Peoplewatch Blogject: Day 2, 06/14/09

The Rules:
No time-posting.
No location tags more specific than city.
No listening in on conversations.
No specific identification details beyond the visually observable.
No posting about people I know.
No posting about the same person repeatedly.
Observation and posting happens for a solid hour at a time, every day.

The point isn't to invade anyone's privacy, and it's certainly not to produce good writing. It's just to practice watching, and to write every day (even if it's bad).

When the two of them leave, they step around a table and converge together. The girl sips her milky brown whatever, and hitches her thumb up inside the strap of her bright orange shoulderpurse. The boy lopes forward and tips toward her at the shoulders. And when they converge, it's in a tilt like a first-date kiss.

Brown braids down her shoulderblades, till she puts her hood up. She's got glasses, thick plastic rims that, from the front, seem to spike at the joints. Her face has a fair, earnest complexion, like she's avoided makeup for years in exchange for a natural resistance to blemishes. When the man comes and takes her spent espresso cup away, she thanks him and flicks her chewed pen round her fingers. She's techno'd out-- laptop with four or five open windows she cycles through; hooked up to that is a mini-computer, the kind that's half palm pilot, half netbook, and clamshells together; flashdrive in the laptop; and iPod too. She's got a giant steel water bottle resting under the lamp, and scratches research from her laptop on a pad, perpendicular to the paper's lines.

Asian girl and asian guy sit down, and she gets a call. She speaks emphatically into the phone, and her head bobs forward and backward when she does. shoulder-length hair follows the motion, behind the lag of air resistance. Her man grins at her, mouth open and toothy, till she goes to the bathroom.

Group of girls sipping drinks in to-go containers that are needlessly disposable. They're at a big five-person table, stabbing the slush in their cups with straws. A girl-- short hair, turqoise shirt under a white zipped-open hoody-- doesn't have a drink and cups her hands around her face and smiles like rain on a cloudless day. She sits across from a nervous girl with a bush of tightly waved hair. The second girl focuses on her drink mostly, and scratching her scalp. She wears a shapeless black hoody and only smiles enough to convince the other girls that she's having a good time.


There's a man in the corner whose goatee extends too far down his neck. It's just thick enough in some places, and too thin in others, but it matches his disheveled hair and intent focus on his work. His shirt is a patterned buttondown, with little splotches of earth tones over a solid redish brown. He reads more than he types, and when he does, his head dips close to the screen, like his glasses fail him on digital text.

The barista walks with a slight limp, black shirt, khaki shorts and sockless sneakers. His hair is so short his scalp shines through the little gelled spikes, even though it's thick enough. He smiles the vague smile of someone who is content with their job. Empty coffee cup in hand, he makes eye contact with each group as he tells us that they're closing in ten.

At this point in the session, the place I was in closed and I had to move. I took a gamble, and went someplace where people *might* have been. Unfortunately, it’s a gamble that didn’t pay off. So, instead, I shall describe the location I am situated in now, rather than any people.

There’s street lamps in a neat grid, along the pathways. Each one shines differently, some brighter, some whiter, some with gray and black shadows in the glass. The light fixtures are shaped like urns, and they rest on black steel columns with long vertical grooves. Trees litter the area, without particular pattern to their age. There are two enormous ones, that stretch high into the sky. Medium-sized trees are smattered around on the grass, and the city has deigned it necessary to install a handful of new ones, tiny little saplings, held straight by metal rods and wires. A semicircle of a basketball court reflects the orange from a bug light across the street. There’s a playground that’s dark and silent, its form casts weird shadows on the woodchips beneath. The slatted benches overlooking the playground are ergonomically dipped in the center, and the cracks are stuffed with woodchips from tired kids or bored parents. The shadows in the gazebo give it direction, like it’s an island of concrete that’s being spun roof-over-floor. Empty cups and newspapers, and grocery bags, and cigarette buts at my feet, and swept round the gazebo’s benches. It’s all constructed of dusty-brown unstained wood; the kind with long grooves that look like hellish splinters. The slabs that make up the pathways through the park are like the trees, mostly old and mat, some new and shining light back at the lamps. In between the slabs, grass forms little mounds, spaced evenly and gentle, like turf speedbumps. The playgrounds swing squeaks as a shadow sits and pumps its legs.



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