One
has not experienced true terror until one has relied on public
transport. It's a symbiotic relationship: those greedy bastards need
money, and we, the people, who are too lazy, too old, too ugly or too
disabled to drive, need them. Unfortunately, the public transport
busy bodies take a huge liberty on the faces of its consumers.
Trapped in the maze of cancellations, delays and red tape there
exists the unfortunate flurry of people reliant on the 'service' and
when the 'service' stops 'serving', these people are required to
emulate this efficient mode of productivity by cancelling or delaying
their own appointments and the cycle continues eternal, ad nauseam. I
was, and continue to be, one of those people. Anyone would believe my
destination spanned thousands of miles and I was complaining about
the ferries or airports; but it was nothing so glamorous. My
destination happened to be the decrepit slums of Birmingham in the
depths of winter. My goal was simple: to get to university. I only
had to go in once a week in my first semester as both of my modules
were on the same day; so, although I had six sevenths of the week to
myself (barring studying and writing) the day ended up being
excruciatingly long. Each of these days followed the same pattern. I
had to get up at six o'clock, pour cold water over my face to break
any illusion that I was still dreaming, put about three layers of
clothes on my wiry frame to fight the Arctic conditions of early
November, and high tail it out of my front door whilst my family
slept like newborns under the effect of tranquillisers.
No
sooner had I removed the key from out of my front door and locked it,
the cold air had hit me like a thousand tonne anvil. The foreign cold
particles in the sky infested my virginal, still warm body like a
virus, and, in a microsecond, the symptoms: fine strands of hair on
my arms and a shiver in my body, began to appear. I sighed and began
to walk zombie-like to the bus stop. The only ally I had was my
iPhone which had over a thousand songs at its disposal. After a quick
touch, the 'shuffle' function activated and the song 'Black Sabbath'
met my ears. It's one of my favourite songs and I was glad that I
heard something familiar, but during the early hours of the morning,
things that are treasured and respected take on a whole new quality:
they're uncannily eerie. The song fitted my thoughts perfectly. While
there wasn't any actual rain like in the song, there was a figurative
storm raging in my head. It could have been symbolic of my digressive
thoughts, pelting away, insignificantly into the abyss of my mind,
never to be thought of again. If my ears didn't deceive me, I could
hear the distant ringing of a church bell crying out for a bygone age
in which there weren't any commitments in life; we lived by our own
measures and values, free of the worries of Travel West Midlands, the
Lib-Dem/Conservative Coalition and strict deadlines. Suddenly the
riff by Tony Iommi and the high- pitched wails of Ozzy Osbourne would
convince us that it was all an illusion. My reluctance to trek to the
bus stop was matched by the slow, lumbering guitar riff and the
grimy, miserable tone of Geezer Butler's bass. It acted as a not so
subtle reminder that the rest of my day would seem like this. I was
heading for my doom; something, anything, I do in the day would
result in my embarrassment in some form or another.
As I
left my street, I examined the houses. All of them seemed bereft of
life. Not one of them in my street had their curtains opened or any
form of light on. A rather insular thought, I recounted later; the
neighbours may have been having orgies behind those 'dead' curtains
and I wouldn't have known the difference. After all, my higher
functions don't begin to work until after I've fallen asleep again.
After slipping through frozen marshland that may or may not have been
people's gardens, I almost made it to the bus stop. The only thing
that stood in between us was the alleyway. This infernal passageway
has been the bane of my existence since I moved to my current house
when I was five years old. I've fallen down there more times than I
care to imagine; whether it be frost, flood or fire. After dusting
myself down, I was never sure whether I was red from injury or
embarrassment. The occasional graze on my skin never bothered me; my
white blood cells could repair it in no time; but no amount of
biological and medical research can do anything to cure a broken
reputation. In spite of my personal grudge of the gully, I always
felt that the place has an aura of evil and has had a continually odd
effect on me. It's hard to describe, but the buildings around it seem
to bend and twist as if they were props in a German expressionist
film and block the only source of light. The wall that houses the
grassy bank has an eternal resident in the form of a black cat.
Whoever it was who said that a black cat brings you luck is a fool;
that cat always passes my path, yet I'm the most unlucky person
alive. The parking lot adjacent to it is adorned with Gothic looking
gates and they amplify the feeling of deprivation and abandonment I
feel whenever I walk through there. It was almost inevitable that
they'd build those gates there. Even
now, twenty years young, I tread carefully. I'm not scared of muggers
or anything like that; after all, they'd be sleeping on top of their
ill-gotten gains whilst I was pondering that thought, it's just the
atmosphere that unnerves me. I'm not superstitious in the slightest,
but that alleyway makes me question my grip on reality. I know that
somehow, somewhere, there are some unusual powers emanating from
there. Being neither a smoker nor a drinker, sleep-deprivation is my
hallucinogenic.
After
stumbling through the alleyway of hell, I finally arrived at the bus
stop and, naturally, it was deserted. It now seemed like a Twilight
Zone episode. Out of the corner
of my eye I could see Rod Serling in his trendy suit from the sixties
narrating my life in meticulous and elegant purple prose, punctuated
by Bernard Hermann's intense soundtrack. In my naïve state of mind
at half six in the morning, I could delude myself into thinking that
a neutron bomb attack had occurred in the time when my eye was moving
rapidly. The buildings were still standing, but all life had been
eradicated. Nathan Lloyd, sole survivor of the human race. Forget the
atomic attack, humanity would well and truly be at a disadvantage
now; its last hope in the form of a long-haired, charmless cretin who
had all the grace of a maggot! I suppose it'd be a fitting indictment
of humanity if they left me in charge. I smiled at such a sentiment,
at least survival would break with the monotony of day to day life.
Although I discarded morals, would I shed a tear to those who had
perished? My girlfriend was the only important person in my life, so
I would definitely cry over her. I'd probably yell out her name in
vain over a smashed landscape until I expire of loneliness, regret
and old age.
My reverie was interrupted by a passing car. I knew I enjoyed
fantasy, but I wasn't aware that I positively revelled in it. No more
digressions. I began to resolve myself to keeping my mind on more
pressing matters of what time the bus was supposed to arrive. Even
though I knew what time the bus would come: forty-four minutes past
six, I checked the bus schedule affixed to the bus stop. 6:44. For
once in my life, I was right about something. I checked the time on
my iPhone. At 6:37, I was too early for the bus. Shit. One of my pet
peeves is waiting. I'm either early or punctual; my nerves can't take
me being late. On the flip-side; however, if someone else is late on
my time, words can't express the anger and anxiety I feel. I checked
my watch again and only a minute had passed. Even though it was
useless to pray for an early bus, especially when its vendor was
Travel West Midlands, I could not resist cursing. I suppose my rising
anger was a blanket for my paranoia. What if the bus didn't arrive?
I'd have to wait half an hour biting my nails down to the bone as the
world of university would continue without me and I'd still be stuck
in the dark hole that is Gornal.
Why is it that every minute seems to wane on pointlessly when you are
waiting for public transport? It's almost as if we are in a time warp
in which the basic mechanics of time are distorted by some fatuous
joker who gets some sadistic or, worse, sexual pleasure on spying on
us checking our watches. Each minute waiting for that damn bus makes
several thousand of my brain cells jump off cliffs like lemmings in
my cranial cavity. There simply isn't anything as soul destroying,
especially when your bus ends up not only being late, but
non-existent. It's the same with trains. There you are sitting or
standing at the platform alone and the only thing you can do to stop
your mind from wandering is to inspect the arrivals board, which is
placed in a strategic position above you in order to mock you.
Waiting for a bus is worse though because Travel West Midlands still
live in the Stone Age and haven't invested in the same technology to
track buses or, more challengingly, hire competent drivers.
Inevitably, my patience was rewarded with nothing. As soon as my
iPhone said 6:45, my inner voice assured me that the bus wouldn't
come. I shook my head out of craven disgust for the company that I
relied on and examined my bus pass. Was the £233 entirely worth it?
Did it justify the utter disdain that the bus company felt towards
its patrons when their drivers do their job only when they feel like
it? Was I subsiding this cavalier attitude that seem to ooze from the
company's noxious existence? Possessing anything that had Centro's
name on it is a severe castigation of my outlook on life: that
meetings should be honoured and service is what you pay for. It was
perhaps relevant that my bus pass was in a red case; it did a perfect
job in provoking me like a bull in a toreador outfit. The time
continued to melt away in my head. I no longer felt cold because my
growing anger acted as a boiler and with each passing second, the
boiler became more and more overstocked with fuel. It was at 6:51
when I exploded. I never remember much when I have an episode of
rage. 'Fucking pricks!' I must have shouted at the top of my voice,
scaring off a murder of crows that had made nest in the nearby tree
and doubtless waking up people in the vicinity. We have truly failed
with humanity if buses cannot make a simple time. It was early in the
morning. There was no excuse for such a shoddy service. There was
little alternative: I would have to jog up the huge hill that links
Lower and Upper Gornal to catch the number 1 bus with the added
chance that I would rupture my back thanks to the huge volumes of
Romantic poetry I had in my backpack. With a loud sigh accompanied by
a growl, I began to lengthen my maelstrom into madness by walking up
that hill.
Due to it being nearly seven o'clock, the roads were busier now. I
had to take caution when crossing the Five Ways crossroads as it is a
site for street racers, pensioners and learner drivers and I didn't
quite fancy becoming pate for a cannibal's sandwich. After a swift
jog, I was finally on the road to Upper Gornal. With a curse in my
throat and a reluctance in my step, I was now ready to make the
massive trek that awaited me. The vertical climb was akin to scaling
Everest to me. I have never been into sports or exercise; in my
opinion it's a gargantuan waste of time because we are all going to
end up in a pine box, whether we exercise or not. It were times like
that that I resented my hostility to exercise. If I were an athlete,
I'd have been able to climb that hill in huge leaps and bounds and
not even have the time and space to think; but, alas, due to me being
built like a Swingball pole, I plodded along like a swan with its
foot cut off by poachers.
As I walked up the hill with my head bowed down, I finally realised
that I was exhausted. This went beyond me feeling tired as I did when
I left the house; that was merely due to me not being awake fully,
but after enduring what I had endured in that hour, my soul was
crying out for a break. There were multiple possibilities as to why
I was feeling lethargic. The first explanation that cropped up was,
of course, my paltry physique and how a chicken could be seen as
Arnold Schwarzenegger when I stand by it. It was a moot point as it
goes without saying. My second explanation was that I had a low
tolerance level to bullshit. Attracting misfortune as I do, one would
expect me to adjust to it, but one never adjusts to it and rising to
fate's bait every single time is indeed tiring. I usually wouldn't
mind, but, as I have stated, days at university end up being terribly
long; I'm out of my house for fourteen hours and if the first hour is
tedious, it serves as an incredibly optimistic omen for the rest of
the day.
I passed the myriad anonymous houses as I searched my mind for any
vestige of positive thought. The grimy surroundings of my home town
did little to raise my spirits. A school, church and a drinks shop
stood between the replacement bus stop and I and none of them made me
raise my head to even acknowledge them; I was too preoccupied by the
sudden bright light in the distance. The sun had finally risen.
Before I could scowl with disappointment at false hope, I could see a
dwelling illuminated by the opal rays that cast a shadow that
extended to my feet. Miracles do seem to occur as I identified the
peculiar sight as the bus stop. I went towards it and inspected the
time: 7:04. Seeing as it was 7:03 on my iPhone clock, I hoped and
prayed that it'd arrive. People who argue that patience is a virtue
are not people; they are androids programmed by some petulant
scientist to believe that everything in life is positive and have no
grasp on those ever present imperfections that make it so
exasperating to live. As luck would have it, the bus actually arrived
on time. Being utterly gobsmacked, I presented my bus pass to the
driver. He was a typical Travel West Midlands employee: all charm
with an eternal frown that emanates invitation and a strong desire to
perform his job by nodding mechanically that allows passage like a
contemporary 'open sesame'. I smiled mockingly and took my usual seat
on the bus. I looked out at the back window and waved at the darkened
slums and relaxed: the day could only get worse. Dolly Parton once
said that 'if you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain'.
There wasn't a rainbow, but there was a hell of a lot of rain.