Monday, August 3, 2020
Tuesday on 16th Street
Tuesday on 16th Street I went back to downtown Denver after work today, back to the center of the city where I was born. I felt the calling. Actually, I also needed to exchange last yearâs light-rail tickets for current ones because in my family we are cheap af. It is summertime in Denver. The ever-present taco man spins his advertisement sign on Stout street, the same place I used to see him when I made solitary adventures downtown on Fridays in high school. I take the free bus down to the other end of 16th Street Mall, and exchange my tickets. A man says something to meâwhat?âthe second time around I think it might have been a catcall so I walk quickly to the ticket window. I give people the benefit of the doubt, but Im not stupid either. After exchanging my tickets I decide to hang out around the city so I go get a smoothie. These women in sundresses order âwheatgrass shotsâ. It looks like two ounces of dandelion puree. I walk. I think about the boy I met earlier this week, at the light-rail station. I was wearing a sort-of suit because it was the first day of my internship. âHey, how old are you?â âDepends on whoâs asking.â âIâm asking!â âWell, whatâs your name?â We talked for a while. He said heâs from Texas and heâs really excited to go to Metro State (a local community college) in the fall, took a gap year after high school when his family moved here. Asked me for my number too, I didnât give it to him. We talked some more, laughed at the weed culture in Colorado. I said I thought stoners were boring. He said, âyeah, I donât do a lot but just once in a while you know?â He seemed so innocent, even though weâre the same age. A friendly young black kid. Still wide-eyed about the world, I thought. Smoking and tattoos donât make you grow up any more than wearing a suit does. That was a week ago. Today, I walk towards the Denver Pavilions. As Iâm walking another young black man starts walking by my side. âHi, how are you doing?â âIâm doing well, how are you?â He sticks out his hand, we introduce ourselves. âWhere you from?â âFrom here, how about you?â âIâm out from vegas.â âOh, are you visiting?â âNah, I got a house out here now. Dang, that makes me feel old, Iâm only 21! How old are you?â â19.â âYou taken?â I hesitate for milliseconds, and say âyesâ although I am not. He wishes me a good day and departs. I am taken after allbetrothed to my textbooks until I graduate. But mostly, Iâm just eager to go read, up at the top of the Pavilions. I have always liked talking to strangers, although weâre cautioned against that as children. Itâs important not to be stupid of courseI donât talk to anybody who makes cat calls, and I donât usually give out my personal information. I donât even mind when itâs clear that some of the menâs motives are mostly romantic (Iâll say that instead of something else), as long as they are respectful. Itâs interesting enough to say hi, to hear about someone who you otherwise would never have noticed. Itâs surprising, what youâll find, and what youâll hear. Iâve talked to plenty of random people: ladies on the train who just want to complain about their day to someone, longboarders heading toward the hilly streets, that one guy who asked if I had an earring back he could borrow (heâd lost hisI felt his pain but sadly had no extras. Itâs disappointing when you canât look as fly as you want to). I go up to the pavilions, and I go all the way to the top. Thereâs a lovely view of the evening commotions. Itâs only a Tuesday, but itâs summertime, and people are having dinner, taking walks, shopping, living life. I got a small snack from 7-11, and opened up my book. I read for a long time. Itâs pleasant, under the fairie lights that overhang the cafes, and as close as to the grey sky as I can easily (and legally) get. I read a book by (hopefully) my future professor, who writes about cheating, the ghetto, the papi chulos, them girls with âfly tetasâ, pendejassome things I know nothing about, but a lot of things that I do. He writes about Dominican culture, but above all, about love and people. I like his writing a lot, although his books invoke a strange feeling of melancholy grit. Like being determined to keep going, even when everything is falling apart, and youre not really sure where youre going in the first place. I must look either homeless or (because Iâm still wearing sort of decent clothes from work) like a crazy hipster chick, sitting on a bench outside of the movie theater, eating a cheap snack and drinking a smoothie and reading. Whatever, because Denver is still Denver. I have always felt this city to be my Motherland, welcoming back her prodigal daughter whenever I felt trapped in the suffocating suburbs we moved to for the school districts, where there was little culture, no people, and even the damn trees were âregulatedâ. What cynicist thought up the idea of an HOA? In Denver, some people keep sheep or chickens in their backyards, right there in the city, houses next to the bus stop and everything. The only thing good about the âburbs was the safety and the preserved wilderness. After moving there, I worried sometimes that (as written in my book) my âghetto pass was revokedâ. Only certain people can understand the strange logic behind this struggle. It rains. Iâm in a cafe, writing this. It rains, but itâs that sort of silly Colorado rain, dripping dew drops while the sun is still full out, like âdonât worry, Iâm still here. I meet yet another person today as I write thisa girl. It begins (like many conversations I have) because she asks if I am mixed. We get to talking and I tell her a bit about my two cultures, and about college. Denver is soft. Denver, on a Tuesday, heals me. Denver reminds me that life doesnât have to be rushed, or particularly unpleasant, or full of worryit can just be. More ladies in sundresses walk along the pedestrian row, the âurban campersâ cluster under the storefronts of kindly managers with their dogs and giant packs. People are smiling. I am content for the first time in a long time. Not exhilarated, not ecstatic, not depressed, not furious, not worried, not busy, not bored. Just content, to sit here and watch all the life happen all around me. The middle path. Itâs getting late, and the rain has stopped. I should go home.
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