For a Good Cause -- Bill Forester
-- Story by Young Chang, photo by TKTTK
The kids call him Dr. Bill and the teachers call him “grandpa.”
He visits Orange Coast College’s Harry and Grace Steele Children’s
Center twice a week just to help out, and not through a formal volunteer
program. It’s just because he wants to have an effect on the children’s
future.
Bill Forester, who retired from a teaching career last year, said it
was the life-changing events of Sept. 11 that directly triggered him to
try to help the world in his one-person way.
“I thought to myself, I can’t do anything to save the world
individually, but maybe I could help to influence some children,” the
63-year-old grandfather of four said.
With two of his grandchildren enrolled at OCC’s center, which services
the children of its students, Forester started volunteering late last
September, doing everything from mop the floor to read to the children.
“The first thing I do is I ask the teachers if they have any
disgusting jobs that they’ve been putting off and need done,” he said. “I
like to see if I can help them out in that area. Quite often they say
‘no.”’
He wipes the tables after the children have eaten, cleans the floors,
sweeps and rakes the outside areas, cleans out the tempera paint pots and
puts things back on the top shelf -- on “the displays that are too high
for the ladies to reach.”
The most “disgusting” thing he can remember doing is cleaning out the
cubbies, which tend to collect all kinds of unwanted things. But Forester
was quick to add that no job at the center is ever really disgusting.
He also reads aloud to the children before they nap and earlier this
month, with Dr. Seuss’ birthday being March 2, he even dressed up as Cat
in the Hat.
Since young children tend to get scared of make-believe characters,
Forester started by wearing the big colorful hat for a few days. Then he
applied his makeup in front of everyone and put on his cat nose.
“They saw it was really me that transformed,” Forester said.
Sometimes he’ll help the kids ease into the center -- the ones who are
still attached to their parents and cry when they get dropped off.
“I kinda take them and distract them a little bit, then they start
leading me around with the finger and a few minutes later, they’re out
playing with the rest of them,” he said.
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