Living away from the city has been an interesting transition. Everyone always whispers, "You live 'out there?" apologetically as if to declare it louder would expose some personal defect I have. I like living away from the city... and no, I'm not just saying that. I like having personal space. Quiet time. Parking. And access to the city whenever I want. If I were to complain, which I would never do, but if I did, it would be about the commute...the sometimes late-at-night-everlasting commute.
I still make it to the city whenever I need to. I was there yesterday exploring the services of the Actor's Work Program... simply, it's the actor's unemployment agency. A kinder one that understands that I'm an artist and not just some lazy person who doesn't want to 'get a real job'. I heard about arts education opportunities they had, and went to check them out. While I was sitting in the orientation room, filling out the myriad number of forms they thrust upon you so that they can create statistics to prove that their existence is viable to funders, I saw this familiar woman walk in. She sat down with that 'don't talk to me energy' so I didn't speak. But after a few more peeks (I didn't want to look like a stalker), I realized who she was. I had met her when she returned to Howard to share her story with us theatre students and to talk about the business of acting. She returned to inform and inspire. She was beautiful with small features, and she was starring in a new musical at Arena Stage, the preeminent theatre house in town. I had called her after I came to New York at the urging of one of my old professors. I didn't have a specific favor to ask... I just wanted to have someone to connect with on my journey in NYC. She never called me back, if I recall correctly. If she did, our conversation wasn't memorable. I saw her image on a print ad campaign for a bank all over the city and figured she was big time. Doing her 'thang'. Making moves. I didn't call her again. Yet there we both were, in the same unemployment office, looking for work. Her face wasn't as flawless as I remembered, and the skin on the front of her neck had begun to to that old lady thing.. the elasticity gave up a little, and started to droop around her adam's apple. She was still cutsie, but you could tell she was older. Rougher. Worn. Tried. I could sense her embarrassment at being there. I could see her holding in her disappointment and beating herself up for ending up in a room full of losers (not myself of course, but those 'other' people). 'How unfair,' I thought. If there is anything I would complain about the acting industry, though I would never complain about anything in the acting industry (*wink*), I might gripe about the state of seniority. This woman had graced the stage of every major and minor regional theatre across the country. She had done television, film, and I think even Broadway. She was, and probably still is, a triple threat. Yet, here she was, the entertainment equivalent of downsized. Why did she end up sitting in the unemployment office with me? Why wasn't there a place for her?
segue...
I ran into a friend of my ex-boyfriend on the train during my long commute home that I am not complaining about. I could tell how long it had been since we'd spoken from the state of his thick, back-long locks. He had always had that aggressive corporate bite and I could tell with his casual suit, blackberry and Nike gym bag, that he had 'made it'. I wasn't surprised. I wasn't proud. It was to be expected. We saw each other from across the platform tracks and it looked like his mind was going a mile a minute. I figured he was one of the types who couldn't stop working... he was constantly strategizing and figuring and calculating. He was busy and important. When the train pulled into the station, we put aside the distance and time and let the reunion begin. We did some small talk and filled in some major details about what we had been doing since last we saw each other. He asked, 'how's the acting?' to my shock. I'm not sure I liked that he remembered my dreams. I couldn't say, "it's bad. I spent the day at the unemployment office." "It's going good," I said, hoping he wouldn't ask, "so, what have you been in?" I generally hate those conversations, where I end up trying to, as impressively as I can, run down the highlights of my resume to justify my choice to pursue my heart's desire. But he didn't ask any more. This conversation standing on the train was suspect - he didn't ask for proof for my success. He was antsy and tight. He seemed preoccupied. He ran down his accomplishments, but he wasn't trying to impress me. He tried to make jokes, but the corners of his eyes never lifted when he laughed. 'Was he nervous?' I thought. No. There was no reason to be nervous. But he stood there, shifting his weight, sweating along his full, kinky hairline, gripping the edge of the partition that separates the seating areas and the door corridors. Was he high? I looked again..No, he wasn't high. I remembered what he looked like high -- don't ask, it's a long story. And then he got to the place where he trusted me enough to say it. He, a young man in the generally stable and lucrative field of finance had just been laid off. He, with his $800 suit, his gym membership and his newly renovated townhouse that still hasn't been paid for, had been laid off. Laid off. He was still paralyzed. Dismayed. Factory workers get laid off. Brokers don't get laid off. Construction workers and miners get laid off. Sales people get laid off. Cafeteria staff gets laid off, but the upper echelon, the lawyers, the doctors, the brokers, the money handlers and decision makers, they don't get laid off. What the hell is going on?' was his underlying question behind all of his small talk. I tried to reassure him with mine -- to subtly remind him of how much he did have. That this too shall pass. That there could be a blessing even here, even now. But he couldn't hear me.
And here I was, throughout the day, fighting the thought that deciding to be a part of the 'whip-creme' of employment society may have been a grave mistake. I thought about how I could end up like that woman, completely deserving of some stability, but without any. Maybe I should have found a job with the Department of Water and Power... we'll always need water, I thought. Or maybe I should have been a mortician... people will always die. I don't even think storytellers, though we've been around throughout eternity, would even qualify as the whip creme... we're the cherry. But those choices wouldn't have protected me for here was a man standing before me who was the ice cream of workers, being set out to melt. He had given up thoughts of following his passion for the money and security, and now that those were gone, he felt he had nothing. I love what I do, but have no money (yet) and no stability (does this world ever provide stability?). Are we at the extreme ends of the same pole?
I had met a Greek man on another during the commute home that I am not going to complain about, and he proceeded to talk my ear to death. He spat at me through his chewy accent, "you are nice girl, I can tell. You are sweetheart." He said, "I flirt you and you don't get angry. That's good. Your man a lucky man. Is he Black?" He said, "Black men don't like the Black woman. But Black women value themselves more now. I am European. We like beautiful black women." I said nothing. He continued, "It's good to talk to strangers, no? It is good. Like old country. Not so many people walking around crazy. We talk to each other. People don't go crazy."
I wonder if the woman, and my ex's friend found a stranger to talk to to keep from going crazy last night. I wonder if I'll talk to more strangers. I'm 29 now and I don't recognize myself. How old was Jesus when he went into the desert?
Updated: Tuesday, 16 September 2008 12:29 PM EDT
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