He wrapped the sleeve of his jacket around his right fist and used the fabric to dry off a circle of condensation on the inside window of the bus so he could see out. It was dark – really dark. It was deep into Fall, when the darkness comes early, and we’re all still kind of used to the daylight lasting well into the evening. He liked watching the lights coming from the buildings this particular bus passed along its path. Its path was a long one. It helped pass the time. This was a commuter bus from downtown, through SW Portland surface streets, all the way out to the suburbs and ending finally in the countryside. He enjoyed looking at the shops along the way. He always noticed shops that he would not see during the day. These intrigued him and made him think that maybe he would one day stop off and uncover some sort of Daniel Pinkwater world, where he would meet strange characters in a mysterious coffee shop or all night bookstore and go on adventures. He was also intrigued by the seemingly endless number of apartment complexes along the way. They were all much like his own. He was fascinated by how few lights emanated from them. He wondered if they were filled with lonely people, like himself, who while away their time at home, alone, mostly in the dark. He never particularly liked light. He liked the darkness. His eyes were generally pretty sensitive to brightness. He began to try to discern the lights that were coming from windows of the apartments. There were many different shades, colors, and levels of brightness. A strong wave of sadness enveloped him. He began to imagine internal crises going on inside those boxes. All of those people so close together, yet all living completely separate.
His mind drifted back to a long-ago memory of him and his father visiting some young family’s home. It was a home on one of those streets that has a grass covered island down the middle of the street. On the end of that island was a covered half basketball court with one hoop. It was dusk. Mostly dark, but there were still faint hints of pale pink and urine yellow washes in the western sky. Bright buzzing lights were already blaring from tall poles in and around the court. He spent his time shooting baskets, because he used to enjoy that. The constant bouncing of the ball, only broken by brief moments of silence for shots, echoed through the neighborhood, but did not stir any attention. The echo of the dribbles – a simultaneous thwip/thud – were beginning to give him a headache, yet he continued on. He was hyper aware of his surroundings. He couldn’t really see outside the covered barrier due to the intensity of the lights, which were above and posted at each corner of the court. These lights created those weird four-part shadows that show in every direction. Only darkness lay beyond. These intense and stark lights, along with the complete lack of activity throughout the neighborhood, made him feel incredibly lonely. As he thought about this memory, he began to question it. He couldn’t pin down when this was, approximately how old he was, who the people were, why they were there – wherever they were, why the rest of his family weren’t there, or if this was a completely invented memory. He was not very old, so this stuff should’ve been much clearer.
He was certain that his Mom would’ve
turned every light in the house on day and night, if she had the option, but no
one else wanted that. She loved
light. He started to understand, as he
looked at all of the dark residences. He
longed for a window with light and life coming out. Sure, each apartment complex had street
lighting and strategic light posts in and around each pathway, the parking
lots, and the doors of each unit, but those only highlighted the sheer
stillness. No activity could be seen. He began to imagine birthday parties inside,
or other fun memories and moments, but could not conjure anything, but empty
spaces, or people alone, motionless, in front of a TV. He decided that it couldn’t be all that
bleak. He remembered how he used to sit
for hours staring into the lights of his stereo, as he listened to the radio
stations fade in and out, afraid to turn it off, in case he might miss that one
important song that would change his life.
He had other basketball memories. When he played on the High School team, the two best teams in their league were also the two biggest schools. Both of them had weird lighting in their gyms. It’s no surprise his teams’ had little chance of victory. One of the gyms had strange blue-ish lights that made everyone look like a corpse. It actually made everyone’s lips look blue, and everyone felt sluggish and weighed down with heavy limbs. The other looked like an old cabin in the forest, which was lit by about a dozen bare 40-watt light bulbs. It was dark and creepy like the old slasher movies that he had been exposed to far too early in life.
He drifted off into more
thought. There is probably some sort of
science to how lighting dictates mood and entire communities who are hyper-aware
of how different lighting effects them, and do their best to control it. If only he cared enough to look it up on his
phone, but he only got so far as pulling it out of his pocket. Then he started thinking about lights in the
classrooms he grew up attending in school and in his workplace. Upsetting at best. Then he started thinking about those who are
into controlling their lighting environments – it must be be exhausting. He guessed that being too aware of how light
can affect mood could make one too sensitive, so in effect cancelling the
entire point. We cannot control most lighting
we’re exposed to and it can truly be disconcerting and uncomfortable at times. For example, the lighting on this bus is
startling and disturbing. It makes
everyone look weird. It’s set for night
driving, it’s a dark red near the driver, but bright in the rear to a point
where you can see everyone’s blood vessels.
He decided to open his phone to social media to pass the time. Isolated with about 30 other people nearby.
Love this entire piece. More, please!
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