Saturday 4 May 2013

Every town should have one

Ours is called Pete (not his real name, so he isn't called Pete, but you know what I mean) and he lives very near us.

Pete is...odd. He cannot engage in a conversation, but will direct monologues at unuspecting passers-by if they're unwise enough to establish eye contact. He is like the Ancient Mariner with the wedding guest. And once you've been pinned down, you cannot get away.

Pete is a great upholder of the law. He wages a war against people who park in the wrong place, drive badly, allow their dogs to mess the pavements (this is a great favourite) and in general do anything that falls short of blameless.

He is often hard to understand, so eager is he to get his message across, and his diatribes come across a bit like this:

"blah ** DOG MESS!!..blah .. humph!...dog mess...mind out!!..blah**" etc etc.

 At least you are left in no dout as to where the offending faecal deposit has come to rest (on a pavement somewhere near you, usually).

One day, he was particularly agitated, and I stopped to listen to him.

Pete: WINDOW WON'T SHUT!... blah blah... draught! ...blah...told landlord...HASNT' HAD IT FIXED!!!
Me: well, Pete, you're a carpenter (he is). I'm sure you could fix it yourself, couldn't you?
Pete (shocked): but it's my day off!

One other flaw in this argument (apart from the obvious) is that Pete hasn't got a job.

I am quite fond of Pete. I like characters and unusual people. I often wonder whether Pete is unhappy or lonely, but I suspect he's a lot happier than most of us. A neighbour once phoned me because she thought he "should be put away", and I was appalled.

The world would be a poorer place without its Petes.

14 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Thank you, Libby, but I think it helped to have a mad mother!

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  2. He doesn't harm anyone, does he? Therefore, why should he be "put away"? That neighbour of yours is very narrow-minded. Besides, "Pete" is right - people really should be a bit more considerate towards others when it comes to parking, driving, having their dogs make the town on big public toilet, and so on. And about the window - if it really was his day off... :-D

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    1. I meant "...make the town one big public toilet". Not the first time that I wish we could edit the typos we make in our comments.

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    2. The neighbour has...er... a low toleranc level, Meike!

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  3. I rather suspect I might be our town's Pete. I can hold a reasonable conversation, but I do carry planks of wood down the main road and cycle about towing trailer loads of horse manure all the while trying to remember what the voices in my head said so I can note it down before I forget.

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    1. Patsy, I think you have to be unaware of your eccentricity to be a true eccentric - but you're well on the way!

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  4. Our village in Cornwall had "Tommy the Post", who delivered mail (mostly) in a meandering path. Traffic, on the one road in the village, would halt as he circled three times on his bicycle, before moving along. So I guess our "Pete" had a job and a uniform.

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    1. Oh, Pete has a uniform all right! He wears a fluorescent jacket, and if given half a chance, can be found trying to direct traffic.

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  5. Ah, agree with you there, Frances - we need our characters and eccentrics :-) x

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  6. We had a lovely guy who worked as a volunteer at the nature reserve where I was Education Officer. He spent all day moving pieces of the reserve (fallen branches etc) from one part of the reserve to the other. (He had autism). He was happy doing this and became just part of the scene. I sometimes wonder what happened to him.

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    1. I think if you're happy in what you do, and it does no harm, then why not? I mean, (my) blogging is hardly productive...

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  7. Oh I do like the sound of Pete - it's good to have someone unafraid to keep everyone right!

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