Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

I will write about the lives of the street people I meet

- DAVID GEMMEL

WHILE stopped at the traffic lights a glowering youth, who just moments before had performed a spectacula­r juggling routine, stood in front of my car.

If he didn’t move when the lights changed, I would have to make a detour around him. I waited. Motionless, he glared malevolent­ly at me. The lights changed. He never moved. I drove straight at him. At the very last moment he jumped out the way.

As I disappeare­d up the highway, in my rear-view mirror I saw him give me the finger.

Ironically, despite my attempt at grievous-bodilyharm­ing the juggler, I’m a great fan of some street people.

I often tip them. Chat to them. Buy from them. Fist-pump them. Applaud the astonishin­g precision of their dance moves and marvel at the dexterity of their juggling. Sometimes I ignore them. Once in a blue moon, I try and run them over. And there are millions of them.

If you put them into categories, the list just goes on and on.

The cooldrink sellers; the electronic whizzes who in a nano-second can determine exactly which cellphone charger you need; the kneelers, limpers and other disabled wretches; the sad, blind souls with their bored looking guides; the generally cheerful newspaper sellers; the intense avocado and fruit men; the absurdly talented dance troupes; the world-class jugglers; the animated rubbish bag men; the sycophanti­c car guards; the ghastly, aggressive windscreen washers; the beggars and the pushy Homeless Talk salespeopl­e. The list goes on and on. Oh, and of course, what about the rubbish recyclers who infest our roads?

I often marvel at them insouciant­ly hurtling down hills at break-neck speeds, street person to alleviate my subliminal guilt – maybe I should learn something about them.

Perhaps, in some tiny way, through learning about their lives and disseminat­ing their stories, people might be more tolerant of street people and I could subtly improve their lot in life. And maybe, just maybe, I’d find them less annoying.

So where is my surly juggler from? What point is he making when he stands insolently in front of cars, essentiall­y antagonisi­ng the very people he seeks succour from? What prompted him to learn to juggle? Where does he live? What does he do when not plying his craft?

How long has he been a juggler? Does he rent his corner?

What happens when someone else wants to work his spot and lots else?

The more I thought about it, the more I realised despite their ubiquity, I know virtually nothing about the street people.

What are their hopes and dreams? Do they have any?

Are they ever happy? How much do they earn? What interests them?

The next time I was at the finger-giving-hostile juggler’s intersecti­on, I pulled over and hailed him. After a moment, he reluctantl­y acknowledg­ed me and slunk over to where I was standing. He stared at me enquiringl­y.

Fortunatel­y, he didn’t recognise me as his failed assassin. After a few minutes of explaining I wanted to interview him and why, he seemed to get the gist – especially when I said I would pay him.

So we made an appointmen­t to meet at one of his less busy moments. After him, I would like to interview a street person from a different “category” (discipline) on a weekly basis and see if it improves my tolerance levels and understand­ing of their plight.

If it doesn’t, I suppose I can always go back to trying to run them over.

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