Waxy.org
Waxy.org is the sandbox of Andy Baio, an independent journalist and programmer living in Portland, Oregon. I created Upcoming.org and some other stuff too.

Contact Me: log@waxy.org or waxpancake on AIM

Santa Monica Farmer's Market, a First-Person Narrative

Posted Feb 29, 2008

It's almost been five years since the Santa Monica Farmer's Market tragedy, when an 86-year-old man accidentally took the lives of ten unsuspecting people with his burgundy Buick LeSabre. I was there, and documented the aftermath in real-time.

This morning, at around 2am, I received an anonymous comment on that entry from someone who survived. It's a haunting glimpse into the experience of cheating death.

From: vancouverite

When it's not your day to die, it's just not your day to die.

I was there that day. Right there. My son was less than a year old at the time and it was a rarity that he and his father stayed home that day, they'd normally be rushing me along impatiently.

So I was dawdling, perusing the lovely organic greens and the beautiful melons, working my way up one side of the street stalls and back down the other.

I am only alive because at that moment, I was looking at Meyer lemons instead of arugula.

It started with a loud, continuous screeching/scraping noise, and then loud boombangs (the screeching turned out to be the upright poles of the display tents and the tables being dragged across the road surface, the bangs being those structures falling).

A young couple standing next to me at the lemons stand joined me in glancing up the street towards the growing cacophony that was heading our way. He gently moved in front of her, shielding her with his body instinctively as the disaster careened mere inches from us. We were so close I'm sure I could have touched the vehicle if I reached my arm out.

My first and only thought was to get home to my child as fast as I possibly could, everything else was suspended in time. I realized I had never let go of my 4 bags of produce. I looked down and saw red smeared on my legs. It seemed to be a combination of strawberries, raspberries, tomato and perhaps blood.

One minute I remember feeling jealous of a pretty slim girl with Manolo mules on talking on her cell phone. I can clearly remember seeing one of those perfect shoes lying sideways in the middle of the road with no idea where its wearer was who was right in front of me just a moment ago.

I remember the middle-aged black woman, separated from her teen daughter, distraught and focussed simultaneously as only a mother can be. I'll never forget the raw sound of relief she uttered as she found and embraced her daughter a few moments later.

Worst of all, I remember being so close to him in his car, I could see the bodies, one under, one on the hood, and the utter chaos moving along in slow motion. The image of his face with his glasses askew will haunt me for the rest of my life. I could have sworn he looked right at me, he wasn't even looking forward through the smashed windshield.

I remember the man running after the car crying and yelling "he just killed my wife".

Just today, the accident invaded my life again. As I drove back to my downtown office this afternoon, the pedestrian traffic was quite heavy, and I thought to myself, as I have now and again since that day, "I know exactly what it would look and sound and be like if someone were to just plow through these people".

I think about everyone that was there that day and have often wished for just one chance to get together to share our compartmentalized grief, to tell our stories, and to comfort one another in a way noone else can.

3 Comments (Add Yours)

Feb 29, 2008
10:33 AM  
Marc Hedlund wrote:

It's amazing how many of the links in your original post are now dead -- only 7 out of 26 links in the post have any meaningful content in them.


Feb 29, 2008
2:51 PM  
doug wrote:

I remember the man running after the car crying and yelling "he just killed my wife".

Jesus, that's haunting.


Mar 8, 2008
3:15 PM  
NYU_grad wrote:

I witnessed something similar more than 15 years ago in Washington Square Park on a peaceful spring day, after this accident, I was haunted for months and it likely contributed to me leaving the city.


 

Leave a comment





Waxy Links
Ads via The Deck
July 18, 2008
The Quirkbook — Rands polls Twitter for everyone's odd quirks and mildly OCD mannerisms
Jane McGonigal on Werewolf at Foo Camp 2008 — ideal strategies, a sneaky all-villager variation, and the impact of the werewolf metaphor
Google interviews the creators of WarGames — great trivia about the making of the film and its impact on tech culture
July 17, 2008
Logan Aube's Hockey Night theme — Something Awful goons tweak an online contest with funny results (via)
July 16, 2008
Sean Tevis is running for Kansas State Representative, XKCD-style — help a computer geek defeat the incumbent, a hard-right, anti-privacy Creationist; he's trying to get 3,000 to donate $9 each
How to Fake Being a Wine Snob — there might be supertasters out there, but most people are just faking it
The Economist responds to Freakonomics co-author's pasty/pastry mixup — tasty response to this original post (via)
Mike Arrington interviews Evan Williams at Foo Camp — great interview; thoughtful questions and brimming with information, without the sensationalism
Rick Trooper — The Empire rolls you.
Mocha VNC Lite, free VNC client for the iPhone — link opens in iTunes; like others, I'm hoping an SSH client is next
Annalee Newitz on Dr. Horrible's Sing Along Blog — exceeds the hype; the site's been down all day, so I just bought the season in iTunes for $3.99
July 15, 2008
The Sound of Young America Live interviews Ze Frank — strange interview, but talks about the end of The Show and current projects; see also: Jay Smooth from Ill Doctrine (via)
Defender of the favicon — staggering hack puts a playable Defender clone in your browser's 16x16 favicon; Firefox and Opera only
Twitter officially acquires Summize — search.twitter.com is now live
July 14, 2008
Deep Note, the Guitar Hero bot — it got 820k points and 98% playing Through the Fire and Flames; amazingly, some humans can still beat it, for now (via)
Unofficial RSS feed of newly-added App Store applications — until Apple adds their own, I've been keeping tabs using this
Daily Mail tries to unmask Banksy's secret identity — unconfirmed, but definitely seems likely
Trailer for August, indie drama about the dot-com bubble — the fictional dot-com is called Land Shark, but they never explain what they do (via)
Lee Byron maps walkability in San Francisco — built using Walkscore, Google Maps, and Processing
Radiohead releases dataset for House of Cards video — 370MB of CSV point data, Processing code, and a 3D viewer of Thom Yorke's face (via)
July 11, 2008
Preview video of Last.fm's iPhone app — no scrobbling from your iPod, but an outstanding streaming player (via)
Wall-E Down to Earth — fan film takes a Wall-E toy on a tour of real life
Ask the Pilot covers his recent experiences with the TSA — they wouldn't allow a pilot to carry a butter knife used for in-flight meals
Techcrunch runs the numbers on App Store's first day pre-sales — sadly, Apple removed the download counts this evening
Patton Oswalt's commencement speech at his old high school — "There Is No Them." (via)
July 10, 2008
I Eat Beats — drum sequencer built with webcam, Processing, and a bag of Skittles
Journalist examines America's rail system on an 85-hour trip from NYC to Oakland — nobody cares about the railroads anymore (via)
Bush jokes about America's pollution record to G8 world leaders — "Goodbye from the world's biggest polluter!"
iPhone 3G or Millionaire — the choice is easy
Flickr user hit by lightning while recording a rainstorm — "because you insisted, here's the unedited screaming version."

Andy Baio lives here. Some rights reserved, for your pleasure.