Pen & Ink: Figure #40

Figure #40 / Ink on paper, 5 3/4 x 7 1/2 inches.

Figure #40 / Ink on paper, 5 3/4 x 7 1/2 inches.

45 Union / Stockton Bus. Chinatown, San Francisco, 2008.

Bush and Montgomery Streets. San Francisco, California, 2007.
Each night for nearly six months we pass in the Stockton tunnel only mildly aware of one another, never exchanging more than a glance or a nod, never speaking or saying hello or goodbye or any such pleasantries, only a merciful and somewhat forced acknowledgement that the other exists as we pass in the Stockton tunnel stepping over puddles and trash and needles and other scenery.
Five nights a week for six months this routine was un-changed, each night the same as the last, in the Stockton tunnel at approximately 12:15 AM we’d pass and nod and go on with our lives and nothing more.
Last night he wasn’t there, and I couldn’t help but worry.

C.J. and Jet (left to right). Fairfield California, 2007.
“…could I have a small coffee in a large cup please?” and minimum wager with glassy eyes and furled brow wondering back at me about why I’m asking for things not on the wall, because if it’s not on the wall it doesn’t really exist, so “I’ll have to charge you for a large” she says and makes a face and waits for me to answer, holding up the line of addicts waiting for a fix…
“I don’t want a large, I would like a small, in a large cup…”
“Well, the price of cream and sugar is part of the coffee” she says being overtly visibly frustrated and annoyed with the un-ending line of addicts piling up making her day more miserable by the second quite perturbed that someone has asked for something thats not on the wall, if only they just stuck to what was on the wall, I can make a half-caf skinny mocha whatever with foam because thats on the wall, but a small coffee in a large cup…
“I don’t want cream” I reply, “or sugar. I would like a small coffee, in a container that is large-ish or larger than what you normally put a small coffee into, nothing more, just room, the coffee needs room, that’s all, I just need the room.”
Glassy eyed miserable minimum wager blinked and paused,… and thought about things for a minute, I watched the wheels turn in her head and could see that things were not going well for her at that very moment what with the line of addicts waiting for a fix, and so I gave up and ordered a large coffee, paid for the large coffee in a large cup and dumped out enough to leave me with a small coffee in a large cup, because the woman at the coffee shop just never understands.
I just like the room…

Clay and Stockton Streets, Chinatown. San Francisco, California, 2007.
After a short interuption, it seems that everyone else is just trying to get by, to live as long as they can and play the game and buy things and make the best with what they have, as little as that may be. Who am I to pretend that I fit in to any of this.
I am terribly unimportant, and I am beginning to realize that I am terribly content in being so, even if it means that everyone else just passes me by. For the most part I am happy to be left alone, I worry less when I’m alone.
At least five people asked me if I had an extra cigarette today, not that I mind, but I do, and it’s not like I have extra cigarettes laying around, most days it seems like I have just enough.

Legs at the crosswalk. Post Street, San Francisco, Ca. 2007

Ocean Beach. San Francsico, Ca. 2007

Candy shop window, North Beach. San Francisco, Ca. 2007

Cafe L’ Osteria del Forno, San Francsico, Ca. 2007

75th annual Golden Gloves, San Francisco, Ca. 2006
From www.savepolaroid.com
“On February 8, 2008 Polaroid Corporation announced that it will discontinue production of the instant film that made the company a household name. This site will document the aftermath of this announcement and will serve as a home-base for the effort to convince another company to take over and begin producing the cherished technology that Polaroid has abandoned.
Over the next few days and weeks we’ll be assembling articles, links, stories and planning out the best way to create a joint effort to save instant film.
One thing you can do to help get things started is upload your photo to the Save Polaroid flickr group.
Read the details here.”