Shoes On The Wire

A special kudos to the US women’s soccer team for winning the gold medal for the 5th time.

Another Sunday and I try hard to find something that is anything but the mundane crap of the last week…..stuff that could inform as well as entertain….and that is a daunting task…..especially for a blog.

This past week I had to drive around looking for an address that Sue needed and spotted something that use to be very familiar but has lost a bit of its luster over the years.

Sue says that my mind never stops thinking and that I ask so many questions that she gets a headache…..this session began when I noticed a pair of sneakers dangling from the phone wires.

Our drive brought about the question where did these shoes come from and what the Hell do they mean?

Odd as it may seem, power lines have become a somewhat popular source of urban fascination. People have wondered why they sometimes sport brightly colored balls, why chunks of trees sometimes hang from them, or why birds love to use them as perches.

While these mysteries have ready explanations, another utility phenomenon doesn’t: Why do people often see pairs of shoes dangling from power lines?

Lauren Cahn of Reader’s Digestcovered a few possible reasons, and not all of them are benign. One popular theory holds that the shoes may be a signal that there’s gang activity in a given neighborhood. Tying the laces of shoes together and tossing them over the lines is a form of staking out territory.

Plausible? Sure. But Cahn couldn’t find any police departments that would confirm. However, a 2015 story from WBEZ in Chicago quoted a “high-ranking member” of the Bloods who corroborated the theory, saying that the shoe-throwing was intended as a notice to rival groups. The source also stated that the shoes could mark that someone had been killed or “knocked […] out of his shoes.” Other stories echo the idea that the shoes could be an impromptu memorial.

An adjacent explanation is that the shoes are a kind of advertisement to illicit drug consumers that narcotics are available in the area. Unlike the gang theory, this one holds credence with some police departments and city councils, including in Alabama and Mississippi. Because it’s ambiguous—as opposed to, say, a large “Buy Drugs Here” sign—it’s possible dealers might be willing to “advertise” with a pair of sneakers.

Other sources cited nothing more than juvenile mischief. Kids may toss old shoes up as a mild form of vandalism or possibly to antagonize a friend or family member. Though they’d need access to a stray pair of shoes—prying them off a child and then tossing them seems impractical. When shoes go missing, it’s usually one at a time, which is why it’s more common to see just one shoe on the side of the road than two.

The most innocuous explanation? That it’s simply a rite of passage. One columnist for Hidden City Philadelphia wrote in 2012 that the practice was common in the 1970s as a way of discarding old or outgrown sneakers. Because some lines had multiple pairs, it appeared that the tossing was often kids emulating behavior.

More recently, students at the University of Michigan observed that the act was simply commemorating their graduation. Shoes dangle from lines near rented student housing, and some have names of graduates and dates written on them.

There’s likely no one motive for the shoe-tossing. It may, however, be in decline. Chicago, for example, received more than 1100 requests to remove the shoes in 2008. Those numbers had dropped by 71 percent by 2014.

Whatever the motive for tossing them, the shoes pose a risk of interrupting the power line’s performance. Often, utility companies will honor requests to have them taken down.

(mentalfloss.com)

Just in case you have an inquisitive mind….and now you know.

And that is it for this Sunday….I hope everyone has a joyful day and as always….Be Well and Be Safe….

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”

6 thoughts on “Shoes On The Wire

  1. There is a mundane explanation for the shoes. No drugs, no gangs, no rituals. It’s plain old fashioned bullying, and it’s been going on for probably as long as there have been shoes and power or telephone lines. Or trees for that matter. Didn’t happen to me but it happened to friends of mine going way, way back already. I saw it done a few times. The “jocks” would steal some meek kid’s gym shoes or, even worse, hold him down and strip his shoes right off his feet, tie them together and fling them up into the nearest tree or, worse yet, low hanging power line. This was called “fun”.

    Well, not for the kid who had his shoes stolen, of course.

  2. I saw the shoe thing a lot in London, and agree with Grouchy’s reason. It was almsot always bullying of some kind. It doesn’t happen in Beetley of course, though I have seen tree branches and plastic bags trapped across telephone lines.

    Best wishes, Pete.

  3. I love this post…something almost everyone has seen and never really stopped to wonder what was going on…the drug one is interesting because, it it was a sign for drug sales in the area, the police would see it too! I say rite of passage is probably closest to the truth – terrific read!

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