September 2010 Weddings
Dear Community,

Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.

If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.

Thank you.

Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.

I'm a jerk.

This morning when I was leaving the subway there was a guy laying spread-eagle on the stairs, looked stiff as a board, with his eyes and mouth hanging open, passed out.  I just passed by thinking something like, "I effing hate Baltimore."

As I was recounting the story to a co-worker, he said, "Did you call an ambulance or something?" and I realized I'm one of THOSE city people.  The cynical ones that ignore people who need help.  It honestly didn't even occur to me.  I figured he was on drugs and it happens all the time around here, plus there were a ton of people around and no one seemed concerned, and there's a cop stationed there and he wasn't doing anything.  I know that's just excuses, though.

I feel like a terrible person.  I swear, though, if I saw someone getting mugged I would call for help!

Image and video hosting by TinyPic
Lilypie First Birthday tickers

Re: I'm a jerk.

  • Laur, to be honest I'm one of those city people also. When I started working in the city I learned quick to keep my head straight ahead, the headphones on & walk fast.

    Is it bad I accept your cop excuse? I feel like HE was or should be the guy to do something - maybe he already checked the guy out before you saw him? Or maybe I'm just adding an excuse on top of another... Tongue Tied

    This reminds me so much of those scenarios on What Would You Do.

    image
    09.25.10
    BabyFruit Ticker
  • I get where you're coming from.  After years of living in NYC, I would turn my head to a lot of things that seemed out of the norm.  I think the cop should have done something about it, but are you sure the cop saw?  Don't beat yourself up over it.  If it were something bad that happened, with so many people around, I'm sure someone who witnessed the situation would have called for help.
    Vacation

    Vacation
  • I'm sure I have passed people who have needed help and ignored them because I'm walking fast, headphones on, deliberately ignoring people who are asking for change or saying crude things to me.  If you even make eye contact, it can cause issues.

    This guy I saw, and now I feel guilty.   But I DO think the cop is responsible for doing something.  The only reason I say it's an excuse is because it's not like I saw the guy and thought, "I don't need to help him because there's a cop" - it's an excuse after-the-fact because I didn't even think about helping him.  I just wanted to get quickly past him. 

    In retrospect, it's fine that I did nothing since there was a cop, but since I didn't even think about it I feel bad, because if there wasn't a cop, I would have done the same thing.

    Image and video hosting by TinyPic
    Lilypie First Birthday tickers
  • I always think to myself when I hear of something like this, or watch that What Would You Do? show on ABC... would I call someone? In the case you mentioned Laura, I don't think I would, and I don't even live in the city.

    I guess maybe you learn to discern more quickly if someone is really in need? I don't know. I would like to think that I would be able to tell and take action, but really, you never know until you are in the situation.

    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • I'm not even a city person, I live in a outskirts area, but I think if I saw that I wouldn't call anyone to check on him.
    Baby Jaxon born 8/18/2012 @ 9:53am, 7lb 2oz!! At 37 weeks 5 days due to Pre-E via C-section.Baby Birthday Ticker Tickerimageimage
  • imagesunshine_day_dreams:
    I get where you're coming from.  After years of living in NYC, I would turn my head to a lot of things that seemed out of the norm.  I think the cop should have done something about it, but are you sure the cop saw?  Don't beat yourself up over it.  If it were something bad that happened, with so many people around, I'm sure someone who witnessed the situation would have called for help.

    This.  I usually pass by the same homeless person for several weeks.  And then they move on, and I hope they're ok.  But I don't actually do anything.

    And the bolded part is known as the bystander effect.  Everyone assumes someone will report it.  It's one of the only things that stuck with me from my psych classes.

    My deal is that I am going to murder your puppies and piss on your rainbows. -diablesse Lilypie Premature Baby tickers
  • The 'bystander effect' is why I know it's not an excuse that so many people were around :(
    Image and video hosting by TinyPic
    Lilypie First Birthday tickers
  • Don't beat yourself up over it. I see similar things on the train (some homeless people will get enough fare to sit on a train for hours since it's heated during winter) and on the streets near work.
    Me (33)& DX: DOR, FSH-20.3; DH(28):SA=normal 8/11 HSG= clear!
    IUI #1 10/12/11 (Bravelle + HCG + Prometrium & acupuncture) = 10/26 BFP! Beta #1=250, Beta #2= 615. 1st u/s 11/8. image Visit The Nest! Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • Late on this, but I don't think you're a jerk for what you did. 99% of people would walk right past the guy like you did. And I agree with you, I think that the cop being there was more of a reason not to do it. But I also think that if something is actually wrong, you get some type of intuition to do something.

    When I was a kid we had a neighbor that never talked to anyone. One day she pulls up in front of the house and lays on the horn. I was outside with a friend and our parents were out there. Without knowing anything else about this neighbor, we instantly knew something was wrong. It turned out she had a severe migraine that basically caused her to be delusion and believe the horn was the doorbell of her house because she couldn't find her keys. Maybe it doesn't happen in most cases, but I believe that gut feeling of "something isn't right about this" happens even with people you don't know.

  • I know.  But some days it's the best I can do too.
    My deal is that I am going to murder your puppies and piss on your rainbows. -diablesse Lilypie Premature Baby tickers
Sign In or Register to comment.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards