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Zachary

Tim Knight from Slope of Hope's picture




 

From the Slope of Hope: A handwritten letter arrived in my mailbox last week from a reader. In it was a note from whom I would guess is an elderly gentleman, thanking me for my work both on Slope and on Tastytrade, but politely asking me to use the phrase "God damn it" less frequently, since he found it upsetting.

The handwriting on the paper trembled like leaves in an autumn breeze, and it was obvious it took time and effort to send me this two-page missive. It meant something to him.

It never occurred to me that I ever used this phrase in a video, let alone often enough to cause concern. All the same, the letter, as with the many other letters I have received over the years, made an impression. For one thing, it made me wonder how angry I must be in order for this kind of sentiment to seep through, since I wasn't even aware I was saying it.

Which leads me to the topic at hand. Specifically, a man. A terribly deformed man whom I think about almost daily. For now, I'll call him Sup.

One summer evening, a few months ago, I was walking with my family down University Avenue, the central boulevard in our town, and the location of dozens of high-end retail stores that cater to the insatiable appetite of the affluent consumers in my fair city.

"Sup?" came from the voice from below. (As is: "What's up?") I glanced around and didn't see the speaker. That is, until I looked lower. There, standing on the brick sidewalk on the corner of Bryant and University Avenues was a person unlike any I had ever seen before.

His head, torso, and arms were normal. There were two things obviously terribly wrong with 1117-suphim: first, his back was completely malformed, with a huge hump, and second, his legs - - - or what passed for legs - - were just a few inches long. He appeared to be mixed race (the politically incorrect term, I think, is "mulatto") and he had a big afro.

"How you guys doin' this evening?", he asked. I stammered that we were pretty good, although I confess being a little surprised. That brief exchange ended the conversation, and my family and I continued on to Umami Burgers for dinner. In the receding distance, I heard this fellow chatting up other people as they passed, asking for a dollar from anyone who would listen.

From that day forward, I paid attention to that corner whenever I passed it in my car or walked by it during my downtown errands. Sup, as I called him, was on that corner more often than not. On occasion, I'd see a special wheelchair near him, which I suppose he could hoist himself onto and roll to wherever it was he lived (if such a place existed). But he was never in it. He was also on the sidewalk at knee level.

What struck me about Sup the most was his attitude. This guy was seriously and, dare I say, grotesquely deformed. When he moved from one place to another, he typically did so by pressing his hands against the ground and swinging his torso and tiny legs forward, much like an ape at the zoo. Although his short stature made him easy to miss, once people saw him, they couldn't help but take note. I can only imagine the range of reactions he's ever received.

But back to his attitude: this guy was relentlessly positive. And I don't mean grinning, giggling, and thumbs-up positive. I'm talking about a self-evident confidence, determination, and cachet. He gave salutations to everyone who passed; he casually smoked on a cigarette while chatting up people who would talk to him; and he made verbal passes at good-looking women as they strolled by (enjoying, incidentally, a supremely good view of their legs from his two-foot high vantage point). In spite of all this, most people tried their best to ignore him. They just felt too awkward (as if they were the ones who were entitled to feel uneasy).

Since I'm an unrelentingly self-referential twit, I pondered these observations in the context of my own behavior. Here was this guy who had every reason to feel sorry for himself. His tremendous physical deformities were going to dominate whatever impression he might possibly give to someone. He was begging on a street corner for dollar bills. He was being passed every day by countless numbers of people, many of them affluent, some of them stinking rich, while he begged for a little money to eat. And yet he was totally unfazed (in spite of, I wager, some cruel reactions or mean utterances offered by heartless strangers).

I, on the other hand, have a PhD in self-pity. I'm a white American male - by definition, a privileged class - who has a perfectly good body, good health, a zillion dollar house, and enough money to live the rest of my life without working another day. I've got a beautiful wife, magnificent children, and a good income that doesn't rob me of any personal freedom. And yet I am seized on a virtually daily basis with how miserable and rotten my life is, and how I don't deserve any of the bad things that have ever happened to me. I dare feel sorry for myself due to solvable personal problems or the fact the stupid stock market refuses to fall.

Sure, if I cornered you and shared a couple of drinks, I could probably conjure up enough tales-of-woe to get you to agree that, yeah, poor Tim is a pathetic sumbitch, and it's no wonder he's often tempted to jump in front of the next CalTrain that passes by. Indeed, most people on this planet would be able to surgically extract some sliver of their lives and make it seem sad. Hell, Elon Musk could surely give grisly tales from his multiple failed marriages, although I imagine it would be a Herculean feat for anyone to actually conjure up sympathy for the guy.

Sup, in sharp contrast to this morose malaise, was just plain cool. On more than one occasion, I'd see that he had managed to coax a couple of women - attractive young women - over to talk to him, and he was just smoking his cig, chatting them up, casual as could be. I don't know what he said to get their attention, but whatever it was, it worked. God knows the guy has chatted up more good-looking women than I ever have in my own life. That's me in the corner.

I've long been tempted to interview the guy, because there's so much I want to know about him. Where is he from? What's his background? What's his physical malady all about? What are the most interesting, kind, and nasty things people have said to him? What are some interesting stories from the many months he's been hanging out at this particular corner? What does he hope the future brings to him? How does he manage to stay so upbeat?

I haven't done the interview yet, and I'm not sure if I ever will. I mean, it takes a certain amount of gumption to start quizzing a guy up and down; he might react poorly to the whole thing. But I've got a suspicion he would be all too glad to tell his story. I'm more worried about my ability to do the interview than his interest in answering my questions.

However, I took one baby step in that direction a few days ago. I was walking by, and as usual, he tosses out - - "Sup, man? Got a dollar for me?" I was on my way to my mailbox, so I replied, "In a minute." I suppose he gets this kind of brush-off all the time, but I was sincere. I was going to come back with a dollar in a minute, because there was something I wanted to buy with it.

"Yo, yo!" he said as I returned to the corner. I handed him a dollar and asked, "What's your name?" In my mind, the question was "What's your real name?", since I had known him as "Sup" all these months.

"Zachary."

"OK, have a good night." And I left.

So now at least I had a real name for this person. That was a more dignified, after all, since I had heretofore attached a goofy moniker to him. But I really need to interview this guy one of these days. In a way, I admire him, even though his disposition and attitude just make me loathe myself even worse than before. I mean, seriously, what right do I have?

So be it. Zachary is one tough hombre. Respect.

 

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Tue, 11/18/2014 - 04:27 | 5460381 Tapeworm
Tapeworm's picture

Gee, I have always found this act to be uniformly a scam. If the guy is that badly off he has an unending gusher of FRNs to support his being.

 I use the Salvation Army to separate the scammers from the truly needy, and I suggest that you do that also rather than dropping good-feel cash on a guy that has control of a corner and an income of double or triple of his donors of feel-good folks dropping cash into his pot. Perhaps I am just pissed that his tax rate is zero, and mine well exceeds 55%. I do not at all enjoy being so suspicious of the motives of those that I want to help. Experience makes me so hardened.

 Then we have the pitiful condition of the folks that bust the borders en-masse to clean up on the taxes of those that have been hooked for the bailout of the banksters and then the Spanish speaking gangsters. Crimea another river of tears.

 This sob story is a complete lie from start to finish.

http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/ditched-by-traveling-subscription...

 Is the original story. The two mentioned are using aliases and the entire sob story was a scam to leech monies from those inclined to be patsies for a common scam. The reporter, Meg Kissinger is notorious for swallowing and for suckering the most gullible people around Milwaukee County into leftist scams of Goomint and the lice that use goomint to leech the rest of us that are suckers enough to work for wages on the book.

 The wall to wall lies in the original story should be enough to get whatever is left of their subscription base to abandon that rag.

 I still subscribe to my local newspaper because I hope that the last decent reporter standing will be an honest reporter on the facts and someone that will truly reveal what is going on with the goomint slime. After what went on in the past several ballot things, I found that the only real news reportage was from both lefty and semi-righty amateur reports on blogs.

 My old notion of continuance of subscription just to pay up for sorely needed reporting on what is really going on is a fantasy in my brain. None on my local newspaper ever bothered to even run with the good leads coming from blogs. The old notion of the "Freedom of Press" that was so heavily promoted in countless movies of the 1930's and 1940's is a myth more so now  than even the most heavily critiqued screeds of that era. Some at that time wrote that off as being nothing more than a fantasy whose time if ever was current, was gone by 1944.

 Papers now are scrapping whatever last bit of being credible in order to kiss up to whatever controls them. It is all finished. Even on the least consequential stories in our local rag one can see just how easily the "reporters" are willing to toss everything in order to get a passing grade from their handlers. They mkust see that this paper is done. They are kissing up to the leftist establishment on all that they wrtite about.

 Their natural subsciber base, that is the only ones that will pay to subscribe will dump the rag after this election cycle. Why should anyone take it excepting for the last of the chain store sale advertisements? You parasites killed your host. Yeah, I'll still enjoy a 1930's B+W movie on a fantasy version of the newspaper business and the huge importance of truly independant reporters, but I know that it was a fib then, and now it is a blatant lie.

 I suppose that my favorite movie of all time is "His Gal Friday" because of the non stop humor and the commentary on the presstitutes/gombit axis.

 If nothing else, look up the movie and watch it. You will not like it if you are slow on following the dialogue. It has more words and sentences packed into ninety minutes than any othe movie around.

https://archive.org/details/his_girl_friday

 is a link for it being free on the web for we cheap bastards.

 

Mon, 11/17/2014 - 22:15 | 5459792 Chipped ham
Chipped ham's picture

Dude, talk to him. But don't make it charity. Or an interview. Just see sup. I bet it takes both of you to cool places.

And quit feeling sorry for yourself. It's unbecoming. Go see him.

Mon, 11/17/2014 - 21:57 | 5459718 Moaron
Moaron's picture

Talk to him.  He's a friggin human just like eveyone else.

My kid likes to hang with homeless/schitzo/fucked up people on the street.  We build up these walls around us but once you open the door you'll be much richer.  You can learn a lot.

Mon, 11/17/2014 - 20:50 | 5459468 luna_man
luna_man's picture

 

A STINKIN DOLLAR!...From a man that know's what a dollar is worth.

 

hope he tells you to jump in a lake, before giving an interview

Mon, 11/17/2014 - 20:46 | 5459456 Bernanke'sDaddy
Bernanke'sDaddy's picture

I've seen that dude while strolling down on University ave too....

Mon, 11/17/2014 - 19:32 | 5459206 Grouchy Marx
Grouchy Marx's picture

"Since I'm an unrelentingly self-referential twit..."

I enjoyed that phrase, and kudos for being that honest with yourself. Self-honesty is the starting point for education, if one lets it happen.

One advantage Zachary has over you, most likely, is that Zachary's friends like him despite his exterior situation. Can that be said of yours?

I learned that some I counted as friends were not, when I went through a rough period. 

I think it was Lee Iacocca's father who said (paraphrased) it is a fortunate man who has even one true friend in his life, and a very wealthy man (not in dollars) who can say he has had more than one. 

Mon, 11/17/2014 - 19:23 | 5459187 sherryw
sherryw's picture

Hey Tim, let us know when you have done the interview. It will be really good for you to do it. You must be getting ready for it to have written this piece, unless this piece is the excuse not to do it! I found in my life that the more I do for others the the better I feel.

Mon, 11/17/2014 - 19:08 | 5459137 limacon
limacon's picture

Respect .

You got it right .

Things go badly without it .

Try it on you significant other if you don't believe me .

Loss of Respect scuppers all .

See

https://www.academia.edu/9354151/The_Economics_of_Disrespect_

Or

http://andreswhy.blogspot.com/2014/11/economics-of-disrespect.html

 

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