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No. 141
ID: 519d90
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Iv been told, God takes care of: Small children, Crazy people, and Drunks. As I watched Teeter walking through the park for the last Twelve weeks or so, and never once fall on his ass, I started to believe this.
Teeter had asked me for money about 120 times since I started riding bus number six every morning. I gave him a hand full of change about ten times out of these 120. Once I gave him a five dollar bill. The smile that came over his face was worth it. I don't mind giving to homeless people once in awhile. Teeter was a good natured homeless guy who always acted grateful when you gave him even a lousy quarter. He's a tall skinny black man about sixty years old. He seemed to me (at the time) to be in basically good health, other then the fact that he was drunk all the time and he was really skinny.
On this day Teeter was in rare form. With his new clothes, he walk around the center of the park talking to every one that past by. He knew many of these people. He said hi to everyone wether he knew them or not. He was talking louder the he usually did. He was laughing, telling dirty jokes to the guys he knew well. He even tried to play Frisbee with some college kids. He gave up on Frisbee in just a few minutes but he was in better spirits then I'd ever seen him. If he drunk at all it was only a little bit and you couldn't tell.
Everyone at the bus stops and in the park was watching him. The mothers pushing baby strollers were watching him and the Babies were to. There was a four year old girl, next to me on the bench who gazed at this very loud, purple clad, man in wide wonder. She never took her eyes off him. I thought at the time the purple man must have looked like a living cartoon character to her.
The business people in expensive suits, the janitors and the hotel maids, the kids in McDonald uniforms, the nurses aids, . We all watch the homeless man. All of us miserable working schmucks, stared at this Jobless , homeless man- who was just as happy as a person could be.
Most of us smiled as we watched him.
It was such a nice day, I almost decided to walk home. My house was less then two miles from this park. I almost walked but I didn't, because I wasn't feeling well. I was tired, and hot, and sun burnt from working outside all day. At my job, I had been cutting grass and laying down mulch for ten hours straight. I had welcomed the overtime, but now I was feeling it.
If I had walked home that day, my whole life (afterwards) would have been different.
The four year old girl and I watched Teeter in silence together. The child's mother was next to us on the bench reading a magazine. Even she glanced up every so often to look at Teeter and then smile at me and her girl. The bench we were on faced the street. We had to turn around to look towards the park. At some point Teeter moved towards the center of the grassy area where we couldn't see him anymore. The child simply stood up on the bench, so she could see him. When she stood up she knocked her 'Dora' backpack off the bench to the ground. I decided to get up and walk out into the grassy area. I wanted to stretch my legs and I wanted to watch this giddy, purple man do his thing. I lifted the girls backpack and placed it where I had been sitting. Both mother And daughter smiled at me. I smiled back.
Teeter was now dead center in the middle of the park. A group of high school girls, eight or ten of them, all wearing catholic school uniforms were strolling by him. Teeter was ignoring these girls in favor of two large dogs that an elderly couple was walking in the grass.The effect of seeing Teeter (in purple) there with the Catholic girls in there uniforms (red and purple) and the two St. Bernard size dogs was kind of surreal. Above Teeter and Above the whole street is a statue. Its a huge statue of a man on a horse. Its a " larger the life " brass thing that dominates an otherwise empty park . The man is dressed in 1700 garb and the horse is reared up on its hind legs. If you look at a Delaware state quarter you can see what this huge, brass statue looks like. The statue added to the sur-realness of the scene for me.
The two dogs seemed to love teeter. They were running around him in circles, sniffing him all over. Teeter was fearless. He was loving the dogs. The elderly couple did not seem to be the least bit afraid of Teeter either.
I decide right then that I wanted to play with these dogs also, so I started walking towards Teeter and the others. I remember thinking that Teeters good mood was a combination of few things. It was the weather, and his new clothes and , most likely, just the right amount of alcohol in his system. Not to much and not to little. This is what I was thinking about, when I heard the first gun shot.
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