he was just some guy from the bus


sorabji.com: Who are you?: he was just some guy from the bus
THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016).

By droopy on Friday, August 3, 2007 - 03:23 am:

    i was at the downtown bus station waiting for the number 11 to take me home. i had to wait a half an hour, so i bought a bag of chili fritos and a dr. pepper and sat outside by the bus bays. soon a group of three security guards walked past me - two men and one woman; they were laughing and joking with one another. a bus pulled up - i think it was the 2 - and the walked over to it. i turned back to my fritos. but then i heard somebody yelling; i looked over toward the 2 and saw the three guards escorting a guy out of the bus.

    he looked to be around 40, on the small side, wearing a shimmering blue shirt several sizes too large and pale cloth pants. he had a backpack and a stack of papers with him that he threw on the ground and started screaming something unintelligable at the guards. they laughed at him. i got the impression that this was just another side show for them that happened every day. the man seemed to calm down, and one of the guards picked up his backpack and papers and handed them to him. then the three of them started walking off the bus station grounds. the man walked in a stiff, almost robotic way and twitched a lot. i couldn't quite tell if he was on drugs or had a condition or both. the man passed by me and looked at me looking angry and sad. i nodded my head to him.

    they got him over to the sidewalk to have him cross to the other side of jones st. instead, he stood in the middle of the street and started yelling at them again. i still had a hard time making out what he was saying. the guards still laughed at him. the man reached down to his ankles, and one of the guards said, "get your hands away from your ankles, now!" this time i could hear the man say, "i ain't got nothing hidden on me! i ain't got shit!" then he pulled up his baggy pants legs from his thighs, exposing two incredibly thin legs with incredible big ball-shaped thighs; they looked like turkey drumsticks. he said, "see, nothing!" and danced around in the street. by this time, a few more people had gathered on the sidewalk and were laughing at him. he let his pants legs drop and stood still in the street again. then he took out a white handkerchief or something and wrapped his right hand with it. he made a fist, held it over his head, and yelled over to the guards: "right here! right now! come on! you wanna mess with me? come on!" the guards laughed at him and turned to walk off. i don't if he had it with him all along, but the man suddenly threw a glass bottle at the guards; it shattered on the edge of the sidewalk and didn't come close to anybody. one guard turned around and walked toward him saying, "hey! none of that, now!" he got up close to the man and talked to him quietly, then he put his arm over his shoulder and started moving him to the other side of jones. the other two guards followed him, and the all walked him down the sidewalked and turned west up 9th street, disappearing from my view. by now it was time to go catch my bus.


By Dr Pepper on Friday, August 3, 2007 - 12:49 pm:

    Droopy, there is always people like him is a mentally illiness, believe me, they are always like that in every downtown. It is nice of you drinking Dr Pepper!, it is just what Doctor ordered! But anyway, I remember long ago, I saw a lady carry baby buggy carried group of small dogs inside, I mean, there is no baby or infant, just group of small dogs, some of people who saw her, laughed at her.


By agatha on Friday, August 3, 2007 - 10:47 pm:

    I love your bus stories, Droop. I should tell some of my own one of these days. Hey, instead of me always badgering you to write a book, maybe we should collaborate! We can ask for submissions from other people and you and I can be the editors. Deal?

    In other news, we got a new couch today, and DAMN is it ever the picture of comfort.


By V on Saturday, August 4, 2007 - 04:12 pm:

    ..do it,I know for a fact droopy posts superb.Dont let a good moment go,you only get a few chances in life,trust me,I died years ago.....


By droopy on Sunday, August 5, 2007 - 05:51 pm:

    deal, agatha.

    by the way, i wrote "thighs" when i meant "calves" in that story.


By V on Monday, August 6, 2007 - 02:40 pm:

    ...odd as it me seem,I also have "big ball shaped thighs"..but I will charge you $5 to see them...


By agatha on Monday, August 6, 2007 - 06:06 pm:

    Okay, people, post your bus stories here! I know Platy has some, at the very least.

    There is some sort of home for men about twelve blocks from my house. It's on my bus route, so I frequently get interesting men riding the bus with me. Lately, there has been a regularly riding gentleman who appears to have suffered brain damage at some point. He always travels with a worker guy who helps said gentleman get about his business. Gentleman talks a lot, and repeats himself over and over in a voice that sounds like Screamin' Jay Hawkins or Little Richard. He generally says about six things with some variation depending on the circumstances of the ride:
    "GOIN HOME!"
    "GOIN ON THE BUS!"
    "I'M GONNA GET SOME MONNAYYY!"
    "GOIN DOWNTOWN!"
    "GOIN DOWNTOWN TOMORROW? MAYBE!" (this one is brought on by the fact that he asks his counselor if they are going downtown tomorrow, and the counselor dutifully answers "maybe," or "we'll see." Every time. Very patiently.)
    "OKAAAYYY." (an alternate answer to the previous question)
    He punctuates his comments with bursts of hysterical laughter, which I can't even begin to describe in words. I really love riding the bus with this guy. Cleo gets embarrassed when we ride the bus together and I sit behind him because I smile and laugh for the duration of the ride.


By Dr Pepper on Tuesday, August 7, 2007 - 04:36 am:

    Like I said before, there is possible mentally illiness, or something like that.


By agatha on Tuesday, August 7, 2007 - 04:38 am:

    POSSIBLE ILLINESS? YA THINK?


By Dr Pepper on Wednesday, August 8, 2007 - 12:09 am:

    agatha, a lady enocunter us few times before. she constanly asked people if this is the bus is her route, we had no idea where she going, and constanlty asked about the bus fare, and other thing she says that we never heard of . the other time , at the transportaion center where we disembark, and I was going to get on of other bus, and there is this guy flashed "peace" at us.
    I find this people strange.


By heather on Wednesday, August 8, 2007 - 12:31 am:

    they are strange, huh?


By Dr Pepper on Wednesday, August 8, 2007 - 12:58 am:

    Yes, it is .


By moonit on Wednesday, August 8, 2007 - 09:27 pm:

    Is english your second language?


By heather on Wednesday, August 8, 2007 - 10:05 pm:

    moonit, there is always people like him is a mentally illiness


By Dr Pepper on Thursday, August 9, 2007 - 12:45 am:

    Moonit, English is my first language, Heather, no I am not.


By heather on Thursday, August 9, 2007 - 05:15 am:

    Oh,yes it is! I know!

    Sometimes a fellow i see he write a sentence it almost make no sense.
    I find this people strange.


By agatha on Thursday, August 9, 2007 - 01:13 pm:

    What's your bus story, HEATHER?


By heather on Thursday, August 9, 2007 - 02:13 pm:

    the only stories i can think of involve drunk people telling their sad unintelligible sob stories. i don't really have patience for extremely-drunk people in public.

    i took a bus from detroit to new orleans with my mom and a prisoner was escorted on to the bus. he had really long finger nails but we weren't allowed to talk to him.

    my friend just started working with people who need counselors with them all the time, he should have some good stories, he pretty much lives for this stuff [i think that he liked to spend time with me for the same reason.]


By semillama on Thursday, August 9, 2007 - 02:56 pm:

    I almost never take the bus, so I myself have no stories.

    The last long bus ride I took was from San Miguel De Allende to Mexico City, a few years ago. It was a tour-style bus, with leg rests for the seats. They played "Little Nicky" with Spanish subtitles on the little tvs.


By droopy on Thursday, August 9, 2007 - 06:55 pm:

    not a lot of drunk people talk to me on the bus, but i do have to sit through the occasional sob story. people seem to think that, because i'm in a chair, i will automatically sympathize with whatever story they have to tell. sometimes it's interesting, more often than not it's just dull.

    did i ever tell the story about the time the bus i was on caught fire? not as exciting as it sounds, but not something that happens every day.


By moonit on Thursday, August 9, 2007 - 09:39 pm:

    It makes my brain hurt.

    I catch the bus nearly every day. Nothing exciting happens, my highlight is how the emo kids have done their makeup today.

    Christchurch now links up into this one big bus exchange with a couple of different areas to catch buses from and last week I watched some dodgy-trailer trash couple have an arguement over a can of coke or something. I had the urge to tell the chick that she could do way better than the k-fed wannabe she goes home with every night, but who wants to get invovled with that. I see them nearly every day (they don't catch my bus). They alternate between needing to get a room STAT, and fighting about stupid shit.


By kazu on Thursday, August 9, 2007 - 10:38 pm:

    They have emo kids in New Zealand???

    Is there no escape?


By Nelly on Friday, August 10, 2007 - 12:23 am:

    Droopy's sounds like a Brain Problem Situation for sure. I don't have any bus stories, but I have a subway story and a drive by story...

    One night I was coming down Dekalb Avenue at Moreland, and I saw a man running kind of slowly up the ramp leading up from Moreland. I was stopped at the light and I watched him... after a minute I saw a fat policeman following him, also running slowly and puffing. They guy in front started taking his clothes off. It was like he either thought taking them off and leaving them behind him would slow the policeman down, or like taking them off was his objective and he was running to get the job done before the policeman caught him. He had the shirt off and the pants half off when the policeman finally caught up with him and pushed him to the ground.. then the light changed

    Number two was riding a Marta train at night after a concert. There were 2 young teenage girls, wild in the city, in one of the seats, and a bunch of very skinny black kids in the back who were clowning around and kidding with the girls, one of whom was an exceedingly tall and flamboyant diva who wore shiny short-shorts and high heels. One of the girls asked the other, "Is that a dude?" and the diva strolled over, pulled open the waistband of the shorts and gave them a peek. They all burst out laughing.

    Apologies if I've told these here before... they're old stories. Didn't experience any weirdness in the subways when I was in NY recently, for some reason. First ride in NY, there was a classic woman who stands up and says in a loud voice "I want you all to know that I'm not crazy" and then proceeds to panhandle...

    there


By moonit on Saturday, August 11, 2007 - 12:07 am:

    oh yeah they have emo kids here. I must see if I can take photos.

    There is no escape. I like the one who wears the top hat. It makes me laugh


By Dr Pepper on Saturday, August 11, 2007 - 12:42 am:

    Heather, Blame it on my parent, cause, my parent raised me strange. Bwhahaha.
    Hey Nelly, are you from Memphis area?


By sarah on Saturday, August 11, 2007 - 11:37 am:


    i used to ride the bus when i lived in hawaii. it was the only place i've ever lived where public transportation was both convenient and reliable.


    nothing interesting ever happened on the bus there. generally people are too chill.


    often times there were older teenage boys riding the bus, alone, playing the ukulele. but that was nothing out of the ordinary really, except perhaps that the players were always teenage boys.



By agatha on Saturday, August 11, 2007 - 11:55 am:

    I don't recall you telling those stories before, Nelly, but I very much like them. I also like the image of teenaged boys playing the ukulele on the bus. You wouldn't see that here too often, although we get an occasional guitar strummer.

    I dreamed last night that I just discovered my mom has been having an affair for fifty years with a fiancee she had before she married my dad. Strange transference going on there somehow.


By heather on Saturday, August 11, 2007 - 03:31 pm:

    transference?


By agatha on Sunday, August 12, 2007 - 11:53 am:

    Well, my parents are really not doing well right now physically, so I think I'm creating some drama in my dream that is unrelated to their physical health. Or something. What do I know?


By heather on Monday, August 13, 2007 - 01:30 am:

    aw :(


By droopy on Monday, August 13, 2007 - 02:02 am:

    sorry to hear that, agatha.

    last night i dreamed about my grandfather, who's been dead for close to 15 years. he was a very gentle man and more of father to me than my father ever was, but in dream (which i can remember only in patches) he was angry with me or even hated me. i don't know what's going on in my brain.


By platypus on Monday, August 13, 2007 - 05:04 am:

    I dreamed last night that I cut my hand off and nailed it to someone's door. I'm not quite sure what the symbolism was there, though. Aren't you supposed to cut other people's hands off as a warning, not your own?

    I don't have any bus stories, really. I did share some donuts from Phil's with some French tourists on the California Street cable car once, though.


By Antigone on Monday, August 13, 2007 - 09:11 pm:

    Summer between my sophomore and junior year in college I took the bus from Dallas to San Francisco.

    At some point before Pueblo a pretty teenage girl got on and sat beside me. We chatted for a while, then she fell asleep and ended up snuggling up to me. She got off at Pueblo that morning and I managed to resist getting off the bus myself. :)

    Later in the trip I sat beside an old man. He told be about his time in prison and other tall tales. At one point I offered him some beef jerky. He took it and started slicing it up with his long, dirty fingernails. I was a bit embarrassed after realizing he hardly had any teeth left.


By Dr Pepper on Tuesday, August 14, 2007 - 01:09 am:

    Antigone, did your mother ever said not to talk to stranger?


By Antigone on Tuesday, August 14, 2007 - 02:54 am:

    Technically I should not reply to that question.


By Dr Pepper on Tuesday, August 14, 2007 - 03:10 am:

    :-)


By droopy on Sunday, March 9, 2008 - 06:28 pm:

    this happened to me on wednesday. i usually catch the #11 bus from my apartment complex over to the downtown bus station and then take the #7 from there to work. but on wednesday the #11 was one of the old elevator lift type of buses and the lift wasn't working that day. the driver yelled down: "i'll call the supervisor! it'll just be a few minutes!"

    so i waited at the stop for maybe ten minutes. then a minivan showed up; it had a ramp and i rolled in to the seatless back and the driver - gil - strapped me in. i told him about the #7, and since we couldn't get the bus to wait, he started trying to chase it down. but the 7 was hard to catch. by the time we were almost 3/4 of the way to my destination, he decided to just take me all the way.

    until he got a call on his walkie-talkie. it was a woman from dispatch.

    "gil, i've got mr. molina on the line and i can't understand him. can you talk to him?"

    gil is latino, and my assumption was that mr. molina needed someone who could speak spanish. but gil said, in english: "what's the problem, mr. molina?"

    mr. molina voice was garbled, and all i could hear was: "..er's a .uy o... an .... ot ca-ca! n .s ..oes! ca-ca!"

    "say again, mr molina?"

    "i .ot a .uy ..th .a-ca on ..s ..oes! shit!! .. -e -on't --t off!"

    "okay. what bus on you on today mr. molina? did you say number 4? 4? okay, were are you right now? say again? did you say hemphill mr. molina? did you you say hemphill? okay, i'll be there soon."

    gil called back the dispatcher and said, "this is gil. mr. molina's got a guy on his bus with, um, poop on his shoes." then he looked back at me and said, "it's always something."

    we were neck and neck with the 7 and gil motioned to the driver to stop at the next stop, which was only a few yards away, and i transfered over to the 7, which was driven by a woman with a raspy voice because of a sinus infection.

    i wonder if i could track down gil to find out how the "man with shit on his shoes" thing turned out. how much shit on person's shoes is enough to stop a bus? where did the shit come from?


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, March 9, 2008 - 08:26 pm:

    real funny, sound like someone is mentally illiness.


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, March 9, 2008 - 08:34 pm:


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, March 9, 2008 - 08:35 pm:


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, March 9, 2008 - 08:37 pm:


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, March 9, 2008 - 08:39 pm:


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, March 9, 2008 - 08:46 pm:


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, March 9, 2008 - 08:48 pm:


By blindswine on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 02:12 am:

    somebody should fly a plane into your ass.


By blindswine on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 02:13 am:

    like BOOM!


By blindswine on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 02:13 am:

    for real.


By Dr Pepper on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 07:25 am:

    Really? wow!


By heather on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 10:25 am:

    i like the bus stops

    today is my birthday

    nate's is not far off (shhhh)

    here's to believing that transformation exists and that this experience serves some purpose other than the one it is serving now. probably. probably not.


By Nate on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 11:18 am:

    and dave and swine, right?


By platypus on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 11:25 am:

    Happy birthday, Heather. I hope you get some neat presents.


By kazu on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 01:21 pm:

    Happy Birthday Heather!!!


By beta on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 03:55 pm:

    I originally read Platy's comment as "I hope you get some meat presents" and was dissapointed when I gave it a second look.

    Thought I would chime in to say that *I* hope you get some meat presents.


By platypus on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 04:17 pm:

    So it was you who subscribed me to the meat of the month club.


By semillama on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 04:31 pm:

    Happy birthday Heather!

    Droopy's story reminds me of the Rollins story about his homeless friend Paul aka Sky King, who among other things laid down this piece of wisdom: "I could've been a dancer but I could never get the shit off my shoes."


By droopy on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 06:03 pm:

    happy birthday heather. hope it's meaty beaty big and bouncy.

    that story reminded me of an expression an uncle of mine once used while describing his experience as a soldier in ww2: "i was scareder than any man who ever shit between a pair of army boots." apparently it's a common phrase where he comes from (the mississippi swamps) and usually ends with "a pair of shoes". the image being that you get so scared you take a dump and it falls down your pants legs and lands between your shoes. maybe that's what happened to the guy on the bus.


By swine on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 07:27 pm:

    have a good one, heather.

    mine's tomorrow.

    all power to the fish.


By Dr Pepper on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 09:08 pm:

    Happy Birthday to you!Heather! and many more....

    and for swine, I hoped your fish drown.....


By heather on Monday, March 10, 2008 - 11:23 pm:

    what's with the venom, pepper?

    i am one of the fish.


By Spider on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 - 03:09 pm:

    Happy birthday, Heather!

    I made this just for you.


By Dr Pepper on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 - 09:15 pm:

    lol spider!


By agatha on Wednesday, March 12, 2008 - 02:03 am:

    So adorable. Happy birthday, heather, and swine, and nate, and dave... are y'all aries?


By Nate on Wednesday, March 12, 2008 - 10:40 am:

    just dave and i.

    who is that, spider?


By Spider on Wednesday, March 12, 2008 - 10:57 am:

    That's me. With unusually bloodshot eyes.


By heather on Wednesday, March 12, 2008 - 11:03 am:

    having at least imagined that i have seen spider makes me giddy


By sarah on Wednesday, March 12, 2008 - 11:30 pm:


    first glimpse ever.




By Spider on Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 12:56 am:

    I was feeling generous. :)


By droopy on Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 01:02 am:

    only that picture could make me do this

    :)


By semillama on Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 12:40 pm:

    See, I told you guys Spider was a looker.

    I don't have a picture for you Heather, but How about a movie?


By agatha on Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 01:21 pm:

    Heh, I just saw that somewhere else. They were so proud of their movie! I wonder if they ever got another client.


By Spider on Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 01:29 pm:

    I tried to take a picture of the weird triangular rash that appeared on my neck this morning, but the camera won't pick it up.


By droopy on Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 01:35 pm:

    quiero mas fotografías de la araña, por favor.


By Spider on Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 03:34 pm:

    Sorry, dude. I have my cultivated air of mystery to maintain, you know.


By droopy on Thursday, March 13, 2008 - 03:41 pm:

    all right - 'tis enough, 'twill serve.

    for now.


By droopy on Thursday, May 15, 2008 - 04:56 pm:

    i was riding home from what i euphemistically call work yesterday. there were only two people on the bus: me in my wheelchair strapped in like luggage and a woman. we come to a bus stop where there is a disheveled guy pacing around the bench. the bus driver stops and opens the door. the guy looks at the bus for a second and then storms in, slams his money down on the machine, and then lunges at the bus driver. they grapple for a few seconds while the bus driver, who is a burly guy of about 50, struggles to undue is seatbelt. when the bus driver is free, he lunges back at the guy and they both go sailing out of the bus door and land on the sidewalk, the bus driver on top. the driver gets up, but the guy just lies there writhing a little. the driver stands over the guy for a few minutes, apparently to make sure that the guy isn't hurt too badly; then he calmly steps back into the bus and drives off. the woman and i both ask him how he is, and the driver says "fine." he said he was worried that the guy might have had a knife or something and that's why he had to get rough with him. the woman said, "well, that guy just about scared me to death!" the bus driver says, "lady, i've been driving a bus for 25 years - i've lasted that long because nothing surprises me anymore."

    i heard that the guy was still lying there when the bus came back an hour later.


By Dr Pepper on Friday, May 16, 2008 - 02:43 am:

    Wow. this was unheard of. Can't the driver call the police and wait til the police comes over?


By patrick on Friday, May 16, 2008 - 02:45 pm:

    Whats the point of that?

    The driver has a schedule to keep.


By patrick on Friday, May 16, 2008 - 02:57 pm:

    My commute is 42 or so miles (rnd trp). Thus I work from home on the days my daughter is with me as it would be impossible to do school and such a commute.

    On the three days a week I go to the office, I either drive or take the train/bus. Well, as you might recall, my 79 camaro ain't the most fuel efficient nor is the girl's f150 so as you can guess Im taking public transportation which comes to $5 for a day pass. It costs me $10 or more in gas to drive.

    The route I take, beginning with the above ground commuter rail brings all the suits to downtown from upity pasadena. on the train it is virtually quiet and everyone is reading a book or paper or working on their laptops.

    Once at union station i take the red line a couple stops and walk two blocks to catch the 333 crosstown bus. The particular corner I wait on...well its quite a transition from the aforementioned train. I've seen heroin deals go down right in front of me. Once on the bus, which takes about an hour Its like a mini tour through several different countries. Again, to contrast the aforementioned short train ride, im often the only white dude on the bus. we literally go through some of the poorest and more wealthy parts of town. my destination is venice.

    there's more to this. i've acquired quite a few bus journals over the last year. droop's post made me think of that.


By Dr Pepper on Saturday, May 17, 2008 - 11:06 pm:


By J on Sunday, May 18, 2008 - 02:08 am:

    And another one down and another one down.........


By J on Sunday, May 18, 2008 - 02:47 pm:

    another one rides the bus.


By J on Wednesday, May 21, 2008 - 03:19 am:

    If your going to ride...don't ride the white bus


By J on Tuesday, July 22, 2008 - 03:22 am:

    But wait,there's more

    Every day I get in the queue (Too much, Magic Bus)
    To get on the bus that takes me to you (Too much, Magic Bus)
    I'm so nervous, I just sit and smile (Too much, Magic Bus)
    You house is only another mile (Too much, Magic Bus)

    Thank you, driver, for getting me here (Too much, Magic Bus)
    You'll be an inspector, have no fear (Too much, Magic Bus)
    I don't want to cause no fuss (Too much, Magic Bus)
    But can I buy your Magic Bus? (Too much, Magic Bus)

    Nooooooooo!

    I don't care how much I pay (Too much, Magic Bus)
    I wanna drive my bus to my baby each day (Too much, Magic Bus)

    I want it, I want it, I want it, I want it ... (You can't have it!)
    Thruppence and sixpence every day
    Just to drive to my baby
    Thruppence and sixpence each day
    'Cause I drive my baby every way

    Magic Bus, Magic Bus, Magic Bus ...

    I said, now I've got my Magic Bus (Too much, Magic Bus)
    I said, now I've got my Magic Bus (Too much, Magic Bus)
    I drive my baby every way (Too much, Magic Bus)
    Each time I go a different way (Too much, Magic Bus)

    I want it, i want it, I want it, I want it ...

    Every day you'll see the dust (Too much, Magic Bus)
    As I drive my baby in my Magic Bus (Too much, Magic Bus)


By J on Tuesday, July 22, 2008 - 03:27 am:

    Just slip out the back, jack
    Make a new plan, stan
    You don't need to be coy, roy
    Just get yourself free
    Hop on the BUS, gus
    You don't need to discuss much
    Just drop off the key, lee
    And get yourself free

    heh


By Dr Pepper on Tuesday, July 22, 2008 - 03:50 am:

    BUS ! BUS ! BUS ! DA BUS!!!!


By sarah on Tuesday, July 22, 2008 - 11:50 pm:


    J, i {heart} you.




By droopy on Thursday, July 24, 2008 - 01:32 am:

    by my calculations, i've had 7 shots of vodka. but i need to record this.

    i'm on the bus this afternoon heading up summit street. we're coming up to the stop just before the "good news ministry" - a place where needy (by some definition) people can get donated food or clothes. three women are coming out of the ministry each carrying a bag or box of stuff. they are about a block away from the bus stop and the white woman starts waving frantically so the bus will stop. the driver stops, then starts pulling up to get closer to the three women so they don't have to run so far. the second the driver starts pulling forward, the white woman gets into to the street as if to stop the bus - she is yelling at the driver, she's not going to take shit.

    the driver lets all three women on. the white woman accuses the driver of almost leaving them and they get into an argument with shouting on the white woman's part. it takes maybe five minutes, but finally they white woman sits down near me. she is about 50 with hair dyed straw blond and topped with a cowboy hat.

    i had gotten on the bus with another woman who also sat near me. this woman and the obstreperous white woman immediately start talking like they know each other. i'm hard of hearing, but i don't hear well on a moving bus, and i only catch snatches of their conversation. it involved hermaphroditism and schizophrenia.

    went to work for the afternoon. glued an old piano stool back together, but i screwed it up and now it's wobbly. a young girl came in today and turned out to be the daughter of gus "bubba" gavrel who had been shot by famous texas murderer cullen davis. this came up because it turns out that my boss mickie had known both gavrel and davis back in the 70s when she was a jazz singer. she told us about the time she went to a party cullen davis threw on the colonial golf course (during a tournament) and he was playing the movie "deep throat".

    and i {heart} j, too.


By droopy on Thursday, July 24, 2008 - 02:36 am:

    katie gavrel. that was the girl's name.


By Dr Pepper on Thursday, July 24, 2008 - 02:38 am:

    Wow , another droppy's story! glad to hear it from him!


By Jenwren on Thursday, July 24, 2008 - 04:18 am:

    so i clicked on one of these links, and ended up finding a video called, "Kitten Loves Melon. Nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom. Nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom. Nom nom. Nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom."

    i didn't even watch the video. but i read the title, and i laughed, and laughed, and laughed.


By J on Saturday, August 2, 2008 - 04:04 am:

    Bus Stop
    Bus stop, wet day, she's there, I say
    Please share my umbrella
    Bus stop, bus goes, she stays, love grows
    Under my umbrella

    All that summer we enjoyed it
    Wind and rain and shine.
    That umbrella we employed it
    By August, she was mine

    Every morning I would see her waiting at the stop
    Sometimes she'd shop and she would show me what she'd bought
    Other people stared as if we were both quite insane

    Someday my name and hers are going to be the same

    That's the way the whole thing started
    Silly, but it's true
    Thinking of a sweet romance
    Beginning in a queue

    Came the sun the ice was melting
    No more sheltering now
    Nice to think that that umbrella
    Led me to a vow

    Every morning I would see her waiting at the stop
    Sometimes she'd shop and she would show me what she'd bought
    Other people stared as if we were both quite insane

    Someday my name and hers are going to be the same

    Bus stop, wet day, she's there, I say
    Please share my umbrella
    Bus stop, bus goes, she stays, love grows
    Under my umbrella

    All that summer we enjoyed it
    Wind and rain and shine
    That umbrella we employed it
    By August, she was mine

    Sarah,Droopy,I loves you too,I think this is the last bus song I can come up with.But never say never.


By Dr Pepper on Saturday, August 2, 2008 - 06:57 am:

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop at the transportation center
    on a nice warm, humid day.

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop where people are coming to hop on the bus, other are getting on one bus from another bus (tranfer).

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop is where alot of different kind of people. Such as Crazy , Mentally Illiness, Dope Heads, Handicapped, Senior Citizens, Blind with the aid of Dog, Homeless, and Businessmen/woman meets.

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop is a place where you are standing at the "Bus Stop" sign , waiting for the bus to stop and pick you up.

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop is a place where you can stay in a shelter glazing through a faded plexiglass scrawled with graffiti, looking at the bus schedule telling you what time will the bus stop at point.

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop is a area where the garbage can,newspaper stand, bicycle stand,traffic light stand,and telephone booth stand next to you.

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop is where people stare down the road waiting for their ride, when they see their bus in the distance, they immediately reach in their pocket or purse scrambling for their money and getting ready to hop on as the bus comes to near.

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop is also a place where people gets off, telling their driver " have a nice day" or cuss at the other people who are trying to get on the bus " fuck off bitch!, I am trying to get off the damn bus!"

    Bus Stop
    Bus Stop is where people often asking the bus driver for a direction or is the bus going on my route.


By droopy on Thursday, November 13, 2008 - 01:31 am:

    at the number 11 bus stop. there was a man sitting on the sidewalk, his head resting on his knees. his was facing away from me - toward the direction the bus would be coming from - so he didn't notice me when i rolled up behind him and stopped. he had a pair of traveling satchels with him.

    after half a minute he looks up at me and says "oh, hi! i didn't hear you roll up." we recognize each other immediately even though i don't think we've seen each other for a few years.

    "i ride a quiet machine," i say.

    "well, i was miles away. thinking about my dead wife. been gone a year now."

    i remembered his wife well. i knew she must have some kind of disease, because she was absolutely skeletal every time i saw her. she just looked like she was dying. the man looked the same: about sixty with shoulder-length scraggly hair and a scraggly beard, both mostly grey with bits of red. he used to wear a big leather cowboy hat no matter how hot it got, but this time he had a white straw cowboy hat on. his face was still leathery and his teeth were still bad. he was smoking hand-rolled cigarettes (tobacco ones).

    he told me he was heading up to the train station to catch a train to dallas for a court date. "it's an old one, from a few years back." i didn't ask what the case was for and he didn't volunteer any information. he started complaing about stains on his jeans.

    the bus came and we got on. as we rode, he stood next to me and talked. my hearing isn't perfect, and it's worse on a moving, clattering bus, but i caught bits of it. he'd had a couple of years of law school, so he'd beat this rap in five minutes. he once got himself out of jail by writing his own writs while his lawyer was out of vacation. then something about having been a teacher - something he always mentions. then i think he started to spin some tale about being in vietnam when we pulled up to the station. he headed for the train and i headed for my next bus.

    "was he just a liar? no, i don't think so. he was a survivor; his stories kept him going. stories were the only things the poor owned. a poor man, he gave himself a life. he filled the hole with many lives." (roddy doyle)



By Dr Pepper on Thursday, November 13, 2008 - 03:02 am:

    droopy, I feel sorry for him. you seems to be a good friend of him, does he have a job or what?


By Danielssss on Thursday, November 13, 2008 - 02:50 pm:

    another man on the bus. Outside Buchenwald, on a mid autumn day just as the snow began falling signalling a colder time.

    just another man on the bus.

    You're great Mr. Droopy. Roll on.


By Dr Pepper on Thursday, November 13, 2008 - 08:29 pm:

    Yeah roll on Mr Droopy, you could make a movie about bus stop, but we need a new title for the movie. You Rock! Oh, you could write a bedtime story for children, it will help alot of parent to make their children to go to sleep.


By droopy on Friday, November 14, 2008 - 01:21 am:

    i like that idea, doc. i can just the imagine the generation of paranoid (possibly fascist) kids resulting from bus stop bedtime stories.

    i don't think he has a job. he doesn't look too employable. he lives down the street from me in some houses across the street from a pet food factory. i'm pretty sure these houses, which are pretty isolated, are where they dump criminals who probably couldn't get another place to live. i know there's a sex offender there. so the story about his going to dallas for a court date i could believe.

    but he's a nice guy.


By Dr Pepper on Friday, November 14, 2008 - 02:24 am:

    How about a muisc for MTV? make a song for "Bus Stop". Rock it out and rock on!


By droopy on Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 01:02 am:

    got on the bus this morning and strapped myself into place. a black guy carrying a bible came on after me. he spent a couple of minutes talking to the bus driver, ms. romero: bless you, i'm feelin' fine today because of jesus, it's all about jesus, bless you. he sat in the back with some other guy and that got into a religious discussion. i could only hear patches of it. mostly it was lots of homilies and reciting long passages from the bible or famous sermons in a histrionic, charismatic preacher kind of way. when he got off the bus, his parts words to all of us were: it's all about jesus.

    when i got off work, i went over to the liquor store and bought a bottle of cheap jug wine. one of those short fat bottles of carlo rossi that i can manage to hide in my wheelchair bag. i saw the bus go by, so i knew i had ten minutes to get over to the bus stop by the pizza place before it came back around.

    there was already someone there waiting. he watched my as i crossed university street, which is a busy street. i had to stop in the middle and let cars pass before i could get all the way across. it was dark. when i got to the stop, he said, "that was a bold move! hell, i would've got up and stopped traffic for you!" i said it was all right, i did this ever week.

    it didn't take me long to figure out that he wasn't just convivial, he was drunk; pretty lit up, but not too bad. the oui lounge, a legendary bar, was just a couple of blocks away; i wondered if that's were he was coming from. it was only a little after 6pm. he told me he was from philadelphia but lived in fort lauderdale florida and was in fort worth to see the stock show and rodeo. i asked him if that's where he was going. he said, "where is it?" i said it was about a mile down university street and that's where the bus would be going. he shook his head.

    "what's that street with the bars and restaurants"

    "berry street?" i said. it was about 4 or 5 blocks down the road at the beginning of the college campus.

    "yeah yeah," he said. "where you going?"

    "downtown."

    "what's downtown?"

    "home. that's where i live."

    the bus came around the corner. i let the drunk guy get on first. the bus driver, who knows me, parked about two feet away from the curb to allow for the ramp he was going to have to lower. i let the drunk guy get on first; when he stood up, i noticed how unsteady he was. it was funny watching him trying to negotiate the gap trying to get on the bus. he looked guy at one of those funhouse attractions where the floor moves and you have to stomp around trying to keep your balane. the bus driver smiled at me. the drunk wandered up and down the bus a couple of times and finally sat down. the driver smiled at me and lowered the ramp.

    when i was on and the bus got going, the driver asked the drunk where he was going. he said, "downtown." oh fuck. luckily, he got off at the college campus and started walking toward berry street, presumably on a quest to find a bar that would let him in. good thing i didn't tell him there are bars downtown.

    the rest of the trip, the bus driver started talking about how he quit drinking. i told him that a bottle of whiskey had put me in a wheelchair (which is partly true) and i think it spared me from hearing all of his stories of misery and redemption.

    dr. pepper: there's already a song called "bus stop" by the hollies. "bust stop - wet day - she's there, i say 'please share my umbrella'....


By Dr Pepper on Tuesday, January 20, 2009 - 03:13 am:

    droopy, my grandfather, on my mother's side, he loved "honeymoon" starting with jackie gleason. when i was living in dallas short time after me , my mom, and my sister moved down. when my grandfather learned that they are to start "honeymoon" tv program, my grandfather shooked and exclaimed so excited that he couldn't believed that they are to run the show for the first time since some few decades ago. I find this acting very interesting. that guy(jackie gleason) is the same as my grandfather......

    if i remember one of the few line he said " we are talking about women and the bus, and behind me is alot of women". and i heard my grandfather chuckle and chorted. hahaha.


By droopy on Thursday, March 12, 2009 - 02:06 am:

    it was a 100% forecast for rain today. but it wasn't raining when i left my apartment to catch the bus for the afternoon shift at the shop. i carried my rain pancho on my lap.

    there was a new woman driving the bus from my apartment complex to the downtown station. i had to roll up the sidewalk and across the street for her to get into position to pick me up.

    when i got on the number 7 from downtown, it had started to rain. a man with of about 50 got on the bus after me and sat across from me. he was dressed old clothes and seemed nervous and confused. he'd fidget a lot and talk to himself. i tried not to look at him, but every so often i'd sneak a peek. i noticed that his hands had sores on them and a couple of his fingers were missing at the first knuckle.

    about 10 minutes into our bus trip he got and started walking around the open area of the front of the bus, where i was in my wheelchair held in place by straps. he was in distress. he turned and began walking toward me. he looked like one of the zombies in "night of the living dead." when he got to me he put his hand on my soldier and sort of leaned into me. i was a little scared and put my hand up to keep him from falling on me. the bus driver started yelling "sir! sir!". he came to himself and sat back down again. he said he was sorry, he had seizures. the driver asked him where he was going. he mumbled "mcclain middle school", which is the last stop on the line. the driver couldn't hear him and wanted him to come up to the front, but i just told her "he's going all the way to bluebonnet" and she went on. the man sat quietly for the rest of the trip, but still looked nervous and confused.

    when i got off at my stop, there was a medium but steady rain. i knew it was going to be raining pretty hard by the time i left, so i decided to get my liquor store shopping over first.

    i rolled a block over to bluebonnet liquor. i was wearing my rain pancho. it's not completely effective; it keeps most of the rain coming down off me, but my wheels pick up a lot of water and throw it up into the pancho and i get wet anyway.

    when i got to the liquor store, the only ramp onto the sidewalk had an ice truck backed onto it, unloading ice for the liquor store. i rolled over and looked at the two guys doing the unloading. i was going to ask them how long they would be and see if i could find a good spot to jump the curb. fortunately, the minute the driver saw me he said "sorry" and moved the truck.

    i bought a bottle of whiskey and went to the shop. there weren't many customers. i sorted hangers, labeled boxes and other fun shit. my boss said she couldn't join me at the thelonious monk festival this afternoon; she'd be in dallas. but she let me have a funky hat she couldn't sell.

    i left the shop during a pretty heavy rain. the bus that picked me up and a lot of water on the floor, and it made rivers of floating garbage.

    back at the downtown station i had to wait a half hour for the number 11 to take me back to my apartment complex. normally i roll myself home, but the rain was too bad.

    at my apartment complex i had to roll down a hill to get to my street. rolling a wheelchair in the rain is tricky business. the problem is that the wheels get so wet you can't control the speed with your hands - there's such a coating of water you can't get a good grip. hydroplaning, basically. you can't slow down, only come to a dead stop. if you're on a hill and start going too fast, it's pretty dangerous because coming to a dead stop could throw you out of the chair.

    but i learned to handle this long ago. i "lower" myself down the hill: ease each wheel down, alternating from one to the other.

    i was one soggy cripple when i got home, but i'd do it again.


By Dr Pepper on Thursday, March 12, 2009 - 02:37 am:

    droopy, I think that guy must of suffered trumatic experience, maybe maniac episode, and it is nice of the driver move the truck, so you can go into the liquor store. I had a few (minor) episode.


By droopy on Thursday, March 12, 2009 - 03:58 pm:

    i think the guy was probably epileptic or something like that.

    i'd like to hear about your few minor episodes.


By droopy on Friday, April 10, 2009 - 10:15 pm:

    this was my day yesterday.

    i was only a couple of minutes late leaving my apartment, but the eleven bus was 5 minutes early yesterday. as i was rolling up the hill, i saw it go by. normally, i would just wait for the next bus - one hour later - but i was feeling frisky yesterday and set off to roll myself across town to the central bus station.

    i set off on the sidewalk running parallel to 3rd street. after i get out of my apartment complex, i have to go under a train bridge. there's a sidewalk that runs under it, but about halfway through there's a slab of concrete that juts into the sidewalk. there's just barely enough space to fit my wheelchair around it. i usually just get on the road, but yesterday i thought i'd try. i made it, but was a centimeter away from dropping off the curb. i'm thinking that maybe one day i'll set a couple of cinder blocks next to the curb one day to allow more space.

    after i go under the train bridge, i have to travel 3 blocks uphill. it's not impossible, but it's still a bit grueling for someone who drinks as much as i do. at one point, i noticed a police car pass by and then slow down to watch my progress. but i kept going and he drove off.

    i get to the top of the hill on 3rd and then head was on jones st. toward the bus station. the next five blocks are downhill, so i just coast. when i hit 8th, there's no useable sidewalk; so i have to travel one block on the street. i'm heading into traffic on a one-way street. but i make it.

    at ninth i hit the bus station. the bus i planned to catch - the seven - was a bit late that day and i could see it pulling out. the driver, ms. romero, knows me and waved to me when she saw me. she pulled over and let me get on. behind me was another guy - a bald guy who walked with a cane. ms. romero said that two guys got lucky today.

    on summit st., at the bus stop near the "helping hand ministry" that gives free food to the needy, we pick up a guy. he's a black guy in his fifties. he has several bags of stuff with him, presumably from the helping hand. the driver asks him where he's going. everything he says he mumbles, so it's hard to understand him. but the word "downtown" was understood, the the driver told him to get off and wait for the other number 7 that would take him downtown. he didn't seem to understand what she was saying, so she finally let him sit down and ride the bus to wherever the hell it took him. he sat near me, just a little behind me. he gave me a stick of gum, which i mimed putting in my mouth.

    so i went to my job. my boss, who's been having having a lot of health problems lately, made an appearance at the shop.

    yesterday, the counties to west of fort worth caught fire. by the afternoon, the sky was gray with smoke. when i left the shop a 6pm, you could smell it. as i approached downtown on the bus, you could see the haze around the tall buildings.

    when i got to the bus station, i rolled myself home the same way i'd gotten there earlier. when i was on the road - and not the sidewalk - between 9th and 8th, i saw another guy in a wheelchair on the street with me; a black guy in a hospital wheelchair creeping along using his legs (some wheelchair users have enough strength in their legs to move themselves in a chair, but not stand).

    i got home and started drinking vodka.


By Dr Pepper on Friday, April 10, 2009 - 11:05 pm:

    droopy, there is fires going on betweek Oklahoma and Texas, a wildfire. i am not sure, but i do know the grass are dry enough for a smoldering matches to make a grass goes up in flames that goes "whoosh". One mistake with cigarette or match, surely enough to ignite the dry grass to spread the flames.


By droopy on Thursday, April 23, 2009 - 12:25 am:

    i'm on the number 11 going through the east side of downtown. it's on the outskirts where there usually very little traffic at all except for the occasional bus. maybe that's why i often see people run the light across that intersection; several times on the sam bus trip i've seen it happen, but the bus was far enough away not to be anything too dramatic. but today i had one of the closest calls i've ever had on a bus. we came to 6th street, the light was green, and we were just entering the interesection; suddenly a little red car came speeding by right in front of the bus. the driver let out a yell and slammed on the brakes. i saw the car disappear in front of the bus and come out the other side, swerving a little. (probably shaken to have just seen a massive bus about to broadside him or her). the driver (of the bus) looked shaken.

    i often think about what would happen if i was in a bus that actually had an accident. during the near-crash, i tried to brace myself for impact. my chair is tied down, but i'm not. i wonder how much of an impact it would take to throw me out of the chair and onto the pedestal/table thing feet in front of me. if there were and impact, would it damage my chair? i don't worry about it too much, but it's something to think about.

    of course, we're talking about a big ass bus hitting a little-bitty car. if it broadsided it squarely, there would probably just be a jolt i could brace myself for and the poor mangled car would be pushed down the street. of course, if the bus tried to swerve and then hit the car and thrown off course, all sorts of shit could happen.

    on the way back home, i picked up some gin and vermouth...just for a change of pace.


By Dr Pepper on Thursday, April 23, 2009 - 01:14 am:

    Well, if shit happens, it could be all over the news, and you could of be granted a interview with the local news tv station, and you can tell them about the "Bus Stop"story. Amazing! ,isn't it?


By patrick on Thursday, April 23, 2009 - 11:17 am:

    had a few close calls like that in LA on the bus.
    You just don't fuck with buses. You cant win.


By Dr Pepper on Friday, April 24, 2009 - 10:47 am:

    droopy, in illinois, you can't get off and go across the street in front of bus, and you can't make a right turn in front of bus.


By droopy on Wednesday, June 17, 2009 - 12:32 pm:

    yesterday i caught the number 11 to the downtown bus station. the driver was new, i'd never seem him before. just before we got to the station, he asked if i needed a bus held. i told him the 7. he called, but said that it had left already. he was genuinely regretful, and said "sorry man, sorry." but when i got off the bus, i saw the 7 in its spot, two lanes over from where i was. i'm fast in this chair, and tore off to it. he was letting one last passenger on. when i got there he was really embarassed. possibly even a little afraid that i might report him, which i wouldn't. i got on road just a few blocks up to main street to get a hair cut. in cooler weather, i would just roll up there for the exercise; but i didn't want shelton to have to deal with my sweaty scalp.


By droopy on Saturday, August 29, 2009 - 03:36 pm:

    yesterday i was catching the eleven up to the downtown bus/commuter train station. when i got on, i was across from a guy who looked maybe to be in his late 20s. he was dressed to impress in khakis, a leather belt, and a royal blue button down shirt. it all looked pressed and brand new. not long after the bus started up again, the young neatly dressed man started saying something that at first i didn't catch. i looked over at him. he looked at me and said "choo! choo!". he looked away from me and around at other people repeating "choo! choo!". he did it with a childlike sincerity. i assumed he was on his way to catch a train.


By agatha on Sunday, August 30, 2009 - 02:24 pm:

    Was he DD? Sounds like a gratifying moment.


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, August 30, 2009 - 04:37 pm:

    What do you mean "DD"?


By droopy on Sunday, August 30, 2009 - 04:50 pm:

    she means developmentally disabled (i assume). as in retarded. the guy on the bus probably was a bit dd. we were on on the bus together for maybe five minutes. there was a woman of about 40 sitting near him who seemed unphased by his choo-choos. she sat on her bay seat and did paperwork. she might have been a caregiver or someone like that.


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, August 30, 2009 - 07:32 pm:

    Uhmm, never heard of that words, but, I know someone who has for what we called "Learning Disabilty". B.T.W. I'm having a dr appointment on friday for another depression treatment, it is the cloudy that makes me depressed for the last 5 days last week in which makes my stomach cringe.


By Dr Pepper on Sunday, August 30, 2009 - 07:58 pm:

    Hey Mark!! What do you mean " In a couple of weeks"?


By Dr Pepper on Friday, September 18, 2009 - 11:52 pm:


By droopy on Wednesday, November 4, 2009 - 01:21 am:

    1. this was a month or so ago, and i can't remember all the details. got on the bus at the downtown station to head to the southside. while waiting for the bus to pull out, a young man (y.m.) got on. i thought he looked middle-eastern or indian: small and thin with dark olive skin, a hawk nose, and what i can only describe as an elvis haircut. he had on acid-wash jeans, a colorful button-down shirt, and i thing he was wearing patent leather boots.

    apparently he rode that bus frequently, because he immediately got into a conversation with the bus driver - a black guy of about 50. they started talking about the lottery; the y.m. had a plan for playing it, and spent our entire cross-town trip describing it to him.

    eventually we got to the college campus, where the bus picked a very cute young woman in a catering outfit. she had to walk between the y.m. and the bus driver; as soon as she was next to him, she asked the y.m.: "what language do you speak?". the y.m. was nonplussed, then said "bangla." (so he was from bangladesh.) the girl then said: "how do you say 'thank you very much,sir?'" he told her something, but i can't remember it now. she thanked him. as she was heading toward a seat he stopped her to explained variations and interesting points in the bangla language. two blocks down the bus stopped; the driver tapped the y.m. and said: "don't you get off here?" the y.m. smiled sheepishly and got off.

    2. at the downtown station again. i had missed one bus and had to wait 30 minutes to catch the next. it was cool, about 59. one bus terminal was a guy sitting on the ground leaning against one of the big brick posts. he was very thin - lanky. his skin was very black and, from a distance, the whites of his eyes seemed to float in a black field. he had a wool cap on his head from which cobweb-like wisps of year would spill out. his clothes where sizes to large and bunched around him like elephant skin. he wrapped himself in brand-new thrift store blanket - it was striped and the colors were bright. he wore old old flip-flops over very white socks. sometimes i thought he might be a woman, but i'll refer to him as a male.

    at first, he just sat there wrapped up facing the train tracks. then he got up, tore off the top of the nearby trash bin and started rifling through it. he tossed an entire hot dog bun (no meat, just bun) on the ground. he left it there and sat back down. he looked over at me with those floating white eyes, then looked away.

    a bus down the line pulled out. the man got, grabbed the hot dog bun and went to the edge of the sidewalk. as the bus passed, he held out the bun as if offering it. it was hard to tell if it was meant for the driver or the bus itself. either way, the bus rolled ungratefully by without accepting. angry, he tore the bun into pieces and through them on the sidewalk.

    it took a few minutes for the birds to show up: pigeons, grackles, and a few songbirds. after the feast, the birds wandered around making sure not a crumb was left. one pigeon made its way all the way over to me, stopping at my feet. i never noticed what fat bastards fort worth pigeons are.


By Danielssss on Wednesday, November 4, 2009 - 07:21 pm:

    Droop, how you doing on cutting back on the booze? I enjoy your stories so very much.

    I am envisioning a Dali-esque street corner in the middle of Fort Worth where a overswollen bun confronts a city bus and large fat bastard pigeons are strutting nearby feasting as if vultures hungry on helpless men caught with their wheels in sewer grates at the curb.

    Poledancers in the distance on-looking.


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