see Cain. I strive for excellence and he covets it in grossly explicit ways. I am not inclined to share the fruits of my labor. I would rather it rot on the vine than reach his decaying lips. He threatens me with his wanting, his needs, his destitution, his desperation. He not only wants what is mine, but he reminds me that if you were to take away the serendipitous virtues and happenstance that separated the two of us, what would be left: One homeless man’s contempt for another.

28 comments:

Vincent said...

Excellently done, say I, having satisfied myself from internal evidence that the piece isn’t plagiarized wholesale from Mark Twain.

Dusty,Hells most vocal Bitch said...

I think I need to read this post again. It is so rich, it really reminded me how little literary work I read these days. Being a political junkie has it's pitfalls.

Michael Scott said...

This was a good read John.

Jolly Roger said...

Nicely done, John. Classic American literature tone; I bow to you :)

Vincent said...

Point of correction Mr Myste. you said above “For those of you who don’t know, Vincent just learned of Mark Twain’s excellence yesterday.” I didn’t know that either, because I read Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn as a boy (and the latter again more recently). But I am ignorant of most of his other works. Can you please recommend what you consider his best, with particular reference to his non-fiction?

Dave Dubya said...

John,
Thoughtful and compelling.

Vincent,
Try "Letters from the Earth", if I may be so intrusive.

John Myste said...

Dave, I recommended that also! Great minds think alike.

Vincent said...

From Choosing Dearth, we advance to Choosing Letters from the Earth. Thanks both.

Mauigirl said...

Powerful post. I know quite a few Cains who prowl our neighborhood looking for an odd job here or there, or in tougher times, a handout. I've started hiring one of them to do yardwork when needed. He does an excellent job. But apparently he can't stick to a schedule well enough to work for a landscaping company. Thanks for the explanation of how people like him come to be that way. I'm glad I am able to give him some business to keep him going. I think he rents a room in someone's house down the street.

John Myste said...

Mauigirl, I know this is a bit of a subject change, but I rented a room in someone else's house for a couple of years, and I made a good living. I think single people not renting rooms in the homes of others is a bit of a waste of resources.

I am glad to hear that Cain has some understanding in his life. We are all too quick to judge and we so easily forget or deny that "there but for the grace of God, go I."

Sue said...

Hi John, You have me on your bloglist along with alot of my friends, yet I have never been here nor heard your name before, imagine that! But I'm flattered and happy to meet you. Yes for you I will open the comments on the post you requested and will add you to my list. Thanks for coming by and I will be back here to read your posts too!

Sue

Vincent said...

By the way, Dave Dubya, I now have a copy of Mark Twain’s Letters from the Earth, at your recommendation. What a wickedly sharp tongue! That is to say, he mocks my own conservative tendencies - from the grave! I want to laugh but sometimes it’s difficult. Such as when he belittles our very own Prince Albert, consort of Queen Victoria. Of course it was the late Queen who commemorated him with the Albert Memorial, the Albert Hall, the Victoria & Albert Museum and many more beloved memorials. And it hurts a little when Twain satirizes the British Museum, St Paul’s Cathedral and every iron railing In London. It hurts because I know he has a point.

And Dave, I apologize for pulling a comment on one of your posts after you courteously acknowledged it. It didn’t seem to belong, in the middle of the rants and counter-rants from left and right.

Francis Hunt said...

What a marvellous post - well crafted, beautifully constructed!

It strikes me that the most untrue part of our western mythology myths is that of the "level playing fields." Even before the new-born baby lines up for the start the odds are already stacked in all kinds of ways. In real life, when Forrest Gump runs he gets caught and has the shit kicked out of him again and again ... until he becomes resigned, sullen and brutalised.

Beekeepers Apprentice said...

John, this was a lovely post. Thought provoking and lovely.

I got a strange look the other day when a co-worker mentioned the "career homeless" that tag-team on the corners outside our work. She mentioned "he looks like he could still work."

I said "Would you hire him?" That's when I got the strange look. There but for the grace...

John Myste said...

Francis,

"In real life, when Forrest Gump runs he gets caught and has the shit kicked out of him again and again ... until he becomes resigned, sullen and brutalised."

As a bit of a Gump myself, I especially appreciate this humorous truth.


You have added to my list of quotables, sir. Excellent.

Davo said...

Mmm, having squizzed most of this; will bugger orf and never return. yer a wanker.

John Myste said...

After I consult a dictionary, I suspect I will be highly offended, sir.

I suspect you misunderstood the article, and for your sake, I will assume it on faith. I am defending the homeless fellow and the last paragraph is representative of how I see his critics. If it is the last paragraph that offended you, then you and I are like-minded. Otherwise, you made the right decision; unfortunately, you will probably never see this comment, as you have buggered orf.

ashok said...

You have a great blog here John. I have marked it in my favorites to return to it at peace.

ashok said...

Beautifuly expressed piece of literature that displays a deep insight into the human condition.

The bit about college - to me it seems that you have enough literary talent to have recieived a doctorate in English Literature and then gone on to be a philosophical writer and Professor of English at at well known University. ( This is assessment from a former university prof. - me)

I am gald I found your blog and hope to return to it from time to time.

ashok said...

Many of us are quick to judge others and the human condition is really complex. It is difficult to say what makes the man on the street a man of the street and a successful businessman a successful businessman. In my experience sometimes the person in the lowest job in an organisation is a finer human being than the one in the highest.

Perhaps a human needs to experience all sides and that is possible if he or she goes through many life times of human birth.

Davo said...

um, have you read the life story of Jack London?
Cut the waffle.

John Myste said...

Getting my dictionary back out. I think this must mean malarkey or pancake, in which case I cannot oblige.

Davo said...

try "Call of the wild" .. dimwit.

Davo said...

Oh, definition of "waffle" .. yep, chose it carefully. But how do wombats exist?

PS, am becoming paranoid about these "word verification" thingo's -clownlyx.

heh, heh , heh.

Davo said...

AND YES .. methinks the "dictionary" you are operating from may well be some sort of "limited" erudition.

John Myste said...

Well, Mr. Davo, you know we Americans are not known for our Australian levels of scholarship. As a very great Australian once said:

Oso said...

John I'm crying here!

Robert the Skeptic said...

Buried in this success story about Kim and other "success stories" I often find a common thread: "...Her parents fronted her money for her studio".

It is rare that rags-to-riches stories truly involve "rags", dig deeper and you will often find someone got a little boost or a door held open for them. Often it can be attributable to luck, though people are quick to ascribe their success to talent. And true, without some talent, opportunities may not bear fruit.

As a former Welfare Worker for the State, I try to remind people that in order for people to pull themselves up by their bootstraps, they have to HAVE boots in the first place.

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