Some
folks don’t have company-provided parking near their places of employment. That’s
me. Or they simply dislike driving in city / commuter traffic. Also me. Some
can’t afford private transportation or can’t drive for a whole variety of
reasons. And some simply prefer the bus.
So, you
get this whole panoply of personalities, economic strata, histories and
futures. And as I said, it can be fun to watch.
What’s
even more amusing is watching the watchers. The way people react to the people
around them is a sociology lesson in real time.
There
are the private ones who want only to be left alone to the book of the week and
do everything they can to discourage human engagement. And on the other hand,
there are the ones who can’t wait to strike up a conversation about just about
anything.
There’s
the ‘crazy guy’ who always cuts the line but no one objects because it won’t
stop him, the drivers don’t care and he goes off on anyone he sees as usurping
his right to be first. We all just try not to be the one sitting next to him
when he starts railing against the world. You can tell the bus-riding newbies
because they appear so delighted at finding an open seat on a
standing-room-only coach. Nobody makes that mistake twice. He watches for
someone to run afoul of his world view and then launches an attack that is
quite alarming until you’ve seen his schtick a few times and come to realize he
is literally all bark.
There
are the guys who stare at girls and the girls who try not to be caught staring
at guys. Leerers come in both genders, although the approach is different.
Folks
become ‘bus buddies’ over time, learning each other’s routes and enough about
their jobs and families to provide a sort of community of the 554 / 8:10. I
have bus buddies and we all watch each other for the opportunity to engage and
then to disengage after a moment’s easy conversation (pulling out the book or
unravelling the ear buds being the primary coded signals we use).
Among
the watchers the most interesting to me are the ones I like to think of as the
Normative Police. These are the folks whose idea of how the world works and our
places in it are so secure that they feel comfortable assuming the judicial
role within the public transit microcosm.
On the
old 210, there was a woman among the regulars whose judgment regarding each
person boarding ‘her’ bus was so clearly etched on her face that folks who didn’t
measure up sometimes found it insulting. In the time it took for a rider to
enter the bus, scan their pass and walk the few paces required to pass her
inspection station, she could size up, adjudicate and consign to the nether
regions anyone who failed to measure up to her standards. One of my bus buddies
took to calling her Big Nurse behind her back. She caught Marsha once but only
looked confused. I don’t think she’s read much Ken Kesey.
On the
212, there is a guy who reminds me of the character Pigpen in the Charley Brown
cartoons. Only instead of dust, this guy moves through the world in a cloud of ‘should.’
If bus riders actually had thought balloons over their heads, his would be infilled
with a dark gray. Pretty much no one measures up, if his jutting lower lip and
furrowed brow are any indication. I don’t believe in all the times I’ve shared
a ride with him (three years on this route, times maybe twice each week – you do
the math) I don’t believe I’ve ever seen him smile or heard him utter a
pleasant greeting or comment. If not for the fact that he tends to make
business calls loudly and at length, I might have assumed he was mute. But his
facial expressions tell the tale.
I love
riding the bus for the community it provides. For a writer, it’s a motorized collection
of writing prompts.