
My first thought when hearing these sobs of severe unhappiness is not "Brat" (it used to be) but "God, someone help him." What if he is panicking? What if he doesn't like crowds? Or loud noises? Or chaos? It could just be the desire to be doing something else entirely, but even that evokes a level of sympathy I never had when I was in my twenties or even thirties. When you are an adult for a while you forget just how controlled your life was when you were a child, and when you are a freewheeling, lets-run-into-traffic toddler, your life is tethered, monitored, and directed every minute of every day. The frustration must be unbearable. So, you do the only thing you can: Scream at the top of your tiny little lungs to the Gods of the Universe for this insufferable injustice. Until snack time.
Anyway, they have storytime here.

There are handy outlets at every workstation (I have a wall, otherwise, they are in the floor), the tables are huge and the seats are very comfortable. Also, and this is some sort of unprecedented unlikelihood, the temperature is exactly right. The better you know me, the more pearl-clutching you will do at this statement. I am just your garden variety hot house orchid (or whatever winter-frigid, 50 degrees or less, messed up variety of flower that might be).


I was hyper aware of why they had to say something, on that day of all days, what with the attack near Parliament in London earlier that morning (US time). Anyone who has visited London as a tourist has been on that bridge--that section of London has to be one of the most photographed areas on earth (I took quite a few myself, back in 2006). While I get the paranoia and wish to stop terrorists from using photographs in their planning, it's just like the airport rules we've all endured since 9-11: Where there is a will there is a way, and terrorists will always find a way. This is a horrible truth to come to terms with--and government must always at least appear to be doing something about it--but as someone who has thrown out numerous lighters (cheap and zippo fancy), water bottles, shampoo, food, and at least one pocket knife at airport security, I will tell you a butter knife or a knitting needle are effective and lethal weapons if you use them correctly, but they are not on the list. As is a pencil or pen, still completely allowed on airplanes (and always have been, even in the earliest days post-911). At the Williams Tower, the guards only said something to me because I was on the property, but feet away other tourists were taking the same pictures...and will it make a difference one way or the other? Well, that's the rub, isn't it?
When you have panic disorder, the idea of safety becomes porous and unpredictable. You become acutely aware of rules, regulations, and laws created to bring order to a disorderly world, and just how flimsy they are when it really counts. And when things are really bad, the construct (lol Matrix, if you must) gets all the more unreliable and transparent. I know this is part of the reason I am visiting libraries in particular--years ago, an unnerving and perspective shifting event changed something sacred to me into something dangerous. It didn't stop me from engaging with libraries going forward, but always with extreme caution and a degree of fear. I don't want to be afraid in these spaces. And I don't necessarily want indigent patrons to be barred from them, either. I just want to use them for my purposes and be left alone. And I think a majority of the homeless who take refuge here feel the exact same way. They just want to be safe and comfortable, too.
I suppose this is why so many of these new libraries all have that bright, Borders feel. The libraries of old, with their dark wood, muted light, and harsh rules were not exactly community inclusive. For scholars and serious patrons only, etc. Before the behemoth B&N and Borders rolled into town, most of us only had those squalid little mall installations to count on for our book buying needs (Waldenbooks, B. Dalton)--and independent stores were always hit or miss. Some had a good vibe, some had the charm and cleanliness of your uncle Greg's garage. If you had that option at all, which in car-driven communities (with no or substandard mass transit), could be a nonstarter, anyway. And none of these options felt all that open or inviting (remember the cramped little aisles and cross, less than helpful staff?). To me, the old Barnes & Noble stores were a bit off putting, hearkening to those old libraries with the dark wood and brass fixtures, but the Borders stores were clearly inviting with light color schemes and a laid back atmosphere. It felt welcoming and safe. And the libraries at least in this community embraced this warm, inviting atmosphere and made it permanent. (Sadly, Borders has since passed, though I suppose it should be proud it's left its mark, at least in some fashion?)
So far, this trip had gone very well (knock on piney wood, everywhere around me)--no panics, no overwhelming feeling of doom. And each library has been a safe haven to sit, plan, contemplate, watch grackles snackle, and write to my heart's content. You know how fear is--it wrecks the world and rules the day if you let it. So I am on this trip, stepping outside my comfort zone, testing the boundaries of my moxie, and attempting to go with the flow as much as my controlling, "let's plan everything down to the last minute" mind will allow. And the little storytime agitator has also helped to remind me: I am free to go wherever whenever I choose. Isn't that the greatest?
Cash cow says "Moo."
Much moxie you have!
ReplyDeleteSo why don't they want you to take pictures of the big glass building? Why would they put it there and make it so big if you're not to look at it?
I'm going to take lots of pictures of the Kochs' black lair of doom. The sky is cloudy and ominous and I'm hoping for a lightening bolt or two. I bet they don't like folks taking pictures either.
Okay, I double dog dare you to get pictures of that Creepy Ass Koch lair. When I am home I drive by it all the time and want to stop to take pictures, but they deliberately set it up so that you can't without either stopping in the middle of the street or pulling into their drive with the guard stations right there, to do what I don't know.
ReplyDeleteCan I steal them from the internet? Place gives me the heebiegeebies(sp?)
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