hedgiewan: (put yer dukes up)
People's fascination with sites like latfh.com and peopleofwalmart.com disgust me. The delight that otherwise sane people take from looking down on others is repulsive, whether those others are lower-class walmart shoppers, some of whom are crazy, some of whom are exhibitionist, some of whom are genderqueer, some of whom are just as fannish as we are only about camo instead of BSG; or are middle-class youth who have sculptural facial hair or big glasses or wear twelve different bright colors at once.

What? Men with breast implants are only OK if they pass as a professional woman?

What? Only skinny people get to wear bikinis?

What? It's more acceptable for an undergrad to wear a made-in-China keffiyeh with sweatpants that say "Pink" on the ass than it is for some kid from Brooklyn who wears one with brightly colored plastic glasses?

Get the fuck over your superiority complex, people.

I am especially disappointed in those of you who already belong to a subculture. Goths making fun of black kids in velour tracksuits making fun of geeks making fun of gun enthusiasts making fun of queer kids making fun of fat people? You've got to be fucking kidding me.

the hedge abides.

the bus man

Oct. 2nd, 2007 11:51 pm
hedgiewan: (night launch)
Sometimes, when I pet Jack the way he wants to be petted, I feel like I'm playing a bizarre harp. A bizarre chubby harp.

I missed the 113 by about 10 feet this morning. Some people at the corner watched me running for the bus, but nobody reached out and tapped on the doors. There was a 4 right behind, so I caught that, at least.

We stopped at a light downtown. I don't know if the driver didn't see anyone at the stop, but as we were waiting for the light, pulled up all the way to the corner instead of at the stop, I looked out the window and saw a man standing at the bus stop sign. It took a second before I realized that he was blind.

Now, usually, when the bus stops for a blind person, the driver opens the doors as close to the person as possible, and calls the route number out the door. This man knew there was a bus right in front of him, but no doors opened and nobody spoke. The light changed, and the bus pulled away, the driver oblivious. The man at the stop looked like he was about to burst into tears, and my heart broke. I tried to tell myself that I didn't have time to alert the driver, but the fact of the matter is that if I hadn't taken half a second to hesitate, I would have caught him before the light changed, and that man could've caught his bus, and his day might have been a little better.

The little things we do to each other don't hold a candle to the little things we don't do for each other.

the hedge abides.

Profile

hedgiewan: (Default)
hedgiewan

August 2020

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23 242526272829
3031     

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 21st, 2025 10:54 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios