I thought I wouldn't blog in Armenia during my Fulbright year as it would deter time from scribing larger works, like a novel, play, second album, etc.  Everyday things happen to me that are blogworthy.    In contemplating launching these blog entries, I wondered would it be excessive to start a brand new blog URL, or build on this URL, "Single Steps", a blog I started after graduating from college with a one way ticket overseas (yes, I just used "blog" three times in a single sentence).  The decision should be apparent (hint: epic entries from walking across Spain, WWOOFing in Portugal, cycling across the US and more can be found in "Single Step" entries past).  Well I quickly wanted to write about two encounters that happened to me in my apartment building, which I love.  One morning about a month ago I am preparing to leave the apartment when a knock is at the door.  I don't usually have unannounced visitors.  I peer through the peephole and find an elderly lady.  I open the door.  She starts yelling.  Doesn't have teeth.  It's incomprehensible but her desperation and purposes is apparent.  She is fragile.  Ancient.  Lines all over her face.  I shut the door and feel like a vagabond for doing so.  But what can I do to help her?    I think about my grandmother.  My father who was educated in this country.  All the people who helped me when I needed a hand.  Who do I think I am for shutting the door on her?    It's easy to pass up on the elderly.  They'll be gone soon, right?  Yet they seem to constitute the majority of beggars I have seen in this country.  One man by the opera who sits at his stoop 8am on the dot, every morning.  Another who walks around in the finest suit writing - with incredible braggadocio - your name and insisting on payment.    I open the door and she's still there, thinking about which door to knock on next.  I give her some change and it feels inadequate.  Still would have had I given her a few bills.  I can't save this woman whose age compels me to consider her simply as a source of innocence.  I shut the door and think - what could I have done more?    Another morning I am headed to class.  It's super early.  Birds are chipping.  Streets are empty.  I have some trash to take out - there's a big trashcan along my commute route and my bag is small and would fit easily in it.    I step out and there's an old man in the classic Armenian sweatsuit.  He sees the trash bag in my hand and asks me what I'm up to.    Throwing it out, I tell him.  Not in the dumpster out back?  That's where we're supposed to throw it out.  No, I tell him.  There's a trashcan on my commute.    You shameful little boy, he scowls.  How dare you.  You should be ashamed.  ASHAMED.    And I walk off.  Who has time for this crap?  Maybe there's a reason, maybe there's an art to trash gathering and collecting in Armenia that I'm not privvy to.  But at the end of the day, trash is trash, a trashcan is a trashcan, and for two instances, I opened my door here in Armenia and found some interesting characters on the other end.                        
 
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