I have updated certain technical aspects of these pieces, but have attempted to keep the content authentic to my original drafts because 18-year-old me was way funnier before I had to throw out most of my humour to make room for learning APA style and thesis writing techniques. This first essay is a true story. Without further ado, here is high school personal essay #1!
The People on the Bus Go 'Round and Get Stranger
Public transit. You meet the most interesting people on the bus. Some might make the argument that the people watching you are able to do during your morning commute to school or work is reason alone for opting out of owning a vehicle. There are those who find pensive tranquility and inner peace in their favourite seat next to the window, while others bump into their soul mates during their awkward shuffles out the door. Personally, I’ve had my fair share of memorable bus adventures over the years. Amidst the random conversations I’ve been forced into, the noxious smells my nose has witnessed, and the numerous personal bubbles I’ve had the misfortune of invading after a sudden brake, one particular incident stands out from among the rest.
For the
three years I spent in Junior High, each morning began with me meeting up with
my best friend before boarding the bus to school together. On the morning of this
aforementioned life-altering event, our walk to our bus stop had been exceptionally
normal. My friend had successfully completed her daily ritual, which consisted
of her frantically scavenging for her misplaced school materials, before we proceeded to
spend our walk filling each other in on our previous uneventful evenings. Our
bus driver had acknowledged each of us with a slight nod of obligation and
gratitude that neither of us had forgotten either of our bus passes that
morning. Out of habit, we meandered towards the back of the clunky metal beast
to our usual seats at the top of the stairs, just off to the left. That morning, however, our zombie-like promenade was halted abruptly by a
middle-aged man wearing a brown jacket.
“Look
out. Look out.”
He
spoke without emotion as he half-heartedly gestured toward the bus floor at the
back exit where a disgusting puddle of sludge was occupying the pathway. My
friend, who appeared to not have heard the monotone man’s warning, continued to
advance precariously close to the unidentifiable pile of nasty.
“Look
out. Look out.”
Once
again, the sludge guard repeated his unfeeling phrase to stop my friend from treading through that awful-smelling bus slime on the floor. She heard him in
time and stopped just short of a ruined pair of sneakers.
“Ooh!
Peach smoothie!”
Perhaps,
my friend would have been correct if we had boarded the bus a few stops
earlier; the miscellaneous slime may very well have been a fellow bus
passenger’s delicious peach smoothie at one point in time. However, it was apparent
that it had become nothing more than a stomach-rejected breakfast fail. Needless
to say, my friend and I quickly transferred to another bus that was carrying
100% less vomit than was our first vehicular attempt at commuting to school
that day.
I wish
I could have seen the expressions on our faces for the entirety of that fateful bus ride. At the time, I
wasn’t thinking anything more than about how disgusting that whole experience
had been. Later, I found myself wondering more and more about that
brown-jacketed man’s role in this weird story. Was he the protagonist of this
tale? Was it HIS once-delicious smoothie that had evaded his small intestine
for a chance at freedom within the public transit system? Perhaps, he felt
guilty about how he had defiled an otherwise peaceful commute for his fellow
passengers and decided he was now obligated to protect us oblivious teenage
girls from an embarrassing first period of the school day. I wondered if,
maybe, he was simply nothing more than the Good Samaritan who had watched this
unfortunate exposition take place and was now playing the hero’s role in the
story. Whatever the situation, both my friend and I were both grateful that he had
raised his emotionless voice to steer us clear of a potentially disgusting
fate.
I
suppose it doesn’t really matter whose gastronomical fluid was residing on the
bus floor. It was not important whether it belonged to the man in the brown
jacket or to another transit taker who had since opted to take the scenic route
to work. Even though nobody directly accepted the blame for the peach smoothie
mistake, there was someone there who was willing to make sure that it did not
unnecessarily ruin another person’s day. That monotone man stepped up and
avoided a bystander losing their innocence to another stranger’s queasy stomach.
I often think about what a wonderful world it could be if there were more of us
who acted like Mr. Sludge Guard.
If
people were more willing to help their fellow humans avoid potentially
mortifying situations instead of silently ill-wishing them to a face-plant in
the name of morbid entertainment, I am sure that there would be less war. Of
course, America’s Funniest Home Videos would
probably have to be taken off the air to achieve this radically pro-social goal, but I am
positive that we could all find something better to do with our time than spending it watching crotch shot montages. It is probably true that the world would be a
better place if everyone volunteered in their community and donated blood every
two months. Not to repeat another
cliché, but it really is the little things that count. The least one could do
is to hold the door open for the frantic looking stranger carrying a million
bags of groceries in their arms. Failing that, one could at least assist said stranger in picking up their groceries after they explode all over the sidewalk. Pain is funny until it’s your own. It
is unnecessary to intentionally inflict it upon another person. Standing by
while someone walks into a disaster that you could have prevented leaves you
just as guilty as if you were the one to push them into it. We are all in this
together, friends. Pay it back. Pay it forward. Contribute in whatever way works best for you. If I ever happen to cross paths with that brown-jacketed man
again, you better believe that I will be paying my debt by treating him to a peach smoothie.
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