I made it out to the street and just ran. No small feat considering I was only wearing the hospital sock booties with the little gripper pads on the bottom.
I wandered for a few blocks until I came to a coffee shop. I met a girl in the bathroom while piercing my nose with a needle, as one does. She helped me push it all the way through. Her name was Chloe. On the street you meet people and they become your instant best friends. Chloe introduced me to two older punk rockers named Slam and Mayonnaise, total street rat degenerates, both in their late twenties. One had dark hair with big spikes, the other blond with big spikes. There were lots of teen vagrants in downtown Eugene. I was hoping it wouldn’t be my future.
It was raining hard that night and we all sought shelter under a church’s porch. My bed for my first night as a homeless teen was the cold, wet dirt. It was the oozing mud that woke me up, seeping into my ears. My hearing was distorted, but I could make out some high-pitched screams that didn’t make sense. I could vaguely see in the dim light that Slam was on top of Chloe. I didn’t see Mr. Mayonnaise. To this day I don’t know if it was consensual. I hope it was.
Once again, I think I was left alone because I looked like a boy. I remember feeling saved because I didn’t have breasts yet. I slid out of there inch by inch, losing my socks in the process. My ears were killing me, and my vision was starting to double. Barefoot and covered in wet mud, the only thing I could think to do was deposit myself back at the hospital, so that’s what I did. I collapsed at a nurse’s feet crying about punks and possible rape.
No one believed me. No one would listen. I’ve never lost the wondering and guilt about Chloe. It is something that drives me to correct injustice.
Everyone was very relieved to see me back, but two weeks and many educational drug movies later, I left again. My roommate gave me some shoes, a couple of sizes too big but better than nothing. I got three other patients to open an alarmed door so I could leave in the elevator.
This time I escaped for good. My life as a runaway had begun.
Being a runaway in Oregon is deeply unpleasant. There’s the cold rain, always the rain. Wet jeans clinging to my legs, never fully being dry. And the hunger. I was starving all the time.
There were times when I was a runaway that I woke up after having these weird blackouts. Once I came to while standing on an overpass, woken up because my shoulder bag and backpack had gotten hit off my shoulder and were flying down the road. There were times during difficult moments when I would disappear from my body. While my physical self was left to deal with the repercussions of what was happening, my mind was in another place, gone. That was my method of protection, floating up above, watching everything happen as if through a camera lens. It was not unlike the kind of trances I would go into later while acting, but that wasn’t on my agenda just yet.
I had no contact with my family at this point. I was just out there. No one was looking for me. I wasn’t offended by the not looking, I was just on my own.
It’s funny, on the street you just kind of fall in with other kids like you. The discarded. The uncared for. The lost. One night in front of a Circle K minimart I met a ghostly Nancy Spungen–looking young woman with a mane of fried white-blond hair. She told me her name was Tina and she was a stripper. I had seen a classic film about the burlesque star Gypsy Rose Lee, so I was pretty sure I knew what being a stripper entailed. But when I asked Tina if she could spin her tassels for me, I was rewarded with a blank stare. She took me to her place, a small box of an apartment with mattresses on the floor and cheap stucco popcorn ceilings. I am not a fan of popcorn ceilings, but I had to make an exception in this case. Kindly, Tina said I could stay for a while. Christmas was coming, and even though I probably wouldn’t eat that day, I did want a roof over my head.
After a week, Tina told me I had to put in some money for the heating bill. Aww, damn. What to do? Aha! I decided I was going to rob my mother’s house. I made my way back down south to Santa Clara, hitchhiking through small green town after small green town. I finally made it to the house. I waited until I was sure no one was home and crawled in through the cat flap, as I’d done every other time I was locked out.
The house smelled like Christmas. Fuckers.
I picked through the presents, irrationally offended that none were for me. In the movies, the tearstained mom would be on the national news, pleading for her runaway daughter’s return. In reality, there was no sign I’d existed. Merry Christmas to me.
I loaded up the wrapped presents satchel style and shimmied out the cat flap. I thumbed a ride in a Datsun 280Z with a guy who looked like Weird Al Yankovic. He dropped me at Pawn-N-Such. I charmed the owner into buying some of my brother’s Nintendo games. I got $27, enough for Tina’s heating bill.
I was punk as fuck. I’ve always loved adventures, tiny and large, and this was definitely an adventure.
Tina didn’t like me at her apartment while she was out, so at night I would go prowling. Usually I’d try my luck sneaking into gay underground warehouse parties where I became somewhat of a mascot. I would usually do the one hit of acid that I’d manage to procure, or later one line of speed because that was more readily available in the club, and I’d dance until I got kicked out. I would go up on the boxes and just dance like a little machine. That’s where I could really lose myself. On the dance floor was where I could channel my fear, stress, everything. I could turn into a kind of dance robot and just move. Sometimes the guys gave me poppers and giggled when I fell over on the floor.
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