However, this young man (who was my same age) was genuinely interested in striking up a conversation. I was not interested from the very start in this guy, but his realness and, frankly, courage are what lead me to not turn him away. Not a lot of guys these days will come up to a girl interested in actually getting to know the girl. Often-time, what girls are greeted with is catcalling and perverted remarks.
Earlier today, in the Starbucks where I am currently writing from, I witnessed another one of these curious interactions. A 15 year old boy was sitting with his mother. In walk a group of college boys and they order their Starbucks and grab seats a couple feet away from the boy. All of a sudden, the boy speaks up and asks one of the boys if it’s alright to ask him a question. The 19 year old boy says yes. Now, what happened next shocked me. The 19 year old boy who was approached did not mind continuing the conversation. In fact, it was both of them who tangoed. And, for the cherry on the cake, I was not at all annoyed by their interaction. Let me clarify something for you non-New Yorkers. Even if we are not the ones approached but we are witnesses to an attempted approach, WE STILL GET ANNOYED AND ARE ANNOYED FOR THE OTHER PERSON.
I did, for a couple split seconds, let my mind wander to those thoughts, but overall, I was pleasantly surprised how cooperative the latter party was. The 15 year old boy told the 19 year old boy that he didn’t have many friends and didn’t mind making new friends. He then proceeded to ask if the 19 year old boy could be his friend. And the latter accepted. This really did warm my heart.
And finally… I was sitting on the bus yesterday and I know this bus always gets packed.
I always sit in a single seat. No matter how many bags I have, I am never that ass hole that takes up two seats for him and the non-living objects in his accompaniment. When the bus is beginning to get full, an older woman mounts the bus. I can see and very clearly tell that she is tired of standing. But I continue to sit. I do not give my seat up to her. I consciously made a choice to not be one kind of asshole, but a different kind of asshole. Now, this is where I new that the New York mindset is one very hard to get rid of. I was battling with myself the whole time. Pretending to disregard her and feeling terrible because being courteous was not second nature to me. When she got off the bus, I beat myself up for about 3 seconds and then felt relieved that that pressure I had been self-imposing, was gone. I feel horrible about that and it is definitely not one of my brightest moments.
The change that I am slowly but surely to make is one of a wholistic nature. If I want to be good, every aspect of my life needs to vow to make that change, too. Because once you delve into that goal, you cannot waiver and you cannot falter.
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