By H. W. Crocker, III on 7.1.04 @ 12:07AM
Only the patriotically deluded think Washington, D.C., is a great summer vacation spot.
Only the patriotically deluded think Washington, D.C., is a
great summer vacation spot. The weather is hot, muggy, and
miserable. The streets are pot-holed, the sidewalks smell, and
those giant 1950s-science-fiction-atomic-blast-transmogrified
caterpillars you see are actually homeless people moving under
layers of blankets.
Unlike many jaded Washingtonians I am not indifferent to the
plight of the homeless, and do give them change if they attack me.
But I am indifferent to the alleged charms of Washington, D.C. You
want D.C. -- and the monuments, the Smithsonian, and the seat of
the federal government -- you can have it.
Unfortunately, I have it every working day, though at night I
escape across the Potomac to Virginia. My dislike of D.C. would be
somewhat ameliorated if I could ride a horse into work -- as a
westerner, I still wear cowboy boots as a matter of course -- but
that, alas, is not on.
What is on is the Metro, the Washington subway system. Riding
it, for me, is a five-day-a-week penance, which I hope will reap me
rewards in Heaven.
As some wear a hair-shirt for mortification, I wear a sweaty
dress shirt from the two-mile walk I have to the Metro station. It
is hard to put on airs -- except for those usually dealt with by
underarm deodorants --standing on a train platform with a sweaty
dress shirt cling-wrapping one's abdomen.
At least a wet shirt allows one to slip between passengers and
get aboard the usually overcrowded trains. Once, looking at a train
with passengers pressed nose tip to nose tip, I heard a tourist
exclaim softly, in the civilized drawl of Dixie: "It's inhuman."
That's right, ma'am, it's mass transit. The pope warns us not to
treat people as objects. The mass transit system treats people as
objects.
To assert my moral superiority, I never -- if a seat is
available -- sit down. I always stand so that pregnant women,
tourist children with encumbering balloons, and men with Sports
Illustrateds I can read over their shoulder, can sit instead.
Does this win me plaudits from grateful passengers?
Let me put it this way. I'm over six feet tall and built like a
wide receiver -- and I wish I lived in a country where the women
were smaller than I am. No one needs to tell me that there is an
epidemic of obesity in America, as women the size of hippos rush in
with greedy, piggy eyes for the seats I've left available for them,
knocking me down as a potential rival or angrily pushing me out of
the way so that they can beat a challenger hippo. If they lose this
tussle of roaring beasts -- like maniac Wal-Mart shoppers wrestling
for the last jumbo-sized discount nightie -- they make it clear my
existence is to blame.
I don't mean to pick on women. I'm married to one after all
(though not a hippo-sized one). Men are bad in a different way,
especially since the demise of the traditional leather
attaché case and its replacement by
athletic-bags-cum-briefcases that are slung over the shoulder.
These are often enormous in size -- the size of a camel's hump at
least -- and loaded with brick-weight bureaucratic impedimenta.
Like Curley, Larry, and Moe inadvertently slapping each other
with two-by-fours carried over their shoulders, men seem oblivious
to the effects of their sling-cases, so that I'm buffeted by the
hunches of jostling hunchbacks.
As an accommodating sort of chap -- and one partly educated in
England (the Californians of my youth were generally polite people
too) -- I am continually saying "Sorry" for the heels that trample
on my toes and the backpacks that smack me in the face. When there
is any response at all, it is usually a glaring look that implies:
"You should be sorry; I'm a lawyer."
I do my best to offer these lawyers as much space as possible.
But this, I've found, is not reciprocated. If I put aside my
magazine (a compact, folded Spectator of London) to create
more space for a young lawyer, he pulls out a giant Wall Street
Journal and asserts a ring of Lebensraum that leaves
one with barely enough room to breathe.
Still, it's true that the meek inherit the earth. In fact, when
the air conditioning fails, and the train stalls out for twenty
minutes in the subway tunnel, and the windows fog up with choking
humidity, they die like flies and are buried in it.
Not everyone who rides the Metro is awful. There's me, for
instance. And one does find a goodly number of people reading
Bibles or prayer books, or with rosary beads in hand -- praying, no
doubt, for deliverance from this Hell.
As a xenophile in a cosmopolitan city, I do enjoy the occasional
blessing of listening to harmonious, flute-like spoken French, or
the troll-like mysteries of Teutonic languages that aren't German.
And during SARS season, there's inevitably the added excitement of
a sneezing Chinaman on board.
Last week, there was a fire on the line so that my commute home
was an entertaining three hours. This week, in recognition of its
sterling customer service, the system raised its fares -- again.
Washington isn't the land of milk and honey, it's the land of
government bilking your money.
Washington? If you need more penance in your life, it's a great
place to be. But personally, I'll spend my summer vacation out in
them wide open spaces.
topics:
Sports, Books, Law