My grade school burned down twice. Once in the 1930's then again in the 50's. They rebuilt, there were two large black and white framed photographs of the school houses before both fires hanging in the main hallway. At some point in the reconstruction someone had decided on two boys restrooms.
The one at ground level was always clean. There were small white tiles and fresh blue paint. It always smelled like pine cleaner, never ran out of paper towels. There was always sweet smelling liquid soap in the shinny silver dispensers. There were doors with shinny silver locks on the stalls. It was a timeless space, pristine and somehow preserved. Free and unscathed by the ugliness of the world.
Then there was the other one. The restroom below ground in the basement. There were ground level windows with round wire cages over them. The view of the ***** untied tennis shoes attached to saggy socks and scabbed knees. The children ran about with purpose over every inch of the playgrounds hot black top as I'd try to guess who's feet were who's. There were no doors on the stalls, yellow stains beneath every leaky ******. Smears of rust around the faucets , a coarse hand soap in the often broken dispensers. More fit for prisoners than students. It smelled like **** and was always cold.
I don't know why one was always cleaner than the other. Maybe it was an unwritten janitor law. Maybe they seen it as somehow lower than the other. I always chose the basement restroom. It just seemed more natural to me, it made me feel strong, made it all feel more real.
Now after so many hardships as I sit with drink in hand or lay down while high on some drug I can't seem to help but look back and remember. Then ponder the question. "Have I always been meant to live in such a *****, harsh environment, even way back then?"