My Not-So-Private-Anymore Shame

Where does the bullet go?

Before realizing jail has no security, I had assumed I wasn't allowed to take my camera. In lieu of photos, imagine my face looked like this.

Some people spend Christmas Eve in front of a roaring fire, cozying up to loved ones, chugging egg nog – I spent mine in jail.

Not that I was behind bars. Rather I was witlessly wandering about outside them.

Don’t fear – the cops have yet to nab me for stalking woodland creatures.

Rather I know someone who knows someone who knows someone who spent the holiday season in the big house.

The hoosegow.

The people kennel.

(I might have made that last one up.)

When invited to help a friend drop something off at the local jail on Christmas Eve, is there anything else to say but yes?

Having found the visitor parking lot and having our choice of spots, we braced the wind and set off on foot to find the jail entrance.

Assumptions that we’d stop and ask people in the guard boxes were ruined with the discovery that they were empty. Apparently that’s a position that gets off on Christmas Eve.

Walking into the first set of doors that weren’t located behind fences topped with barbed wire, we entered a dimly lit room. There were two rows of chairs and a few vending machines. A long hallway had a sign reading “Lobby” with an arrow pointing straight ahead, directly towards a locked door. A man sat in one of the hard, plastic chairs, dressed in jeans and a sweatshirt, staring at the doors.

Seeing no employees or information desks or anything that resembled Andy Griffith’s office, I stumbled to a stop.

But if you can’t fake confidence in jail, where can you?

So I walked down the hallway to the locked door.

Trying to open a locked door is always an awkward predicament.

Trying to open a locked door in a jail adds a new level of discomfort.

Midway down the hall there was a box with a call button and a place to put an I.D. card. So we pushed the button and said hello. Then said hello and pushed the button. Then just held down the button for a while. Then decided to move right to the I.D. stage, so I slid my driver’s license into the slot. It seemed more likely the requested I.D. was prison identification, but I don’t have one of those so I was hoping my driver’s license would do.

As nothing continued to happen, as no one continued to walk by, as no voice responded to our requests, my discomfort grew.

Similar to that of a middle school boy, my discomfort expresses itself in one way.

With loud, uncontrollable laughter. Though given the seriousness of our surroundings, I tampered down my natural instincts to the level of short giggles.

It seemed the time had come to make my first jail friend, so I approached the man sitting by the door, smiling and loudly requesting “excuse me, do you know where to drop off medicine?” My smile slowly disappeared as the man shook his head, saying “no” in a voice almost inaudible, almost immediately returning his attention to the wall.

I fight my natural awkwardness by being unnaturally friendly, but when friendliness fails, awkwardness rushes forward to take its place, especially as I started to wonder why a man would be sitting alone in an abandoned part of jail on Christmas Eve.

My friend spotted an elevator, and after a quick stop to look at some useful pamphlets (what should I do when I’m released?), we headed up one level.

Relief arrived as I did at the first floor, when I was greeted by the sight I had expected upon entering the jail – rows and rows of chairs against one wall and a large information desk against the other, surrounded by ceiling-high plexiglass.

In what was becoming a disturbing trend, the room was completely empty. There was a sign taped to the information desk informing us it was closed for Christmas Eve, a fact self-evident.

Further into the room, immediately before a dark hallway sloping gently upward, was an iron combination mailbox/safe. On the top was a horizontal handle, opening into a small shelf for items that would send them sliding downward once closed, into the bottom section which was guarded by a combination lock. Above, two giant bulletin boards described the rules for leaving prisoners money. I gave them a cursory glance before noticing the bulletin board to their right, listing the rules for dropping off medications.

After quickly assuring myself I’d followed said guidelines, I knelt down and, upon pulling open the top slot, deposited the medication into the safe. In an instinctive reaction to years of mailing letters in college, I immediately opened the slot again to check on the medication, only to find it still sitting there, un-fallen.

“Huh” I brilliantly muttered, before closing the slot again, this time with enough force to convey my desire for falling.

My third try at pulling back the metal handle was met with stoic solidity. I paused then tried again, and again, and again.

Either there’s a two-opens-per-person limit, or I broke the safe.

Assuming the safe has yet to achieve sentience or the ability to tell one opener from another, the latter seems more likely.

Looking frantically around, as though we’d stumble upon a jail employee or a sign reading “What To Do When You’ve Broken The Safe,” we found two machines. One enabled searching for people within the jail system; the other allowed transference of money into prisoners’ accounts. Neither gave us safe-cracking abilities, and after tugging uselessly for a few moments I started feeling suspiciously suspicious.

Laughing hysterically, I declared there was no more to be done. Best to find our way out of jail so I could make my mom’s Christmas Eve dinner on time. My friend was not as amused, nor as convinced there was nothing left to achieve in jail, but after wandering for a few moments we headed toward the door.

Discussing whether whoever retrieved the meds would check the top slot, I spied something out of the corner of my eye and remarked upon it as we neared the elevator - “look, there’s another safe.”

Before I finished my sentence I could feel time slowing, my brain grasping the significance of the safe’s existence and the realization of my newest mistake. My dread was justified as I turned and walked toward the safe – once I got within a few feet the words “Medicine Safe” were clearly etched into the metal. Rather than a mailbox-type slot, this safe had a huge rotating top, clearly geared toward the acceptance of larger items like prescription bottles.

Turning back, it was obvious we’d deposited the medicine in the money safe, only to jam it with items significantly larger than a folded wad of cash.

Of all the people who spent this Christmas Eve in jail, I fear I might have been the dumbest.

At least the jailed acquaintance probably thinks so, as it was later discovered the delivered medicine never arrived.

If someone was watching us on security cameras I hope we made their Christmas Eve merrier,

Megan

p.s. Gerald the Groundhog v. The Dinosaur v. Sharon – vote for the next What Was I Thinkin’ subject!

Christmas Eve in Jail: A Cautionary Tale

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Where was I? Oh yes, in downtown D.C., frantically searching for my car keys.

Digging, digging, digging.

Nope, no keys.

I realized I must have first put them in my camera bag, before deciding to leave my camera bag in the car.

Lindsey and I looked at each other. Then we looked at Daniel and his “friend.”

By then I’d determined his “friend” was actually his “date.”

But that’s another story.

Then we all looked at each other. And we laughed.

Then we decided to break into my car.

We searched, but there isn’t an app for that. We were able to find an eHow article.

But it said we’d need a coat hanger. Sadly I’d left mine at home that night.

I ran a few blocks to Allison’s apartment, knowing while she was in New York for the weekend maybe one of her roommates would let us filch her belongings.

Along the way I passed a jogger.

Tilting my head sharply, I indicated our shared bond of running. While my distance spanned only a block and a half, I felt we understood each other.

I ran up to Allison’s door, and after taking a moment to catch my breath, rang the bell.

That block and a half really takes it out of you.

Nobody answered.

So I rang again. And again. And again. Ensuring that if someone was just ignoring me, at least they suffered for it.

Looking around, I hoped to find they’d left a coat hanger on their front patio. There was a hose. And if I could improvise a screwdriver, a long piece of metal holding their gutter to the wall that might work. Lifting the trash can lid, I took one sniff and decided not to investigate the trash further.

So I dejectedly walked back to the car, trying to decide if I was willing to break a window.

Pros of breaking car window: Making the midnight showing of the movie on time. Not having to abandon my car in the city. A fairly awesome story.

Cons of breaking car window: Broken glass. Not feeling safe parking my gaping wide-open car anywhere. The shame if I was unable to break the window after I decided to try. Accidentally getting arrested for grand theft auto, as the car isn’t registered in my name.

While I have always been intrigued by the idea of getting arrested, I’d rather it happen in easily remedied situations, preferably during daylight hours.

I’m not scared of night prison.

I’m just healthily wary.

Okay, okay, I’m scared of night prison.

We all have our demons.

Once breaking into my car was out, the options became either taking the metro to go see the movie, then coming back later and figuring out the car and hoping someone would return to Allison’s apartment to let us sleep or calling my dad and praying I’d left a set of car keys at his house.

I opted for calling my dad.

Without questioning or complaining, he asked for directions and drove into the city to bring them to me.

My friends waited with me at the bar down the street – the bar which earlier that night they’d called overpriced and poorly serviced – so I wouldn’t wait alone.

Finally in my car

I look just as frightening in real life.

So I guess my quite unfortunate night was actually quite lucky.

That is, until we saw the movie.

And I bought a gigantic box of Junior Mints to calm my nerves.

Junior Mints are the Valium of candy.

I think I heard that in an ad once.

Though I was unaware of it happening, at some point I must have dropped a Junior Mint.

Or two. Or five.

Because halfway through the movie, I reached into my lap and felt this.

Chocolate Covered Pants

While used to receiving strange looks in public, this took it to a whole new level.

Then I resolved to never go out in public again.

The end.

If only that could have cured me of my Junior Mints addiction

But at this point I fear rehab is required,

Megan

How To Steal A Car (A Not-To Guide) (The Sequel)

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DAM is a Palestinian rap group.

Lindsey introduced me to their music in college.

You know, in those wild Palestinian rap-filled halcyon college days.

So when we heard they were stopping in D.C. as the final leg of their North American tour, we made immediate plans to attend. Mainly because we’re terrible at foresight.

Driving into the city, we found a street parking spot on Allison’s street, when I realized I’d thoughtlessly brought my camera.

Cameras with detachable lenses are discriminated against terribly in clubs, so I’d meant to leave it at home. But having instinctively grabbed it, I now had to try and hide it in my backseat.

Thankfully the clothes I’d recently borrowed from Lindsey were still lying on my backseat, able to provide cover. You know, after I laid them on the dirty floor.

We rushed over to the club to meet Daniel and his “friend.”

Lindsey was unable to ascertain if said friend was really a date or not, so I, oh-so-generously, decided to gently interrogate.

One of the many reasons I’m fun at parties.

The concert was fantastic, and afterward Lindsey and I went to check out the merchandise table.

The lead singer was standing behind the table signing autographs so I asked him for a photo.

He vaguely nodded so I squeezed my way back there for Lindsey to memorialize the event on her iPhone.

My awkward face

This is my awkward smile.

While he signed others’ posters, I awkwardly waited.

An Awkward Pose

My uncomfortable brush with fame.

After taking the photo, I discovered I was trapped behind the table, the band’s manager blocking me in.

He talked to a few more fans, then the lead singer turned back to me, asking “where’s the camera?”

“I… um… we’ve already taken the photo” I so suavely replied.

He nodded slightly, becoming distracted by a girl looking for musical advice.

I remained standing by his side, uncomfortably waiting for an opportunity to bolt when he turned back to me, asking “where’s the camera?”

“We already took the photo. It wasn’t very memorable but trust me, it’s already happened.”

“Ah,” he replied. He held up his beer bottle and gesturing toward it said, “it’s this. I use it to forget, as I can’t face my problems.”

“Huh.” At this point the manager shifted, so I used the opportunity to quickly squish through the opening, feeling satisfied with my brush with fame.

Walking back to the car I felt my jeans pockets, asking “Lindsey, did I hand you my keys?”

“No, I don’t remember that.”

“Well, I don’t remember it either, but I definitely don’t have them, so could you check?”

To be continued…

This was the night I discovered Lindsey is my bad luck charm,

Megan

How To Steal A Car (A Not-To Guide)

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