Here’s how it went down
A friend dropped me off last night, and I make it my habit not to make my friends deal with the small maze of one-way streets that they have to deal with if they actually turn on to my street. Instead he dropped me off in the bus stop on Mission Street and I went around the corner to my apartment entrance.
Coming up my to the door, there was a guy, latino, with fucked up hair in every direction, all in baggy clothes, crossing the street toward me. He asked me something and I said, «what?»
«Are you frontin’ me?»
«No, what do you want?» I thought of the time it would take to get me inside the gate, in which time I’d have to have my back to the guy. I didn’t like those odds, so I turned back.
Two more behind me. OK, I really didn’t like those odds. The first guy rushed me and I tried to go past him. He landed a couple of hits on me. I remember thinking, «OK, he can’t punch for shit. If I can just get across the street to where there are people, I could be OK.»
I tried to hit a couple of them, but they took me down and spent a little time kicking me around on the pavement, right on the corner under my living room window. I was wearing a heavy coat, which must have padded the blows to my body, because I’m pretty well unharmed except for the shiner and a skinned knee, which I’m sure is from the pavement. My nose got bloodied but not broken, but I remember looking down at the pavement an realizing that that was my blood there.
I was on the ground and one of the guys said, «give it up, what you got?» I think I said something like, «Fuck you. What do you want?» I remember thinking, «take what you want, but if you think I’m going to help you steal from me, wrong.» And no, that’s not what I said. I was too busy being kicked on the ground and bleeding to be a terribly cooperative victim.
There were hands on me patting me down, and I felt hands in my back pockets. I heard one ask another about my wallet. I didn’t volunteer the information that it was in my front pocket. I didn’t volunteer any information about any of the other stuff I was carrying. The guys started away, and I felt a tug at my shoulder bag. I started to get up, pulling the strap back with the weight of my body, and he gave up and walked off.
The owners of the liquor store across the street, who have seen me nearly every day for the last two years, to whom I pay inflated prices for my Diet Cokes and frozen meals, and who always greet me as «my friend!» and sometimes as «San Francisco!» because of my tattoo, closed and locked the doors when they saw me getting beat up and didn’t bother calling the cops.
I guess I can’t blame them for locking up at the first sign of trouble, but a call to the gend’armes would have been appreciated. A cop car drove by about two minutes after the incident and I failed to effectively flag it down. A call made earlier would have gotten the cops to me about 30 minutes sooner than the actual arrival time.
OK, so these assholes didn’t really do a very good job of mugging me. They gave up without actually taking anything. They wanted my wallet but when it wasn’t in one of my back pockets or my coat pockets, they gave up, missing out on the treasure trove of valuables I had with me:
- Polar heartrate monitor watch
- 40GB iPod
- Palm Tungsten T and a keyboard
- Nokia 6310i cellphone and bluetooth wireless headset
- Brand new $180 Ray-Ban sunglasses
I can’t really know, but I think that even as ineffectively as I tried to fight back, I made myself more trouble than I was worth. Without a wallet (and if they’d gotten my wallet, I would have lost the four dollars in cash I was carrying and would’ve had to cancel my debit card and get a new drivers license) presenting itself, I was not worth spending time on. I think they weren’t really prepared to actually fight, thinking that a couple of punches would intimidate me and that I’d start handing things out. Which might have been smarter if I had, but that’s not how I’m wired.
Maybe it’s time I went back to those Aikido classes.
…or maybe a martial art that involves breaking people’s bones a little more.
In the end, I’m OK. A little shaken up and all, but nothing broken.
Maybe in addition to those
Maybe in addition to those Aikido classes, a bottle of pepper spray too. I can’t tell you how many times that saved my ass.
I’m damn proud of you for not giving in to those fuckers and screw the people in hte liquor store across the street too! Whats teh point of supporting local businesses if they don’t help someone from their community in their time of need.
I guess moving seems a
I guess moving seems a bigger priority now, eh?
I don’t know how much cred I
I don’t know how much cred I can take for “not giving in”… I basically just failed to help them along after I was down on the ground. But thanks.
I think maybe I’ll spend a little more time at the gym…
and stop being an ass — have
and stop being an ass — have people drop you off in front of your building at night. i’ve navigated those streets, and i can get lost in a paper bag. a couple of right turns is worth a little extra urban safety.
so glad you’re safe. kisses.
I think maybe I’ll spend a
I think maybe I’ll spend a little more time at the gym…
I think you did the best anybody could have done.
fuuuuck.
fuuuuck.
Arrgh. First, that’s awful,
Arrgh. First, that’s awful, and I hope you’re not too injured. Second, good for you for not being submissive. I didn’t do as well the one time I was mugged. I made about three different wrong decisions.
Third, I hope you inform the corner store guy of exactly why you won’t be spending your money there any more. Forth… aikido classes… I’m reminded of the lady who started a woman’s self-defense course because after she got mugged, the master at her dojo told her that she had brought shame on the school by failing to fight back successfully, rather than taking the view that there was something wrong with his teaching if it was useless in reality… It seems like being prepared for fighting has less to do with technique than with being ready for a real fight… which means to be prepared you have to do some fairly real fights in your training, and pay to get beat up. So if you’re looking for self-defense preparation, I hope you find something that isn’t all about forms and traditions.
Good luck.
You are the most toy-packed
You are the most toy-packed person I know, and those goobers didn’t get anything! Good work.
Were you packin’ the Wave? We learned in Kill Bill about the fun things you can do to a scumbag’s achilles tendon when you’re on the ground and have a knife han‑d. The serrated blade would probably work best for that.
If you seek a martial arts discipline that has a higher whoopass/meditation ratio than Aikido, ju-jitsu is my suggestion. Alameda has one of the top dojos in the West; the guy there, Wally Jay, was a friend of Bruce Lee. I took a few self-defense classes from one of the instructors, and the focus was definitely on subduing the attacker (and what happens between the subduing of your attacker and the arrival of the authorities is up to you:-).
Nice sparring photo of Professor Jay on the title page. He’s got his opponent’s head on the floor with a fistful of his hair and is drawing back with his other fist to paste him in the face. For some reason, the guy is holding his crotch.