Jennifer
sits in the back seat of the car. It has been so long since she has sat in the
back seat. She is often the driver or the passenger, but never the backseater.
It feels like a new perspective. Out the window stands a man on a street
corner. Money on his mind. No, relief on his mind. Sign in his hand, but
Jennifer feels too guilty to read it. She is a hypocrite. Every Sunday, to and
from church, she sees that poor man. Too scared to help him. Giving the money isn’t
the issue. Being bold is the real problem. She prays for someone braver than
her to help him. Her family drives on. No one mentions or acknowledges the sad
sight they see. It is too shameful to admit they sin.
No one stops; everyone drives; no one cares; everyone
ignores. The guilt is too heavy for
Jennifer, so she lets it go. She forgets, in that moment, that the man; the unique
life form; her fellow sharer of the earth; her neighbor whom she was called to
love as she loves herself ever existed. Never asking, what is that man’s story?
Do people give him money? Does he hate the world? Is he smart? Kind? A follower
of Christ like she is supposed to be? What has happened in this man’s life that
forced him to become a beggar? Maybe he is a man “who carries in him the
greatest message in the world,” but no “passer-by suspects” a thing (Woolf 83).
Questions she doesn’t care to ask. Her thoughts, actions, and beliefs orbit
around her own gigantic head. How rare it is when her universe attempts collide
with another.
OMG. This was well written. Usually when us kids attempt stream of consciousness it's a horror to behold. But this was well written and mirrored Woolf's style and themes. Great job! :D
ReplyDeleteThat was beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI really love this. I always wonder about people's stories in life and how they got to where they are now.
ReplyDelete