Wednesday, December 12, 2007

dropping, breaking, spilling


Aah, do you have a flat tire? A scrunchy looking man outside of the Salvation Army in Spuistraat is making conversation as I walk by.

I tell him, no, no flat tire, it's just that I lost one of my bike's lamps and broke the other, again, and it's getting dark and the police has been so active in stopping people and giving them fines and I really can't have another one. The other day, I almost started crying when a police officer stopped me for biking in the wrong place.

I break things, I loose things, I spill them, too. I drop drinks that were just bought for me. I dropped three in one night once. It bothers me a lot. It bothers other people more; or less, I cannot be sure. Sometimes I want to hide underneath my blankets, build a tent and not emerge untill I am done with that. I am scared of entropy, scared of all things that keep breaking and falling and leaving me. My things like me, actually. I will have you know. I had a bike that really liked me but it got stolen anyway.

So I am walking.

My new friend looks compassionate. Did you know, he says, that by law, you are allowed to bike without lamps for half an hour after dusk sets in? He says look it up, I promise you it will be ok.

You will go a lot faster.

2 comments:

Anna said...

Ah, loopholes!

Tell them: I never know what I have till it's lost, dropped, broken or spilt.
Tell them you once had a bike which you could write books about, for no other reason than that you lost it.
Tell them the half hour after dusk is the best, because it's the part of the night when anything goes.
Tell them dropping the drink they bought you only makes you appreciate every drop of it.

Anonymous said...

"Tell them dropping the drink they bought you only makes you appreciate every drop of it." super grappig...

as long as you don't drop me....lieve uhk
kus