Yesterday, I hitch-hiked to the gym.
If I tell that to any of my friends, they look at me like I’m crazy.
Yet if I had said the same thing 40 years ago, it would have been like saying, “I just drove over to the store” or “I just had lunch.” No one would have batted an eye.
Actually though, it was a remarkable experience. The day was pretty cold, with a biting dry wind, and I had planned to walk the three-mile distance, because my wife had one car and my son had the other, my bicycle had a flat tire, and I was happy for the extra exercise. But then, when I got into the little market center of Maple Glen, about a quarter mile from my house, I decided it would be a good time to stick out my thumb and take a reading on the state of American community-mindedness. It’s a week before Christmas, after all, so people should be in an especially friendly, sympathetic mood, right?
Wrong.
I watched in wonder as over 100 cars drove past me, most of the drivers averting their faces or staring stonily ahead so as to appear not to notice me. Some of the cars were driven by women. Okay I get that. Everyone’s a potential rapist when you’re a woman alone, but then again, it’s daytime, and I’m a 62-year-old guy with a Santa-like white beard. And how about two women in a car or three? Well, I’m a forgiving guy, so I still get that.
But what about all the guys who drove past? Big guys in pick-up trucks. Often two guys or even three guys in a car. What are they afraid of? Really nothing. It’s more about not wanting to let anyone else in your bubble, I think. Having to converse with a stranger. Having to be a minute or two later getting to the mall (this was a Sunday afternoon).
Remember too, Maple Glen, PA is a small town. Certainly some of the people passing me had seen me in the local stores. But because they were so intent on avoiding my gaze, they weren’t really looking closely.
Hitch-hiking, once commonplace in America, is no longer easy in a land of mindless fear
I was musing on all this, and thinking about how, whenever I’ve mentioned hitch-hiking, the immediate response is, “Oh, that’s really dangerous. People are crazy these days.” That’s immediately followed by a line about how, “I never pick up hitch-hikers.”
My own background with regard to hitch-hiking is, I confess, a bit extreme. I hitched everywhere as a teenager, criss-crossing the country several times, making one trip at 17 with a friend from high school all the way from Connecticut to Alaska and back over the sumer of 1966. My wife and I, back in the early 1970s, hitched a lot of places together -- from New York to Florida, all over the northeast, and from Aspen, Colorado to the Grand Canyon and back (with a stretch on a freight train from Moab, Utah to Grand Junction, Colorado). Hell, we hitch-hiked to our own wedding, from Cambridge, Mass. to Middletown, Connecticut!
There were some difficult times, to be sure, like in Moab late at night when some rowdy teenagers with nothing better to do than race up and down the main street in pick-up trucks, decided to pitch some empty beer bottles at us (that experience led us to opt for the freight hopping to get out of town). But in general, as long as you stayed out of the cars that reeked of alcohol, thumbing was a pretty safe way to travel, especially by twos. Same for picking people up. I haver never had a problem myself giving people rides who were thumbing, though a couple of times I admit I’ve had qualms -- but never if there were two of us in the car.
Are things crazier today?
No! They are safer. That’s what is so weird about people’s unwillingness to give a hitcher a ride these days. All the crime statistics show that crime is about where it was in the ‘70s (total crime in 2009 was the same as in 1968, with homicides down to the lowest rate since 1964, while violent crime in general has been falling since 1990 and is now at the level it was in 1973). What’s way up is fear. We have a media that live and breathe crime reporting, and always as lurid as possible. The more gruesome the story, the better. And we have a government that is all about generating fear -- fear of crime, fear of immigrants, fear of terrorists, fear of poor people, fear of the 99%, fear of hitch-hikers, you name it.
My grandfather, back in the Second World War, was a traveling salesman. One night on a long intercity drive, he picked up a hitchhiker in uniform--a sailor. It was at night, and the guy, dog-tired, fell asleep almost right away in the passenger seat. As he drove along, my grandfather turned on the radio for company, and heard a news report about a killer who was hitchhiking, last seen in a Navy uniform. My grandfather drove on, and left the guy off at the nearest restaurant lying that he was turning off the highway. The poor sailor was probably not a criminal -- just one lonely guy trying to make his way home on leave.
It was probably a prudent move on my grandfather’s part, but it shows that there has always been an element of risk in hitching or in picking up hitch-hikers, and yet people used to do it easily, so that hitching was a viable way to get around if you didn’t have a car.
In fact hitch-hiking was a way of life for people without cars for nearly a century, before fear took over this country. Now almost nobody will pick up a hitch-hiker.
It’s gotten so that almost nobody even thinks to hitch-hike. What that means is that the people who still hitch-hike tend to be real down-on-their-luck types, often winos and homeless folks. I generally pick people up, figuring that I owe a lifetime of favors to such people for all the thumbing I did over the years, but there are times I wish I’d put down a newspaper before the rider sat down! The odor of urine can be overpowering.
It’s a sad commentary on the state of our society that today most--or nearly all-- Americans in cars will not stop for anyone trying to hitch a ride, however well dressed or coifed.
I did finally get a ride Sunday. It was a big SUV that stopped. When I got in, I found myself seated in a vehicle among three immigrants from India. I was sitting in back with the teenaged son. The father, who was driving, said he had “only stopped because my wife said she was afraid you were one of those people with dementia, who was lost. I was afraid if I didn’t pick you up, I’d be hearing about it from her all day long!”
The wife, my benefactor, sitting in the passenger seat, laughed in embarrassment.
It took this family from a whole different cultural background from our own fear-crazed American society to see the human need before them, and to act out of generosity or concern, offering a fellow human being some assistance.
I thank them, but end up thinking: how sad for us that we’ve come to this as a nation.
You evidently have never had a guy pull a dagger out of his pocket and commence sticking you in the face...all for asking if he was Mexican.
ReplyDeleteBoo!
ReplyDeleteTwenty years ago I hitched from Toronto to Vancouver. It was hard to get a ride out of TO even then, and by the end of the first day I had only made it to North Bay. The thing that always cracked me up was people driving by at 80 mph and LOCKING THE DOOR as they flew past! Even if I could have grabbed the door handle it would have just ripped my fingers off!
ReplyDeleteIt took nine days to get out of Ontario, with two days in Thunder Bay for laundry and a shower and a prepared meal, then three days to cross the entire prairies and stop again in Lake Louise.
If you are going to hitch in Canada, I recommend Manitoba. It says "Friendly Manitoba" on the license plates, and they aren't lying!
No, it was popular many years ago, but never safe. I found out the hard way.
ReplyDeleteHitching (espically for women) is EXTREMELY dangerous this day and age. The guy who invented profiling for serial killers stated that the west coast may as well be a wild jungle, with anwhere from 10 to 20 serial killers operating on the coast. Since the victims are mainly prostitutes and run-aways, we never hear anything about it. No one cares for a dead hooker.
ReplyDeleteWhile one can argue that the odds of you running across a crazy in a car, or getting picked up by one is extremely low giving the number of drivers on the road, it only takes ONE time to end up robbed, raped or dead (if not all three). I would strongly advise against EVER taking a ride from a stranger; if your a woman alone and doing this, you are so nuts you damn near deserve what you get! But this applies to men as well. Jeffrie Damier anyone? Or how about the case of the young college boys being murdered up and down the east coast (all strapping young men). Size and gender means nothing if someone is trying to get you. What matters is you take all due precautions to keep yourself safe. And that means not locking yourself in small, mobile closet with a total stranger.
Sorry, but these arent the good ole days. If I play with a loaded revolver, there is a good chance I WONT blow my head off... But why run that risk?
If you must hitch, look like you are clean and do be careful. My friend picked up a young couple and as she grabbed and held his head back from the back seat, her 'boyfriend' managed to chop up my friend's leg. A couple hundred stitches just because he was helping them out of the rain. They were scruffy. With the economy collapsing, things will become more dangerous
ReplyDeleteMany years ago I was picked up hitchhiking between Sydney and Melbourne by a truck driver who took me on a shortcut through the Belanglo State Forest. Once we were off the main track I had an awful feeling and was scared shitless. To this day I consider myself a very lucky man. If you want to know why go to wikipedia and look up Backpacker Murders. I have no idea why I wasn't murdered that night all i can guess is that it was early on in Ivan's career and that I was lucky. I had no idea until many years later just how close I had come to death. Like you I hitchhiked all over Australia as a young bloke.
ReplyDeleteMy record during the sixties for hitchhiking between Seattle and L.A. was 21 hours.. I probably did it ten times .. between 1967 and 1973.
ReplyDeleteThings were different then..
When I was a kid in the 50s, we never locked our front door(except at night) or locked the car. Times were different. People were civil. Moms were always at home. The kids today are ferrel. Moms are out there grinding to be "equal". No one home to guard the fort. Can't put the genie back in the bottle
ReplyDeleteI once spent three days standing at Darlington Point, NSW trying to hitch a ride. There was no point attempting to walk it would have made it much harder to be picked up.
ReplyDeletewow, most of the comments just prove this guy's point...sad that we really have to face the fact that "America" is gone...all gone...either stay and deal with "Amerika" or escape. The good news is, there are quite a few nice places left in the world where people are moral and decent!!! If you're young and motivated, get the hell out!!!
ReplyDeleteSome freak should pick me up so I can do the freaky on him, oh yeah, blade to his throat he'd be begging and blubbering, get the cuffs on him, chain him to the rack for some slow asphyxiation while the skin peels . . .
ReplyDeleteI used to pick up hitchhikers. Two of the four times that I did, the person started to light up a joint in my car. The other two times involved the hiker demanding that I take them several places I had no intention of going just because it was "on the way". I regretted picking up all four and made it my policy not to give any more hitchhikers a ride. I understand the author's point, but there has been a radical loss of civility in the USA that his crime statistics don't show.
ReplyDeleteAMERICA HAS FAILED.
ReplyDeleteMy friends in college and I hitch-hiked a lot in the early 1970's. I crossed the country several times. There is a skill to it. We found that giving folks a little wave as they went by, like saying it's OK that you don't stop, often got them to pull over.
ReplyDeleteWe were young then and willing to take some calculated risks. I ended up living with a woman who picked me up in Oregon. The first night at her house her ex- shows up wanting to get frisky and I'm in bed naked with all my clothes in the washing machine. That could have been dangerous!
I don't think people have changed much since then, but the mass media has insistently drummed "fear this, fear that" so much that people are more paranoid. The worst psychopaths seem to be in big corporations or government, so perhaps hitch-hiking is not as dangerous as, say, joining the military!
I, too have logged many a mile under the thumb. And recently, while my car was down, I had to hitchhike to a job. It took four hours to go 50 miles.
ReplyDeleteI am a musician. I was dressed in a suit with a tie and a nice western-style hat. I was clean shaven, and carrying my music. (I had left my instrument at the rehearsal space, so another player brought it to the gig)
Several other recent times I have hitched, under similar circumstances, with similar results. Once, I had to walk ten miles, and the ride took three hours, nearly four, to get. I was almost late for the show!
A few years ago, while living near Santa Fe, I had to hitchhike to work in the early morning, around 5AM. Over the course of two months, the ONLY rides I got were from Mexicans. (I am white, middle class-looking.) No matter if the cars or trucks were packed, they would stop and make room. Sometimes they did not speak English and my Spanish was poor. Many of them, I suspect, were illegal. It was an eye-opening experience.
Thanks for writing this article. It was one I intended to write.
~
I used to hitch a ride around the towns around the university of New Hampshire in the early to mid 80's. I had a cardboard sign made up for each town i wanted to go to in my backpack. even late at night I would snag a ride. I met some very nice people. the signs were key, they knew you were a student not a mental patient. I picked up people when I got a car. Nowadays the people I see hitching look like methheads n stuff. I remember the neighbors older brother moved to southern California in the 70's and got murdered while hitchhiking.
ReplyDeleteI spent a year hitching this used to be free country in 1974.......was not bad, only a couple of bad encounters, but the atmosphere was always positive, don't know if I would do it know though, I mean like al cia da is everywhere, right......fear fear, crazy crazy......OMG!
ReplyDeleteThe fear is what drives a nation to tyranny!
Where is Amerika today.....SCARED!........thankx gummint!
"...but never safe..."
ReplyDeleteI hitched all the time - but that was 25 years
ago - in my late 20's. Never had any problems,
though.
fall 1983. faked sick at work, grabbed some friends, hitched from albany to bleeker st NYC to see Jaco Pastorius. 4 feet from the 'worlds greatest bass player'. i'll never regret it.
ReplyDelete25 years ago we lived in the Caribbean. Hitching is a way of life down there for many people. Even did it ourselves. There's no end to the types that will pick you up and drop you where you need to go, and no element of fear with it. We've met some interesting people that way. Some we've kept in touch with over the years. I miss that.
ReplyDeleteAmerican hitchikers could launch a class action against Hollywood and the media for making hitchiking look so scary. It used to be a way of life...
ReplyDeleteThe one thing that i remember the most clearly over the past 39-40 years of my school days at Brandeis University in1970's are my student adviser's words that when he was growing up that his grand parents and parents used the term "‘goyishe kup,’" meaning that the "Non-Jews are Stupid"
ReplyDeleteLater in life I learned that the exact translation of "GOYISHE KUP" means that the "Cattle are STUPID"..
I remember him recalling whatt his father told him when he was growing up in Eastern Europe. One of them being that when his father was in high school he and a group of friends would skip school early on Fridays and go over to his friend's father's butcher shop. That they would buy at cost any cows , that had not been butchered by the end of the day on Friday before the begining of shabat . They would take the cow home and wash it and then the boys would procede to "beat the udders of the cows so that they would swell up and turn pink" so as to sell them to the "GOYISHE KUP" as milk producing cows.
The part that I remember him asking me if the East Europeans are so naive, so gullible and so stupid to buy old "non milk producing cows" from a bunch of young Jewish Boys.
So thinking of it now I agree with the Jewish saying that the "GOYISHE KUP" are indeed" Stupid" as they believe that a Bunch of Arab Muslim Kids who were not able to Fly a Cessna Airplane took it upon themselves to FLY a Boing Jumbo Jet outwitting the US Military and Civilian authorities. The "Jewish Lightning Insurance Scam" of the 1960's is still alive and well has been put to good use by Larry Silverstein and his SAINIM Jews in putting 15 million down and comming out with 7 billion dollars for buidings that no one wanted to buy because it would have cost a billion dollars to remove the asbestos from. Then on top of that the people in America actually believe that they actually decide who is elected President or for that that actual VOTE is really counted and makes a difference in deciding who represents them in the White House and congress. http://www.bollyn.com/index.php
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVTXbARGXso http://www.911missinglinks.com/ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxnpujfanUM
Yeh I agree that the AmericanNon-Jews are indeed American "GOYISHE KUP" or "STUPID CATTLE"!
The Israeli Defense Firm That Tallies The Iowa Caucus
By Christopher Bollyn
1-1-8
The Iowa caucus is only a few days away and the nation's attention will be directed to the results, which signify the beginning of the U.S. presidential race. But does anyone watch who tallies the results of the Iowa caucus?
The Iowa caucus results were tallied in 2004 by a company that is headed by a man whose company was bought by Elron Electronics, the Israeli defense firm. I suspect that it will be the same this year. Don't expect to see any grassroots political activists doing the tally in Iowa. The Israeli defense establishment takes care of that part of the American "democratic" election process.
VOXEO
In the summer of 2004, I first learned that a foreign and out-of-state company using Interactive Voice Response (IVR) technology tallied the Iowa caucus results.
The system used to tally the 2004 Iowa caucus results was provided by a company called Voxeo, which was apparently based in Orlando, Florida. (Yellow flag goes up in the mind of those familiar with Orlando and electronic vote fraud history