Driving up a busy street in our neighborhood, my husband and I are accosted at each intersection by people asking for money. It’s an annual charity thing, not sure which one, but basically, it seems to involve groups of volunteers, everyone wearing white and holding money buckets and weaving between cars. It is causing my husband immense anxiety.
Someone is going to get run over, he says, as we roll through the first intersection, narrowly skimming past one of the white-wearing, money-bucket-holders.
Who thought this was a good idea? he says, at the next intersection, a volunteer darting out in front of us to accept a gift from a nearby car.
I try to change the subject. It’s a story I just heard on the Family Secrets podcast about a woman living in India in the early 2000s, and how every few months violence would flare up, but mostly, she could sort of forget about it and go on with her life until the next flare-up would remind her again how much danger she was in.
If someone gets run over, my husband says, wouldn’t that bankrupt the charity?
Yeah, I say. But I can see it, though, how you could forget about it. I mean, look at us during Covid, how fast we got used to working from home and not going out to restaurants and flinching every time you heard a person cough.
I don’t want to think about it, my husband says, but I can’t help thinking about it. A car slamming into someone, the guy flying up in the air.
And then there’s now, I say. Like, what’s going to happen in January when they start rounding up immigrant families and outlaw polio vaccines and get rid of the Affordable Care Act?
There’s gotta be a better way to ask for money, my husband says.
Maybe this is what people want? I say.
We’re at a red light, and the white-suited bucket-swingers surround our car, but, realizing we are a dead end, quickly disperse.
I don’t know why it bothers me so much, my husband says.
Because you care, I tell him. And we continue our drive up the street, our dueling conversations, our disparate anxieties, each inside our own head, each with our eyes worriedly on the road ahead.