Similarly, I love the idea of having public transportation available and using it versus driving just me, myself and I to the desired destination, but I very much dislike how sometimes I literally have to tack on 18 minutes to wait for the next train, 30 minutes if the metro suddenly decides to go "single track" (and two lines have to use the same track), and sometimes the trains jostle so much I get intensely queasy.
However, today I decided to ride the metro into the city to meet up with a friend for brunch and I'm really glad I did because I happened to overhear a conversation between two people. This 20-something woman was recollecting this incident to her friend where she was walking in DC and saw this 80-something year old man who had fallen and was lying on the sidewalk outside a public library. He had a large gash on his head and was bleeding profusely, but none of the other pedestrians stopped to help. They all just looked at him, and kept walking. When she stopped to ask if he was ok and if he wanted her to call an ambulance, he responded in broken English that no no, he didn't have insurance and that he'd be ok. She then went into the library to find a first aid kit, and saw that the library wall directly facing the sidewalk where the man had fallen actually comprised ceiling-to-floor windows where library patrons were using the computers and had seen the whole incident. When she asked if anyone had any medical background, she was met with silence. Not knowing what else to do, she went back outside, and started cleaning off the blood and bandaging the old man back up. A small sparse crowd had gathered by then, watching her actions. The man asked if she had a medical background, and she replied, "oh, no I don't, but apparently I'm the only one who has a heart!" The man then asked what he should do when he got home, and she had no idea so made up some "reapply new bandages every 3 hours" instructions on the spot, emptied out the entire contents of the first aid kit, gave it to the man, and waited with him for his bus to take him home.
A few days ago, I was blog stalking someone (I'm rather embarrassed to say I did this, so don't spread it around) and I read where this particular individual was road biking around a bend at a rather fast pace, his front tire hit a pothole, he catapulted in the air and landed face-first on the asphalt. Obviously he had several abrasions but when he limped into the nearest Starbucks to use the restroom, not a single patron or barista asked if he was ok. They just stared. Apparently the only people who asked if he was alright was this black bus driver woman and a little black kid.
My brunch friend and I debated about these two unrelated incidents- and he contributed his own experience as a cyclist. When he crashed and tore himself up pretty badly, he said no one stopped to see if he was ok, if he needed medical help, if he wanted a ride somewhere. Instead, he limped 2 miles back to his office where people who knew him from work helped him.
We speculated why bystanders and witnesses don't feel compelled to help. I thought maybe it was a northern thing. We're both from the south and the north is seriously lacking in enough Bojangles sweet tea, Cookout milkshakes, and southern hospitality. Surely if something like this happened in North Carolina, people would stop. Or maybe it was an ethnic thing. My friend is Asian. The individual whose bike hit the pothole is also Asian. And based on the way the woman on the metro was describing the 80 year old man's broken English, he probably was a minority too. Maybe if all of them were of the majority ethnicity in the area, other majority ethnicity pedestrians would stop to help.
I once watched a Punk'd episode where Ashton Kutcher played a prank on Mila Kunis (who is Ukrainian) by positioning an actor by a sewer grate where this actor was frantically asking for help to save his puppy who had fallen into the grate. No one stopped to help partly because he was speaking entirely in Russian. When Mila Kunis walked by, she stopped and started trying to help, calling out to other bystanders and translating the man's pleas. It was all just material for a Punk'd episode, but it was in effect, a really interesting sociology experiment. Maybe if you see someone of your same ethnicity, you would be more inclined to help.
Or maybe it could be a gender thing. There's this one time when I was biking to work and in minute 4 of my eight minute commute, the skies opened up and the flood of rain started. It's always the most dangerous when it just starts raining. All the oils from the cars since the last good rain rise above the water and don't have a chance to wash away into the sewers yet. Needless to say, I completely wiped out when making a right turn. I fell on my hip and it hurt a lot. But being conditioned to get right back up after crashing onto east coast ice during snowboarding (really, I remember thinking to myself, "this fall is just like when you used to fall when you were learning how to snowboard. You're fine. Get back up!") I got up, grabbed my bike, and limped to the sidewalk. I was, after all, in the middle of the street right at an intersection. Only one bystander happened to be around, and did ask me if I was ok, but all the other cars waiting to turn right just did precisely that. They waited. I don't want to ever repeat that incident, but if I could redo the whole thing, I might have lied there in the street just a little bit longer to see if being a woman would bring people out of their cars into the pouring rain. Just to see.
The sidewalks in Taipei, Taiwan are different from the ones you see in the States especially the ones right outside storefronts where street vendors lay out their watches and fake jade bracelets. They're not made of concrete, but are made of slabs of rock, almost like marble, and they look like they were all placed down at different times, so that there are tons of raised edges, the kind that you trip on and then quickly play it off like you never broke your walking pace. It's especially dangerous if you're an old woman with really bad eyesight and peripheral vision. I remember hearing about the time my grandmother fell on the sidewalk. A bunch of people crowded around shouting, "Grandma, Grandma are you ok??" and pulling her back up on her feet. My friend and I speculated about this. Was it because she was an elderly woman? Was it because she was surrounded by other Chinese people? Or was it because it was Taiwan? It wasn't a mistake they called her "Grandma". In many if not all Asian countries, there's this respect mentality ingrained into our brains. From a young age, we're trained to call our parents' friends Auntie and Uncle regardless of any lack of familial ties. I'm now in my mid-late twenties and it's still instinctive for me to call complete strangers Auntie, Uncle, Grandma or Grandpa; the trigger being if they're Chinese, of course.
So maybe it's a cultural thing. In Taiwan, people might be more likely to feel compelled to help because they already have that Auntie/Uncle/Grandma/Grandpa respect connection. In the States maybe not so much. I've been reading "The Tipping Point" by Malcolm Gladwell after the recommendation by a couple of friends. It's a really interesting sociology book about different kinds of people and how they all connect together to spread an idea that would not have been contagious otherwise. On pages 27-29, he touches on the idea of the "bystander problem". In 1964, a woman named Kitty Genovese was chased by an assailant and attacked three times on the street as thirty-eight neighbors watched from their windows and did nothing. It triggered rounds of self-recrimination in the neighbors. The New York Times indicated in an article that maybe their apathy was a result of a conditioned reflex in New York as in other big cities. "It is almost a matter of psychological survival, if one is surrounded and pressed by millions of people, to prevent them from constantly impinging on you, and the only way to do this is to ignore them as often as possible." The book then goes on to discuss a study conducted by two NY universities, where they found out that a key factor in predicting whether or not helping behavior was triggered was how many witnesses there were to the event. In the study, they discovered that when people are in a group, the responsibility for acting becomes diffused. Each person will assume another will make the call, or assume that because no one else is acting, the apparent problem really isn't a problem.
I guess no one can be 100% certain why no one helped the old man with the gash, or why all of those cycling accidents (I'm realizing that this entry makes it sound like road biking is extremely dangerous... it's really not.) rarely triggered any inquiries about each individual's well-being. There are simply too many factors and maybe-it's-becauses to think about. I guess this entry was more to just bring all these incidents to light as something to ponder about for however long people usually ponder about interesting things. At least, I think it's interesting.
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