Dystopian Portrait
Photoshop Manipulation by The Real Cie
Utopia was
Only ever a sad lie
Flawless fallacy
Pretty cars, pretty people
Not a place for those like me
~Cie~
Notes:
Today I found a couple of great prompts and flipped them upside down.
The Carpe Diem Weekend Meditation prompt asks us to examine the concept of utopia in a Haiku or Tanka. Mine is more a Senryu than a Haiku. I do not question the existence of Utopia, but I postulate that it is more like Metropolis. It exists for a very small percentage of people. Most people are on the outside looking in, and some are completely crushed beneath the boots of the beautiful and careless dwellers of Utopia.
So, what portrait did I paint?
That of one of the people crushed beneath unrealistic expectations of beauty and brilliance and casually cast aside, not worthy of any sort of rescue because they do not adhere to society's standards of prettiness.
The person in the portrait is me. I chose it because I was sitting at a rather dismal-looking bus stop on the day of the 2017 Women's March. I would learn that day that not only had my health deteriorated more than I previously realized, but people are utterly self-absorbed, even the ones who claim to be "progressive" in their approach.
I managed to get through the entire march, which is a miracle in itself considering that I almost stopped several times along the way because I was becoming weak, but I had also become confused enough that I was afraid I wouldn't be able to find my way back to the bus stop.
When the bus stopped, everyone else shoved on board and the bus driver told me he wouldn't be able to take me. I said I understood, and I understood his position, but I kind of thought all those other people were assholes. I started feeling that wouldn't have happened to me if I was young and pretty.
I was ravenously hungry. I had a Snickers bar, but I was trying to conserve it for "the right moment." With a lifetime living with ED (stands for Eating Disorder), I had learned to deny myself food up until things became critical. They were critical, but not critical enough.
I got on the next bus about a half hour later and had to stand. I was wobbling all over and my eyes were rolling back in my head. Exactly nobody gave any fucks. In fact, one spectacular dudebro about my age chortled and said: "I had to stand all the way there, now it's your turn."
Despite the fact that my eyes were glazed over, I managed a withering glare and said in a steely if somewhat shaky voice: "Buddy, I had to stand the whole way there too. Don't even try to pull that crap on me!"
He turned away and noticed a confused-looking young woman holding a bus schedule. He grinned and invited her to sit down in his seat. She didn't speak much English. He leaned in close to her in order to better "help" her, I suppose, because he was just a helpful kind of guy, at least if the person in need of help was a pretty young woman.
When a seat finally opened up, I scooted my ass into it as quickly as I could and scarfed the Snickers bar as if I hadn't eaten in a year. By the time I got off the bus, my feet were swollen and aching so badly I could hardly walk. This time, however, an angel appeared in the form of a very sweet Latina lady in her late 30's or early 40's who offered me a ride. I thanked her profusely. After the callousness I'd just experienced, her generosity brought tears to my eyes.
I knew at that point that I could no longer take part in events such as marches because I was no longer strong enough to do so physically.
I lost my job a couple months later because I became extremely ill and was pushed to keep working by my supervisor in spite of having a serious respiratory infection. I had a small stroke while working one night and ended up getting fired. Once my savings were gone, which happened reasonably quickly, I ended up living in poverty and have been there ever since. If it weren't for my son allowing me to couch-surf, I'd be sleeping in my car.
Utopia exists for a very small percentage of people. I used to dream of being something wonderful, of being a star, but over the years I've come to see that often those dreams end as nightmares.
So, you have a portrait of the kind of person that society doesn't want to acknowledge even though there are a lot more of us than most people care to think, and my skepticism that Utopia exists for anyone but the well-heeled in anyplace but dreams.
You gave us raw, honest, real. The image of you, your truth are beyond moving.
ReplyDeleteThank you Helen. :-)
DeleteThank you for sharing your experiences in a way that makes clear the terrible struggle for survival that is the day to day reality of so many people. Given your poor health, what springs to mind is applying for a disability income, and subsidized housing. Might a resource person help you with that? I wish you well, and hope for better days ahead for you.
ReplyDeleteHi Sherry,
DeleteApplying for disability isn't as straightforward as it might seem. I was advised by a lawyer that since I can still work, however little, that I should NOT apply for disability income. They want you to have nothing, and I still have my 401k from my old job. The problem is, if I were to try to cash it out now, I would lose a significant amount of it. I want it to go to my son should I go tits up, so I am doing everything in my power not to liquidate it, thus losing $18,000 of it in penalties.
Thankfully, subsidised housing is a route that I should not have to go. If you're interested, you can check out my blog at http://www.goodstufffromgrover.com
My son got a bit of inheritance money, which he is using to purchase and renovate a historic hotel in a tiny town on the Northeastern plains of Colorado. This little town is in one of the poorest counties in Colorado, so they may be more keen to help people who are residents of their county than Denver County is.
This six-bedroom property (granted, it needs a fair bit of work) cost $90,000. Plus, it has a 1500 square foot unfinished basement.
In Denver, one can't even get a condo for less than about 250,000.
The working classes cannot afford to live in the places where they work.
Psychologically, I'm having a hard time with moving away from the place I've lived most of my life. I'm also having a hard time with the fact that I will be well and truly unemployed when I do. Much of the time I wonder that I'm not already dead. Either I'm too stupid or too tough to die.
Your Senyru is right on, Cie. Utopia for me is a fictional, storybook, place, a myth. Definitely "Not a place for those like me."
ReplyDeleteUpside down? When my oldest son and his wife separated for a divorce I asked him where he would live. He said not to worry that he would sleep in his car. Of course that was invitation for us to invite him to stay with us. Every one of our five grown kids has stayed with us, ranging from two weeks to six months.
..
I've got your kids beat! I've been living with my son for about 8 months now.
DeleteYour tanka has blown me away with its stark honesty!
ReplyDeleteThank you. I'm quite honestly thinking about sending a copy to the Governor of the fine state of Colorado. He actually seems like a decent person, so it might get him thinking if he ever sees it.
DeleteI like your tanka and really appreciate your idea of utopia as metropolis. Going to sit with that for a while.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the update about what is going on with you, which of course I'm very sorry to read. People can be such assholes! I remember standing on a bus while extremely pregnant... and you are right, we become much less visible as we age for sure. Argh. It's getting harder for me to remember that there are many good and kind people out there, like the woman who gave you a ride. We seem to be overrun with nasty.
I'm glad there are some safety nets for you, understanding that of course none of this is what you planned or wanted. (Also you are 100% correct about not applying for disability benefits because you have assets. What a ridiculous rule, intended to keep people down, way down.)
My late father always cautioned that one must be careful when accepting help from the government, because then they will have reason to get up in your business. He was on the FBI shit list for being a Vietnam war protester. He was a bit of a libertarian, but I do think he was right that one should always approach government agencies with caution.
DeleteI wonder if Utopia exists for anyone.. certainly not for you... maybe the only power of Utopia is for us to realize how impossible the dream is.
ReplyDeletePossibly so. I've always been skeptical that Utopia is possible, but I do think it would be possible to have a society that lets everyone lead a decent, modest life if only some people weren't so greedy and self-serving.
Delete