Down These Mean Streets, an autobiography by Piri Thomas is about a boy's journey to manhood on the mean streets of New York's Spanish Harlem. While growing up in Harlem, Piri adopted an attitude, which was both hot-tempered and violent. In the end, this personality flaw almost cost him everything, including his life.
Whenever Piri faced a problem, he would become angry and resort to viloence. There are many instances where he does this, one in particular is when he is a young teenager and is going to school. The teacher wouldn't let him go to the bathroom and when she grabbed his shirt to stop him from walking out of her class, his shirt ripped. Realizing that she had ripped his shirt he turned around and not thinking "of her as a woman, but as something that had to be hit," he punched her in the face. His quick-temper caused him to hit a woman, which shows that he isn't one to think things out and then act in a peaceful manner. Another example of Piri's anger happened when he got into an argument with his girlfriend. After a party he walked her home and they got into a verbal fight. When the tensions rose and he couldn't control his anger anymore, he sent his fist through a window which wound him up in the hospital. The most signifficant example of Piri's aggression was when he was twenty-two. He and two other people were robbing a nightclub. Piri was guarding the door when a cop from inside pulled his gun and shot him, not thinking of consequences, Piri returned fire. He had shot and almost killed the police officer, earning him a five to fifteen year prison sentence.
Eventhough it was Piri's personality flaw, it affected many if not all of the people around him. When he chose to solve his problems through violence, it affected the people that he fought, and it affected his family and friends when they had to witness it and then lose him to jail for six years. ...