Something so good

Posted March 1st, 2010 | Filed Under: Blog

dsc_0014The do-gooder ninja strike force all star team

The fog curled over the hills in thick purple skeins, like ghostly tendrils spiraling around the city and portending rain.

On the doorstep, I plugged music into my ears and shouted over my shoulder that I’d be back in twenty minutes, plenty of time for dinner — but of course I had no way of knowing I’d end up kidnapping a pair of elderly gypsies, abandoning them in the urban wild just as the new rain began to fall.

I had always thought of myself as a better person. Someone who helps others in need. Someone who lends a hand.

Whenever I thought of “doing good,” the term “false imprisonment” was never part of the equation.

They were on the sidewalk, shuffling along like some lost caravan of the indigent. The man was stooped and frail, pushing a walker in front of him and trailing a noxious wake of booze behind him. Because he wasn’t moving quickly, the wake more or less billowed around him, reminding me of that Peanuts cartoon character who was forever enshrouded in a dirt cloud. It was as if the kid suddenly became a Shriner and exchanged his go cart for a walker and his dirt cloud for something more socially acceptable, like gin.

The elderly woman at his side was even shorter. Gray hair pulled back tightly and with a long, pointed nose, she looked like a storybook witch in leisure wear, crab-walking along the sidewalk while trying to help the man push the walker along.

As I jogged by, I heard her mumble something like, “Come on!” in an exasperated whisper, while he coughed out something like, “I’m trying, I’m trying. Please.” They both spoke in short, mumbled whispers, and I guessed from the bickering undertone that they must be married.

The walker had run into a sidewalk crack and they took a moment to rest before lifting it together and shuffling a few more feet. By this time, I had already passed them and couldn’t help glancing over my shoulder. The rubber nubs of the walker’s legs had hit another crack and they were clearly preparing for the effort to lift it again. I didn’t have much experience with walkers, but I was still pretty sure they were supposed to help you along, as opposed to the other way around.

It was the saddest scene I had witnessed in quite some time, this slow, crippled waltz down the sidewalk. And yet, at the same time, it filled me with a momentary joy.

Here were two people who clearly stood by each other through thick and thin and all manner of infirmities. Isn’t that what we all hope for?

Practically every time a discussion of the elderly comes up, I think of the curious arrangements of native cultures, the older generations left to fend for themselves in wild prairies or on melting ice floes. I’ve never done the research to see if this is actually true. The mental picture is too rich to ruin it with reality. I imagine what that must be like, waking up one morning only to discover all the other teepees had vanished in the night: One moment you’re warm and snugly under your furs, maybe there’s a few dying embers left in the fire, and the next moment you peek outside your door, your hand instinctively covering your mouth as you survey the deserted prairie and mutter the Indian equivalent of “Oh jesus fuck.”

So it was heartening to see this frail, trembling man still had someone by his side. He hadn’t been abandoned.

Yet.

It had nearly been twenty minutes since I left the house. I would be expected home soon. The fog grew thicker, spectral ropes twisting through streets. Rain drops started to fall. I had no cellphone, no way of calling Dana to tell her that no, I hadn’t been struck by a horrible San Francisco driver — I had merely stopped to help out an elderly couple.

I would be late. Dana would worry. Emmeline would pester her with 5,000 questions: Where’s daddy? Is he dead? What does dead mean? When you wake up from being dead, can you watch some TV? Does this mean we can get a dog now?

And yet, I couldn’t just leave them there, on the sidewalk, struggling to make it someplace safe and warm before the downpour. In retrospect, it probably should have occurred to me that they had managed just fine for decades without my intervention. But I had already made a decision.

“Do you need some help?” I asked.

“Oh yes,” the man mumbled, light shining in his eyes. “Oh please, yes, thank you.”

The woman stopped, appraised me for a moment and then sneered, “We’re fine, thanks.”

These are approximations of what I think they must have said. They both mumbled in a terribly low, heavily accented tone and although I could never be sure exactly what they were saying, I quickly glommed onto the idea that the man immediately regarded me as the hero stranger I thought I was while the woman held me in the position equivalent to benign interloper. I liked the man’s vision better and used two hands to latch on to his walker.

“Here you go,” I said, “Just a few feet a time.”

I held my breath as he coughed a boozy “thank you” and glanced at the corner, where a bus stop seemed like the logical conclusion of their journey.

“Is that where you’re going? To the bus?” I asked.

The man mumbled something like “bah!” and pointed frantically. He could have meant anywhere. To the bus. To the corner bar. It could have been a signal to turn him around and head back home. I nodded my head and continued to help him along, just a few inches at a time. Wherever we were headed, we had a lot of time to get there.

The man suddenly stopped and put a hand on my own. His fingers felt like cold paper. They were light, almost weightless. His hand moved up my arm and then around to my back. The woman inched closer and I instinctively tapped my rear pocket where I normally keep a wallet. Then the man said, “thank you” again and moved his hand back to the walker, preparing to inch along.

I felt enormous shame.

Here he was offering the kindness of touch and praise, creating a real bond between strangers, and all I could think of was that I had been swindled by a pair of pickpockets.

“No problem,” I muttered.

We fell into an uneasy routine. On my side of the walker, I lifted too quickly, while the stooped, elderly witch on the other side lifted too slowly. The result was that the man in the middle hobbled and lurched forward. In no time at all, the man’s frail arms began to shake and he refused to move his feet. He said something about needing a break and I resisted the temptation to ask “already?” and point out that we had only moved five feet.

“Thank you,” the woman said as we stood there, waiting. Her tone was different than the man’s. While his offered genuine thanks, hers seemed to imply that I had done my duty — that I had helped enough and was freed to move along and find other, more needy infirm among the populace.

“Thank you,” she said. It sounded more like, “Get lost.” And at the rate of our movement, I have to admit I gave it serious thought.

It was the perfect out. I had helped. I had done something kindly — for the elderly, and crippled. It was a trifecta of do-goodery, and I tried to think of an elegant exit. Do I simply nod and walk away? Do I continue jogging? I didn’t want to give them the appearance that I actually wanted to run away at the first opportunity, but to be fair, I was jogging before I found them.

But the man grabbed my hand again.

“Please,” he mumbled, “Don’t leave.”

He shot a look to the side, at the woman, and I wondered what I had just gotten myself into. One moment I think they are a sweet elderly couple and the next I think I had just been waylaid by a pair of scheming pickpockets. And now I was beginning to wonder if I had just intervened in the world’s slowest kidnapping. Was she even his wife at all?

“You know,” I said quietly to the man, “You can tell me anything.”

His eyes lit up and he moved his hand to my back again, just above my butt, and I made a note to choose my words more carefully in the future. The woman rolled her eyes and started shoving the walker along, forcing the man to catch up.

Our movement was glacial. I checked my watch. In the span of 10 minutes, we had moved 10, maybe 15 feet. We still had a long way to go to the corner bus stop, and the man was shaking violently with effort.

It was about this time that a car rolled up to the curb at our side. The door opened and a woman fell out, landing flat on her stomach on the wet sidewalk in front of us. It sounded like a lump of meat had fallen off a hook and lay there, moaning. Our little three-person caravan stared, unbelieving.

My first instinct was to rush over and help the poor woman on the ground. But the man in the walker was shaking so badly that I sensed if I let go he would surely tumble to the ground as well.

A normal person would have probably called for help at this point. But I looked around for hidden cameras, thinking that this wasn’t some strange cosmic calamity of the elderly — the crippled falling from the heavens like some gray-haired pestilence — but rather, someone was surely fucking with me. I watched a show a few weeks ago about Heidi Klum working in a pizza parlor. The idea was to put big stars in everyday situations and then film the results, as people did double takes, as if to say, “Hey, aren’t you …?” I wondered briefly whether the man at my arm was really Abe Vigoda and the woman Betty White.

“By any chance do you know Rue McClanahan?” I asked the gypsy woman across from me.

“Who?” she snapped, “Don’t you have something better to do?”

The man interrupted us, coughing, “Don’t leave.

The man driving the car rushed around to help the fallen woman off the ground and she appeared unhurt. The pair disappeared into the corner bar. From the smell of the man at my side, I guessed that’s where we were headed too, but when we finally got to the corner, he turned the walker down the sidewalk and continued puffing along.

“There’s the bus stop,” I motioned, in case he had overlooked that, too.

“Just three more blocks,” he said, or at least that’s what I thought he said.

“How many?”

“Three blocks,” he mumbled again, “Maybe four.”

I checked my watch. It had been nearly half an hour and we had moved half a block. Although I’m not the person NASA consults when it needs to solve a huge problem involving mathematics, something told me I’d be out here all night, and I cursed myself for not running away when given the chance.

How much help is enough help?

I had always thought of myself as a helpful person, someone who wants to perform good deeds for the sake of doing something good. Things like Karma and the Golden Rule always bothered me. The Golden Rule, for instance, is really a selfish mantra. Treat people well, and you’ll get the same in return. Why not just treat people well because it’s the right thing to do? Does everything always have to come back to you? The same goes for the popular connotations of Karma. People never throw good deeds into the universe for the sake of simply doing something good, but rather for the hope that either those good deeds will come home someday — or, even better, bad things will overlook them altogether. It sounds more like an insurance policy.

Guiding this wayward couple home, I remembered all the parables I had learned as a child. Even the story of the Good Samaritan always got to me. It’s never told with the intent of doing good — as people always assume — but with the idea of securing your place in heaven. The moral of the story comes in response to a question from a lawyer (of course, right?). Do good deeds — be like the Samaritan on the road, helping a fallen traveler — and you’ll win eternal happiness. And then there’s the Jewish parable about the elderly grandfather who is given a wooden bowl and made to sit in a corner, alone, while the rest of his family enjoys dinner, because the old man was always breaking dishes and spilling crap on the floor. Well one day the elderly guy’s son spots his own boy trying to craft a wooden bowl out of some scraps.

“What are you doing?” the man asks the boy, and the boy responds that he’s making a wooden bowl for when the father becomes elderly just like grandpa.

Of course the next day grandpa is invited back into the fold, seated at the main table no matter how much food he spills or how many dishes he breaks. But is he back at the table because he’s a part of the family, no matter how infirm, or because the asshole father is just afraid of what his own boy will do to him someday?

Just yesterday I happened to see the modern-day bumper sticker translation of this parable on a minivan parked on our curb: “Be Nice To Your Kids: They’ll Choose Your Nursing Home.” I wondered if the minivan owner knew the millennia-old origins of this epiphany, this internal struggle humankind has had for untold generations, this instinctual drive to do good … or else. Does anyone, I wonder, perform good deeds selflessly? Merely for the sake of good? Or is it a human failing to always look out for number one?

The rain began to come down in bursts, peppering us with icy bullets. The man’s arms began to shake even more violently and he said he needed to stop.

“There’s a cab!” the gypsy woman shouted, raising her arms to hail the taxi. The yellow car stopped and I saw the driver appraise the scene — me holding up the elderly man while the frail, bedraggled smurf of a woman suddenly found the energy to leap up and down. The driver turned his head and drove away.

“Here,” I said, edging the walker toward the shelter of the bus stop, “Let’s stop here for a moment.”

“No, please,” the man said, while I steered him toward the bus seats.

“Nice and comfy,” I replied, “just for a moment.”

The man protested again. “We can make it,” he wheezed. But by this time the gypsy woman had returned and she must have sensed what I was up to.

“No,” she said, “It’s a good idea. We’ll wait here for a taxi. Thank you for your help.”

I settled the man into the bus stop seat. He slumped over uncomfortably, his arms still shaking violently as his chest heaved for air. His eyes appeared wet and sad and defeated. I checked my watch. The woman moved to the edge of the sidewalk, stooped and broken, trying to raise her arm to hail a cab.

“So we’re good then?” I smiled, “OK then, you guys have a great night!”

And then I ran home as fast as possible through the ghostly fog, dodging rain bullets and feeling a touch of shame for taking so much personal pride in performing such a good deed, completely and utterly selflessly.

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34 Comments

[...] blew up the photo to this story because you can’t really see all the kick-ass characters over on the main site. Ahh, dental [...]

I don’t know about you, but so many of us take so much beating up for what we do wrong. I think you deserve to take *some* pride in doing something good.

Plus, I end up crying during nearly every one of your entries. Your blog is aptly named.

Posted by: debinsf on March 1st, 2010 at 10:31 am

Sigh. I’m going to have to give you another Top Marks award, aren’t I?

Posted by: TeacherMommy on March 1st, 2010 at 10:54 am

Um, yeah, I am. So I did.

Posted by: TeacherMommy on March 1st, 2010 at 10:56 am

Weird. I didn’t think this would be a “cry-y” one — I was thinking something more along the lines of, “Geez, this guy is a selfish asshole, no matter what he says about doing good.”

And please, TeacherMommy, do not inflict me upon your awesome readers. They are too nice for that.

Posted by: mike on March 1st, 2010 at 10:57 am

I didn’t get “assholey” out of this at all. But the lawyer part cracked me up. Dana must be thrilled.

Posted by: Karen on March 1st, 2010 at 11:29 am

Terribly.

Posted by: Mike on March 1st, 2010 at 12:01 pm

This? is awesome. I actually didn’t realize that about the Good Samaritan. I just thought it was one of those feel good parables people told to make us always do the right thing. Lawyers always look for the finer points!

Posted by: Isaacsdad on March 1st, 2010 at 12:04 pm

You have just turned yourself into a brand new parable.

Posted by: daddletales on March 1st, 2010 at 6:26 pm

This is my new favorite of yours. We are all not perfect.

Posted by: Ted on March 2nd, 2010 at 8:31 am

I loved this tale/parable. I loved it for the characters and the writing, of course, but also because I have felt the same twinges of shame/guilt at my own self-conscious reflections on Good Samaritan actions I’ve taken in the past.

Posted by: Aliki on March 2nd, 2010 at 9:23 am

finally delurking to comment on this one - (although I love pretty much all of your posts).

I love your thoughts on the golden rule etc. I was a really literal child and remember being really distressed when others didn’t “follow” the Golden Rule. I couldn’t understand why they wouldn’t treat ME nicely when I had treated THEM nicely (or so I thought).

It seems it would be a much more powerful lesson to teach children to do good “just because”. I would have appreciated not having to figure that part out on my own!

P.S. no crying after this one - although I do often find myself tearing up when reading here.

Posted by: Becky on March 2nd, 2010 at 10:13 am

Becky I think we had the same idea about the golden rule. My sixth grade teacher had a big glitzy poster of it on the wall, and whenever anything bad happened to me in class, I’d motion to it, open-mouthed and astonished, as if the poster itself had let me down. Thanks for delurking — great to read your comment.

Yours too, A.

Posted by: mike on March 2nd, 2010 at 3:57 pm

Don’t worry too much about it. I leave old ladies in cross walks all the time!

Posted by: Kate on March 2nd, 2010 at 9:06 pm

This is one of my new favorites.

Posted by: Cass on March 3rd, 2010 at 3:58 pm

This is why I only go running in younger parts of town.

Posted by: Whit on March 3rd, 2010 at 5:48 pm

I’ve been away from this blog for too long… Glad to see that you’re still churning out brilliant stuff.

Posted by: ShotgunDaddy on March 3rd, 2010 at 11:39 pm

Love, love, love. And if it’s any relief, I’m sure they DID manage just fine without you.

Posted by: Denise on March 4th, 2010 at 4:40 am

I have to say that I don’t believe in Karma or that doing good things comes back to you. I was raised that you help others. Not you help others because it will help you now or later. You did good things because you were nice and it IS the right thing to do. I just wish others had been raise that way. The world might be a nicer place to share with everyone else.

Posted by: Forgotten on March 4th, 2010 at 5:39 am

Raised that way…sheesh. I gotta stretch my fingers more before I start typing. :-)

Posted by: Forgotten on March 4th, 2010 at 5:40 am

I was raised that way, too. Doing good is its own reward: I think that’s a say, too isn’t it? I like that one best.

Posted by: beanmama on March 4th, 2010 at 6:08 am

Beautifully written, and its given me a lot to think about, about my own life and how fortunate I am. Thank you. Please keep writing!

Posted by: Angela on March 4th, 2010 at 6:20 am

Well, you tried? I know not everything has to come back but aren’t there points for effort at least? (And this all makes me wonder what this sad little couple does anyway? How do they get around!)

Posted by: Hillary on March 4th, 2010 at 9:11 pm

Beautifully written indeed!

Posted by: Amy on March 4th, 2010 at 10:19 pm

Very nice.

I like your notes about the “insurance policy” (aka-cover my ass) that most parables/karma point to. Sadly, I think part of that is because many people need more motivation than just doing it because it’s the right thing to do.

I was raised by someone who needed that motivation, while I didn’t. As an adult, I’ve recently realized the difference, and it’s been a hard pill to swallow. It’s nice to know I’m not alone. Keeping doing the right thing.
(And I didn’t say I ALWAYS do the right thing, but saying my motivation isn’t to CYA)

Posted by: mamaspeak on March 4th, 2010 at 10:40 pm

I have know idea Hillary, but yeah, I need the points. And mamaspeak I think you’re onto something. Clearly I’m not always doing the right thing but I do think it’s nice to at least hear about doing it, regardless of motivation. But some people do need the motivation, you’re right. I’m sure even selfish karma has brought more than a few people happiness and actually done some good in the process.

Posted by: mike on March 4th, 2010 at 10:48 pm

Sometimes I need the motivation. Old people are mean. This is also one of my new favorites too.

Posted by: niko on March 5th, 2010 at 5:10 am

That’s horrible, Mike! Reading that just made me feel so bad!

I do understand, though…. :)

Posted by: Jen R. (emeraldsunshine.org) on March 5th, 2010 at 8:59 am

Next time don’t stop! That was mistake number one. Seriously, I’m cracking up here. This was pretty funny.

Posted by: CarrieN on March 6th, 2010 at 2:53 pm

I think we’ve all been there. I often wonder how long I’m supposed to hold a door open for people. I’m not the fucking doorwoman. Hurry people!

Posted by: Diane on March 7th, 2010 at 6:27 pm

You totally nailed it, Diane. I tried to write something about helping old ladies across the street — do I grab their elbows, just walk beside them, CARRY them? — and gave it up because it got to be too long. Holding doors open is another thing. Just how long DO you have to keep it open anyway? Excellent, excellent question.

Posted by: mike on March 8th, 2010 at 9:23 am

I’m with you on the doors. You don’t have to stand there forever! I am quite capable of pulling handles myself thank you very much.

Posted by: Paulette on March 11th, 2010 at 7:20 am

Love this!

Posted by: Kelly on March 11th, 2010 at 12:33 pm

“How much help is enough” is a vast, challenging question indeed! I find that mindfulness helps me through my impatience in times like these (and I live in New York City, where impatience is a way of life!).

Posted by: The Flamingo Room on March 13th, 2010 at 11:07 am

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