Bug

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Lose one, gain another.

This older-looking teen I’d never seen before strode into the Center yesterday. He had a dazed, kind of drugged-out demeanor, but I don’t think he was on anything. He just seemed slow. Like Eeyore, or that big oafy McDonalds mascot from the 80s. Grimace! Yeah, that’s him.

Co-Workerette recognized him from last year and told me he was “crazy” and regularly hung out with Darth and Michael Vick. So my now expertly-honed preconceived judgmental defenses shot up. And I stayed away from him. I’m not particularly proud of that, but I suppose it was a learned reaction. A survival method.

But that didn’t last long because he sought me out. And I’m glad. We had a nice conversation about books and homework and the fact that he wanted to “start over.” Well, that wasn’t exactly how he put it. But he claims to be reforming himself. He said he didn’t want to do the things that [Darth] was doing anymore. I’ll believe that when I see it, but in the meantime I’ll just try to be a positive presence for him.

Later that night we had another amusing conversation about where he’s taking his girlfriend for Valentine’s Day.

“Got a date on Wednesday,” he began.

“Oh?” I was intrigued. Usually they never want to talk about their dates.

“Takin’ my shorty out for Valentine’ Day.”

“That’s cool. Where are you taking her?”

“One’a them all-you-can-eat places.”

“[Grimace]! You ol smoothie. Gonna get a table in the back?”

He went on to giggle like a 8-year-old girl and tell me everything he was going to order, and how he plans on scooping out the mashed potatoes and mac & cheese for his girlfriend’s plate. Very charming. But given his friends, I’m skeptical. I hope he comes back more often and proves me wrong.

Also coming around almost daily now are The Professor (a regular back in the fall, but he was probably afraid of Darth), named for his shirt and tie getup every day, and Bug (a soon-to-be 13-year-old down here for the first time), named for both his short stature and his less appealing personality traits. They both enjoy making excuses for not having homework and losing to me in foosball. Good times.

In other Post-Darth Era news, Dimples had a minor blowup recently. Actually, he’s been getting more and more ornery lately. His preliminary court appearance for his association/participation with the stolen/wrecked car over Christmas break is coming up, and he’s convinced that Co-Workerette is going to testify in order to land him in jail. The notion that he is completely incapable and undeserving of receiving positive adult support has been figuratively, and perhaps literally, beaten into him throughout his entire life. No matter how many times she or I explain that people DO exist that are on “YOUR SIDE,” nothing ever penetrates his barriers.

“[Co-Workerette] is goin’ just to get me locked up. Gonna get locked up. Just like everyone else.”

I know he’s terrified and thinks he’s going to jail. His father is going to be there and will likely tell the judge that he thinks Dimples should be shipped off to the worst juvey in three states. I don’t know how to placate someone like this. None of the usual methods are working.

“I’m leavin,” he told me, early in the evening. “Goin to get my last meal before I get locked up.”

“Where?” I asked, trying not to smile.

“Popeye’s.” He stalked outside like a dejected puppy.

He has a flair for the dramatic, but the facade really isn’t that deep.

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We just had our AmeriCorps midyear conference this past weekend. I got to spend three days with the people doing the same sub-program as me from 12 other cities. I heard some inspiring speakers, attended some useful workshops, and exchanged stories with people having the same — yet entirely different — experience as me. It was supposed to re-energize me for the second half, and I thought it did. But it turned out to be more like a sugar crash instead.

Today was probably the worst day I’ve ever had here. Worse than any Darth-procured shenanigans. Worse than the time I left here covered in fingerprint powder and smelling like the pool bathroom at the Countryside Y. I’m still not quite sure why it was so bad, but my addled brain has produced an applicable analogy… if you tilt your head:

Some prescription drugs have certain side effects that can be dealt with on their own. But when certain ones are taken together, or within a set timeframe of each other, they can produce adverse reactions and possibly kill you. Tonight was that deadly combination of aecetometaphine and… Dimples, The Professor, Tapas, Bug, Inspector Gadget, and some very fiesty HTFUs.

The shorter explanation is that I’ve finally cracked.

I walked to my car with only one thought: “I wish I was back with kids I can relate to.”

Maybe I should be proud that it took a whopping five months before I melted into a decrepit blob. I called home and mom wanted to know what was wrong with me. I didn’t know. No, it wasn’t any physical confrontation. No, it wasn’t anyone being deliberately rude or mean to me. No, it wasn’t any single upsetting event. I didn’t know what to tell her. So I hung up. I eventually decided it was an overwhelming feeling of abject failure and misery all at once. You know, nothing bad.

This is difficult to articulate because these entries are not published in the form of a daily diary. I write every day, but only translate whatever seems interesting to me at the moment into the entries that appear here. So only a small percentage of what actually goes on makes it here. Some days are uneventful. Most are pretty challenging. Especially difficult days are not uncommon, either. But I deal with whatever arises using the most applicable method I can conjure. Patience and high tolerance for loud, unpredictable environments are the essential sword and shield. That gets me out the door with at least partial sanity most nights.

But tonight, everyone’s various problems and issues and temperaments seemed to brew into this unstable… thing. Between homework crises, fights, more fights, and typical adolescent dumbassery, the frustration and sheer unfulfillment became overwhelming. I’ll have to be completely lame and say that you really “had to be there” to understand it, because… you just did. I’ve had fleeting moments like this, but never before have I vehemently wished to be back with “relatable kids.”

There was a bit of unconscious precursor-ing to this mind-meld. I’d recently gotten an e-mail from one of my campers from the past four summers telling me she’s going to be playing Scout in the Playhouse Series’ production of To Kill a Mockingbird. She remembered it was one of my favorite books and couldn’t wait to tell me about landing the part. I was angry that being 500 miles away would prevent me from seeing her perform. I got another e-mail from a camper who joined a soccer team after I encouraged her to learn some basic skills at camp last year. She invited me to a game and was disappointed when I reminded her I didn’t live around there anymore.

These are two examples of kids who came into my group at camp with little confidence, friends, or ‘niches’ they could ride for success. It took less than six weeks for me to point them in a positive direction and now they’re flourishing. It feels good. I probably didn’t think it was easy then, but it was. A positive role model here, some encouragement there, add in some genuine interest and a daily dose of goofy humor and presto — instant pre-teen, ready and confident for those troubling years ahead.

It was fun, too. All the time. I miss being around kids I know. I miss being able to completely be myself. I can’t do that here. It’s like living in a foreign country and speaking a new language. Even after five months. You’ll probably never be as you are in your native land. I miss being able to solve a kid’s problem and see them happy and benefiting from that service. Here, you hope that some tiny bit of what you’re saying gets through. And you may never know if it does. You don’t know if situation or circumstance beyond their control will prevent success or change. With less to feel good about, there’s a lot more room for despair. I know what it feels like to stand at the line and swish all my free throws. Right now I feel like my eyes are closed and I just hope I come within 10 feet of the basket.

I’m crazy. I have to be. Some of my friends think I am. “Why don’t you pick a safer job? Is it worth it?” “What are you doing there?” Hmm. What AM I doing here? I’ve wondered the same thing.

I wondered that during the drive to my apartment tonight. I wondered why I’m not back home teaching AP Government and coaching a peewee basketball team. I wondered why I’m not getting ready for another summer of making lanyards with fifth graders and receiving my esteemed award for Counselor Most Likely To Eat Skyline For Every Meal. I wondered why I’m putting so much energy into kids who hardly understand me. I wondered how I can keep doing this when it’s a seemingly endless road of crappy life situations and kids who won’t listen to anything. Yeah, they need someone, but me? I wondered why I’m doing THIS, why I have to be the one in the trenches, when doing what is familiar and easy sounds so appealing.

I kept wondering when I got home. Wondered while I picked at my tofu stir fry. Wondered all through Jon Stewart doing the headlines. Wondered until I plopped down at my desk.

I finally stopped. The answer was never very far.

I have a favorite verse. Short and sweet. It’s written on a little card, and I’ve had it on my desk since 11th grade. Whenever I change desks, dorms, apartments, states, whatever. It comes with me. And it’s here now. Days like these are reasons I keep it in plain view.

And so, dear friends, let us never grow tired of doing what is right.

2 Thess. 3:13

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When the doorbell only rings one time, it’s a blessed event. I also know it’s not a kid.

Ever since we got that foul contraption installed, it’s been the bane of my existence. If the adults are all back in the offices, it’s pretty impossible to hear anyone knock at the door. And the door is locked. So for practicality’s sake, it appears to be a smart investment. But the ratio of necessary ding-dongs to woefully unnecessary ding-dong-ding-dong-ding-dong-ding-dong-ding-dong-ding-dong-ding-dong-ding- dong-ding-dong-ding-dong-ding-dong-ding-dong-ding-dongs is about 1:100. And this is with my new and massively-aggrandized tolerance for annoyance.

But this particular time, it only sounded once. I walked out to get it, wondering what non-youth could be visiting us so late in the evening. But Co-Workerette beat me to the door and welcomed in the three older gentlemen whom she apparently was expecting. News to me. They turned out to be the guest speakers for her “Life Skills” class.

One rolled in via wheelchair, one limped, and the other stood in front of them like the bouncer at Nick’s. And then, for the first time in the history of my AmeriCorpsing, every single kid sat in silent, rapt attention during a class. An entire class. All it took was three black dudes talking about back when they used to run around the streets and shoot people. Who knew.

It really was a fascinating hour listening to their stories. In a nutshell, the three of them used to make a living out of dealing drugs and beefing on the streets. Their tales were long and rambling and probably glorified the excitement and power of violence a little too much, judging by the reactions of the kids. All of them had been shot multiple times over their years of perpetual beefing. But in the end, their message was pretty clear: there is life beyond the streets. A much better life. They implored everyone to not fall into the traps that look enticing during adolescence and to make something of their lives. I’m sure the kids have heard it all before, but never from three guys sporting more lead than a pencil factory.

Most of the group left right after the class ended. I was getting ready to head out myself, but stopped to help Tyson and Bug finish off the mozzarella sticks. They thought it was hilarious when I discovered said golden brown pieces of cheesy glory were actually lukewarm fish sticks. Properly chagrined, I started for the door but turned back when Tyson began enthusiastically instructing Bug the proper way to throw punches.

Apparently Co-Workerette had noticed the same thing, and shook her head.

“Nice to see he actually learned something from all of that,” she lamented.

“No kidding,” I replied.

We stood watching for another minute or two before Bug finally scampered out the door. Co-Workerette finally interjected.

“I can’t believe you’re teaching a little kid how to do all that not five minutes after you hear these guys talk about how their lives were pretty much ruined.”

He shrugged. “I don’t care.”

“Did you not hear anything they said?”

“That’s what it’s like here. I rep my own hood. I rep myself. When you gotta beef, you gotta beef.”

He went on to talk about occurrences in his recent past that warranted the need for such… beefs. The catalyst, naturally, was the universal teenage angst-causer that permeates every social class and situation — getting hurt.

“There are other ways you can deal with that stuff,” Co-Workerette said.

“Not when you get jumped. You got no respect if you don’t rep.”

“[Tyson], you are so smart and have so much potential. Why would you even chance wasting it away on that?”

I was thinking the same thing. I’ve mentioned it in other entries — he has what it takes to do whatever he wants and be that guy. The one who escapes in tact and better than ever. But he’s so bogged down in a culture he accepts as the law, that he predictably and stubbornly replied:

“You don’t understand. That’s what it’s like in DC. You don’t know what it’s like.”

“We know what it is, even if we haven’t lived it exactly the way you have,” Co-Workerette said.

“No offense, but you don’t. I don’t mean to be racist,” he said, “but you guys out in the nice suburbs haven’t lived this shit so you don’t understand that’s the way it is. That’s DC. You can’t change the way things are.”

“Be the change you wish to see in the world,” I quoted automatically.

He stared at me for a beat.

“You can’t! It’s the way! It is!” he said, as if speaking to a small child. “Do you know what it’s like to get hit from behind and kicked in your ribs?”

“No, but—”

“And it’s all by people who s’posed to be your friends? No. You don’t. I have, and I want to hurt them like they hurt me.”

“I may have never been jumped like you, but trust me,” I said, “I got hurt plenty by my so-called friends in high school. Sometimes emotional pain can feel just as bad. So I just went far away to college and found some new friends that I had more in common with than living proximity and sports teams.”

He didn’t seem to find that a valid comparison. Co-Workerette filled the silence:

“Don’t you think it’ll hurt your friends a lot more when you get somewhere in life and they don’t?”

He just shook his head.

“When you come back to DC with your fancy car and your clothes and your great job. Things you worked hard for and earned without resorting to dealing drugs and living the street life,” she finished.

Another teen had been listening to us debate for the past couple minutes. I can’t believe, considering she’s here practically every day, that she hasn’t been “named” yet. But sometimes they just blend into the wall, or, in her case, into her perpetually-raised hood. Anyway–

“C’mon,” Hoodie said, “You one’a my best friends. I don’t wanna see you locked up.”

“Gotta do what I gotta do,” Tyson said. “I got a gun and if I’m goin down I’m takin everyone with me.”

“[Tyson]…” I sighed. Hoodie just threw her arms up in exasperation.

“You just don’t get what it’s like to be hurt like that. They s’posed to be my friends,” he repeated, as if we hadn’t covered this topic two minutes ago. “I don’t care. If they wanna beef with me, I’m gonna get my gun and take care of that shit. People gotta know they can’t mess with me. And I’ll take anyone down with me.”

An African-American volunteer from Upstairs was passing through and caught our conversation.

“Look,” she said, “My dad is locked up in South-Central LA for this stuff. I don’t even know him. My brother too. It don’t make you a man. It just ruins your life.”

He just shrugged again, still not buying it — at least on the outside. He could be the most stubborn person I’ve ever met, which is saying something. So I don’t believe he’s completely dismissed our survival logic. I listened to Co-Workerette work on him a little more, with Hoodie occasionally repeating her desire for him to stay out of jail, but it appeared not even the pleading of a close friend was enough.

It was a half hour past our closing time, and I had not the energy nor the will to keep talking in circles, but the three of them continued on.

That blasted doorbell caught my eye on my way out. I paused, suddenly and surprisingly thankful for all the times I hear it ringing ad nauseam. Every time Tyson — or whoever else — chooses to come here after school, it’s another day where all that spiteful adherence of the beefing culture stays in the harmless smack-talk phase. And I have to believe that in those few hours, conversations that may seem fruitless, aren’t.

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I had a lot of downtime yesterday, with only having to hang around the paranoid conspiracy theorists in the senior building. So I rummaged through the supply closets looking for any cameras or electronic supplies Co-Worker had stored but didn’t tell me about before he left.

I found this ancient (and by that I mean circa-1999) camera/recorder hybrid… thing. It looked like something reporters used during interviews, but there was also a cheap camera on the other side. There’s a good chance it may have come from a Happy Meal. I started messing around with it today and found the recorder part worked, so I left it running when Bug walked through the door.

This is a transcript of our conversation taken from the recording. It isn’t particularly profound or interesting, but a good example of our typical rapidfire nonsense conversations with each other.

“Hey, [Bug],” I said as he walked through the door. “You’re early.”

“I know,” he replied, stopping at the desk.

“Didn’t you go to school?”

“Nah.”

“Why not?”

[He laughs]

“C’mere. Why is your face so shiny?”

“My face is shiny?!”

“Very.”

“I ain’t even put baby oil on it.”

“What’s on it?”

“Grease.”

“Why?”

“D’you like my hair?”

“Yes.”

“I hadda look good for my first day back.”

“You didn’t go to school.”

“I know.”

“Why not?”

“I was, uh, I was in Southeast.”

“What were you doing in Southeast?”

“Seein’ my sister.”

“What did you do?”

“I was up all night playin’ video games on the computer, drinkin soda…”

“And so you were too tired to go to school?”

“I got up at 7:30 and got on the bus and fell asleep, and this lady next to me, she be fallin asleep too. And she said is that your brother? And I said no it ain’t. And we got off at the same stop and she was all I’m tired too.”

“Ahhh.”

“And then I went inside and my mom said you best get ready for school now.”

“So why didn’t you go?”

“I had to make myself look all great for my first day back. But I also wanted to go real slow.”

“Uh huh.”

“So I was takin’ a shower for bouts an hour.”

“An hour?”

“Yeah, and then my mom, she knocked on the door and say what you doin in there? And I say I’m takin a shower. And she say you best get your ass out now. So then I put on some clothes and went in and started eatin my cereal real slow like. And then she says it’s 12, maybe you shouldn’t go to school. And I said but I really really really really really wanna go to school! And she said aight if you think so. But then I said maybe I ain’t because it’d be a waste of money and tokens. And she say you best stay home.”

“You’re very sneaky.”

“Yeah, yeah, and so I spent all day takin’ showers.”

“Wait. You took showers all day?”

“Nah, see I took another shower and then I took a bubble bath.”

“Why?”

“I hadda get clean.”

“I think you accomplished that with your three previous showers.”

“I hadda be soakin’ my stress away.”

“And what exactly is your stress?”

“Ya know… school.”

“[Bug], you didn’t go to school.”

“Parents?”

“You don’t live with your dad and your mom let you stay home. How are they stressors?”

“I’ont know.”

“Okay.”

“See whadda did to my hand?”

“Geeze, that’s a huge burn. What did you do?”

“I was being scientificy.”

“You were being scientificy?”

“Yeah!”

“How did you burn it?”

“With salt and ice.”

“Salt and ice?”

“Yeah.”

“How?”

“I was being scientificy.”

“Where did you do this?”

“In my house.”

“Why were you playing with salt and ice?”

“I was being scientificy.”

“Stop saying that. Scientificy isn’t a word.”

“I was being a scientist, then!”

“How did you decide to do this?”

“My friend told me it was cool.”

“Next time you listen to what your friend thinks is cool, you might lose your arm.”

“See this? I did this before. In sixth grade.”

“And it hurt so much you couldn’t wait to try it again?”

“It was fun.”

“Do me a favor.”

“Don’t ever do it again?”

“Wait until you have advanced degrees in chemistry and biology before you do any more experiments.”

“I don’t wanna be that. And see? My pigment’s already comin’ back.”

—–

And with that, he ran off to find snack. I shrugged to myself, amused, almost basking in the normalcy of that random conversation after having been gone a week.

Inspector Gadget arrived right on Bug’s heels, and I was subjected to a long and rambling stream of consciousness monologue about his Spring Break adventures at imaginary clubs with his imaginary friends and imaginary dream girls and imaginary drugs.

I’ll leave that transcript to the adults-only blog.

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So… stop me if you’ve read this book.

Ten unlikely companions risk their lives to save the fate of the world decide not to sleep in on their day off from school and band together for one incredible journey to the evil Mordor Georgetown to destroy the One Ring stereotype of black teenagers in DC.

Yeah? All I can say is … good thing the fate of the world really wasn’t left to us. But rest assured this entry could be just as lengthy as that book. For those who “qualified,” the culminating event/test of Co-Workerette’s life skills class was a trip to Georgetown and lunch at a nice restaurant frequented by the tourists and locals, followed by an afternoon of shopping. A few of the classes had been devoted to etiquette and the like, so she arranged for the waiters (she works there on the weekends) to grade the kids on various things they’d covered in class.

The aforementioned lessons would not have been possible before a spirited debate about how the purpose was not to “change” them, or “make them white,” as Tyson put it, but to learn skills that will be needed for future things like job interviews and whatnot. And so they embraced the lessons with gusto, demonstrating the importance of possessing the skills of civil public behavior they’d surely use later in life.

Whatever. They just wanted the free food.

Really, though, I can’t even blame them; I was never comfortable with the class. It felt like Whiteology to me, too. Yes, she was teaching them some valuable skills, but… oh, hell. This is for another entry.

So, anyway, on an unseasonably windy and chilly Monday morning, 8 teens (Tyson, Red, Cupcake, The Professor, Diva, Bug, Bitsy, and Dimples — though I’m not sure how he qualified having missed so much time), along with Co-Workerette and me, set out for the neighborhood metro station. DC schools were out that day. Why? I wanted to see if any of them knew.

“[Dimples],” I said as we walked, “Do you know what holiday this is?”

“It… uh, ain’t it, um… pro—, uh, consta—, um, constipation day?”

He was 100% serious.

“Ah, no. ‘Emancipation Day.’ Do you know what that is?”

“No.”

“When Lincoln ended slavery, he wrote something called the Emancipation Proclamation. And this is a celebration of that.” Technically it’s a DC holiday for the emancipation of DC slaves, but I doubt he cared about specifics. Or really, any of it.

“Oh. Okay.”

Yes, because Abe totally freed the slaves so that their children’s children’s children’s children could be denied even more education with a pointless holiday. I kept that thought to myself.

So onward we trekked. It normally takes about 20 minutes to walk to the station, because despite the tracks being “right there,” in this part of the city they’re elevated. So we typically have to walk allllll the way around the plethora of liquor stores, cash advance joints, carry outs, dilapidated housing units, and other pleasant neighborhood scenery. But the smaller group dynamics changed the game a bit. They wanted to take the infamous “shortcut.”

Hoo, boy.

We crawled through a hole cut in the iron fence of the complex’s parking lot, which lead into a section of trees and a muddy trail beaten into the ground by short-cutters past. The people in front of me had no problem with the steep drop on the trail and ensuing potential for wiping out in the mud at the bottom. I surfed down before I could think about it. Silently congratulating myself for escaping what I thought was the worst part of the shortcut, I bounded down the trail to keep up with Bug and Tyson. Alongside the left of us was a precarious edge and a very long drop to the street below. I figured the further we moved down the trail, the lower that edge would get to the street. In other words, a manageable jump.

Oh, the naivety of adulthood.

Suddenly Bug and Tyson took a sharp left and leaped off the side and to the ground below — WAY down below. I could hear Co-Workerette somewhere behind me already flipping out about getting down. There was a giant green transformer/thing/box that apparently lot of kids use as an island to jump onto and then down. But I quickly nixed that given the rain-slicked surface. Not to mention the jumping distance. If you miss that and fall, you’d probably die a lot more painfully than if you just jump straight away.

I didn’t give myself a chance to mull my options and just… gracefully careened off the edge. I escaped with only a muddy shin. Whee!

Co-Workerette watched as a couple kids jumped down before she foolishly tried the “jump to the green island” method. I tried not to watch. Somehow, she made it in tact. Eventually, the only ones up on the trail were Cupcake, Diva and Red. All seemed opposed to doing anything but sitting there. Sensing a major event about to take place, I pulled out my little camera and switched to video mode. (2/8/11 note: all of the password protected photos/video from this entry will look like broken links at the moment – server issues. They’ll be restored whenever I get some time. Thanks)

I’m only sorry I shut off the camera when I did, because Red’s subsequent jump and hysterical 10-minute long freak-out (this is not an exaggeration) was beyond priceless.

Once everyone was finally on the ground, we made it past the shady alleys, dilapidated fences, broken glass, dirty needles, piles of garbage, and freight train tracks leading to the station — probably shaving a whole two minutes off our projected arrival time.

It was a bit of a wait for the next train, so a bunch of the kids decided to keep warm by riding the elevator up and down. The rest of them seemed content with running laps around the platform and generally being loud and disruptive and just like normal kids excited to be going somewhere.

“Okay, class is officially starting now!” Co-Workerette called out, receiving a predictable non-response.

Regrettably, I didn’t ask her if she had the transportation route covered. I know about six different ways to get to Georgetown, but I assumed since she worked there that she had complete understanding of how to arrive the most quickly and efficiently. Well, turned out I was 0-for-2 on assumptions for the day. We got off the train at K Street, which is Lawyer Central downtown. After reaching the street level, everyone emerged from the escalator and looked all around at the bustling sidewalks and big buildings.

“So, where is this bus that we need?” Co-Workerette wondered aloud. Before I could answer, I noticed a conspicuous silence around us. Muttering a quick crrrap, I took off.

I barely made it in time to pull Bug back from boarding a random bus. Then I reeled in Red and Cupcake from posing and dancing in the camera path of whatever this guy was trying to film. Then I chased Tyson and Dimples out of the line at the hotdog stand. All the while Co-Workerette peered at the bus schedule signs. Is this what kindergarten teachers feel like? I eventually got everyone rounded up and back into a semi-stationary group. Co-Workerette wondered which direction was “west,” so I pointed for her, and finally we knew where to find our bus.

“Okay,” she glowered at the group, “class is officially, officially starting now.”

After a small 5-minute long mishap while boarding (she calculated the wrong fare amount and I had to fork over a few more dollars to cover everyone), we were finally on our way. This bus happened to be the “circulator,” which hits all the popular tourist spots on the main loop. So we were the only people on the packed bus not holding a DC sightseeing book. And as such, quite frankly, we were freaking them all out.

I’ve become more of an ethnographer over the course of the year than I’d ever have anticipated. I’ve been immersed in a culture I knew nothing of (first hand, anyway — no sense in counting television and rap music) and have since learned the cultural norms. As we stepped on the bus, I got to see them in stark relief. There was a time, before I worked in the inner city, that I wondered when encountering groups like ours, why their tones of voices were naturally ten times the average loudness. Why they’d blast their iPods and dance in the aisles of the bus. Why they were impervious to what the person behind them might be thinking about their actions. I don’t wonder anymore. I am fascinated by it. And in keeping with the unexplored themes lurking on the periphery, let’s just say it’s exactly the kind of “behavior” Co-Workerette has coached them not to do when we go to lunch.

Anyway these tourists… were just all staring. It was fun.

We finally reached our stop, located on one of the main shopping streets in Georgetown. Co-Workerette stopped the brood outside the restaurant door and made a last-ditch attempt to cram a bunch of behavioral tips into their brains. She ran through a list of what they’d be graded on, what was expected of them, and general stuff that they “yeah yeah yeah we know”-ed at. After picking someone to present our reservation to the hostess, we walked towards the door.

“Okay. Seriously, guys? Class is starting. NOW,” was her final plea.

—–

They had a long table set up for us, and everyone filled in accordingly. I sat at the end of one side, with Dimples predictably picking the seat to my right, and Tyson across from me with Diva next to him. The acoustics of the room made it difficult for me to hear conversation beyond the four of us.

The hostess passed out the menus and ran through the lunch specials, but everyone was too busy taking in the surroundings to pay attention to whatever random psuedo-snotty fish and seaweed concoction they were offering today. I noticed that most of them had already put the cloth napkins on their laps – apparently having paid more attention during class than I thought.

“This ain’t much like Ruby Tuesday,” Dimples mused aloud.

The waiter, who I’d guess was either being punished severely or drew the short straw, arrived and began taking drink orders. When he approached our end, Dimples quizzed him on the pop selection and finally selected a sprite. I ordered a coke. He turned to Tyson.

“What will you be drinking today, sir?”

“I want a coke and sprite mixed with a little bit of lemonade in it,” Tyson asked. I gave him a funny look, and he returned it, before glancing back at the waiter. “Please.”

I shook my head.

“What?” he looked at me.

“Nothing,” I smirked back.

Co-Workerette informed the group that they could pick out three appetizers to share among themselves. I’ll tell ya, I could have died of shock when everyone wanted the buffalo wings. She ordered two baskets of those (along with “a bowl of ranch dressing”), the grilled pizza, and some kind of seafood dip that I was sure she’d be the only one to touch. Sadly, I lost a bet with myself when no one mentioned the lack of mumbo sauce.

Diva’s forehead crinkled as she read through the menu.

“I want the uh, pasta, uh, pasta, um… what’s that word?”

She pointed to her choice.

“Bolognese. It’s meat sauce,” I clarified.

I felt a poke in my side.

“What’s that?” Dimples asked.

“That’s pasta. It has shrimp in it.”

“Mixed up?”

“Yeah.”

“Is it fried?”

“No, it’s marinated in something.”

“Do it come with fries?”

“No, but trust me, you’ll have plenty of food.”

He seemed satisfied with that and turned away.

“You get to pick your cheese on the burgers!” Tyson seemed happy with this.

“So what are you going for?”

“I dunno,” he said. “Don’t think I’ve ever had these. What would you get?”

I recommended the cheddar – with bacon – and he took me up on the advice.

“What are you getting?” Tyson asked.

“A Reuben,” I said, and seeing his blank look I elaborated. “It’s corned beef with sauerkraut and swiss cheese and thousand island dressing.”

Three identical noises of disgust came from those around me.

“It’s what you’d get at a deli in New York City, only…not,” I tried, but they were beyond convincing.

The waiter came back and started taking lunch orders. Dimples was still quizzing me on how to pronounce things so I didn’t catch what anyone at the other end of the table got. Eventually he made his way to our end. Dimples endearingly screwed up the name of his dish, and Diva just pointed to hers instead of trying to say it.

Tyson ordered his burger, and then had an addendum.

“Me an’ her,” he gestured at Diva, “also want some, uh, chicken fingers between us.”

“[Tyson]!” Co-Workerette admonished from the middle of the table, “You don’t need that, you ordered a whole meal for yourself already.”

“It’s just something to share between us,” he said, like that the Curryout method of ordering food was universally applied in all eating situations.

The waiter seemed confused by this, as if he thought that three-drinks-in-one thing from five minutes ago was just some sort of beveragical anomaly. Amateur. I’m not even sure chicken strips were on the menu, let alone as an ala carte choice. But he scribbled away.

We had a few down minutes of the kids quizzing Co-Workerette on her relationship, or lack thereof, with the guy serving us, before he finally returned with drinks.

“Here’s your coke,” he said to me, then setting Tyson’s down, “And your… drink.”

There was something very Ferris Bueller’s Lunch Maitre d’ about the tone of his voice. I was amused.

He also set down baskets of bread at various points on the table. Tyson, Dimples and Diva eyed the one nearest to us warily. After a minute each kid took a piece and passed around the “community butter,” which was also a foreign concept.

“Why do it taste like this?” Tyson scowled, giving me full view of some lovely mastication.

“Like what?”

“It all chewy and nasty,” he clarified.

“Why’s the outside so hard?” Diva added.

“It’s just the type of bread it is,” I tried to explain.

Dimples looked at me like I was making him eat a baby whale. Raw.

“Why can’t we just get real bread? This stale,” he whined.

“This is the kind they serve at these restaurants. It’s … special bread,” I reached.

“So it’s White People Bread,” Tyson tossed at me. “I ain’t eatin’ that shit.”

I didn’t humor him with a response. He’s such a rabble rouser.

Thankfully, the appetizers arrived a couple minutes later and the huge buffalo wings distracted them from having to pick at the bread. I was right about no one else trying Co-Workerette’s crab dip, and the “grilled pizza” was actually 4 tiny pieces of flatbread daintily-clad with tomatoes and cheese. No one seemed too concerned with the unpizza-ness of that particular offering because the giant bowl of ranch dressing took them on a nostalgia trip to … well, probably when they all went to the Curryout the night before.

The rest of lunch was just as eventful. Diva switched seats with Tyson because Dimples kept kicking her underneath the table like a 14-year-old with a crush on a girl… which… is what he is. Dimples was also convinced that the “white people in the corner” kept looking at him funny… which… they probably were. Diva and Tyson couldn’t figure out how to work the fresh pepper grinder thing. Tyson decided his beverage cornucopia was “nasty” and so he ordered an iced tea – only to be outraged when it arrived unsweetened. I tried to explain that most restaurants give you tea to sweeten yourself. He still chose to be mad the rest of our time in there. Diva was in the bathroom for ten minutes, and when she finally came back, informed me that she threw up her lunch (“spaghetti that’s not my mom’s makes me puke,” she said. I asked her why she ordered it, then. “I dunno”). Dimples ate the shrimp off his pasta but wouldn’t touch anything else because it tasted “weird.” He ended up picking off the plate of fries between Tyson and Diva… and continued to kick her – now diagonally – under the table.

Co-Worketette had to remind everyone about keeping conversations restaurant-appropriate and to watch the noise level, but other than that, they seemed to be taking the whole etiquette thing seriously. Although I don’t really know what was going on at the other end. I saw Bug trying to shove some kind of funky-looking pile of mush into his mouth. It may have been a burrito at one point. He seemed to be more interested in tapping his fork on his glass and calling for a toast every five minutes.

Almost everyone had to get the remainders of their lunches boxed up. When the bill came, Co-Workerette passed it across the table for a couple volunteers to calculate the tip, as practiced during class. They fought over who would get to count the money out, probably because no one’s ever held more than forty bucks in their hands at once.

The waiter came back to pick up the check and delivered the “report card,” which Co-Workerette informed everyone would be revealed and dissected during the next class period. She wouldn’t even let me see it. Hmmph.

After a mass trip to the restrooms, during which everyone conveniently forgot their “lessons” and acted like a band of Irish rugby hooligans, we stepped into the attached indoor shopping center.

We all agreed to meet back outside the restaurant in two hours. I assumed Co-Workerette would kind of keep an eye on one group, and I’d go around with the other, but I guess she had some personal shopping to take care of and ran off before anyone could follow her. I looked at the 8 kids standing around me and shrugged.

Cupcake and Red asked if I could take them up Wisconsin Ave. so I agreed. Dimples, Tyson and Diva walked off in another direction, and I said a quick prayer for their collective good judgment. Bug, The Professor, and Bitsy tagged along with us. I honestly did not want to deal with Bug’s 12-year-old antics for the next two hours so I made sure to (repeatedly) tell him that they didn’t have to go with us. But I got the sense that underneath his penchant for childish rebellion he was absolutely scared out of his mind to be in such a “foreign” place without an adult. And so I made myself suck it up in the name of… well, my job.

We drifted through the stores all up and down the shopping mecca that is Wisconsin Avenue. I was much more interested in this sociological experience than looking at all those swell things I had not the money to buy. So each time we entered a new store, I paid attention to how the employees received this unlikely band of five black teenagers. I don’t want to make it sound like we were walking through Selma, Alabama in 1965, but Georgetown is the most chic part of DC. This is where the politicians and dignitaries and celebrities and tourists and pretty much everyone else come for shopping and fine dining and general perusing of the quaint cuteness that are its old, colorful rowhouses and brick sidewalks. I mean, Georgetown doesn’t have a metro stop because the locals “want to keep the riff-raff out.” That should say it all. Our “group” is probably the rarest of sights.

So anyway, I was mainly curious about seeing the perpetuation of stereotypes. Or maybe lack thereof. I didn’t know what to expect.

Our first stop was Abercrombie and Fitch, which received its name only after the creators decided Overpriced Crap For White People wasn’t as catchy. But the loud, incessant bass pumping from the speakers kept the group happy. Cupcake was absolutely sure that this was where I got all my clothes. She pointed at a huge sepia wall ad of a buff twentysomething in Abercrombie boxers.

“Izzat yo boyfriend? Haha sikenah!”

I retaliated by flinging a scrap of cotton at her, that, according to the tag, was called “shorts.”

“Here, you’d look cute in these.”

“You trifilin!”

A girl and her mom looking at tank tops turned and stared at us. Cupcake threw it back at me, and we decided we’d been there long enough.

The employee folding the argyle cardigans by the door in J-Crew did a hilariously cartoonish double-take when we walked in. I wish I had a picture of it. But he recovered nicely and greeted us like he would anyone else. Red looked at the season’s new line of sundresses like they held the secrets of the universe. Bug was upset that it seemed to be a “girls only” store. I’m not sure if he simply didn’t see the men’s side, or if he just thought those flare-leg cords had no chance of going on a male’s body.

We spent the longest time of any store thus far in Up Against the Wall, which featured a lot more urban-style of clothing and a whole section of bling, including toy guns studded with gaudy fake jewels and other glittery things. Everyone crowded around the glass case and pointed to the ones they wanted most. The consensus seemed to be the diamond-encrusted pistol and skull handcuffs were the tightest shizz in there, yo.

Everyone was visibly more comfortable in that store, but it was also the only one where an employee literally followed the group around. She was about as inconspicuous as Wile E. Coyote wearing a cactus disguise.

Red picked out a thuggish-looking hat and put it on me, declaring it “tight” and urging me to buy it. This was about the time where I started feeling like Mowgli. Oh my, that was a horribly un-PC analogy. My point is that when I came here, I was very different from them. And I still am. But sometimes… I’m just another shortie in a reprint-logo, off-glitter, straight-billed Washington Nationals hat. And those are good times.

It started raining, so we headed back to the aforementioned indoor mini-mall that is probably primarily there for days like this. I wondered how they were going to stay amused for another hour and a half, but we found a music and movies store that had something for everyone. That was pretty uneventful, except for having to steer Bug out of the adult movie section and explaining to Bitsy who the Beatles were. That was so painful.

“Oh… like them white dudes… Backstreet Boys?”

I had to excuse myself to the poster corner to shed a few tears.

Eventually we left and headed further into the mall. We passed by the enticing clear windows of The Sharper Image and I knew we’d reached “the end.” People who regularly shop at malls like this are even powerless to resist at least stopping in for a few minutes to play with all the crazy gadgets. I could only imagine what it would be like for a group of kids who’d never seen one. Especially when the other three members of our group waved from the inside. Their wide-eyed gapes lead them straight to the cluster of massage chairs.

Somebody turned up the Jackson Five on the fancy stereo and Red, of course, had her moves already prepared. I pulled out my camera and got a quick clip of her dancing. Note Bug’s whining at the end of the clip and then congratulate me for hearing this on a daily basis and not being completely insane by now.

They stayed in there for almost an hour. I’m sure the employees of that store are used to people coming in and playing with everything and buying nothing, but probably not to this extreme. A bewildered woman kept coming over and asking if we needed help with anything.

Bug and The Professor were especially amused with the portable punching bag and got in some good practice. I have the memory of Diva trying out the “Love Handler” to carry with me the rest of my life. I don’t need much else. I’m just sorry that I didn’t get an actual picture of her trying to operate that thing.

After a while I noticed Dimples was not among the group so I wandered back into the hall and found him on a couch playing with his cell phone.

“Did you find a Verizon store?”

“Yeah,” he said, not looking up. “That white man try and tell me I need somethin’ else to make this work.”

“Well, do you?”

“I dunno,” he sighed. “I wanna go to PG.”

That wasn’t the first time during the day he’d expressed his desire to go to “PG” for his shopping. He was referring to Prince George’s Plaza, Maryland, where there’s a strip mall thing right off a metro stop catering to the predominantly African-American population.

“You can’t just get it here?”

“Them guys in the store be jonin’. I really needa go to PG.”

I let it drop after that. He likes to blow things out of proportion, so who knows what, if any, level of “joning” he experienced. But what was wide-eyed excitement at the beginning of the day changed to resentment at some point.

A couple minutes later, Tyson came out and flopped onto another couch and ate his leftover soggy fries before agreeing with Dimples about wanting to go to PG. The Professor followed soon after and amused himself with watching the shoppers go in and out of the surrounding stores. Every so often he’d mutter something like, “…son must be rich!”

I noticed with disdained amusement that a security guard walked over and stood across from where we were all gathered and didn’t move the entire time. This experience would have made a great social psychology paper.

Finally Co-Workerette got off the escalator and greeted us, armed with a couple bags from stores that aren’t even in my social class. We rounded everyone up and headed out into the wind and drizzle. This time I handled the bus selection and we made it up to the George Washington University metro stop in a few minutes.

And then we headed back east. East and past the invisible wall dividing the proverbial haves from the have-nots. Only these days, the wall is actually becoming a gaping chasm. Gentrification is making bad matters even worse, as DC developers continue to change neighborhoods like “ours” into ones more like Georgetown. All that does is displace the people who lived there. Pushes them other places, so they can live miserably somewhere else. It’s not actually helping anything.

But that’s for another entry.

We left the metro station and some of the kids seemed to get a second wind of energy, bounding across the train tracks and through the broken fences. A few brave souls tried the reverse-shortcut, jumping like flying squirrels from the green box to the wall and then somehow climbing up. Most of us wisely passed it, choosing to walk down the adjacent back alley. They were quieter than usual, maybe worn out from the long day… or maybe not. We made it back to the building in comfortable near-silence.

Tolkien ended his epic Lord of the Rings with the most complexly simple line I’ve ever read. After 1200+ pages and umpteen different characters, far-off lands, subplots of subplots, and complicated literary themes seamlessly woven together, the end came plainly and reverently via the book’s unsung hero, Samwise Gamgee, upon his return home to the Shire.

“Well, I’m back.”

In a strange mixture of comforting familiarity and weary resentment, I think a lot of those kids were thinking the same thing.

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When I was in elementary school, I loved Shel Silverstein. I still do. My favorite poem is ‘Sick.’ I think I’ve had it completely memorized since third grade. Well, I was sick last week. Not just sick. SICK. I pretty much had everything described therein. Only the last line didn’t apply to me. So I was gone from the hood for an entire week.

I hadn’t had an appetite throughout, and still didn’t, really. I was also still tired all the time. With this in mind I came back hoping for a light day. I am such an idiot.

Soup had grad school class and meetings and whatever else, leaving just Co-Workerette and me. I also got word that our new Photography contractor would be holding his first real class tonight. Which meant I’d have to essentially be the bouncer/security team/facilitator/lesson plan off the top of my head-er/Photoshop consultant/IT support/person who takes care of all technicalities. This is the problem with having a contractor come in and run the class. I could do it — but we don’t have the equipment since Co-Worker left. I can teach them anything they want to know about graphic design but that’s hard to do without media to work with in the first place. So he comes in with all his fancypants (literally — this guy had Gucci shoes) equipment and I end up running the class because he doesn’t know anything about working with kids. And he gets paid.

ANYWAY.

Oh, I’m leaving someone out — Co-Workerette brought her new dog. It’s one of those little yappy ugly things. Apparently though, if I were a dog connoisseur, I would have gasped at what an expensive breed was currently traipsing around our Center. Or so she told me.

So it was me, Co-Workerette, the new clueless guy, Yappy, and about 300% more kids than we usually have — the beautiful spring weather brought them out in droves. This is exactly how I wanted to ease back in!

The afternoon and evening were just the sort of chaotic nightmare I didn’t want. I’m not a math person by nature, but this is the equation I came up with: hoodlings + dog x sunny spring weather / me being stuck in a room x no one else stopping them + sugar = *(%*(&%^*%)(@1.

Photo class was running over its allotted time and I was trying to get the guy to wrap up, but he seemed shellshocked by the chaotic atmosphere. All the sudden there was a scream from the other room. I ran in there and found Co-Workerette freaking out like Spielberg’s wife in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Yappy was uncharacteristically un-yappy and just kind of lying on the floor.

“What’s wrong with him?” she cried.

It seemed obvious to me.

“He’s been running around nonstop with the kids for the last 5 hours, he’s probably tired,” I reasoned.

“But he’s not MOVING!”

A few kids gathered around to see what the commotion was.

“Oh– was I not supposed to give him Oreoes?” Bug actually looked guilty.

“YOU GAVE A DOG CHOCOLATE?! He’s DYING!”

She looked down at the dog in horror as Bug ran away.

“So– call your vet,” I suggested. “Don’t panic, just take him home tonight and if he’s still like that you can decide what to do then.”

She scooped him up in her arms.

“I’ve gotta get him to the hospital!” Dramatic pause. “NOW!”

She headed for the door, cradling the scruffy thing that honestly just looked like needed a nap.

“Wait!” I ran after her. Thinking about it now, I’m sure my face was pretty comical. “You’re just leaving me here with all these kids?”

First of all, it’s illegal. Since I’m with AmeriCorps, I’m not technically an employee and can’t be liable blah blah blah legalese. Second, it’s not safe. Even if I wasn’t a puny little white girl I’d still want to be in a large group of adults who watch each other’s backs. Third, it’s just inconsiderate. We usually close up shop between 7:30 and 8, and it was about 7:15 at the time. Why not just say “sorry kids, emergency, we’re closing now” and leave together? Because that would make way too much sense.

I knew she’d never go for the first two reasons, so I plead the third. I suggested we just close, and she whined that we had a whole 15 minutes left. WOW, MY BAD. Alright then. She was out the door with her not-really-dying dog before I could convince her otherwise.

Having been locked in with the 10 or so kids and the contractor the last 90 minutes, I didn’t know what exactly had been going on in other rooms. I looked around the place, taking in some disturbing sights: a glomp of kids with sundae material all over a table, squirting chocolate sauce and whipped cream into each others’ mouths; an open window that people were climbing in and out of at will; the photography contractor still reeling from the aftereffects of a spring-fevered class that wouldn’t sit still or pay attention; and general mass chaos.

Hmm.

Basking in the power of my deputization, I announced that we’re closing “right now.”

I turned to start telling people to pack up when I saw something that ramped up my stress level 10000000x. Before I could get around to shutting said open window, in climbed the last two people I wanted to see — Darth Vader and Michael Vick. The long-dismissed, long-lamented, long-still-not-arrested-for-trashing-the-joint-what-the-HELL Darth and Michael.

Six months ago I probably would have run from the room crying. Only not. Because I don’t do that — except on the inside. Hah. Who knows what kind of crap they would start? When has Darth ever listened to anything I’ve told him? Oy. But I know I wouldn’t have handled it back then as well as I did this time. Something like this only comes from 8 months of experience and understanding how things work around here.

Remember Goofus and Gallant? Yeah. There’s always two courses of action from which to choose. Anyone who’s picked through the 4-year-old Highlights magazine sitting under a chair in the doctor’s office waiting room knows THAT. Luckily upon seeing these two foes, I chose the Gallant route:

[insert picture of Darth and Michael Vick having just climbed through the window]

Goofus overreacts, flips out and allows his fear to be used against him.
“YOU GUYS ARE NOT ALLOWED TO BE IN HERE. GET OUT NOW!”

Gallant remains calm and presents an authoritative, yet amiable front.
“Hey Darth, hey Michael. What’s up?”

oOoOo

Goofus mocks Darth’s team’s draft picks to cover his fear.
“The Broncos suck! What losers did you draft, anyway? Jake Plummer is worse than Tony Romo! Also GET THE HELL OUT NOW.”

Gallant disarms his opponent with some well-timed self-deprecation.
“The Bengals had a crappy draft day. No amount of new people can make up for all the suckiness on defense. They’ll probably all get arrested anyway.”

oOoOo

Goofus panics when unable to get the offenders to leave the building.
“GET OUT. I’m calling security if you’re not gone in 5 minutes. AND DON’T GET NEAR MY CAR!”

Gallant basks in his impending survival following the friendly exchange.
“Alright guys I’m closing up for the night. See ya later.”

Crisis averted. Crises, even. Even Yappy survived — having ‘officially’ been plagued by fatigue, not Oreoitis.

It was good to be back.

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I don’t like to talk about the people I work with. I may mention them in passing if they were part of a particular situation. But I purposefully don’t REALLY talk about them on here. The point of this blog is to reflect on my interactions and experiences with these kids. Not to dwell on or illustrate whatever issues may or may not exist with the three-ish other adults mentioned in these entries. I find it a bit unprofessional. Maybe it’s just me. Whatever. Point is, this time, it’s unavoidable.

So I apologize in advance… only not really. See, I’m tired of this kind of stuff happening.

I’ve mentioned on previous entries about field trips that Co-Workerette has, shall we say, a poor sense of direction. Well, maybe not so much that as it is her complete lack of common sense when it comes to planning an outing. One who is responsible for the children of others must take into account things like, oh I don’t know, SAFETY. I come from the school of “not winging” that kind of responsibility. I’ll wing a paper. I’ll wing a presentation, even. I’ll wing things that have outcomes and consequences only affecting ME.

I will not wing a group of hoodlings on a field trip.

But it’s not my job to plan these things. It’s hers. And holy hell, I’ve been here how many months? So I should have seen this coming. I accept that spectacular failure.

It started out innocently enough. Doesn’t it always? We were taking the kids go-kart racing as they’ve begged for it since January.

It was supposed to be a quick one. Hour and a half, tops. Because they only go around the track six times and it’s over. Most of the time would be spent getting over there. Wasn’t that the truth. Here’s how it went down – Jack Bauer style.

2:01: I arrive at work after a morning of meetings at the main office. I am informed Dimples has been arrested again. Something about a knife and his father overreacting and trying to get him out of the house forever. I take it in, am disappointed, and decide that at least the worst part of the day’s over.

2:07: I remember Co-Workerette’s travel difficulties in the past, so I ask her where this go-kart track is located. She tells me she has it covered. I want the address anyway. I look up our bus route at the DC Metro Area Transit’s website and make note of the bus number. I shoot an email to my roommate telling her I’ll be back earlier than usual so we can probably go see a 7:30 or 8:00 Spiderman 3.

3:07: Damn, the Reds lost again.

4:30: Our posted leave time. No one’s ready to go. Red wants to know what time we are getting back. “6:00… 6:30, at the latest,” Co-Workerette promises. I have been feeling narcoleptic all day, so I am thankful this will be quick and painless. Maybe I can even get in a nap before the movie.

4:55: I ask Soup if I can lock my laptop bag in his office while we go. He suggests I just take it with me because “we won’t be gone long, and you won’t have to come back in here to get it.” I agree, and lug the monstrosity over my shoulder.

5:03: Our actual leave time.

5:05: Most of the brood, followed by Soup and Co-Workerette, head for “the shortcut.” Remember those good times? I’m wearing platformish- yet-comfortable-sandals and decide I’m not making the jump. Predictably and hilariously, Red and Cupcake want no part of the jump either. We decide to walk around.

5:18: We reach the Metro station, and I notice that Soup and Co-Workerette are not with everyone else. Tyson says they walked back around instead of jumping. Co-Workerette then emerges from the bridge, sans Soup. She says Soup had to get to Philly, and it’s just us now. Lovely. I confirm the bus number with her, and then ask if she knows where we’re supposed to get off. Because this bus won’t drop us right off at the place. She doesn’t respond, and instead passes out fare for the kids.

5:21: We board the bus. I’m annoyed already.

5:23: My bud from Ohio calls me. We chat amiably and then I blithely tell her I’m just going on a quick trip to the go-kart track.

5:34: I ask Co-Workerette which road I should be watching for — she’s busy reading Cape Cod Living — so we know when to get off. She brushes me off again.

5:40: A woman in a wheelchair boards the bus, so we literally sit for 15 minutes while she gets properly “strapped in.” I listen to Bug complain in my ear the entire time.

5:57: We’re still stuck in Friday night gridlock going out to Maryland from DC. I ask Co-Workerette how far we have to walk once we get off. She tells me she doesn’t know exactly where we get off. I stare at her with suppressed rage. She repeats the address to me, and I suggest she go ask the bus driver about where to get off. I mentally slit my throat for not printing out a copy of the itinerary.

5:59: Co-Workerette returns from the front of the bus lacking any additional information as she had to start with. The brood is blissfully ignorant, as they should be. I warily watch for our destination road.

6:10: I inform Co-Workerette that we’re now on the same road as the go-kart track. She thinks we should wait to see if we’ll pass it. I tell her the route of the bus did not go past the tracks – it must be in the opposite direction. Sure enough, the numbers on the street signs are going the wrong way. We hastily pile off the bus.

6:12: The 8 of us stand on a curb in the middle of El Salvador, Maryland. I look around and immediately feel like this is the worst place we could possibly be. Shadiness aside, these kids have probably never seen an entirely Hispanic community and now was not the time for a diversity lesson. Glancing at the street sign above us, I tell Co-Workerette that the address of this place is at least 14 blocks in the other direction. But we’re not in the city anymore, so who knows how far a “block” is. It’s hot. It’s humid. There’s no way we can walk down this road — it even lacks a sidewalk. Someone complains about being thirsty. Someone else complains about not being there yet. Someone else complains about not liking go-karts in the first place. We’re with a bunch of teenagers on a road like Beechmont Avenue. Only I don’t know anything about THIS Beechmont Ave. Neither does she. And it seems to bother only one of us. I start mentally calculating the odds of my surviving the night. Right now it’s a very generous 5:1 shot.

6:13: I wait for Co-Workerette to say something indicative of one who is in charge and in control. Like someone responsible for the 6 minors standing next to us. She doesn’t. She thinks it’s amusing, our predicament. I concede the fact that there’s only one adult on this trip. Someone spots a 7-Eleven down the street.

6:15: We walk to the 7-Eleven and Tyson, in typical fashion, antagonizes the angry-looking group of Latino men loitering by the garbage dumpster. My current odds for surviving the night: 10:1.

6:17: Co-Workerette instructs everyone they may buy a “drink with a lid” so it can be taken on the bus. She then goes off to read the tabloids. Predictably, the brood starts buying slurpees, pizza, chicken wings, hot dogs, candy, and all types of other non-travel-friendly items. I call my roommate to tell her to do something without me tonight. I stand by the Big Gulp station and take deep cleansing breaths.

6:24: We, and by that, I mean “I”, finally get everyone outside the door. Tyson, mouth full of chicken, antagonizes the Latino men again. I mean, really, has the kid not heard of MS-13? My current odds for surviving the night: 50:1.

6:27: We seem to be at a standstill as far as action plans go, but anything is better than pissing off the locals, so without waiting for Co-Workerette to do something, I urge everyone to cross the street and get by the bus stop. I am thankful there’s only 6 of them and not 16.

6:29: I notice the bus stop is in front of a trifecta of seedy liquor stores. Lord.

6:31: Co-Workerette thinks we should just get on the next bus that comes by and “maybe we’ll find the go-karts.” I counter with logic — “isn’t that how we ended up here in the first place?” She ponders this for a beat. Meanwhile I remember that she apparently doesn’t consider “here” to be that bad, anyway. She wonders aloud if we should just go to the movies, instead. We were already supposed to be back by now. I resist the urge to kick the pole.

6:32: I check the bus schedule and note that one should be along in a few minutes. I suggest that we re-board the same bus we came here on and ride it back to our “home” Metro station. Go to the movies. Or go home. The brood seems to want to do that, anyway. Whatever. I don’t care at this point. Anything is better than getting even more lost than we already are. Or sticking around this area. She agrees. Not because it makes sense. She just wants to see Lucky You.

6:36: Some guy walks by with a paper bag-covered 40 and offers our group some. We all decline, except Bug. I decline for him. Said man eyes my laptop bag. I squirm. My current odds for surviving the night: 100:1.

6:39: The bus that was supposed to show up 7 minutes ago never does. Co-Workerette reads the schedule again and shrieks, “IT DOESN’T EVEN COME HERE!” I quickly inform her that yes, in fact, it does, all the while Bug flips out behind me. She counters by pointing out the stop’s non-existence on the printed schedule. I counter her counter with more logic — “It doesn’t list every stop. There’s not enough room on the paper.” Then I tell her to stop panicking in front of the kids because it will only upset them. She tells me I’m uptight.

6:42: Bug convinces himself and anyone within a 50 yard radius that a bus is never coming. Tyson drinks the rest of my Dr. Pepper. Red dances like someone’s filming a Snoop Dogg video over in front of the far liquor store. Cupcake huffs and sighs. Cupcake’s brother continues his uncanny Curious George impersonation. Pixel closes her eyes and leans on me.

6:47: Tyson makes up a new game to pass the time called “yell at all the cars that drive by.” My current odds for surviving the night: 250:1.

6:51: Cupcake and Red and Tyson and Cupcake’s brother start play-fighting. I get them to stop, but only after Tyson nearly gets shellacked by a Dodge Durango.

6:53: The locals start whistling at us from their semi-permanent fixtures next to the booze shops. My butt is sore.

6:58: Co-Workerette says, and I quote, “This is fun!”

7:01: I stand up and call the DC Metro 800 number on the side of the schedule. After touch-toning through 174 menu options, I am informed that the bus will be arriving at 7:08.

7:05: Co-Workerette, having noticed what I just did, deems me “proactive.”

7:06: Tyson’s game now centers on yelling at passengers pulling out of the liquor stores. My current odds for surviving the night: 500:1.

7:09: Co-Workerette blames me for the bus not showing up at 7:08.

7:20: Like a glimmering mirage, a bus appears in the distance. But it’s not our bus. The marquee indicates its eventual stop is another Metro station. A way-way-out-there Metro station, I notice, but then realize that we’re ALREADY way-way-out-there. Co-Workerette decides we should just go there and Metro back home. It’s late. She’ll give the kids movie money to go on their own which means my duties are blessedly through for the evening.

7:21: We board the bus and my tension begins draining away in waves. Sure, it’ll take us forever to get back from this Metro station, but I KNOW EXACTLY WHERE TO GO. Everyone will get their children back! And then I can just go home and sleep! Maybe even by 8! Ahhhh.

7:24: “LOOK! OVER THERE! THE GO-KART TRACKS!” someone yells. “QUICK, LET’S GET OFF!” Co-Workerette responds. “YOU’VE GOT TO BE SHITTING ME!” I don’t say. It’s not a stop, but the driver lets us off anyway. Smart man. I watch our only guaranteed ride back to civilization disappear into the decidedly un-romantic horizon. We walk through knee-high grass to the most kracker jack, piddly-looking track I’ve ever seen.

7:28: I wearily lower myself onto the measly pile of old bleachers. Co-Workerette is down buying their tickets. She gleefully interacts with the hoodlings while I worry about the small problem of getting the hell out of here. When the time finally comes. If ever. The setting sun and lack of bus stop provide quite the ambiance.

7:30: The hoodlings begin their completely unexciting trips around the track. No, really. Pixel is going to be the first person to ever fall asleep at the wheel of a go-kart. Red smiles and waves at me. I wish I could enjoy this. Co-Workerette comes up and sits by me. I casually, and by casually of course I mean with barely restrained acerbity, ask how we’d be getting back. She looks at me, and, I shit you not, says “ooooh, we’ll just go as the wind takes us.” My current odds for surviving the night: 1,000,000:1

7:35: Tyson crashes into Bug.

7:37: I have a Eureka! moment. I grab my laptop bag and pull out Old Faithful. Thanking myself for being too lazy to shut down my computer, I open it — the system is only sleeping — all of its whatevers still in tact. One of those whatevers is my Firefox browser. The one that I didn’t “X” out of. The one that still displays the page from the DC Metro website with the bus route directions. I pull it up. Willing my brain to operate, I reverse the directions in my head and find where our original bus departure point is. According to my calculations, a bus stop will materialize — down a block or two, over a block or two, down a block. However far blocks are in El Salvador.

7:39: Bug crashes into Tyson.

7:41: A random woman sits next to me and asks where we’re from. I resist saying we’re part of the Typewriter Maintenance Division of the Rocko Club School For Women.

7:43: Bug and Tyson crash into each other. I wonder when go-karts became bumper cars.

7:44: Literally 14 minutes after it began, the actual go-karting is over. The sun is almost completely set. Knowing the buses aren’t exactly plentiful this late in the evening, I attempt to hustle the hoodlings from the track. Co-Workerette encourages them to stop at the vending machines.

7:46: Exactly half the group thinks [go-karting] was “really stupid.”

7:47: Co-Workerette walks over to me and admits she doesn’t know how to get us home. I have no words.

7:48: I find the words. They sound a lot more sarcastic in my head. “I was able to pull up the route on my computer blah blah blah just walk this way.” She responds — “They have the Internet out here?”

7:50: We trek at an impossibly slow pace back through the knee-high grass along the side of a poorly-lit road.

7:56: We manage to cross half the busy road and wait on the island in the middle to cross the second part. Tyson stands down on the road and actually moves closer to the semi truck currently barreling towards us at what has to be more than 60 mph. He proceeds to taunt the truck and yell at it after it passes by. I lose my patience and ream him for being a total moron. He rationalizes being able to sue the truck driver if he got hit. I tell him that would be difficult with his body parts all over the road.

7:59: Instead of walking past the dimly-lit-imitation-for-a-one-pump-gas-station like normal people, Tyson and Cupcake’s brother decide to walk through it and yell at the people working there to “go back to their own country.” My current odds for surviving the night: 5,000,000:1

8:03: After a few minutes, we miraculously find the bus stop, thanks to the 30 pound bag I’ve been lugging around all night. I am about ready to weep of happiness when Bug complains that he has to pee. This is Bug. He’s the biggest drama queen in 6 states. I tell him to hold it. Co-Workerette overrules me. “BUT HE HAS TO GO!” Great. I point to a bush. She looks at me like I just gestured at a bomb and says we’ll all have to go back to the (different) 7-Eleven we passed five minutes ago. I remind her that at this time of night and this far out, there’s probably one bus an hour — if that. She ignores me and starts walking everyone back down the street.

8:09: I am beginning to hate 7-Elevens.

8:10: The jolly cashier “can’t seem to find” the bathroom key. Bug is prancing around the store in a full-bladder, Oscar-winning performance. He and Tyson go outside. Everyone else – wait for it… wait for it — starts lining up to buy chicken wings, pizza, slurpees, and whatever else. I wonder if our fickle ticket to civilization has passed by yet. No, I really hate 7-Elevens. My current odds for surviving the night: 1,000,000,000,000:1

8:11: I realize I have a better chance of winning the lottery than surviving this trip. I consider playing the Maryland Powerball.

8:12: I venture outside where a couple cops are milling around. I consider the poetic nature of Bug and Tyson getting arrested for indecent exposure and peeing on a public bush to top off my night.

8:21: Bladders drained and empty carbohydrates purchased, everyone congregates outside and eventually we all start walking back up the road. I wish I had a flashlight.

8:27: The bus stop is on a residential road. Whoever’s front yard we’re all standing in comes outside and glowers at us. I don’t bother looking at the bus schedule.

8:36: Mercifully, miraculously, and other words that begin with M, a bus picks us up. The correct bus. It has gas and everything. We’ll get back to the station much faster this time around. I slide bonelessly into a seat and count to 30.

8:39: We get stuck behind a train crossing. In the 8 minutes it takes for the blasted thing to fully pass by, I think about how I didn’t learn my lesson from Toby about tempting fate.

8:52: We arrive back at our neighborhood Metro station, and no one wants to take another bus back to the complex. We start walking. Normally one may be fooled into complacency by the familiar surroundings. Especially after being lost half the night. But it’s dark and it’s the hood and being adult enough for two at the moment, I know — My current odds for surviving the night: 20:1.

8:55: We try the reverse shortcut but a train is sitting on the tracks. My 30 pound bag and I hop a fence and clamber down an inclined side of a bridge overpass. Over rocks and broken bottles and dirty needles and… yeah. In sandals. Somehow.

8:59: By now the brood is all scattered, but I don’t care. They probably don’t want to go inside yet anyway. We approach the dark and scary alley that passes for our route back. I pull out my pepper spray keychain. Co-Workerette is confused. I don’t bother explaining. I resist spraying her.

9:07: We finally enter the parking lot. It’s still a long way up to our section. But I have never been so happy to see this dump. My current odds for surviving the night: Even.

9:10: After listening to Co-Workerette talk the last few minutes about how she’s “never felt unsafe” around here, I quash the urge to kick her in the face. I bid her a polite goodnight and get in my car. My sweet, sweet beloved car. Of which I am in total control. On my own. Just me.

9:37: I repeat the above story to mom via speakerphone on my drive home. I don’t even get to 7:30 before I’m on my street. Finished dealing with what was probably 20 adults-worth of pressure and anxiety in my system, I have a total adrenaline meltdown. I turn the car around and go to Wendy’s. I decide I need bacon. And fast.

I never did get to see Spiderman 3.

Odds are it sucked anyway.

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The sign on the front door says “Program Closed Until June 25.”

The sign on the front door should have a parenthetical “That Means You Can’t Come In Here.”

But I’m just a softie. So no matter.

I was gone last week and a bit of this, conducting the reading post-assessments at all the program sites around town. Almost as fun as the first time around. Um. But now I’m back and we only have a couple weeks to plan everything for summer camp. More about that later.

With Co-Workerette gone and ne’er a replacement in sight, all of that leftover work goes — yup — right to me. So very quickly I’ve found myself calling and e-mailing various bus services and field trip contacts and parents and an entire laundry lists of people I’ve never once spoken to, but suddenly must. It’s been interesting to say the least.

But this particular day, I finished all my tasks and wasn’t feeling especially proactive. Soup was gone at some meeting, so I couldn’t exactly call and ask him for something else to do.

So I started messing around on Craigslist, looking for apartments closer to Georgetown to move into at the end of the summer. Let’s be real here — there’s nothing more mentally engrossing than browsing the most outrageously priced rental housing in the universe. But I could have sworn my spidey sense detected movement in the outer office.

That’s not exactly a comforting thought in these parts, so I dragged my eyes away from the screen and peered past my open door. There, above the outer office windows, was the top of a ‘fro bouncing by. I couldn’t think of anyone who had that hair, but the height of the body was unmistakable. I resisted the urge to roll my eyes, and didn’t even want to consider how he managed to get inside. The doors were locked, for pete’s sake.

“[BUG]!”

The ‘fro stopped bouncing, and a few seconds later, a grinning-but-not-nearly-chagrined Bug stood in the doorway looking thoroughly pleased with himself.

“What are you doing here?”

He shrugged.

“Do we need to break out the practice reading, or did you not see the sign?”

He shrugged again, but the grin morphed to a smirk.

I just shook my head and went back to my screen. He took that as an invitation to stay and wandered around the room, randomly picking up and putting down various mundane office equipment.

“Are you coming to summer camp,” I asked, putting my hand out in silent demand that he stop shooting staples like a gun and hand the thing back over.

“I’on’t know,” he replied, giving it back without complaint.

“You took your hair out.”

“I gettin’ it done up tomorrow.”

He moved behind me and hopped up on the seat-like windowsill, apparently intent on hanging around.

“Watcha doin?”

“Grownup stuff.”

“Wassat?”

“Looking for apartments.”

“Why?”

“I need to move before school starts.”

He must have started swinging his legs, because there was a telltale thump-thump of feet against the wall every half second.

“So you ain’t gonna be here next year?”

“Nope, I’m going to grad school.”

“Oh.”

It was an uncharacteristically short response, and I figured he was probably thinking about how it seemed like everyone was leaving them lately.

“Yeah, but I can still come back and visit,” I added.

“Where you goin?”

“Georgetown, so I’ll still be in DC.”

He didn’t answer right away, so I looked over my shoulder. He was regarding me with a strange expression. Like a mixture of wonder and horror.

“Aint that where we ate lunch that one time?”

“That’s the place.”

“Where you lookin to be?”

“I’m trying to find a place near school.”

He hopped down, suddenly even more animated than usual.

“You could live here!”

“Oh yeah?”

I smiled sadly as he rambled on about my bus route to school.

“Yeah! It ain’t be far, cuz, uh, you could jus’ take the G8 and change to the uh, the P30 and change to the G2 and I think it go somewhere over there so you be like right there!”

He was so serious, so adamant, so excited at the prospect of me moving into his building. And so blissfully unaware of how the world works. I gave it the proper hemming and hawing before politely declining.

“Thanks for the offer, but I think I want to be within walking distance.”

“Oh. Well thas’ aight. But you visit us, right?”

“Sometime, sure.”

“Good,” he smiled, and hopped back onto the windowsill.

I didn’t get much done after that. My heart ached a little bit.

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Flashback to April.

I was sitting in what passed for my “office” — the one between Soup’s and Co-Workerette’s. I’d only meant to hang out there temporarily among the empty boxes and bare bulletin boards until Co-Worker’s replacement came. It never did.

So, I was in there (still among the boxes and probably working on the ill-fated website), half-listening to Co-Workerette and Soup have a conversation about summer camp over the distance between their offices.

“I found a bus service that’s way cheaper than the others!” Co-Workerette called.

“We can’t go over budget,” Soup answered.

“This is the best deal in town,” Co-Workerette called back. “This guy has all his own buses and runs the service.”

And I thought, Hmmmm….good of her to find us a deal on transportation. Because lord knows we have the worst kind of funding shortage. But I hope that all of our field trips are close by so that the 28 year old cheese bus donated from the Cape May, New Jersey City School District won’t be in the middle of nowhere when it breaks down with 40 kids on it.

And then I thought, nooo! You rueful, rueful girl. What happened to that eternal optimism? Those old cheese buses will be GREAT. And functional.

Flash forward to yesterday.

I was sitting in the second seat from the front of said cheese bus and no longer engrossed in my 47th reading of Slaughterhouse-Five because we’d pulled off onto the shoulder of I-95 due to the thick, white plumes of smoke billowing from the engine.

And I thought, hmmmm. My life has sure gotten predictable.

I’m one of those people who always whips out the cell phone when I get easily amused. Which is a lot. I guess because I’m so far from my family and friends. It’s always, Hey, guess what?

Hey, guess what? I saw a Two-Star and a guy wearing a Peace Train shirt have a stare-down on the Metro.

Hey, guess what? I’m in the liquor store — on a SUNDAY!

Hey, guess what? I’m stuck behind 10,000 Indians decked out in sari protesting arranged marriage. They’re all crossing the street at once.

You wouldn’t believe the restraint it took not to call home and say:

Hey, guess what? The cheese bus is smoking on the side of an 8 lane highway and ready to explode — and we’re all still sitting on it.

But sometime during the course of the year I’ve adopted this Jedi-like countenance of calm. So it really wasn’t that hard to just shrug and smile and wait the 45 long minutes for another cheese bus to pick us up.

It wasn’t exactly an auspicious beginning to our Big Friday Field Trip, but at least things at camp had gotten better. The past week was hard, but not excruciating. The weekly schedule is something like this:

Mondays — an all-day “outdoors” field trip through Georgetown Outdoor Adventures
Tuesdays/Thursdays — workshop days. The camp is divided into four groups who rotate through four workshops like a school day. Art, Drama, Music, and Artist Development. By the end they’ll each (group) have made their own digital documentary using still pictures and video from camp.
Wednesdays — team building and “gardening” in the morning; swimming in the afternoon
Fridays — big field trip

This week we finally had typical M/W/F. Except for W because it was a holiday. But, Monday we went rock climbing (!) at Great Falls National Park, and that was just as amusing as you’d think. Maybe I’ll put that entry on my Special Deleted Scenes Edition.

The workshops have been fine so far; of course it almost feels like school for them so we have some feet-dragging. But the art and drama contractors are both very good. And the kids always love going to the music studio. It’s that “artist development” one that has the issues. Mostly because it’s supposed to be New Guy’s class, but he’s all freaking out over having to keep 10 kids engaged for 45 minutes. So it’s turned into me pulling graphic design lessons out of my butt at the last minute and trying to make them all Photoshop experts. Unfortunately he’s still in shell-shocked mode. Last week he made the unfortunate rookie error of trying to be “cool” and “one of them” and not establishing those boundaries — and now no one respects him and he gets walked all over. I’ve been trying to help him, though. It’s just not the ideal environment for first-time interaction with teenagers.

But anyway. Back to the trip.

Co-Workerette planned all of our summer outings before she left. When I saw that the second week was a semi-close jaunt up the road to Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, I thought it was a great idea. I’d been there several times before and remembered there being a lot of things to do and be exposed to. There’s also a huge variety of entertainment so I figured the kids would be able to really be in control of doing what they wanted. Yay!

No. Slight problem.

After spending money on the exploding bus, we didn’t have anything left for entertainment. Not even for lunch. Or a damn ice cream cone. Soup stressed that we “got them there — anything that anyone wanted to do once we were there was up to them.”

I guess it never occurred to me until after getting there that absolutely everything fun to do up there costs money. Now, I can be easily amused by sitting on a bench and staring at the pretty water for three hours. I really could. But try being around a teenager these days. The attention span is even worse than in “my day” … so yeah, it’s bad.

I made myself think back to the times I’d been there, and the fun things I’d done: ate at a great seafood joint, played a million silly games at the ESPN Zone, ate at a great seafood joint, gone to the famed Baltimore Aquarium, ate at a great seafood joint, went to Camden Yards to watch the Orioles, ate at Hard Rock Cafe, watched the singing and dancing fudge makers and subsequently caved in and bought some, ate a huge, sprinkle-laden ice cream cone, walked aboard one of those docked ships that turned into a pirate thing, ate at a great seafood joint, bought a few things at the Gap, ate at a great seafood joint…

Yes. Come to think of it, the only thing that was completely free of charge was walking with my dad to Edgar Allen Poe’s grave. But that’s not exactly in the Inner Harbor. I’m sure TONS of my peeps want to see that!!

Errr.

I tried my best. The four adults were each “responsible” for a fourth of the clan. Thankfully about ten people couldn’t make the trip so the numbers were more manageable. Half of my group immediately ditched me. They were all new people and I could hardly remember their names. But they knew where to meet — five hours later — if they didn’t want to get stranded in Baltimore.

The remaining four girls all stared at me. I knew one of them from throughout the year, but the rest were summer-only types. They also didn’t talk. It was bizarre. I’m just used to being around people like Tyson and Red and Bug who talk my ear off in regards to what they want to do. So I immediately steered them towards one of the indoor malls.

By this time, it was fast approaching lunch, and the food court we passed was packed. The one girl I knew decided she was hungry, so she got in line at a Sbarro-like Italian place. Another girl followed her. The other two just sort of stared at me.

“Are you guys getting lunch?”

They looked at each other and shrugged.

“Are you not hungry?”

“Yeah, I am,” one mumbled.

Crrrrap. I immediately figured out what was wrong.

“Do you not have money?”

One shook her head and the other just stared at the ground.

So, let’s see. I could either just let them starve for the next five hours (“They can buy their own lunch” -Soup) or I could find an ATM and get out some of those imaginary AmeriCorps funds and buy these kids some damned pizza. Not a hard decision.

The rest of the day was no better. It was a typical hot, humid afternoon. The sun glared off the harbor and the air was as suffocating as the crowds. My quasi-mute peeps were hot, thirsty, tired, and probably a lot dejected.

Here’s a summary of what we saw throughout our fun day: lots of people having a great time shopping to their heart’s content in the many indoor malls, lots of people having a great time in the dragon-shaped pedal boats on the harbor, lots of people having a great time coming in and out of the aquarium, lots of people having a great time enjoying their cold, delicious custard cones, lots of people having a great time buying a ton of the fudge they just sampled, lots of people having a great time picking out and getting their fake tattoos, lots of people having a great time waving their tickets about and boarding the cool pirate ship, lots of people having a great time buying a litany of crab-related paraphernalia, lots of people having a great time sipping frothy, fresh-brewed root beer from frozen mugs, and finally, lots of people having a great time doing lots of fun and great things that required a credit card… in general.

And the fact that three of them barely talked just made it even harder. I kept suggesting new places we could go, and they’d shrug and dutifully follow along. Thankfully, I got the better-late-than-never idea of hitting up Barnes and Noble for the last 90 or so minutes. They were effortlessly and endlessly entertained by the free music samples, and I could finally relax a little.

But overall, it was a five hour exercise in being a “Have Not” in America. I don’t want to make it sound like these kids are walking around like Oliver Twist in rags and bare feet. I’m sure some of the kids in other groups did bring money with them and were able to do more. For these four, though, it was just depressing.

It was very unlike our trip to the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum the previous Friday. Sure, a lot of them were bored. But aside from the gift shop, they had just as much access to everything the place offered as the group of kids from St. Barnabus Preparatory Academy for Effete Snotballs. Here? Not the case.

But it just wasn’t very much fun. Unless you think wafting a steak in front of your dog’s nose and then putting it back on the table and eating it yourself is a good time.

I want them to try a real Maryland crabcake or just experience some food that’s not from a Curryout. I want them to be able to ride in one of those ridiculous duck-shaped water taxis like all the other tourists. I want them to have a damn bus that doesn’t practically explode on the way up. They already get the crappiest teachers in the crappiest schools when they’re not living in the crappiest apartments. I want them to have the opportunity to escape it now and then. We try to provide something meaningful, but we can only half-ass it. We’re always on the cusp of something born of good intentions but can rarely fully achieve it. The nature of a program like this is having everything all but out of reach. Just once, I’d like these kids to get the best.

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When I was seven, and visiting my grandparents in New Jersey, my mom gave me an assignment.

“Go see what the weather’s going to be for the picnic on Saturday.”

I flipped through a few channels until I landed on something so unbelievable… it changed my life. It was amazing. It was incredible. It was THE WEATHER CHANNEL.

I think it’s because I liked maps. And cities. And geography. Mostly maps. But it became a thing. When we got back to Ohio, all the sudden it was– “LOOK, Mommy! We have the Weather Channel TOO!(!!!)”

The next order of business was writing a letter to Jim Cantore (I think it was in purple marker, if I remember. And this was before he was all famous and chasing hurricanes and whatever. Pfft.) and blasting him for not having Cincinnati on the business travelers forecast. Ten bucks says it was on the mailroom bulletin board for months due to extreme hilarity. I received a very serious and professional letter in return saying they were “considering it” and thanking me for my inquiry. Whoever wrote that and kept a straight face deserved a gold star.

I wanted to be a meteorologist so badly. I was gonna be the cool one who predicted all the severe weather from the underground bunker thing. Not the local news weathergirl who got dolled up and handed wire copy. Nope. According to the back of one of my umpteen weather books, I’d answered enough questions correctly to cut out the cardboard certificate and be an OFFICIAL JUNIOR METEOROLOGIST. Beat that with a barometer!

So, my career plans were set.

Until I got to high school. And realized that such endeavors require some serious math skillz. So… goodbye, dreams.

But, as the famous saying goes, you can take the girl from the cumulonimbus mamatus clouds, but you can’t take the cumulonimbus mamatus clouds from the girl. Or, as in the case yesterday, you can’t take away her OFFICIAL JUNIOR METEOROLOGIST card, even… you know, decade(s) later.

I promise there’s a point to all this self-reflection. See, we’re supposed to go to “the pool” on Wednesdays. We haven’t yet, because last week was a holiday and the week before we didn’t have enough staff. Because it’s not as simple as walking outside and being at the pool. This is a huge production.

First we have to split them into two groups so we’re not all on the same bus. Despite the fact there’s only one bus an hour at midday so we’d all end up cramming on anyway. Whatever. Then two of the staff march one group down to the Metro station where the bus stop is. Then two other staff bring the second group. Then we get a bus to this neighborhood a few miles away. Then we pile off the bus and walk 20-25 minutes to this DC rec pool. Then we spend yea amount of minutes cajoling them to shed their layers of denim and get in the water, all the while hoping no one else in DC wants to swim today because it isn’t exactly considerate showing up with 40 kids all at once when the legal capacity probably isn’t much more than that. Then we drag them out an hour later (assuming no one drowns) and cajole them to re-dress a bit more efficiently so that maybe we can get home before dark. Then we walk 20-25 minutes back to the bus stop, wait for the bus, ride back to our Metro stop, and walk alllllll the way back to the Center.

It’ll all be worth it, because most of them love going to the pool. They’ve been begging for two weeks. And there’s not one around here for them to use. But it’s also all OUTSIDE. The walking, walking, swimming, walking, and walking.

And today, I knew. It was going to rain. Not just rain — we’re talking big, booming, classic summer storms.

Around mid-morning, while Soup and I were waiting for the “gardening” and “team building” groups to switch, I told him that maybe we should think about staying in and watching movies this afternoon because it was going to rain. He said he heard something about that too, but that “it’s so sunny, we should still go.”

What a lot of people don’t understand is that sunshine and humidity are like the… flour and water and yeast for the bread called thunderstorms. So they’re all, “I don’t understand where this storm came from — it was so SUNNY out before!” That’s like saying, “I don’t understand why my car will move now — I only just FILLED IT WITH GAS!”

An hour later, while everyone was eating lunch and Soup was trying to divide the groups up, I tried again.

“Look,” I said, “I know everyone wants to swim, but it’s going to rain. A LOT. Maybe not right now, but probably when we’re out there walking. The storms are going to be bad. We should just stay in.”

“It looks nice out to me,” he said.

I gave up. I also found a small plastic bag from the kitchen and put my cell phone, wallet, and keys in it. Then I took a bigger one and put my notebook in it. I put them all in my little Nike bag along with an umbrella. At least my electronics and important things would be spared the water.

30 minutes later we were off and walking. I didn’t really notice the sky on the trek down to the station because of a 4 foot tall distraction.

That 10-year-old I mentioned a few entries ago is still here. I’m not entirely sure why, but it’s not up to me to decide. But he’s pretty well annoyed everyone to death. It’s a sad situation, though, because the whole thing is unfair to him. He can’t fully participate in activities designed for adolescents, and in turn gets mercilessly teased by the older boys. It’s equally as hard on him as on the staff.

He’d been pissy with me for the last couple days after I kicked him out of Photoshop class, so I was surprised when he tagged along next to me on our walk. He talked my ear off, jabbering about pools and kayaks and rocks and the Fantastic Four. We’d just turned a corner and were walking down a (scary) alley typical of the area, and he moved closer to me, delivering what could be the quote of the summer.

In a pre-pubescent squeak, he piped up, “Hey, we in the ‘hood. Don’t worry, I’ll protect you.”

After my involuntary snort/choke, I managed to ground out a, “Thanks, I appreciate it.”

It was particularly endearing considering he can’t even protect himself from the likes of… well, forget Tyson. He can’t even handle Bug. Or manage to not get lost in the Air & Space Museum. There’s an interesting psychological angle here that, not to worry, I won’t make anyone read. But anyway, he was completely serious. I patted his head in an affectionate and non-patronizing way.

Protection in place, we made it to the bus stop. About 5 minutes later, the second group straggled up the bridge. According to the schedule, the bus wasn’t due to arrive for another 20 minutes. So we waited. I noticed some ominous looking clouds rolling in.

“Ah… [Soup]?” I said. “I think we should go back.”

“It does kind of look like rain, now…” he squinted upwards.

“No, I mean we should start walking back NOW.”

“Let’s just wait a little longer and see if it rains.”

Five minutes later, the first, fat drops started.

He cursed to himself before announcing, “Alright, everybody, we’re going back!”

I have never had the misfortune of being caught in such a horrible rainstorm. My cheap umbrella snapped after 10 seconds. This was the kind of torrential rain that you see on TV during hurricanes. No, better yet — it was exactly like the monsoonesque rain at the end of The Shawshank Redemption when Andy is all MWAAAAAH OUT OF THE POOP DRAAAAAIN.

For the entire. walk. back. Which is 15 minutes on a good day.

No letting up. Buckets upon buckets. Upon buckets. There’s a section of our route that’s on a bit of a hill. I literally had to hold onto the parked car next to me so the raging torrent of water careening down from above didn’t sweep me away. I tried to keep track of kids around me, but it became too difficult to distinguish anything as more than blurry blobs of denim.

Everyone was scattered and seemed to be arriving back in waves. Hah. Great pun. Uh. There’s not exactly a strategic plan in place for this type of crisis. So since the front door was broken (again), I stayed by the cafeteria door and directed the waterlogged hoodlings where to enter. After that? Just about as miserable and confusing as you can probably imagine.

On a typical day, the “entire camp” is only in the Center all at once first thing in the morning. We simply don’t have enough room. And if we truly utilized what room we DO have, there’s not enough supervision to cover all the space. But when everyone’s inside, it’s a tight squeeze, and certainly not conducive to doing anything other than meetings and “gatherings” of that sort.

This is all by way of saying that 40 people, all utterly soaked to the bone and stuck inside was about as far from the ideal situation as Philip Morris at a Lung Lover’s Convention. Normally we’d open up the music studio and allow those who want to work on those projects head over to the other building. But between the weather and the wet bodies, that wasn’t possible. Which meant EVERYONE would be stuck in here “watching a movie.”

Yeah, that really worked. They were all so comfortable, right — either in their wet clothes, freezing in our 40 degree air conditioned back room, or stripped down to their swimsuits, freezing in our 40 degree air conditioned back room.

We left New Guy to try his best at “supervising” the “movie watching,” but judging from the noise coming from that room, there probably wasn’t a lot of sitting and staring going on. Soup went off to try and commandeer some dryers from the nearby complex laundry facility.

I delegated myself to herding the stragglers back to where they were supposed to be, trying not to groan at the tshirts dripping on various electronic equipment. Or the cataclysmic “THUD” and shouting coming from the back room. Or… yeah. After running interference for an hour or so, I re-delegated myself to the kitchen/cafeteria/room, attempting to rid the floor of its flood by slowly shuffling my feet around on a couple dish towels. Yeah, dish towels. It was all I could find. So of course it was anything but a fruitless endeavor. Not.

I’d just noticed that my own soaked jeans were starting to give me something akin to diaper rash when my AmeriCorps program adviser suddenly materialized in the open doorway.

“Just dropped by to see if you’re still alive,” she said, probably 90% serious.

You wouldn’t think nuns are that funny, but she’s a trip.

“Yes… I’m alive… just… you know, wet.”

She just nodded sympathetically and watched me do more towel skating around the room while we chatted about the delights of understaffing. I’ve gotten the feeling from talking to her that none of her visits to the other people in our program are anything like her trips to see me.

There was some not quite atypical shouting and banging coming from a few rooms over, and she took a long glance at the open door before turning back to me with an incredulous look.

I just shrugged, as if to say, you know by now. That’s how we roll around here.

Yup. It may look like you picked the worst possible day to show up. It may appear that we’re dealing with a few issues. Let’s see… we have a back room brandishing two holes in the wall suspiciously shaped like teenaged bodies; bored, inadequately supervised kids cavorting around in various states of undress; six dozen items of sopping clothing splayed about and dripping down every available surface (and some unavailable ones); six dozen more items of clothing mixed up and stuffed into several of the complex’s not-so-drying dryers; a cafeteria floor that’s transformed into a slippery, aquatic lawsuit; several seemingly apocalyptic crises involving waterlogged cell phones; and a youth center that smelled like the world’s biggest wet dog.

But it’s all good. We finally got to go swimming. More or less.

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