My childhood was not idyllic, not in the traditional sense, but it was mine. My mother died in childbirth, so my dad raised me. Some fathers wouldn’t have, and I always felt special for that. I remember trips to the grocery store where my dad used to steal, usually steaks or salmon, always bottles of wine. I didn’t see it as a crime. I saw it as a game and proof that he loved me. Our whole life was a game, a kind of dare: Can you survive? Without a washing machine! With too-small shoes! You’ve got eleven dollars in your bank account and seven days to wait for food stamps: GO!
All of our furniture was sourced from the side of the road, so we had two huge executive desks with rolling office chairs, a brass bed, a piss-stained sofa we covered with scarves and caftans. We collected furniture we didn’t need, because anything free was too good to pass up. By the time I was a teenager, our studio was filled with armoires and dressers and dining room chairs stacked to the ceiling. The dressers were filled with electrical cords, old radios, headphones, drills and saws and tools we didn’t know how to use. Anything that worked or could be fixed or figured out, my dad had to take. He wasn’t a hoarder; he was a survivor.
I never knew we were poor. I thought everyone lived like this. Until one New Year’s Eve when I was six or seven. I found out the way everyone does: by meeting a rich person. My dad went out to a local club called the Globe and brought two people back with him. The first was John and I knew him. He was a Rastafarian who looked like a Rastafarian, so people would acquire him like a piece of clothing, and that night a rich woman hung off his arm. She was high. Her eyes were swollen blue and her lips were so juiced, they were crooked on her face. She was wearing a silver gown, like snakeskin that slithered down her sculpted form. I watched her through the break in the drapes—our apartment was all one long room, the bedroom separated by a scratchy blanket hung to make a curtain.
It was late and I was trying to sleep. That is the most consistent memory I have from childhood: how much I wanted to sleep all the time but never could. And the woman was high and she stumbled past the curtain, threw up in our closet all over our clothes, then looked at me, said, “There’s a kid in here,” laughed and walked out.
Dad didn’t hear, and if he had, he wouldn’t have cared. He was always ridiculously accommodating to other people, especially guests, offering them things we couldn’t afford to lose, like it was a game he was playing with himself. “Take this jacket. It looks good on you! Do you need a Walkman? We have three!”
So I just cried quietly. It stank of vomit and I wanted to leave. I wanted to go for a walk, which was what I did whenever I got overwhelmed by everything. I walked to trick myself into thinking I was going somewhere else.
But it was too late to go for a walk, so I lay there listening to them through the curtain. She went to the bathroom and snorted drugs off our toilet, and then she took a shit, but the toilet wouldn’t flush because sometimes it got stuck. She fought it loudly for a minute and then I heard a crash. And she walked out of the bathroom and said, “Your toilet’s broken,” and a few minutes later, she called a car and dragged John out.
The next morning, I discovered that she had broken the toilet. She had dropped the tank cover into the bowl and left an enormous gaping hole. If we flushed the toilet, water would rush out through the hole, flooding the bathroom.
When things broke in our house, it was permanent. We couldn’t afford to fix them. To his credit, Dad didn’t seem pleased about this new challenge, but he also refused to demand, even beg, that the woman pay for the repairs.
So we pissed in a bucket and poured it down the sink, or we crapped in the toilet and used that same bucket and water from the bath—carefully applied—to activate the suction to flush it down. We did that for the rest of my life in that apartment.
That was the night I became poor. Because poverty is not just not having money. It’s the way you see the world. It’s out of your control.
There were people I knew with less money than me who somehow never believed they were poor. For example, my dad was never poor, but I was. We lived in the same house, ate the same food, suffered from the lack of the same things, but only I was poor.
I think about that woman in the silver gown all the time. I rage and obsess. Her dress that night was worth ten times what it would have cost to fix that toilet. It drives me crazy that a person like that can just drift into your fragile world and break it and never look back. I know it was an accident. I know she wasn’t the real culprit—poverty was. Accidents happened all the time to everyone. But I still hate her.
People never understand, God, what it feels like from your side. That you are like the ghosts in that movie; you forget you’re dead until someone tells you, until someone laughs at you, until someone says, You have only one cup? That’s your only jacket? You don’t have a car? You never had your own apartment? Like you are a magic trick: impossible.
DEMI
The sun has set by the time I leave the helping hands office. I am on Victory Boulevard in Van Nuys, and I gaze down it, one way and then the other. Then I start walking.
It’s a strange feeling, knowing I have nowhere to go. I can’t quite believe it. I still imagine my dad’s apartment sometimes, shimmering in the distance, beyond the horizon. That if I walk far enough and fast enough, I can get home.
My feet ache but I won’t stop. I have to keep going; that’s the only way to win the game. Or at least to avoid losing.
I may be poor. It may be a stain that will never go away, but I am not homeless. I have lived for years in other people’s houses. I have never technically had my own home, but that doesn’t make me homeless, in the same way my dad was never poor.
I won’t do it. I will find a way out. Even if I have to walk all night, walk for a week. I will not be homeless.
* * *
IT’S NOT AS hard as it seems to walk all night. At least it’s always been easy for me. You just need to give yourself a destination—far but not so far it feels unattainable—and then you walk there. Once you arrive, you hover around for a minute: Maybe it’s a park and you sit on a bench. Maybe it’s a mall and you look at the storefronts. Maybe it’s a beach and you stick your toes in the sand. And then, just as you are starting to deflate, at the exact moment before that deflation transforms to inertia, you give yourself a new place to go.
That night, after I walk from Van Nuys to Glendale, I continue toward The Grove in West Hollywood. It’s closed, but I tell myself I’ve never seen it at night, and that’s enough of a goal.
Once I arrive, it’s locked up like a fortress and I tell myself, Well, now you know they close it up at night, and I decide to head to the beach to catch the sunrise. This is where I sleep, on my backpack on the sand, like a traveling dilettante. I just flew in from Poland! Who doesn’t sleep on the beach?