Saturday, September 6, 2014

Tardiness



The bus was late, but it finally came the moment I wanted to call in work (and saying that I might be late). I looked at the clock one more time and got on the bus. Because of that 15-min tardiness, the bus was overly filled. I took off my backpack and carried it as if it were a briefcase, then turned up the volume on my headphone.
I used to take the same bus every morning but towards the other end, when I first started school here as a literature student. It has always been difficult for me to get up early in the morning and I hated to walk into a classroom in a middle of a lecture. When I over slept, I would take the bus two hours later to catch the next whole lecture. If the bus wasn’t crowded, I would even try to finish the last bits of the assignment minutes before it was due. Oh yes, those assignments, thousands of pages and a handful of readers. Bus riding in a sunny day is a day dream trap. There have been countless times I missed my stop because the day dreams blurred out the station name outside the window.
The bus arrived at a popular stop. I pushed myself against the side window to let the people around me getting in and out. When I started my second study a couple of years back, I often got out here to change to metro, like most of the passengers did. Today I wasn’t going to get out of the bus here and tomorrow either since I had decided to put the second study on the back burner. Last week I heard two people talking about schrödinger’s equation on the bus; and I sensed a chill running down my spine. If I had managed my time perfectly, I would probably be talking about the same thing now.
“If”—there is another “if I had…” thought again, I guess I need to turn the volume a bit higher.  
We passed the pharmacy at a main cross road – I was half way there, and if there wasn’t any traffic jam, I could even make it on time for work! A man in colorful T shirt and jeans rushed out of the pharmacy, with one hand carrying a bag from the drug store and the other dragging a blue haired girl with lip piercings with him. The young couple slipped through the bus door split seconds before it closed, giggling and out of breath. I don’t know if they knew or cared being stared at from other passengers.
“It is important to observe what people wear.” An artist told me that.
“For you?”
“For everyone! You can know so much about a stranger just by looking at what s/he is wearing!”
“Are you still trying to convince yourself of that?”
“It is true! We reveal who we are through what we choose to wear.”
“Is it important for you that other people notice what you are on?”
That was the last time we spoke.
Through the bus window, I have seen the shops along the streets closed and reopened at an amazingly fast pace in the past six months.  I don’t remember what these shops were, but only “shop-to-rent” signs in various colors and sizes. The streets feels like a train station, and the shops are wagons owned by drifters. I am too chicken and cynical to open my own business; I’d rather work for someone.
It was almost a miracle that I made it to work 10 minutes earlier. I went into the office to greet my colleagues then to the kitchen to fix my caffeine withdraw. The pupils were done with school and starting to arrive. That is when I start my shift – at the end of the pupils’ shifts.