There was a woman taking a nap on the granite bench that curves along the river walk running through downtown Providence. She had on several layers of clothing despite the warm August sun, and used her backpack as a pillow. I stood photographing city architecture from my place nearby. She must have heard the click of the camera's shutter .
"No pictures of me," she said sitting up to swing her legs up on the bench in the opposite direction.
"No, I wouldn't. I won't," I assured her. Then I asked, "Do people take your picture?"
Truly, I'd thought briefly of doing so--a photo journalistic impulse, a poignant documentation of the sadder, sorrier side of life. In honesty, I might have taken a picture had I been using my zoom lens from farther away where she might not have noticed me. I've been tempted at other times, with other homeless folk, although something always holds me back from what feels like a blatant invasion of privacy.
"Lot's of people do," she said, and then angry words delivered in a measured tone, "I tell them they better stop, or I'll grab their God damned camera, and I'll . . .
She was already lying down again with her back to the river and me. Her words became indecipherable
"Oh, well, they deserve that," I said lamely as I walked away. I'd deserve that, I suppose, had I given in to impulse.
And I left her lying there beside a bridge with Rhode Island's symbolic brass anchor--HOPE--shining in the summer sun for all who walk beside the river to see.
But not for all to feel. Some people see the flip side of hope.
~~~~~
Hope is the thing with feathers, that perches in the soul, and sings the tune without words, and never stops at all. ~Emily Dickinson
Comments
I always get excited when I see that you have a new posting on Upstream and Down. Brilliant photographs, nearly always of things that I probably wouldn't have noticed, but I'm glad to see and discover through your eyes. The reverse side of hope ...
And your words to describe your observations!
Was it Jesus who said something like "The poor are always with us ..."?
The homeless need not be poor, from my experience. In fact, they need not be homeless. Or hungry or unclothed or unhappy or hopeless. It may be the viewer who feels all of this, draws conclusions.
Yes, one might live rough ... but that is only compared to the most of us who might live too well.
Joni Mitchell: "Jesus was a beggar, though he was rich in grace. And Solomon kept his head in all his glory. It's just that some steps outside the Boho Dance have a certain fascination for me ..."
However ... Comes the winter. The reverse side of summer, if you will. It is in the winter that we should, perhaps, give all that we have to the poor and follow that rich and graceful beggar.
R.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/09/opinion/09ehrenreich.html?em
What we do to the least of us...
Barry
You have the gift of giving us a slice of life in a way that reaches into the depths of our being and makes us ponder.
Ruth, you are a treasure, and I'm so glad I found you so many months ago.
Love and Hugs
Wanda
Wendy