So I met this Navajo dude in jail once
I'm half native but I'm Yaqui. It's Mexican native. So we were alike but very different.
I wasn't in there for anything serious. I was 18 & got arrested for graffiti. I was getting released the next day so when they were releasing me they put me in a cell with another dude who was getting released. We just sat there & started talking while we waited since there was nothing else to do. You meet a lot of people in jail: Some not great, some kinda weird, & some are actually good people who shouldn't have to be there.
This guy was a cool dude & I don't remember why he was there but I remember he was there for a week.
We got along & when we got released they gave us back our things of course.
When we got outside I asked him if he knew where we were (I knew what jail I was in but had no idea which direction was home. I was pretty clueless at the time).
He told me the address so that was enough to help me know where to go so I started to walk that direction. It was about to be a 10 mile walk & 105°F that day. It was HOT. But I didn't complain.
He asked if I knew where I was going & I said "yeah now I do, thanks man" so then he asked me if I had any money to catch a bus or if I had a ride.
I told him nah I didn't. I had nothing but spray paint in a backpack when I got arrested so they released me with just my empty backpack 😅
He pulled out his wallet & handed me $4. He said he would've gave me more but he only had $8. So now we both had $4 which is enough to buy a bus pass.
I didn't take it at first & kept saying "no man it's okay don't worry about it I'll be alright".
But he told me "No it's a gift. For you to refuse it would be disrespectful to me. It's too hot out here. Buy water with it if you really want to walk but just take it".
So I took it & thanked him. I guess I had to 😅 I genuinely appreciated that he took it upon himself to ask questions & make sure I was good. He even gave me half of all he had.
It wasn't much but I always remember that.
So the last time I got out of jail (sucks I gotta say that lol) I met another guy. He was an old man who seemed a little confused. I asked him if he had a way to get home & he said his friend is supposed to pick him up but his phone was dead so he had no way to call him.
One thing I learned from my stays in jails, is to turn your phone off before they put handcuffs on you. Because if you don't it'll be dead when you get out which is usually a bad situation.
So I turned my phone on & told him to call whoever he needed to.
Luckily he had his friends phone number written down in his wallet so he called him. I waited with the guy just talking about random things until his friend got there.
It was probably only like 20 minutes.
By the end, it seemed like the "friend" was more like a caretaker who looked out for the older man. But he looked similar in age so perhaps they were real friends who stuck by each other. I really don't know. But the older man told his friend that I let him use my phone & that I was really nice to him so the guy thanked me & tried to give me money but I didn't accept it.
I told him I knew what it was like to get out & have no way to get yourself home. That was all.
I was just glad I got a chance to help somebody in the same situation the Navajo man helped me in before. I guess I was just paying it forward or something like that 🤷 so now that man is the reason another person got home safe.. & he doesn't even know that.
People don't always get too see the extent of the positive impact they have.
I wasn't in there for anything serious. I was 18 & got arrested for graffiti. I was getting released the next day so when they were releasing me they put me in a cell with another dude who was getting released. We just sat there & started talking while we waited since there was nothing else to do. You meet a lot of people in jail: Some not great, some kinda weird, & some are actually good people who shouldn't have to be there.
This guy was a cool dude & I don't remember why he was there but I remember he was there for a week.
We got along & when we got released they gave us back our things of course.
When we got outside I asked him if he knew where we were (I knew what jail I was in but had no idea which direction was home. I was pretty clueless at the time).
He told me the address so that was enough to help me know where to go so I started to walk that direction. It was about to be a 10 mile walk & 105°F that day. It was HOT. But I didn't complain.
He asked if I knew where I was going & I said "yeah now I do, thanks man" so then he asked me if I had any money to catch a bus or if I had a ride.
I told him nah I didn't. I had nothing but spray paint in a backpack when I got arrested so they released me with just my empty backpack 😅
He pulled out his wallet & handed me $4. He said he would've gave me more but he only had $8. So now we both had $4 which is enough to buy a bus pass.
I didn't take it at first & kept saying "no man it's okay don't worry about it I'll be alright".
But he told me "No it's a gift. For you to refuse it would be disrespectful to me. It's too hot out here. Buy water with it if you really want to walk but just take it".
So I took it & thanked him. I guess I had to 😅 I genuinely appreciated that he took it upon himself to ask questions & make sure I was good. He even gave me half of all he had.
It wasn't much but I always remember that.
So the last time I got out of jail (sucks I gotta say that lol) I met another guy. He was an old man who seemed a little confused. I asked him if he had a way to get home & he said his friend is supposed to pick him up but his phone was dead so he had no way to call him.
One thing I learned from my stays in jails, is to turn your phone off before they put handcuffs on you. Because if you don't it'll be dead when you get out which is usually a bad situation.
So I turned my phone on & told him to call whoever he needed to.
Luckily he had his friends phone number written down in his wallet so he called him. I waited with the guy just talking about random things until his friend got there.
It was probably only like 20 minutes.
By the end, it seemed like the "friend" was more like a caretaker who looked out for the older man. But he looked similar in age so perhaps they were real friends who stuck by each other. I really don't know. But the older man told his friend that I let him use my phone & that I was really nice to him so the guy thanked me & tried to give me money but I didn't accept it.
I told him I knew what it was like to get out & have no way to get yourself home. That was all.
I was just glad I got a chance to help somebody in the same situation the Navajo man helped me in before. I guess I was just paying it forward or something like that 🤷 so now that man is the reason another person got home safe.. & he doesn't even know that.
People don't always get too see the extent of the positive impact they have.