The Zeitgeist Diaries Pt. 1
By: Javan Bair
Somehow, I had managed to feel even
more trapped in the day to day grind than I did before the pandemic began. The
two major time consumers in my life, work and school had become constant
fixtures in my home. MY desk loomed in my bedroom as if to remind me that even
in the imminent fall of the world, I was still merely a cog in a profit-driven
machine.
A significant number of people
loved working from home during the pandemic. Many of them are still doing it to
this day. At first, I have to admit that I loved working from home. It was a
dream come true to hang out in sweatpants and smoke weed with my dog while
pretending my job still had meaning.
But countless hours spent stoned
and alone had finally lost their luster, and I decided I needed some kind of
alteration in my life’s direction.
I switched all my classes to CU
Denver and moved in with a couple of friends that needed a roommate. They had
an apartment that was “basically in Denver.” And for the price in rent, I
couldn’t believe how affordable this apartment was in the notoriously expensive
and saturated Denver market.
I quickly found out that I was not
“basically in Denver. I was in Thornton, which is fine if you are searching for
an alternative to everything that makes Denver, Denver. Where Denver is
contemporary and creative, Thornton is suburban and purposefully ordinary. The
only thing both areas have in common is an absurd number of homeless people.
Classes were supposed to resume in
person a couple of days after I moved up there. But COVID had other plans, and
classes were once again relegated to zoom meetings and Microsoft office meeting
rooms. I was trapped again. The world had briefly reopened, and then the omicron
variant came in like Dikembe Mutombo and swatted all our hopes and dream of
normalcy into the trashcan. And taking the 20-minute drive from Thornton to
downtown was to no avail. Aside from the occasional protest, Denver had very
little excitement at the time. Everything was either closed, or you sat outside
on picnic tables outside of a microbrewery and drank beer in the frigid cold. I
was drinking at one of these urban winter survival courses once and made direct
eye contact with a homeless person doing the same thing I was. Except, he was
doing it for far less money. The pandemic was nonsensical, monotonous, and downright
arduous unless you were homeless. The pandemic was like a never-ending summer
camp for them.
Because I hadn’t yet given up on myself enough to forgo my worldly possessions and join the Forever Camp on Colfax Ave. And I couldn’t afford to move out of Thornton, so I was forced to resume our regularly scheduled programming. I was back to smoking weed, hanging out with the dog, doing homework, and working in the form of sending meaningless emails to coworkers day in and day out. New location. Same directionless feeling.
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My roommate Mike still worked a regular
job. He got up at 7:00 every morning and came home at 6:00, a ritual beginning to
feel foreign to me. Sure, he still came home with the glaze of the workingman’s
dread over his eyes. He would openly vocalize how much he hates work and his co-workers.
But I was jealous of him. He was leaving the house every day and somewhat
living with some sense of normalcy.
He worked as the manager of a medium-duty
truck salvage yard/dealership in Denver called TTI Trucks. If the term “medium-duty
truck salvage yard and dealership” sounds sketchy, that’s because it is. The essential
business model of TTI Trucks is to purchase used box trucks at auction and
either sell them back to the general public if they run or strip them for parts
that they sell back to the general public if they don’t run. It’s kind of like
recycling, except more dangerous. These aren’t plastic bags being turned into
flimsier bags; these are parts for the big trucks on the highway that you pass
on your way to work. Very sketchy.
So, I was all in when he offered me
a part-time job. I grew up in salvage yards. My dad kept our family cars
running with parts from U-Pull-And-Pay for most of my life. As a toddler, I
used to sit in dilapidated vehicles that had already been ransacked by others
while my Dad would pull the parts he needed. Those are some of my fondest
memories, sincerely. In addition, my Dad has been a mechanic his whole life,
and as a result, I grew up around shops like TTI.
Mike knew this about me, and that’s
why he thought I might enjoy working part-time at TTI while I was still in college.
In addition, TTI needed help. Unlike most industries in the time of COVID, the
trucking industry hit a major boom. The rise of online shopping binges that
kept many people tethered to reality during the pandemic caused a subsequent surge
in the need to deliver those products. The demand for delivery drivers and
transport services went through the roof, and trucks worldwide began clocking
in more miles than ever before. But more miles equals more wear, and more wear
equals broken and worn-out parts that must be replaced.
Truck drivers are losing money when
their trucks are not operating correctly. And just like every other good or
service during the pandemic, truck parts were no different. They we limited and
challenging to come across. Acquiring new parts in a timely manner became an
act of God. And thus, TTI Trucks arose as the prodigal son of the Western Front
trucking industry.
The parts were sold faster than the
trucks could be purchased, and TTI needed more help pulling and selling the
parts. The manual labor force in this country does not slow down for politics
or pandemics. Even in times of chaos, one thing remains true in the United
States, wrenches must be turned, and those doing so must be paid. The pandemic
was good for TTI and those that worked there.
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“This job is ghetto as hell.” I think
to myself as I use one of our jump boxes to try and start a truck that was
literally recovered from a highway fire. The jump box I use is a steel
furniture dolly with car batteries stacked on top of one another. They are inconveniently
heavy and very unsafe. I hook cables to the battery terminal and let this old International
4700 rip. The engine remarkably starts,
but the rest of the truck appears unsalvageable. I take pictures of the truck,
a video to prove that it does, in fact, run despite looking like it was used on
the set of a Michael Bay film, and see what parts are still salvageable and
advertise those parts online. It is a very blue-collar job. It’s dirty. My co-workers
are dirty. Everything smells like grease, diesel, cigarettes, farts, and Copenhagen.
And on a somewhat hereditary level, I like it.
After a couple of months at this
job, the world began to open, and some of my classes began occurring in real
classrooms again. I began to split my time 50/50 between CU Denver and TTI Trucks.
A College of Liberal Arts and a blue-collar mechanic shop and salvage yard. I
believe there to be no two more polar opposite locations in the universe. They
are the antithesis of one another.
At CU Denver, the world is viewed through
a lens that portrays a myriad of left-leaning agendas common throughout academia.
Despite how the media represents the college, it is not just a crash course in communism
nor an indoctrination to Antifa. But the tropes and stereotypes do exist. Anti-fascist
poetry club posters and Joe Rogan petitions decorate the hallways. At TTI
Trucks, the agenda is all over the spectrum of right-wing beliefs, everything from
the overtly Christian Conservatives to the heartfelt followers of Qanon. There
is no shortage of unfounded conspiratorial beliefs to be heard.
I existed in both of these places
during a time of intense division in this country. I was bounced around between
major ideologies like a pinball during COVID, the protests, the election, the vaccine
rollout, the mask mandates, and every other piece of duplicitous chaos that
unfolded between 2020 and 2022.
I learned, worked, and lived among
the two groups in this country that seem to have the most disdain for one
another but spend almost no time commingling.
I found myself smack dab in the middle
of the American Zeitgeist (definition: the defining spirit or mood of a
particular period of history as shown by the ideas and beliefs of the time).
This isn’t some “take a walk in
someone else’s shoes” story or some profound tale of self-discovery and
unification in a time of division. Those would both be excellent options, but I
fear we have long since departed from being able to digest anything from a
central point of view in this country. Instead, I will tell you stories about
the last two wild fucking years I have spent among these two vastly different groups,
and hopefully, by the end of it, you realize just how ass-backward we have become
as a nation. What you choose to do with that information is entirely up to you.
***Part 2 is coming next week***
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