Saturday, August 1, 2020

August 2020: "Beep beep!" and The Homeless RV Camper "Park" Of Death















     August is not much more than an hour old.  I wake up on Saturday around 1 AM to use the bathroom.  I can barely hear what I think are two separate music soundtracks.  At first I think it's next door.  I get up to investigate.  It's one soundtrack, and it comes from outside, from the parking lot across the street, from a pickup truck parked in a space at the apartments there.  Mexican music.  Yesterday evening, I saw a Caucasian guy on these apartment steps, in a suit and tie, and mask, on his phone.  A white SUV pulled up and he got inside and it left.  Now, in the dark, I'm walking toward the end of my own parking lot under the moon and stars.  I spot a female sitting cross-legged under a tree, looking at her phone.  On he way back inside, I suddenly notice that it's the teenaged daughter of my neighbor.  Just before I return to bed, I notice this neighbor's kitchen light on.  The music goes on for an hour and a half.  I think that I won't ever get back to sleep.  Next thing I know, I awake with seventeen minutes to spare before I can leave for work with a comfortable margin of time.  I'm out the door with an hour and a half to make it.  I've made it home as fast as an hour and ten minutes.  Earlier this week, I was passed on the trail to work by a grey-haired guy wearing a mesh vest.  On the back was printed, "triple bypass."  Yesterday, I was headed to work and just of the trail, climbing a steep hill in a sleepy, hidden neighborhood.  At the top, a couple of other grey-haired guys came up the hill behind me, on ten speeds.  The first announced that, "This hill should be outlawed."  The second said he admired my hill climbing technique.  I wasn't aware I was employing it, but he must have been talking about what i refer to as switching back.  That's taking the hill at an angle, back and forth across the street, traffic permitting.  This morning, the camper is there on the way to the trailhead.  It appears to be here in the morning and gone in the afternoon.  When I come back this way after work today, it will still be here.  It must have Saturdays off.  But out on the trail this morning, I rolling past the parking lot where the twin campers formerly held court.  The clothes-packed, sleeping woman, other banana woman vehicle is gone.  A lone Parks and Rec truck is here.  A worker picks up trash from the pile, piece by piece, and throws it into the bed.  At least an hour later, I'm approaching the entrance to the horse trail, where the guy stood in front of my approaching bike.  I'm glad he ain't here this morning, as I watch a mountain biker come blasting out of the entrance like a bat out of hell.  I make it to work and clock in...with a single minute to spare.  Today, Saturday, is a short day at work.  Afterward, I head to the waterpark today instead of tomorrow, when I will head over to the sister's to celebrate my birthday.
     Sunday.  I'm on the way to the sister's for an unexpected party.  Along the way, I'm coming up one of several long hills.  I'm headed through the west end of the metro area.  Residential homes out here have additions including plenty of exterior metal and clear plastic.  Toward the top of the hill, a woman approaches with a baby carriage, on an empty street on a lazy Sunday afternoon.  As she gets closer, I see that she's homeless and her carriage is filled with stuff.  At the backyard birthday party, the air is cool and the day is relaxing.  I get a new pair of badly needed fingerless gloves and a new seat cushion.  I think the last birthday party I had was during the 1990s.  Afterward, I'm off to track down a new pair of sandals.  Last week, an old pair finally broke. I spend the rest of the afternoon hauling my gifts on a bike ride across the west side.  I'm coming down a residential street past a yard with a shell of a trailer.  It's missing windows, and has handmade signs all over it announcing that it's someone's home and not free to take.  I hit a couple of shops unsuccessfully in a shopping center out here on my sister's side of town before I decide to stop into a Village Inn.  I left the house without breakfast.  A little while after I'm seated, I hear a guy who comes in.  He and a woman sit at a nearby table, with a guy in a motorized wheelchair.  All three have grey hair, the hair of the guy in the wheelchair in a braid.  The guy I'm listening to had a do rag, and a Harley Davison mask and T-shirt.  He's telling the guy something about being able to park a camper out at a lake.  After eating, I'm successful tracking down what surely must be one of the last pair of sandals anyplace this summer.  Back in my own neighborhood, I'm coming down one of its streets when a young guy on a bike turns a corner.  With one hand, he's guiding another bike.  He says to me, "What's up, primo?"  I have an unknown cousin.  There's a considerable age difference between us.
     Monday.  I need to stop at a supermarket before the rec center, on the way to work.  I decide to look for a more direct way to the gym, rather than backtrack to the bike trail.  A little while later, I'm coming down a residential block where new mini-condo duplexes are replacing brick homes.  Down the sidewalk, a young woman approaches with her dog on a leash.  She's in a cropped shirt and her hair is up in a pair of tight little buns on her head.  Along with her glasses, she looks as if she's cute and sexy and smart.  She gets close enough that I can read the front of her top.  In Yale school letters, it reads, "DYKE."  A little way past her, I spot a familiar figure in this neighborhood.  My impression is this is a woman.  She's completely covered and her clothes appear to hang off her body.  Her head is hidden in a mask and huge brimmed hat.  She steadily walks down the sidewalk.  Some ten hours later, I'm coming home from work through a residential neighborhood which appears to be full of young women, all walking their dogs.  I grab a cheap dinner at a 7-Eleven on a busy boulevard, and I ride to a park to eat it.  It's a hangout for a handful of homeless.  In an area enclosed with cinderblock walls are picnic tables and grills.  A homeless couple loiters.  The guy has a Harley Davidson vest, but I see no motorcycle.  I find a spot on a plastic bench.  A teenager and a couple kids are all on bikes, and congregate at a spot where the trail meets a street, and is an entrance to the park.  They are blocking the way as a homeless guy approaches unnoticed on his bike.  The trio is engrossed in banter as he attempts to ask them to move.  They relent and he is one his way, saying something about not blocking the way.  They reply but I cannot hear.  A second homeless guy approaches on his bike.  He tows a kind of cart on wheels.  It appears to be for transporting an oxygen bottle, but it has noting on it this evening.  The following morning, I'm out on the trail to work.  A cyclist behind me announces that there are four others approaching from behind her.  The last one brings up the rear.  He's in a cycling jersey, again with "triple bypass" on the back.  This is either a heart surgery survivor, or it's the name of some kind of bike race.

     The city was overrun with false prophets and savage messiahs, as well as double agents and police informers.  Strange creeds and mysterious leaders developed overnight followings.  Inexplicable communiques were issued from the underground.  The sacraments of blood and guns...  This was the churning froth of ...rage and counterrevolutionary cunning from which slithered the Symbionese Liberation Army in late 1973.  The SLA was born in...a behavior modification program...in Vacaville, the California prison system's medical facility.  ...a reputation [for] mind control experimentation.  And...run by a man [who] had...worked for...a CIA-controlled firm that built...interrogation chambers...  One of the few inmates with whom [he] developed a special bond was Donald DeFreeze...  ...the convict began his own prison course...  At Vacaville, DeFreeze reinvented himself as Cinque...  ...transferred to Soledad Prison...  On his first night, Cinque...scaled...the twelve-foot fence...  ..in Berkeley...Cinque soon began building his own underground liberation force...the Symbionese Liberation Army.  The SLA leader mesmerized his followers...He strutted around various SLA safe houses...naked and fully erect...   Cinque and his women formed the power nucleus within the group.    "I crave the power Charles Manson had," declared Cinque...  But in contrast to Manson's girls, they came from solid, middle-class backgrounds.  ...traumas - assassinations of popular leaders, imperial war, and brutal acts of government repression - were crimes against the national conscience.  This is...clear and concise summary of the radicalization process...  A thick air of doom and drama hung over the youth ghettos of San Francisco and Berkeley.  But nowhere...more pungent than in the subterranean world of the SLA.  - Talbot

     ...to woo capitalists to Singapore, Prime Minister Lee...forced through a new Employment Bill...which, for a socialist state, was tantamount to a small counterrevolutionary move as far as workers were concerned.  ...trade unions were banned from negotiating...  "Our best chances lie in a very tightly organized society," Lee had earlier mentioned.  ...some observers [felt] that Singapore was demonstrating [both] tough self-reliance and colonial-minded dependence on others.
     The old protective and paternal family and patron ties will only...break up as independent and individual opportunity becomes more apparent, and that takes time...  ...the absence of social discipline and political stability...established social patterns and...precolonial Filipino mores...
     ...the Thais have always been strongly guided by the precepts of their natural religion, Buddhism.  ...the world as a moral whole, in which elements of power, virtue, and value are neatly counterbalanced, the human world is...but one of many...  ...American servicemen...five thousand a month from Vietnam shuttled in and out of Bangkok...  The city by 1967 had become the liveliest, the loudest, and probably the most licentious city in Southeast Asia.   ...heavy and odorous with traffic, and at night the city heaved with the sound of jazz and was ablaze with neon lights.  - Shaplen

     He was trying to say that the teams he's been a part of, he hadn't necessarily seen, firsthand, racism.  (In the NFL), you've got some guys that grew up with four or [sic] five brothers and sisters in the same room.  ...another teammate...from a nice neighborhood, had his own neighborhood, never had to worry about what he was going to eat...  ...some white guys...went through it also.  "Why wasn't this the reaction when the news first started?"  These things have always been happening.  So, when [Colin Kapernick] tried to put the league on notice, I don't understand why it wasn't received or taken the way it is now...  - Mile High Sports, 7/2020

     On the horse trail toward work, earlier this week, the guy with the long horn sheep has them out for a walk.  Wednesday morning, I'm climbing a last steep hill in the hidden neighborhood.  Coming down the street is a lady on a horse.  She leads a pony on a rope behind her.  When I arrive at work, my coworker begins to reveal a tale of the drama surrounding her son's life.  He had a best friend and his own son's mom who he knew in high school.  Six years ago, his son's mom found herself in an altercation with another young woman.  He attempted to break it up.  His son's mom dared him to hit her.  My coworker tells me, this is "the wrong thing to say to him."  He knocked her teeth out.  He ended up in prison.  His son's mom ended up moving in with his best friend.  My coworker says she's getting to old for her son's drama.  I can't say that I know where to begin with this story.  I worked with her son in law for more than a year, at our location downtown.  I listened to his stories, about being taught that you should ask someone nicely, three times, before punching them in the face.  I watched him argue with customers.  She goes home when I arrive.  When I have less than an hour before the store closes, I suddenly hear a male voice next door.  He sounds as if he's complaining.  I take a look outside.  In our parking lot is a Fire Department squad vehicle from the station just up the boulevard.  On the sidewalk in front of the business next door is a guy on the ground.  Three paramedics are holding him.  He has a pair of handcuffs on one wrist.  A couple of police cruisers arrive.  Officers are out n body armor.  The guy is off the ground, and I presume in the squad vehicle.  A smiling paramedic high fives a smiling officer, who has his arm around the paramedic.  The owner of the business comes over from next door.  She tells me that he's drunk.  How she knows this she doesn't say.  He laid down and went to sleep, so she called 911.
     I have the following day off this week.  And I have a reservation at the water park.  They will be open, it turns out, through next week.  Today has yet another grey and gloomy sky-encompassing cloud overhead.  The swimmers who have the reservation after mine are surely the ones who will enjoy the sunshine, once this cloud goes its own way.  Out on the trail, I roll past the same spot which always appears to be occupied, as of late, by various homeless people.  Today, a guy sits on the ground off the trail, a line of trees behind him.  He stretches his arms.  Behind him is an office chair.  An orange vest is draped over the back.  Just past him, I hear voices coming from the busy street beyond the other side of the trail.  I see a couple of guys and a woman walking from a side street.  One of the guys and the woman each have a walker.  They do not appear to need them to walk.  I suspect they plan of eventually filling the walkers with as much as they may hold.  I wonder if they are headed over to the office chair guy.  I arrive at the water park as the sound system is playing a song by a favorite band from the 1990s, Lush.  Was that decade 30 years ago?  Am I 55 years old as of last Sunday.  Do I now have a urologist who says my prostate is "not really enlarged," and his nurse who says it is?  Yes, yes, and yes...and yes.  Welcome to my body; a matter of semantics.  But my ass digresses.  On the way back home, I stop at a super Target for more diet iced tea mix.  I spot a couple with their kid outside, all sitting next to a red Target shopping cart.  I detour over to Chilis for a meal before rejoining the same trail back home.  The cloud of death has indeed advanced to the horizon, and the sun is finally out.  I'm glad I took the time to put on sunscreen before I let the house.  The couple must have had a head start on me.  Along the same stretch of trail as the office chair guy, the couple is pulling one stolen Target shopping cart, and pushing another down the trail.  The first is full of stuff.  The second has their kid in it.
     Saturday.  I'm home after work.  I head over to the new Mexican place for dinner.  I come inside before several families arrive.  It's getting busy fast and the wait staff is struggling.  The new crew in the location of this longtime previous Mexican establishment appears green against the former seasoned crew.  I get a menu and wait for someone...anyone...to take my order.  More than one large family wait for their own orders to be taken.  This must be a good sign, a busy place in a county under virus restrictions.  Three young guys come in and take a seat at the table in front of me.  They never order anything.  I wonder if they are picking up?  One of them gets up to use the bano.  He bumps into my chair.  Soon they are gone.  Instead of waiting for a waitress, I go up to the register to order.  A guy who speaks English tells me that the hamburger listed and pictured on the menu, is no longer on the menu.  I order a torta.  I sit and read David Talbot's wonderful book about San Francisco  I'm on a chapter about the old SLA.  It's a story which includes Randolph Hurst, a circus of underworld street characters, a housewife FBI informant who eventually attempted to assassinate President Ford, a prison psychologist who had worked for a CIA Vietnam torture program, all swimming in a story which reminds me of the movie Zodiac.  I check on my dinner.  It finally arrives.  The previous establishment would have hand made a corn meal kind of pita pocket.  This places uses a wheat bread bun.  I'm almost done with it as I hear someone tuning a drum kit.  A Mexican band is getting ready to crank up.  This ain't three guys with an accordion and a viola.  This is a full band.  I put away the book, pay my bill, and  head back across the street.
     Sunday will be my only day off for the time being, instead of also having Thursday off as well.  And I can use the money.  I pay a visit to my friendly Vietnamese beautician and barber, Mrs. Thuy, who tells me (she's in the know) that the previous Mexican place moved just a couple of blocks away.  Later on, just before I go to bed, I hear more music coming from outside.  I step out to see if it's just a passing vehicle, or our neighbor next to the townhome complex.  Cruising traffic is backed up on my street.  The fire station across the street has dispatched an engine.  And I see bales of smoke rising from the approximate location of the bus stop where I used to wait for grocery shopping.  I go back to bed.  The next morning, out at my corner, I see no evidence of a fire.  Hours later, I'm out of work.  Mondays we are open the latest during the week.  After a stop at the supermarket along the way, the only chain with a product I use, it's early evening when I'm off the trail and climbing a long hill on my side of town.  Up ahead, I spot someone walking their bicycle in the street, on their own way uphill.  When I reach this cyclist, he appears to be a decade older than myself.  He's got small circular mirrored sunglasses.  He says to me, "You must be used to (this hill.)"  I'm impressed with him.  The following morning, I'm back climbing the hill in the sleepy neighborhood along the way to work.  A guy comes up from behind me.  "They call this hill 'the Widow-maker,'" he tells me.  And again, hours later, I'm headed toward home after work.  Only this afternoon, I'm approaching an underpass.  This time, it's a much younger guy who comes up from behind.  He's on a skateboard, and taking the exit of the trail.  As he passes me, he tells me he likes my sandals.  It tries to rain, but instead it's a windstorm, and I'm fighting a headwind.  I'm under the bridge and past a long wooded curve, across the river and headed for what I refer to "golf course #2."  At the south end of this course, under a tree next to the fence, is a guy under a sheet.  He's trying to light a cigarette and shelter his lighter.  Just yards from where he lay are guys in colorful Polo shirts and shorts, playing golf.  It's not long before I'm off the trail, up the long hill and onto a last long street toward my boulevard.  The camper which has been parked here since the Spring has an SUV parked behind it.  The two rear doors are both open.  Clothes are piled on the ground, and more still pack the back seat.
     On Wednesday, I rejoin the bike trail from a detour to the gym, where the trail passes through a short tunnel under an avenue.  Cruising through the tunnel, I adjust my shorts, and I suspect an oncoming cyclist believes that I don't see him.  Before he passes me, he loudly says, "Beep beep!"  The following morning is my doctor's appointment.  We cycle through my issues.  Prostate?  No cancer, check.  Did my testosterone cream directly result in my elevated PSA levels?  No, all men's prostates enlarge and the levels may even go back down, check.  Blood pressure?  My sodium intake has been reduced, check.  Sunscreen?  Once in the morning ain't good enough, a second application required before going home, check.  I can't remember why she mentions her dad.  I ask about him and she tells me he was a family medicine specialist in their native India for 35 years.  Doctors make the worst patients, she tells me.  She examines him and give her recommendations, to which he replies, "Oh, I know, I know."  I tell her, "Hey, as far as I'm concerned: if you haven't been to medical school, you're NJFS."  She waits for me to explain this.  "Not Jack Fucking Shit," I reply.  I get a laugh out of her.  Her demeanor is still, and when she laughs, she does so she throws her head back with a jerk before quickly returning to her centered posture.  Not quite Buddhist, perhaps, in spite of our greeting each other with folded hands "namaste."  Again, her joy in this sneaks out before she immediately returns to her doctor mode.  I ask her if her dad, if not her favorite patient, is perhaps a resource.  She tells me she used to watch him with some patients.  He spent a lot of time simply sitting and listening.  When his patients were leaving, they would tell him they felt better just having talked to him.  "Ah," I reply, "old fashioned medicine."  She agrees.
     It's after work and I'm rounding the long wooded stretch of the trail home.  The entire trail shadows the river all the way into downtown and to where it intersects another river.  On this bank, along the trail, runs a street named Platte River Drive.  I've been riding this trail, off and on, as far back as 2005.  I've never been on the other bank along this stretch of the river.  For some reason, I decide to look across the bank as I have before, where I've seen the occasional tent down on the riverbank.  I just happen to look this early evening.  I see a long line of campers and tents all clustered along a road on the other side.  I get up to where I've crossed a bridge over this river countless times.  Then, for the very first time, I turn down a trail along the opposite side of the river.  I'm headed back toward the cluster camp. The trail runs through a small park before it connects to a cul de sac.  Beyond the cul de sac, past a couple of cement berms upon one of which is spray painted "fuck parks and rec," is another road named Platte River Drive East.  I follow the road down to the camp.  I've never seen such dilapidated campers.  There are a couple of camper shells on the ground, in which someone is obviously living.  Trash bags are lined up along the river side of the road.  There appears to be a water treatment plant on the opposite side of the road, where the camp is.  The river has been low this summer.  Grass and bushes grow on the exposed bottom.  In the afternoon it smells.  The summer has also seen cloudy afternoon skies.  And this week, fire smoke appears to have joined the scattered clouds overhead as the sun shines orange through them.  This feels like the camp of the dead.  One brand new pickup has a generator in the bed, hooked up to one camper which appears as if it came from a junkyard.  A dusty, skinny, vacant figure sits expressionless in a camp chair under an open tent.  I can't see any eyes behind her glasses.  Tents hang from ropes combined with bicycles in between campers.  I turn around for home.  A homeless woman comes down the middle of the road before she slowly moves out of the way of traffic, which also must make its way past an approaching homeless guy on a bike, pulling a bike trailer with who knows what inside.  The camp is a short walk from where the twin campers were parked in the lot next to the playground.  In the small park, between the street and my familiar section of the trail, is a shirtless thirty-year-old guy.  His skin is red from the sun.  He stands staring at a tree as a colorful kite lay abandoned on the grass.  Just beyond this scene is the golf course, where I watch a guy teeing off.
     On Friday, for the first time ever, I ride all the way down the street on the river bank opposite the bike trail, and past the death camp.  Walking on the river bank side of the road is a young woman in a bikini top, denim shorts, and goggles such as Johnny Depp wore in Willy Wonka.  She keeps jerking her head around, expecting to see I know not what.  A couple of lean and wiry homeless guys are out on bicycles.  On the reverse trip some hours later, I'm rolling past one camper.  A middle-aged woman is climbing into a back door as a young guy says to her, "I'm in tears because I'm in so much fuckin' pain."  Another young shirtless guy with a mohawk is headed down toward what's left of the river.  At the end of the street, a woman in a house dress is using a pole with pincers on the end to pick through a small pile of trash next to her own camper.  I decide to make this part of my regular route to and from work.  The following week, I will see the occasional individual here who does not appear as if they are homeless.  I will see someone shaving another campers head with an electric clippers.  And I will see stacked home water heater tanks laying around, and flatbed trailers filled with assorted junkyard items, including a screen door.  On Saturdays, my shift begins two hours earlier than during the week.  I hear on the radio news of a heat wave across parts of the nation.  At 7 am, when I leave the house, it's 60 degrees F.  I'm now going to and from work past the death camp.  In the morning, I notice yesterday's kite up against one of the tents.  Coming back after work, one of the campers is riding his bike the direction of oncoming traffic.  This is what the cars which pass along here must put up with.  Sunday I have an early swimming reservation, 10 AM.  I'm on the bike I use for the weekends.  It was brought back to life by my new bike shop.  The tech told me he took his own initiative and adjusted the shifter somehow "to make it easier."  Well...now it won't stay in gear.  Any gear.  I psych it out to the extent that, it appears it will slip out of gear into no gear (which I didn't think was possible) until I quickly up shift to the highest one.  Then the gear will catch again, until it slips out again.  I may have to wait until Saturday to take back in to the shop.  On the way back down the trail home after my swim, I climb a hill to a super Target shopping center.  A small strip of shops next to the trail used to have a bike shop.  I don't see it.  I go into a couple of the shops and I'm told it's no longer here.  Actually, for the moment, I'm only looking for some oil for my chain.  The shifter repair will, as I said, have to wait.  I head over to Target.  I don't find any oil.  One guy wants to make me a deal on a new phone carrier.  I ask where the bike chain oil is.  he directs me toward someone who is already with another customer.  I ask a young woman about the oil.  She checks automotive with no luck.  She suggests a fishing shop in the center.  I ask why.  She replies, "Well, people ride their bikes to go fishing, don't they?"  Then I'm out in the expansive parking lot.  Because the bike will slip out of gear whenever I stop for a stop sign.  I must do ridiculous circles as I shift back into high gear and then downshift again.  Until the next stop sign.  I'm also dealing with perplexed drivers.  I never find the fishing shop.  I do, somehow, make it out of the parking lot and back out on the trail.  I decide to find dinner at the remaining Mexican place down the street, the same company as the one which used to be across the street.  There, I speak to a waitress who tells me that the "new" Mexican place across the street is under the same ownership.  Coming back up the street, the sun is going down in a haze of fire smoke.  It reminds me of the scenes I've seen on smog on the west coast.  With the Vietnamese and Mexican businesses on both sides of the street, the hot rod pickup truck traffic up and down the boulevard and the MS-13 graffiti, I imagine that I'm in Los Angeles.  Outside a liquor store, a gaggle of locals sit around a card table in a parking space.  Mexican hip hop comes out of a speaker in another space.  Except the temps are ten or twenty degrees cooler.

     The current zoning code was adopted in 2010, with...some...language...that dates back to the 1950s.  "...we support...people's ability to live...accessible to transit, jobs..."  "I'm worried because Denver is changing.  I want those changes to reflect the beautiful city that it can be."  - Denver Herald, 8/6/2020

     .a path...to be more economically resilient.  More customers living and working downtown...through economic cycles.  Spaces that are smaller, flexible, and more affordable...  Offices and homes near transit and bike paths.  - Englewood Citizen, 7-8/2020

     "Make housing more affordable and make more options available...  ...prevent more people from losing their homes.  ...making it easier to reuse existing buildings, creating more historic districts and ensuring new buildings fit in with surrounding neighborhoods."
     ...after 38 years, Racines [restaurant] is closing for good.  In December 1983 the group opened Racines...  "It didn't matter.  Construction people, theater people, business people.  ...I'm not sure anybody even knew what a gay person was."  It remained a favored spot for power lunches and after-work beverages.  ...politicians cutting deals alongside reporters meeting with sources...  ...another location...the group of friends would own.  Dixons in Lower Downtown opened in 1997.  "...the Democratic Convention (in 2008).  The energy downtown.  I've never seen it like that..."  - Denver Herald, 8/13/2020

     Pasternack's Art Hub, the Lakewood home of several galleries priced out of Denver, is on the market.  Since 2017, Pasternack's Art Hub, a Lakewood pawn shop turned cultural center, has been home to orphaned cooperatives and galleries that could no longer afford rent in Denver...  [The owner wants] to focus more time on his family's remaining pawn shop...making money there so he can eventually retire ...perhaps even...hitting the road in an RV...full time.  The pawn shop business...is making most of its money these days on guns.  ...as people panic over social unrest, efforts to defund the police and firearms restrictions.  - Westword, 8/27-9/2/2020

Requiem For My Boulevard
     Racines was one of my late mom's favorite places.  I go to bed around 9:30 PM these days.  I drift off listening to my basement window rattle from the bottom end of the sound systems from traffic out on the street.  It strikes me as a hoppin' evening.  A 20 minute walk straight north of where I live is an intersection of two major arteries.  I used to catch the bus to work there every morning until some five years ago.  It's been a part of my neighborhood since 2007.  A little more than an hour after I hit the hay, at that intersection up the street someone will shoot and kill someone else, and wound five more in a revenge killing.  Or so I will be told at work.  Two of the wounded will not survive, raising the death toll to three.  Why the time has come now, that I have stumbled into "the know" about one of these back and forth street murders, is no more clear than anything else about this testosterone cauldron of a boulevard.  The next morning, I get up and go to work.  The woman who works the morning tells me about the shooting.  It's the first I've heard of it, and it's just about twelve hours after it happened.  She shows me video on her phone, from someone else's phone.  The first video shows a guy pointing his arm followed by the sound of a number of gunshots.  he may have emptied his clip or his chamber.  The next footage is from a passing vehicle.  A second guy standing in the first footage, in a red T-shirt, is now laying in the street.  I'm told it's his girlfriend screaming and pulling him by his right leg out of the street.  He leaves behind a pool of blood as big as his body.  This afternoon, I will hear on a local news report that he was pronounced dead at the scene.  At work this morning, here's the story I'm told.  Last year, I worked downtown with an employee who had a son who was shot and killed in a park, again not far from where I live.  Last week, I'm told that another of her sons was in the same park, when he and others were shot and wounded.  Then I'm told that the word is, guy in the red shirt was the shooter.  Presumably, he was shot last night by a friend of one or more people hit and injured in the park.  The woman I work with knows this because her son, who is transitioning out of prison, was friends with the guy in the red shirt.  After work, I'm on my way home.  I detour to a supermarket for a couple of vegetables.  I'm attempting to make it through a green light.  Coming off the sidewalk, there is a patch of gravel.  My wheel slips and I'm down on the ground, before I pick myself up and roll into the grocery parking lot.  I'm locking up my bike near a homeless guy.  He's leaning against the building, where all the homeless guys here lean.  He asks me, "Hey man, how's it goin'?"
     When I get home after work, I'm on Facebook when I see a new post on the page belonging to a group of my neighborhood residents.  The post was from last Thursday.  It's a short press conference with the city police chief, a couple of city council members each representing mine and an adjacent district, and a resident of my neighborhood.  This is three days before Sunday night's shooting, and the resident mentions a shooting of five people in the alley behind his home.  Again, this is the first I've heard of it.  All speakers want to make clear that they support a cruising tradition on my boulevard.  The endless afternoon rumble of engines up and down the street.  All but the Caucasian council person mentions being former cruisers.  I'm sure that they all are fully aware of the jackrabbit starts at lights...from the middle of the street...braking and sliding to a stop in parking spaces.  It goes with the river of broken glass and occasional discarded syringe.  The guys who put new tubes onto my bikes should come out here and see for themselves.  My own city council rep says she does not condone traffic blocking a space on the boulevard so vehicles may do doughnuts.  Is this another way of saying that there ain't a goddamned thing she can or will do about it?  Clearly, cruising is a delicate topic among this amiable collusion of bedfellows.  She also mentions the desire for social justice.  What did Robert McNamara say to the commander of the US naval blockade of Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis?  The president was attempting to navigate an entirely new field of political communication between nuclear superpowers.  I feel as though last Thursday, in a hamburger joint parking lot with customer orders coming over a speaker, both the state house and the city police got together with a neighborhood resident in a Black Flag cap (which wasn't me) to display some good old government-tested and community service-approved advice.  All they had to say was don't blame the cruisers for any mayhem or "dangerous behavior which may lead to loss of life", be nice to each other, and help out the police.  It was as unspecific as it could possibly be.  I wonder where this upbeat community posse is when the sun goes down?  How about the pairs of wandering Catholic monks from the university sixty blocks north, who like to come down on the bus and walk around here?  Three days after this get-out-the-hugs photo op, the bullets flew and the blood ran on Sunday night.  After the post of Thursday's press conference, I watched a local new report about the shooting.  Monday afternoon, a man and a woman stand of the corner where a guy in a red shirt was shot and killed, in front of a bus stop next to a bank parking lot.  They hold signs and implore passing traffic to "stop the killing."  The woman speaks to a reporter about her life in our neighborhood.  "I was a hot mess," she says, "breaking in to houses."  I can't claim to understand her life.  Not in this lifetime.

Dance Of The Campers
     Saturday.  On the way to work, some time after 7 AM.  I'm rolling past the death camp.  A woman with her face void of any color sits in a black motorcycle jacket on a camp chair.  On the way back, I see the hood up on one of the campers.  The engine is completely gone.  I can see bicycles all the way through on the other side of where the engine would be.  On Sunday, I have yet another reservation to swim.  The only one available was the 4 - 6 PM.  On the way back from my swim, again I pedal past the death camp.  Though the sky is still full of fire smoke, either from the Poudre Canyon fire or other fires in California, the line of campers doesn't appear as stark as I first saw it.  It's such an odd deliberate gathering of strung up tarps, full camping tents, and framed open tents such as seen at outdoor summer festivals, almost in an attempt to make one great covered space.  There is a sameness to some camp residents; there are two women, both in tube or bikini tops on this 90 degree afternoon.  One appears either elderly or weathered beyond her years.  She's picking through one of many piles of random objects.  And the camper vehicles, each one has at least one bike parked next to it, apart from the piles of bikes both collected together and scattered around the camp.  A younger woman is coming down the road walking a bicycle, as others at this camp do.  Back on the bike trail for the short trip back to my own side of town, a couple of updates there during the previous week.  The camper, which was missing from the street next to the open field, has returned.  And on one of the last streets home, a second camper has vanished.  Another second smaller one is now parked behind the remaining one.  Also, there appears to be accelerated road construction on my very own boulevard.  New medians are going in, making it no longer possible to cross the middle of the street by bicycle.  I understand that this is supposed to reduce the speed of the traffic, which the police chief and others told all of us to stop complaining about.

     Monday.  I'm opening the store today.  My coworker needs today off...and I need the money.  This weekend was her boyfriend's birthday, and she explained to me, "there's parties all weekend."  This means she will be in no shape to come to work today.  But I'm out on my bike with not enough sleep at 5 AM.  Hey, it's just like old times.  Actually, once again, it occurs to me that I used to come this direction to work, just about this same time, fifteen years ago.  Only it was a couple of years before I was living on this side of town.  I don't remember the last time I covered for another employee for her reason.  I shouldn't be out on the street, especially the streets of my neighborhood, without lights.  But I'm riding tactically, to avoid traffic which may not be able see me.  But the sun is on its way up as the early morning moves along.  I spot a home with an old TV antenna on the roof.  It has Christmas lights arranged in a light blue cross.  It's perhaps 5:30 when I'm approaching the death camp.  From behind me comes a motorized scooter.  In the dim streetlights, the rider appears to be yet another thin and grey shaggy haired guy.  Does he have...a top hat on his head?  He tows a makeshift cart perhaps fashioned from a wheelchair.  In the cart is carboard.  Rounding the bend in the road with the camp, there a single tent with light inside,  The flap is open, and as I roll past, i can see no sleeping bags or inhabitants.  Just a single bicycle upside down.  It's surrounded by all the many other bikes outside the tent.
     After work, I'm on my way home, but there's a single product I need, which I can get only at one particular grocery chain, and there's one on the way home.  I'm on a familiar detour, all for low fat cheese.  At this supermarket, outside, where a single random homeless guy usually leans against the wall, there are two homeless guys.  One is telling the other that he was just inside, and one particular manager was giving him the evil eye.  I lock up my bike as I listen to this.  At the checkout stand, I mention this to the checker, who tells me that such guys come inside and shoplift.  I go back outside.  The two guys are still yakking.  A homeless young woman exits with a cart full of groceries.  One of the guys offers up his own stolen shopping cart, mentions how far he's pushed it.  The young woman takes her groceries out of her cart and places them onto something like a walker.  She is pushing it into the parking lot when it falls over.  One of the guys goes over to help her pick them up.  Then he appears to be taking his own 12 pack of sodas over to her.  He drops them on the ground and the cardboard box breaks, and then they have 12 extra sodas to pick up.  The other guy speaks to the first, as if the one who dropped the box was upset.  He tells the other, "Breathe..."  A third homeless guy comes along to also help.  How many homeless does it take to put spilled groceries onto a walker?  Not log thereafter, I'm rolling past the death camp.  It's on the curve of what has come to appear to be a service road, and I have to keep checking my rearview mirror as well as keeping my eyes open for homeless potentially running out from between campers.  The place is like some kind of anti-amusement park.  On Tuesday, having awoken with more sleep, I'm again cruising past the death camp on my way to work.  I make it past before I see a young woman walking toward me.  In her half-shirt, she appears as if she may be a cam member.  When I'm close to her, she asks me if I've seen a "kid on a scooter?"  Is this her son?  Her boyfriend?  I haven't.  I wonder how far a kid, living in a homeless RV camp, can go on a scooter?  After work, I'm coming back past this very spot.  I believe I see a new pile of stuff amidst the vehicles and tents.  It's a pile of what appears to be office chairs.  There is also a flatbed trailer full of what appears to be street light poles.  Late in the following afternoon, I'm coming back past this same spot.  From behind me comes an Englewood Police cruiser.  It parks next to a camper.  In front of it is another police cruiser which is stopped in the road.  These are the first employees from any city department I've seen here since my daily vigil past this place.  I'm down the road before I see anyone exit the police vehicles.  This morning, I came down this road, and passed a middle-aged guy pulling a wagon.  He appears to me to be living at the camp.  He waved at me as I passed him.  I see him again on this road just now.  He's walking the other direction.  His wagon is gone, ad he carries a backpack.
     Last night, I came home from work nd checked in with Facebook.  I saw a post on the page for my neighborhood.  A resident came upon a post from the sect of a gang who had one of its members shot and killed recently, up the street from where I live.  He threatens the lives of his rivals on my boulevard, declaring that they will be "sprayed" with his bullets.  His short statement strikes me as lacking in emotion or bravado, eve any anger.  He's just laying out, coldly, his simplest of intentions.  It's ironic that he mentions at the end how his own sect has "lost so many."  He doesn't mention his rivals: how many they many have lost.  At his own hands.  I recount that it was some time during the 1980s when I first began to hear pleas for an end to gang violence.  It's an old story.  You don't put away your guns, why should we?  Something about peace has never been an option.  And so neither has life.  Rather than that, they prefer a good looking funeral.  'Out on the street, it's all about the attitude...baby girl.'  And here's this homie's post mentioned on my neighborhood's page, which usually hosts residents' questions about how to best win police cooperation.  One recent comment states the opinion of the police "doing nothing as usual."  The police chief did recently have a brief press conference in a hamburger shop parking lot.  He asked for the public to lay off the street cruisers.  That was three days before one Sunday night's multiple shootings, including a stray bullet killing an employee of Children's Hospital, picking up a friend from an auto parts parking lot a five minute walk from my door.  Now cruising has suddenly been reduced to a single lane, until next month or until further notice.  Whichever news station's report comes first.
     This morning, my coworker tells me about her passing through the intersection where the retaliation murder took place, just up the street from my home.  She saw a vigil.  She also shows me phots and videos on her phone.  The photos are of her son, just out of prison, who had a chance to go to the funeral of his friend.  One of the guys killed up the street.  The twenty or so guys with him at the funeral are all decked out in shorts, T-shirts, red bandannas, and ball caps.  She tells me that moms at such funerals also dress the same way.  She also shows me video of her 3-year-old grandson.  He's listening to video of his recently released dad, her son, rapping on a TV monitor.  The grandson is doing his best hip hop moves.  He picks up a toy machine gun and says, "Pop pop pop!"  On the way home after work on Friday,  I notice that two big RVs are gone from the camp.  Saturday.  I'm headed to work past the camp early in the morning.  I originally thought that a line of trash bags, always on the other side of the road, were meant to be hauled away.  I see a  guy picking through the contents of one bag, dumped on the ground.  A young guy on his bike tells the other guy, "Well I'm gonna try and fix up this bike."  On the stub of a broken tree limb, of a tree in camp, hangs perhaps ten bicycle tires.  back on the trail, lines of weekend cyclists pass by in their spandex outfits.  Coming through an old money neighborhood just off the trail, the intense green of the grass and leaves together with the morning shadows are psychedelic.  Summer is on the way out.  The manicured lawns and patio furniture with cushions always pull my thoughts back to my youth, when I used to live in a place like this.  After work, I'm cruising past the camp.  A young woman sits inside a tent with a big America the Beautiful banner in front of the entrance.
     Sunday.  For half of the day, namely the morning, the sun is out.  Only a thin veneer of fire smoke stands between the waterpark and a sunny day for a change.  And the 10 AM - 12 PM slot has an opening for me.  I'm in the pool before a single damned cloud appears in the sky.  I take some turns down what they call the "drop slide" into the deep end.  My final turn, I forget to take off my sunglasses.  I realize this when I hit the water and feel them come off my face.  And of course, everything is much brighter.  Well, they are old and even broken.  After a swim, I'm headed for the camera place across town.  I arrive on a major boulevard, and I stop into a 7-Eleven for a new pair.  For $11, I find a pair of the lowest quality manufacture which I've ever seen.  They also appear obsolete by more than a decade.  They're perfect.  I opt for this pair, instead of the one with the loose lens.  I've gone to the camera place from work, but never from the waterpark.  This will be a new route.  At this point, I feel as though I've been in almost every neighborhood in the metro area.  Which of course isn't true.  Right after I have "new" sunglasses, a couple of streets up, I'm at my new bike shop.  I need more chain oil.  Of course, they don't have what I've been using since I returned to riding almost five years ago.  They recommend a wax-based chain lube.  I hope these neo-hippie freaks know what they're talking about.  If this crap fucks up my chain, I'm going to post on Info Wars that this bike shop has children inside abusing pizzas.  Then it's not much further that I spot a breakfast place.  It's a beautiful sunny mid-day for a swim and a ride.  It's noon and I'm looking to grab a bite before I make the rest of the trek.  I've never been here before, but so many of these places feel familiar anymore.  I remember a couple of decades past, I went looking for an art gallery on this boulevard, only to enter the address and be told that it was gone for three years.  This place is called the Breakfast Queen.  I first ask a waitress if everyone asks the question I am about to put forth, and then ask her if they are owned by another breakfast place called the Breakfast King.  Breakfast King is a bit further north and one street west.  Yes, they get the question all the time.  No, they are independently owned.  My food ain't fancy, but I like little places like this.  And they're open for dining.  Service is fine.  After I eat, I'm outside refilling my water bottle from a canteen.  I listen to a middle-aged guy at one of the restaurant's outside tables.  He is non-stop commenting on his youngest son's choices from the menu.  His older son has hair and growth of beard which makes him look homeless.  The dad sounds as if he thinks he's the bomb.  The waitress who comes out to take their order apparently is his daughter.  She asks her youngest brother what he wants.  The kid is looking at his phone.  The dad criticizes him, not as a dad would sound, but more as some kind of hip teacher.  "Your on your phone while your sister is taking your order..."  She interrupts, "Guys, guys..."  She does it once more before she gets the order.  I'm off to drop off film.  It doesn't feel like a long ride before I'm on familiar streets, and soon at the shop.  My tall, photogenic hippie goddess is not there this afternoon.  It's an icy girl who reminds me of a high school senior, but I'm sure is older.  She emotionlessly asks the fewest questions before letting me know it will be 2 to 3 weeks before it's processed.  I'm curious why.  "The processing lab has no AC," she replies.  No air conditioning?  I wonder if the repair guys are sequestered?  Though it strikes me as an occupation which would be essential.  The film processing employees should try working in a dry cleaning plant. in August.
     Monday.  The month is going out with strange omens.  On the way to the gym, and then work, I stop at my neighborhood supermarket for more protein powder.  I have a coupon.  This morning is 55 degrees F.  As I lock up my bike, a guy comes strutting along.  He's in an overcoat and has a huge afro.   I run in and find my powder, and I'm out.  I'm unlocking my bike when I see him with a canned beverage.  He asks for a cigarette from a woman sitting in her car with her window down.  I recognize her shirt, she's an employee of the store.  I don't hear her response, but it appears she has no cigarettes.  He replies, "Jesus almighty."  He cuts a lone figure as he struts his way through an empty side of the parking lot.  I prepare to shove off.  I look again and he's disappeared into oblivion.  Soon, I'm on the trail and approaching the road with the homeless RV camp.  A couple of Denver Police cruisers are parked with lights on at this end of the road next to the trail.  A pickup truck from the Hazmat Decontamination Unit is also here.  Two officers and two guys in sanitization suits.  I roll past the camp.  More RVs and some of the tents are gone.  The pile of office chairs are now on a flatbed, next to the light pole which I notice is cut in half.  The lower half is here, complete with the walk sign.  When I get to work, my coworker has yet another Facebook post on her phone.  It's from the guy I worked with downtown, the cousin of her son in law.  He shares a post from a guy who claims to have a friend in the Denver Police Gang Unit.  The friend of this guy claims to have told him that there is now a "full on gang war" on my boulevard, between MS-13 and the Bloods.  He says that MS-13 is targeting bystanders.  He doesn't share any insights from his experience as to why.  I have seen MS-13 graffiti on my corner ("SUR 13" in Spanish.)  The guy who originally wrote the post recommends to all his friends that they "steer clear" of the boulevard upon which I live.  How do ya' like that?  What a way to end the month.  I don't think the presence SUR 13 is going to convince my mortgage company to forgive my mortgage.  I'm sure they would suggest I call my homeowner's insurance company.  ("Are you covered for gunfire?  Have we got a plan for you!")  Right.  Well, I'll end with this.  I need more low fat cheese, available only from a particular grocery chain, where I am headed after work.  I just can't stop purchasing individual groceries at different supermarkets.  I'm once again headed through the same intersection with the eternal patch of loose gravel.  I take it slower...which makes no difference.  I slip and go down just as I did before.  When I do get across the street, there is yet a different random homeless guy where they always perch, against an outside wall.  This one sounds like a classic drunk.  He's speaking random unrelated sentences every minute or so.  "I'm from right here.  My children.  Don't throw up on me."  I run inside, grab the cheese, and run out again.  He's still reading off a mental list of random statements.  "I'll just wait until I get an answer."  Okay.  Works for me...






Wednesday, July 1, 2020

July 2020, Dirty Hands, Clean Money,. Don't Sprinkle The Bike, and Now You See A Handful Of Campers - Now You Don't

     I don't remember when,  I began to see a couple of big RVs parked along one street from mine, on the way to where I now work since having been called back to work in early May.  Every several days, both of these appear t have been move to a different spot along the street next to a big empty lot.  They both appear to b broken down.  The roof of one has bicycle rims or frames.  I suspect that they are occupied by homeless.  Wednesday is the 1st.  The mornings feel as though they are in the 50s F.  The afternoons feels as if they are near 100.  I'm in line at the rec center, before I head of to work.  My bike is locked up at the bike rack, which is on the edge of grass between the sidewalk and the building.  Two groundskeeper trucks and four guys are here to test the in ground sprinkler system.  On go the sprinklers over the grass...and on my bike.  When I get inside the re center, I mention this to the woman behind the desk.  She gives me a number to call, and tell someone "not to sprinkle" my bike.  After the day is done, I'm out of work and have just crossed the boulevard.  I'm a short way down the road and turn into the old money neighborhood on the way to the trailhead.  Halfway down the street I see a tiny girl in a blue and white striped bathing suit, with a navy bow on the back.  She stops me to ask me where I'm going.  I tell her I'm going home.  She wants to know the name of myself, my mom, and my dad.  Before I answer, she wants to know if I'm going to see my mom.  She's quick with questions.  I tell her my mom has passed away.  She comes close to me.  She has shoulder-length blonde hair.  She asks me if someone murdered her.  No, I say, she got old.  She asks me if my mom is going on an adventure.  I answer that she just stayed home.  She shows me that the tar used to seal cracks in the asphalt on the street is soft.  She then waves me along, telling me to go help her.  Before I go, she lets me know that she killed me a monster, demonstrating how she stepped on it.  She says also killed a bug.

     "To engage an unknown experience with bravery, we need to have a specific relationship established within ourselves.  The relationship is one that includes self-love, feeling safe being yourself, trusting yourself, and self-security."
     "...we make the choice to...what we need to do to feel the feeling - its energy - instead of stuffing it down or acting it out.  The practice of self-love allows us to respond instead of react."  - Colorado Parent, 7/2020

     The City of Denver worried a group of protesters was forming an autonomous zone on Wednesday.  ...like Seattle...  Dozens of protesters set up tents and a food station that they said was intended to serve those experiencing in the south end of Civic Center Park.  They planned to stay the night as part of an "occupy" protest.  ...Denver Park Rangers and Police began a dialogue this afternoon...  ...after midnight...more tents had appeared.  Police say they used mace and batons...  The city said...to prevent the park from being taken over.  ...posts on the Afro Liberation's Instagram story [police say calls] the site a Denver Autonomous Zone...  - 9NEWS, 7/3/2020

     …"a store's windows...broken to prevent, a protestor's facial bones from being broken or eye being permanently damaged...is more than a fair trade.  If a building must be graffitied to prevent the suppression of free speech, that is a fair trade.  The threat to physical safety and free speech outweighs the threat to property."  - Life On Capitol Hill, 7/2020

     ...I express my deep appreciation...for the...way you've...weather the storm...  ...big challenges [such as] the race and social injustice protests in downtown Denver...  Local business owners are our friends and neighbors...  Regarding the protests, as an elected official, I...ask, "How can I share this power with my constituents?"  ...bring...accountability back to our government..  ...a deep dive into policies...  ...a proposed charter change amendment that would give the city council approval of the mayor's cabinet members...  Every day of the protests, I've engaged with constituents and the Denver Police Department...  I've also spoken with the press...
     "If it's not a (public) school, it will not hold as much value to the community.  Before it closed, everyone's kids from the...neighborhood went to that school.  ...we won't know who is supporting the community and its students."
     "Schools serve as a center for activity and energy of a neighborhood."  ...options to serve the community [include] closing the gap on the demand for early childhood education[, also a neighborhood] only blocks away...is a childcare desert.  "To take a public asset out of the community seems risky."  - Washington Park Profile, 7/2020

     I ran for council the first time because I felt like my peer group wasn't represented.  I thought we needed a thirtysomething to bring that voice of what an hourly worker is experiencing - that view of what Summit County is.  - Colorado Summit, Summer/Fall 2020

     Saturday is the 4th.  I expected to get less than enough sleep, being surrounded by neighbors on all sides launching fireworks.  I didn't expect never to get to sleep.  A little after 12:30 AM, they have been going for 3 1/2 hours.  I go out to see what the aftermath of a fireworks orgy looks like.  The house next to my townhome complex usually has it's small front yard full of pickup trucks.  There is a small space between the trucks where I see some three guys in caps sitting in lawn chairs.  They have some kind of spotlight they sit next to.  By 2 AM, the last of the stragglers have stopped.  I realize I didn't check the mail.  I go back out in my parking lot.  The trio is still out there.  The extended collection of residents who live in this house have always appeared to be Latino.  In the past, I saw some of them wearing the purple shirts of the workers who clean up the downtown pedestrian mall.  This evening, I hear English.  Either these are visitors or Caucasian poachers.  It's another odd summer in the Rockies.  Overnights are 50s-60s F.  Days feel like 100.  It's cool out with a full moon.  In the morning, I'm leaving to pick up some photos across town and then go swimming.  All this in spite of the fact that I haven't slept since I woke up yesterday morning.  Around 9:30 AM it's 92 degrees F but it feels like 100.  I turn toward the neighbor's place to have a look at how much leftover firework debris all the noise produced.  Last night sounded as if mortars and machine guns were going off.  There's much less evidence of the war movie soundtrack noise than I would have expected.  When I am coming back through the neighborhood across the boulevard, I will see multiple sites of home fireworks shows from the previous evening.  This morning, there is a young Caucasian guy sitting in silence, on the front step which is hidden behind a yard full of pickup trucks.  It's standing room only.  When I return late in the afternoon, an inflatable swimming pool will be positioned in an available spot between the home and one of the trucks.  I will spot a different Caucasian guy, who appears as if he's the Marlboro Man in a short-sleeved stylish buttoned down shirt, leaning on one of the trucks.  The pickup with a suspension almost twice the height of the others has lettered facing out on its rear window, "Dirty Hands, Clean Money."  The owner forgot, "Non-stop Fireworks."
     Oh, it's nice to have a working back rim, along with brakes.  Last week (or was it two?) during my first workout after seven weeks, I believe I stressed m right knee.  It's a bit weak pedaling as it first was climbing stairs, and I will notice it getting in and out of the pool.  I'm across town once again.  I grab my photos, and then I have the task of finding my way south to the waterpark.  I must negotiate my way around an interstate, and find the safest route across busy avenues and away from busy boulevards.  I swear, some of these streets I've been over before.  Too many companies I've worked for, too many far flung locations, too many odd hours of the day and night.  I hardly feel as though it's the least bit unusual to be without sleep.  I pass a church where I vaguely remember a bazaar.  I think I was in a 7-Eleven just recently, which I cruise past.  I'm rolling along an apartment complex.  One guy is carrying a box as he tells another resident, "I'm moving.  I'm so over this place."  This summer, I've seen neighborhoods with US flags draped from roof overhangs.  Around a corner, across the last avenue and down a residential street.  I'm making my way past crowded bungalows.  On the west side is a home with a flagpole.  It has, below its own US flag, blue and white "Trump America" flag.  Directly across the street is another bungalow.  On its flagpole is a single Colorado rainbow flag.  It's in front of this home where a pickup with a huge suspension is parked.
     At long last, after an hour and 37 minute ride from the only camera store in the metro area which processes black and white film, I arrive at the avenue with the waterpark.  I left one extra large water bottle home, and only have my canteen, which I empty before the final push to my destination.  I sit under a tree and wave visitors ahead of me in line.  When the park opens I join the line.  I step out of line to snap a photo of a growing thunderstorm.  It's something of a tradition to attempt to swim and make it home before a suspected downpour.  Unless it's so hot, you prefer to take a rain shower...such as today.  I rejoin the line a second time.  A mom behind me doesn't like this.  She asks me if I am with the people ahead of me.  I reply, "Sure."  She then asks her son if I'm his dad.  I don't know what she's worried about.  We all have reservations and will get inside.  Otherwise, it's nice to be here on a day when I'm not necessarily rushing to swim and get home.  One kid joins me in line at my favorite slide into the deep end of the regular pool.  It's called the "drop slide."  He's small and enjoys doing cannonballs down the slide.  There's a curvy woman in a tiny bright red bikini.  Among the families swimming in the shallow end, a guy in a black T-shirt stands up and talks to a younger woman.  He's talking about the activity schedule at some summer physical fitness program, about budgeting a household.  I never see him move from his spot.  I uncharacteristically spend the majority of the allotted two-hour reservation here before heading home.  The storm didn't move in until now.  It appears as if the visitors on the final time slot are the ones who will be cheated out of any sun today.  'Tis a typical summer day on the bike trail.  Everyone and their grandmother is out riding in packs.  It must be hot indeed.  The river along the trail home is almost bone dry, more so that I ever remember seeing it.
     On Monday, I'm at work when the general manager comes in.  I mention my sleepless night on the 4th.  He tells me he's never seen so many home fireworks displays.  His own family spent $500.  When I get home, in the mail is a notice from services rendered by the urologist.  The notice comes before the bill, letting me know how much the bill will be.  Rather than the estimate my insurance company gave me, around $1,200, the notice informs me that my part of the bill will be $1.45.  That's one dollar and forty-five cents.  There's a message on the voicemail of my landline.  It's from one of the four guys soaking my bike with the rec center in ground sprinkler system.  He apologized, but said he noticed me looking at him.  (As he looked at me, and I looked at him...)  He said he was surprised I "didn't jump up" and say something.  That must be because, instead of jumping up, I make a phone call.  Still, I'm impressed that he called.  On Tuesday, the owner came into my store.  This Thursday, my store is expanding hours.  I will be moving to an afternoon shift.  Wednesday.  I'm on the way home after work and hungry.  I detour to a supermarket off a highway between work and home.  I've been here once in a while, since I've gone back to work at our location south of Denver.  There's always one homeless guy hanging around outside.  I grab some hot wings and take the short ride to a park.  The park is along the way from the supermarket to one entrance for the bike trail home.  There's one collection of metal picnic tables under a metal roof.  A couple of women are seated at one table.  From their discussion, one goes on about her living situation.  The other could perhaps be her case worker, as the other has a laptop.  After the first leaves, the other remains to speak on the phone.  The park also has another set of metal picnic tables, these partially covered and enclosed by brick on a couple of sides.  This is where the homeless in this park hang out, or hide.  I see one asleep in a hammock which is attached and hung up.  Another, with long grey hair, is spinning some kind of string like a lasso.  As I much my wings, I watch a mom walk in the park with her two daughters.  One is a toddler, who lags behind because her heel has come out of her shoe, until Mom fixes it.  I watch as this trio of separate classes all simultaneously occupy the same municipal green space.
     Thursday.  In my ever-changing schedule, I have today off.  I will end up being gone all day.  This morning, I'm headed for a workout and a swim at the waterpark, followed by a stop at the particular supermarket with my low fat cheese.  From there, I will head home to drop off the perishable items, swimsuit, and towel, and douse my perspiring head with the hose from the kitchen sink before I head back down the street to the bank followed by some more groceries I need from a less expansive supermarket.  A long day, but I believe a fruitful one.  I won't have to do all this stuff on Sunday, when I will have cooking to do for the coming week.  I'm out on the trail as it's closing in on 10:30 AM.  I'm rolling past a woman sitting on a gravel patch, in the shade of a trash can.  She's dressed as any other suburban grandma might be; Capris, tank top, and ball cap all in pastel colors.  Her bicycle lay on the gravel next to her.  A stolen shopping cart is parked next to the trash can.  The cart is piled as high as it can be.  As I roll past her, she looks up at me.  She's missing her two front upper teeth.  I arrive at the rec center just in time to realize that, I remembered almost everything.  I forgot a second water bottle on this week of record temperatures (and evenings remaining in the 60s F.), but that bottle will end up coming in handy along my second supermarket journey.  The important thing I forgot are the sneakers, because I ain't supposed to workout in sandals at any gym.  Fortunately for me, no one mentions anything to be about it.  Nice guys that they are.
     I get to the waterpark a little after noon, and a good hour before my "reservation."  I decide to sit under a shady tree in the huge park right next door, and I write this.  I've been riding through this park, most recently for two solid months, until three years ago for almost a couple of years.  This is the first time I've stopped to sit under one if its trees.  A creek enters one end and flows through its considerable length.  Families may picnic, play in the creek, sunbathe, throw the frisbee.  Last week I saw one guy shoveling sand into a dam (?).  A mom arrives with her young son as a young girl they appear to know approaches them.  The kids begin chasing each other.  "Can't catch me!"  "Can too!"  "No too!"  Inside the waterpark, I head for the men's locker room.  It smells like Clorox, just cleaned.  I notice a door I never have before.  There's a janitorial closet between the men's and women's locker room.  Unfortunately, each side has a separate door.  I notice that both doors are open, and it becomes obvious that one may see through all the way to the other locker room.  great design.  I notify a park employee.  After a fine swim, I complete the aforementioned trip for the rest of the afternoon.  When I have groceries in hand, including dinner, I briefly stop to eat at a bus shelter in front of the store.  A guy comes down the sidewalk.  When he passes me, he says, "Jeez!  The heat!"  I can't remember if he says it's outrageous, abominable, or abhorrent.  Then he tells me to have a great day.  No wonder he's hot.  He's in long pants and a long-sleeved shirt.  He carries a backpack and a full cloth bag.  he spends a few minutes pacing in and out of the bus shelter, looking as if for a bus, swinging his arms.  Then he crosses the avenue.

     "In an effort to reclaim our spaces, our communities, and our history, I have made it my duty to work to regain the essence of Denver Colorado's historically black neighborhood."  ...the "Five Points" that was...the "Harlem of the West"...long before two artists coined the RiNo name...  Today, Five Points has become "perhaps the model of gentrification across the nation."  - Westword, 7/9-15/2020

     ...with a disgruntled Muslim element on the right and...Communist underground on the left, there remained...poles of attraction...  "...there was really no idea of where the country should go after independence...a struggle for spoils rather than...new directions and goals.  The [political] parties simply became little oligarchies..."  [Some in the Army] would have done away with all parties [for] at least a quasi-permanent Army rule...  ...despite Suharto's...constant disavowal of...a military dictatorship...military men...were still intent on carefully consolidating their own positionsIf, after the Vietnam War was finally ended, there would be a "third force" in Asia, and if, as many hoped, such a force would be...nonaligned and essentially Socialist...Indonesia would...be...more important than...Vietnam, where events were likely to be indecisive for some time to come.  ...specific projects that could generate self-help and improve employment...the more would be the position of the modernists - the economic experts and those looking...to...more meaning than mystique...  [Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew] said that the [Vietnam] war was being fought 'to decide that Vietnam shall not be repeated."...in Southeast Asia...  The war...enabled Singapore and other nations [make money selling goods and services to South Vietnam.]  ...President Johnson [called him] a...brilliant political leader...of new Asia.  - Shaplen

     Friday.  I'm on the way to work, just off the trail, and climbing a hill through a sleepy residential neighborhood.  Open space and horse trail lay just beyond back yards.  I'm pedaling past a couple of women in a driveway.  Both strike me as around 40 years of age.  One is telling the other about her basement.  It's full of her husband's filing cabinets.  Could he be a lawyer?  I don't stick around to find out.  I have a hill to climb.  Today, another employee who works at this store has been called back to work.  She is the mother of the wife, of the cousin of the guy I worked with at our downtown store.  The guy who had misadventures I would hear about, sometimes directly from him, sometimes from his side of a phone conversation with furniture outlets and phone companies and city agencies.  The guy who lives with his cousin and cousin's wife, who admitted to petty crimes and to plans to "hustle" in the park downtown during his furlough.  The guy who has alluded to gang connections and had his homeless friends stick their heads in the store to say hi.  His cousin's wife's mom works the morning shift, and I now come in at noon, shortly before when I see her this morning.  I ask her how the cousin of her son-in-law is doing.  She laments his drinking and complains that he's living "the unemployment life."  I ask her if the morning schedule works for her.  She replies that it's fine as she isn't "on an ankle monitor now."  I wasn't aware she had any criminal convictions.  I mention that she forgot to turn on the electric "open" sign.  She laughs and replies that she "must have been high" before letting me know that she's just kidding.  It sounds as if she expects me to know that one of her sons was incarcerated when she announces that she has "some good news."  He's been released to a halfway house.  He originally had a six-year sentence, for what she doesn't say.  Though she mentions that he will soon begin his anger-management classes.  After work, I'm pulling into my townhome parking lot.  A guy who I don't recognize is shuffling toward the back of the complex.  He wears no shoes or socks, but he strikes me as a resident.  I go inside, change, and come back out to water the flowers.  I can hear this guy arguing with a female resident toward the back of the complex.  I hear him say something about her making noise.  Is he kidding?  He has nothing to say about the fireworks overnight on the 4th?  On Saturday, I'm making my way down the trail again to work.  I'm rolling past a dog park as a guy comes along from the parking lot for the park.  He's on his Bluetooth, talking to someone about the stupidity of those who refuse to wear masks, "as a matter or rights."  When I get to work, I decide to run over to Trader Joe's to grab a couple or oranges for my iced tea.  When I'm in there, it doesn't occur to me that every other shopper has white hair.  As I come out, I hear an employee at the door telling a young woman, "There's ten more minutes for the senior shopping hour."  I then see a line of people, all six feet apart, beginning to form.  No one stopped me from joining the senor shoppers...do I look that old?
     Sunday.  I woke up shortly after 1 AM.  I don't know how cool it is outside, but as I don't have central air conditioning, it's hot inside.  I get up and get some iced tea.  I rinse down my head with cold water and attempt to wash the perspiration out of my eyes.  I turn on a fan until 2 AM and then go back to sleep.  I awake some four hours later with a full night's sleep.  No, this will not be another July 5th.  Around noon, I head out for the short ride to the supermarket, for a handful of items.  I'm just across the street.  On the corner is a red stolen shopping cart.  Yards away, a guy is pushing an identical shopping cart down the street.  In the cart is a flat screen TV.  I turn down the street to the supermarket.  The short ride is a vision of the occasional vehicle with a smashed front end, of flags displayed outside of homes, and of curbs filled with parked trucks and cars.  Somebody has come to pay a visit to someone around here, on this sleepy and hot Sunday smack in the middle of the summer. It's a family kind of neighborhood.  The streets are for hot shots racers.  I watch a young kid on his little BMX bike come out from hiding, behind a huge pickup, just in time to spot another huge pickup coming down the street.  I pass the third identical shopping cart before I pass a car with a red heart balloon tied to the driver side mirror.  Music comes from inside the home where the vehicle is parked.  A birthday party?  Then, looking through the window behind the driver, I can see the opposite window appears as if someone put their fist through it.  The rest of the entire window is shattered.
     Tuesday.  I ride most of the way home with just a few rain drops falling.  Toward the end of the trail, the drops begin slowly picking up.  I park under a tree and decide to put my poncho on.  I approach the trailhead as the drops pick up quickly.  The drops turn into a downpour.  Just before the trailhead, two middle-aged guys and a kid come from an intersecting branch of the trail.  One guy is running and the other two are on bikes.  The guy on the bike is telling the kid to "Hurry.  Go.  Go.  Go"  I cross the busy thoroughfare from the trail to the street.  I turn up a long hill as the downpour turns into waves of rain.  Water floods the gutter on my side of the street.  Toward the top of the hill, the rain lets up.  I turn up a residential street.  On the ground in a spent yellow shotgun shell.  The following morning, I come into work.  I mention to my coworker that I got caught in the rain the day before.  Her jaw drops.  "It rained yesterday?" she asks.  A few hours later, a salesman pulls up in a big van.  He's going into each store in the shopping center.  He comes inside to say he's from Kentucky.  He has no mask on.  He demonstrates an all purpose cleaning solution.  It cleans a spot on the floor pretty well.  It must have something such as Xylol as an active ingredient.  In art school, we cleaned our serigraph screens with Xylol, which came in metal gallon cans, and is toxic.  I decline his offer to purchase a collection of his cleaning solution bottles.  I'm living these days on $25 per week.  He's off to the next store.
     Saturday.  Perhaps beginning last week, I've seen what appears to be individuals panning for gold in the Platte River.  The river has been visibly low all month.  This morning, as I cross a bridge over the river, I spot an angler in waders down below.  This morning, everyone and their grandmother is out on the trail.  Runners and cyclists must sneak around one end of a homeless tent sticking out on the trail.  Further along, they must do the same with a snake crossing the trail.  Am I comparing the homeless to snakes?  Yes.  (Just kidding.)  On the way home in the afternoon, I'm stopped at the trailhead exit on the way home, just across a bridge over the river.  A young homeless guy on a bike is coming down a dirt path off the trail, along this side of the river.  He nonchalantly says, "I'm sorry sir, this is private property.  I'm going to have to ask you to leave.  So...go kick rocks."  He laughs.  He's homeless...and uninterested in, to quote Woody Allen, planet Earth.  I'm across the bridge, and across the highway, and around the corner and halfway up a hill. Coming down a street (which I take the opposite direction on the way to work) is a middle-aged homeless guy.  He's dressed all in black, is on a black bike, and tows an attached black dolly.  His long hair is up in several homeless man buns.
     Sunday.  The heat keeps me up and I get a half a night's sleep.  In the early afternoon, I decide to get lunch at a deathburger just down the street.  I lock up my bike just before a young guy and his friend show up on their own bikes.  This guy speaks with a voice which suggests he occupies a unique place on the mental health spectrum.  He comes in behind me.  An employee asks him to put on a mask.  He asks for one.  They have them for sale for a dollar.  After he orders, he goes to the window and knocks on it.  His friend, who is outside, takes this as his cue to come inside.  His friend goes into the men's room.  The kiosks are shut down.  On one kiosk, the text is displayed upside down.  I order and take a seat.  There are chairs in the lobby which are not up on the tables.  Even though I get my food in a to go bag, there are no sign sat the entrance or inside informing customers that the dining room is closed.  I'm eating in a booth next to a window.  I'm taking a look at the guy's bike parked outside.  It has extra-long handlebars, and it appears he must have taken his seat inside with him, as it's not on his bike.  Though I don't see him with it.  Only one of his grips has a brake lever, and I don't see any brake cables anywhere on his bike.  I can see his rear brakes are unclamped, as when the rear rim needs to be removed.  He's ordered and has his food and his mask, and he sits a couple of booths behind me.  I'm almost done with my meal before an employee comes out to tell me that the dining room is in fact not open.  As I collect my last bit of food, the employee tells the same thing to the guy behind me.  He informs the employee that he's waiting for his friend.  It's an odd fake lunch, with a guy who has an odd voice.  Back home, I sit down and feel as if I will pass out from lack of sleep.  The following morning, I will awake as if out of a mental fog.  Later on this afternoon, I get dinner at the new Mexican place across the street.  It's where the old Mexican place was.  I like the new menu.  The waitress sounds as if she's bilingual.  I inquire about using English.  She prefers Spanish.  I ask about the previous establishment here, where I've been eating for the past 13 years.  She attempts to pronounce "Google" in English, suggesting they moved.  Downtown this afternoon, in the park between the state capitol and the legislature, was the 6th annual Back the Blue rally.  It was in an outdoor theatre at one end of the park.  I heard about it on the radio yesterday.  I would later hear on the radio that it was started six years ago in response to the impression by some, that former Attorney General Eric Holder decided he disliked the police.  I would later see some footage of the rally taken from a phone and posted online.  I think I've sorted out the various mutations of the US flag I've seen carried by various marchers.  The black and white US flag with the single blue stripe is "pro-police."  The all black and white US flag represents "resistance," against the current president and his policies, I think.  As for all the standard US flags I've seen displayed outside all the homes I ride past to and from work, I will see this week one of those flags at a home with a yard sign.  The sign is a list of what the residents' support, from science to human rights.  I will also see a US flag outside the home, along with a young couple who appear to be hipsters.
     Monday, I'm off to the gym before work.  I'm off the bike trail and on a tiny median, waiting for the light to cross a highway.  I've pressed the button when another cyclist comes onto the same tiny median.  She asks me to push the button.  I tell her I already did, and she appears not to hear me.  We cross at the light.  She reaches the next corner and crosses the intersection on a red light.  I conclude that she never pushes the button for the crosswalk herself.  I'm sure she's avoiding any unnecessary contact during this pandemic.  Tuesday.  Out on the trail to work.  Just past what I used to refer to as golf course #2, I come out from an underpass and past a VFW hall.  There appears to be two RV campers parked here, one behind the other.  Behind these is a car packed with clothes.  between the last camper and the car, attached to a hitch on the camper, is a flatbed trailer.  It's full of black plastic full garbage bags.  I'm convinced that these are occupied by homeless.  Later on, I'm out of work and rolling through a residential neighborhood just across the boulevard.  I will take a route home off of much of the trail this late afternoon, and again, all along the way I will see flag after US flag displayed outside of homes.  From big flags to tiny ones.  On this street within sight of my store, I stop in front of one home with a big US flag hanging vertically from the gutter.  It's in front of the porch, and behind it sits a woman in a chair.  All I can see of her are her legs behind this flag.  Before I can pull out my camera, a cool breeze blows the flag up.  It was a beautiful ride to work this morning, as the 60 degree overnight low made its way toward the heat of the day.  As I make my way through the ritzy neighborhood, on a short trip along the horse trail, I exit this trail and turn up a street toward a couple of city blocks of middle-class homes.  It's a dreamy, cool and breezy early evening ride under broken clouds.  It's one of those rides home when you can feel the summer and summers past in the air.  The end of a summer day, when it's cooled off, when you have someone you love in your arms.  The kind of late afternoon you soak up.  I pass more than one beautiful young mom in her driveway.  I pass one home, not the first I've seen with a flagpole in the yard.  This one has a US flag above a yellow Don't Tread On Me flag.  A guy with a long black beard takes his small daughter into his pickup truck.  Several tires sit in the bed.  Further down the street I suddenly smell French bread.  I reach a crosstown street which takes me through a small neighborhood park.  Just beyond, I enter a short trail on the to rejoin the main one home.  I comment out loud that I can't believe no one is in my way at this part of my ride.  Usually at this spot, there's a confluence of bicycle and pedestrian traffic.  I've spoken too soon.  From the trail hidden behind some trees emerges a grey-bearded guy leading a line of some four or so other riders, all on ten speeds.  I first hear his voice, "Right turn!"  I then make a left in front of them as he tells one of the others simply, "Signal."  Another cyclist signals with his arm for a right turn.  Dream over, I'm awake again.  Right after they pass me, I'm through a short tunnel when I hear more voices..  At the other end is a homeless couple.  They're off the trail, on the grass, sitting with their bikes.  I hook back up with the trail, and soon I roll past the campers again.
     Wednesday.  I'm just on the trail.  Ahead, I spot a cyclist who made a U-turn and is parked in the oncoming lane.  When I pass him, he's stopped on his bike, having a smoke.  He's a middle-aged guy with no helmet, looks like he hasn't shaved in some days, and is dressed all in black.  A few yards down, I look across the river and watch a guy on the opposite bank.  He's halfway down the slope from the road toward the water, and he's walking his bike along this incline through trees and weeds.  His skin is as brown from the sun as his hoodie and shorts.  This week, I received in the mail both two statements and one bill,  all from the specialist i saw last month.  My total bill will not be $1.45, as a previous single statement suggested.  Hey, I never know what my health insurance company is going to do.  The specialist and the lab want a total of two grand.  I pay the specialist with my savings.  The other twelve hundred I don't have.  After a call I make on Monday to the lab, I find out that they will knock off 25% if I pay on time.  This I could do with the help of my next paycheck, which I was going to bank anyway.  Which also means I had other plans for the money.  Such as save it.  I may also be able to borrow the rest.  Otherwise, the lab does have payment plans.  When I get to the gym on Wednesday, I'm told by the employee behind the desk that I have four visits left on my membership card.  This is the same employee who used the words "sprinkle the bike" in reference to a test of the rec center in ground sprinkler system.  I ask her how much to refill the card.  She tells me that the rec center is waiting for the governor to decide whether or not he wants to again shut down most businesses in the state.  I haven't seen or heard anything about this, online or from anyone else.  After work, I'm crossing the last bridge over the river, along the trail home after work.  I'm at one end behind a poor guy on a bike.  In one arm, he's attempting to hold either a cooler or an ottoman.

     Our summer season might be shorter than what lower-elevation cycling meccas...but as with many aspects of high-country living, what matters is quality...of hours spent in the saddle.  ...swooping layout as well as the mesmerizing aspen forest through which it swoops...
     ...August 18, 2019...summit of 14,265-foot Quandry Peak...a quartet of local eighth graders led by some of their fathers...are talking about throwing back flips off cornices.  "We should skin this and ski this winter."  ..two mountain bikers come bouncing down...at 12,900 feet, barely holding on.  "Yeah, we ran out of nice trail!"  "I don't think anyone actually likes hiking up.  But that's why you do it, right?  To say you did it?"
     "We're absolutely a white-collar company in a blue-collar world."  ...you can go from shopping for luxury furniture to eating a grass-fed burger via an open doorway.  The array of services under one roof would be rare in Manhattan...  - Colorado Summit, Summer/Fall 2020

     ...530 acres of paradise...it was the lure of this land that captured their imagination.  ...the richness of the landscape and wildlife exudes a powerful spiritual  connection and brings a healing solace to the soul.  One could not ask for a more compelling environment...  "...the guest house - about 2,200 square feet..."  - Vail Valley Magazine, Summer 2020

     ...during the global pandemic.  Many people are experiencing vivid dreams; powerful old emotions resurfacing for healing; odd physical sensations...
     Many Americans choose to travel in recreational vehicles (RVs)...  "It's about getting our of that social norm of always knowing what the next day is going to be like...  ....a little bit of the unknown, the unexpected."  Cleaning out portable toilets and taking showers at truck stops can be challenging...  "The world actually isn't a scary place at all."  "Maybe that means working less and living more frugally, so you see a rise in minimalism..."  - natural awakenings, 6/2020

     Friday.  On the trail to and from this week, I've so far seen a couple of different men outside the pair of campers parked in front of the VFW.  One is a skinny guy.  Yesterday, on the way home, a Caucasian woman who looked like any housewife was outside the door of one of one of the campers.  This morning, the skinny guy is at the back of the flatbed.  The trailer is not full of trash bags.  It has a big black plastic tarp over its contents.  The tarp is up now, and the skinny guy is unloading a moped.  The rest of the flatbed appears to have assorted furniture and items such a sink.   Down the trail, onto the next and all the way to this trail's end, I exit next to a corral, where a horse lives.  This morning, three kids are petting the horse from the other side of a fence.  behind them is a young woman in a shirt with "instructor" on the back.  In the late afternoon.  After work, I head across the boulevard and down the street to a horse trail.  It runs behind some large residential homes.  The back yards make these houses reminiscent of large manors.  As I roll along the trail, I spot the grey-haired lord of one such manor at a patio table.  Is he reading a book?  I'm soon along the first trail, cruising through one of a series of parks.  Families are out late in the afternoon.  Sitting not far off the trail, under a tree, is a woman who may be forty.  She's in bare feet, a tube top and overall shorts.  She has sunglasses and has her hair up.  She could be a housewife but sits alone.  And as I approach, she looks directly at me.  She's not smiling., she's sending me a serious signal.  Her body is poised.  She's clearly in command of her corner of this park.  Who is this woman some may refer to as a cougar?  I don't recall the last time I saw a woman sending out such a clear signal.  I look away and back again, and I give her a smile.  She's looking right at me with her whole body.  Does she live in one of the homes just across the creek along the bike trail?  I imagine stopping and strolling over.  Sitting next to her. as she places her arm around mine.  I take off her sunglasses.  I undo her hair which she shakes free.  This makes me smile.  I give her a kiss.  But, you don't want to hear about any of  my imaginary musings.  I have just turned off one trail onto another.  Down a gravel path comes a young teenaged girl on her bike.  She sports orange racing rims.  We both are fighting a mild headwind, but at least it's a cool one.  I give her a few bike lengths between us as I shadow her up the trail.  She spends a lot of time off her seat as she cranks her pedals.  She must not have any gears but she's cranking it up every hill which comes along.  Occasionally, she moves off the concrete and on again.  We swing past the pair of homeless campers.  The car parked behind them has a smashed front corner.  There is yet a different guy here.  He's sitting in a wheelchair working on the moped the skinny guy took down this morning.  I follow the girl through another underpass.  She moves to the center of the trail as a pair of neon Lycra-clad cyclists attempt to pass her.  We approach the point where I disembark the trail.  She continues north toward downtown.  I wonder how far she's going.
     Saturday is one of the busiest mornings I can remember on this trail.  Lines of cyclists all in a row.  A line of teenaged girls, another line of middle-aged cyclists.  Just before I enter the trail, I turn down a block with a stretch next to an open patch of field.  Parked here is yet another broken down RV.  I found a third place the homeless are living out of campers.  Sunday.  I have another date with the waterpark.  But first, the budget this fortnight permits me one breakfast at the place along the way to the supermarket.  I read in a neighborhood newspaper that a couple of other municipalities have opened pools this month.  My waterpark's last day this season is the 8th of next month.  Perhaps I can swim elsewhere after that.  From there, it's off to hook up with the bike trail.  I'm coming down a street to the side of the river opposite the trail.  I turn toward an intersection from which i will cross a bridge to the other bank, and enter the trail.  I notice on this side of the river, a fourth location of yet another homeless camper.  Just under the bridge, I'm along side the twin homeless campers, flatbed full of appliances under the black plastic tarp, and car filled with clothes.  Two completely different guys are out back behind the campers.  One is in shorts, has no shirt, and has a pair of black earbuds around his neck.  He's heavyset and pale, in his thirties.  The other guy is on a bike.  Out on the trail are more multiple cyclists riding in a line.  The sky doesn't look threatening, and it appears I will have a fair swim.  When I get to the waterpark, I discover I paid for a swim yesterday by mistake.  They let me swim today anyway, nice guys that they are.  It poured yesterday.  There are always good-looking moms here.  One comes in the water with her two young teenaged kids.  She has dark brown eyes and freckles.  It begins to drizzle, but no matter.  Everyone is having fun.  I head out after an hour and a half, and I wait a bit for a small shower to cease.  When it lets up, I exit the parking lot into the park, where picnic goers have all crowded under a big tent.  I'm on the way home when I realize that I can stop into a super Target along the way for the odd vegetable item.  I also realize that this being the same trail home from work, I can do this on any trip home.  I detour for some mushrooms before I roll over to a Chilis in this shopping center.  It's open.  I decide I have enough in my budget for the old crispers salad plate.  This must be the first Chilis I've been into in a year.  I have a chance to read a book I always bring along but never open.  It's just like not so old times.  Then it's time to head home.

     [The] Senior Aquatics Facility Supervisor [for the municipality where I workout and swim] said the...waterpark opened June 19 at a capacity of 150 people in a session [but] jumped to 250 by July.  - Denver Herald, 7/23/2020

     Monday.  I'm coming down the last hill before I turn onto the trail.  Struggling up this hill is a battered old Toyota hatchback.  Tied to the rack on its roof appears to be a thin mattress.  Halfway to the top, it slowly turns into the entrance for the park on this side of the river, and meanders its way along the drive.  This has homeless written all over it.  Down a long stretch of trail, the river is on one side and industrial plants across the street.  Out on this particular trail, the elderly sit on benches and homeless sit in the grass.  This morning, three colorfully dressed seniors all share a bench cut out of a big log.  Just past them, a middle-aged guy sits cross-legged on the grass, having a smoke.  I'm down this trail, onto the connecting trail and off again, onto the horse trail and into the last residential neighborhood before I get to work.  In front of his home is a lanky guy with shaggy gray hair.  I suspect he sees me come this way to work, as he's the first person I can remember who has ever waved at me.  Some seven hours later, I'm on the way home past the twin campers.  The flatbed appears to have been emptied and turned into a tent.  The woman I refer to as the mom is outside.  On the side of the trail, opposite the lot with the campers, is a playground.  Cyclists, moms and kids hang out there while the camper people do their own thing.  Just before I pass the campers, on the same trail home along the same stretch.  Coming down the road next to the trail is a homeless couple on bicycles.  The guy is shirtless and pulling a metal wagon.  Inside the wagon is what appears to be a carpet steamer.
     Wednesday. Regardless of what I was told by a woman behind the desk at the rec center, the Governor has not shut down the state.  I was dubious.  I'm just out of work, along the short trip on the horse trail.  I turn down the short, yards-long exit for the horse trail.  Entering the trail is a couple waling their dog.  The guy is middle-aged.  He looks like a homeowner-type.  He stops in front of me and complains that I didn't go the other way around him, before he says something about they both are taking up the entire entrance to the trail.  We are stopped next to a home made backyard Black Yard Matters sign.  I can think of many reasons he's having a bad day; furloughed from work due to the virus, can't make mortgage bills, utility bills, insurance bills. He strikes me as someone who prefers to be in control.  I hear him tell the lady he can't do his "job effectively."  They continue on their way, she holding the dog leash and he speaking and gesturing.  I've been working down here on a regular basis, from April 2015 to August 2017, and again since early May of this year.  I don't remember meeting anyone like him around these parts, and I must say he's not representative of the residents here.  I make it past the couple and their dog and turn up the street, rather than head toward the bike trail.  I'm going to pick up a weekly newspaper and some chicken wings for dinner.  With both in hand, I make my way back to the bike trail.  I approach the bridge, across which I will reconnect with the trail.  At this end of the bridge is a skinny homeless guy trying to start a moped...which is not supposed to be on the bike and pedestrian trail.  Across the bridge and up ahead, I decide to stop and eat at the plaza next to the playground, and across from the parking lot with the twin homeless campers.  There are a couple of new vehicles in the same lot, both packed with stuff.  One has it's doors open.  A middle-aged woman hands a banana to a different homeless guy who rides up on his own moped.  Behind the campers, on the ground is a guy working on a bicycle.  Another woman is with him.  Over with the banana woman, yet another guy is walking along with a cane.  I sit and eat, and watch this scene as cyclist after cyclist goes past on the trail.  I wonder what the guy on the entrance to the horse trail would think of the camper guys?  A young woman behind me is with a dog on the small plaza.  I finish eating and I roll over to ask her if she has any idea who the campers people are.  She has no idea.  She comes here to train dogs.  I think it's interesting that young women who train dogs, cyclists, and moms at the playground all coexists here with these characters out of some kind of short story.  "Maybe because of the Corona virus," the young woman suggests as a reason for the camper guys being here.  I'm not sure I follow her, but this afternoon, this is the least of my problems on my effort to make my way home.  Again this early evening, lines of cyclists are out riding in formation.  Shortly after, I'm off the trail at last.  Down the street and around the corner, two homeless guys on bikes appear to be headed the direction of the campers.
     Thursday morning.  The camper on the way to the trailhead, on a residential street along an empty field on the way to work, is gone this morning.  Just on the trail, a homeless guy on a bike comes from the direction of the campers.  Down the trail past the lot with the campers, the two vehicles with the banana lady and the guy with the cane are gone.  A newer VW Bug is now behind the campers.  Some kind of pad is on top of the Bug.  An older woman slowly comes along the trail, past this site.  She has an odd gait, with both her knees turned inward.  After work, in the early evening, I'm coming back past the campers.  One of them is gone.  So is the VW Bug.  Another vehicle, and a pickup truck hauling a horse trailer have replaced it.  A driver sits in the pickup, his arm out the window, the engine running.  He appears to be bored from waiting for something.  The hood is up on the engine of the remaining camper, and someone is under it, working on the engine.  Back up the trail, where I passed one homeless cyclist this morning, a couple of homeless guys on bikes roll past toward the camper.  Friday is the last day of the month.  I'm on the way to work.  Again, in the morning, the single camper parked along the street next to the empty field is gone.  Shortly thereafter, I'm out on the trail and cruising past the parking lot with the twin campers.  This morning, campers, flatbed, vehicles stuffed with...stuff, and all other traces appear to be gone.  On the way home after work, I'm rolling past the parking lot of the former twin campers.  A small pile of junk is neatly piled into a corner of a parking space.  This junk includes the front suspension of a vehicle.  Off under a tree next o the trail is a popular spot for individual homeless.  A guy sits there this late afternoon with a dog on a leash.  Next to the trash pile is the vehicle of the banana woman and the guy with a cane.  It's in a different parking space this afternoon.  The driver's side door is open.  All the space inside this vehicle is still filled, with the exception of the driver's seat.  A middle-aged woman is asleep on the seat, reclining upon whatever is piled upon the passenger seat.  Down the trail, a young guy carries a bedroll toward the lot.  And this month drives away like a sleepy homeless caravan; flatbed, mopeds, bananas and all.