Those ridiculous people with their talking machines
ROBERT GARDNER
There used to be a certain kind of person who lived in our
communities. This was a person who wasn’t in contact with the same
reality as the rest of us but who was no danger to those around him.
Such people lived with their families, who kept them neatly bathed
and groomed and didn’t restrict their activities but let them be part
of the neighborhood.
Thus you could walk around Balboa Island and see a grown man
perched on a fence or the sea wall, flapping his arms and making
cooing sounds. This man thought he was a bird. What kind of bird I
don’t know. Presumably not a sparrow or a hummingbird. More like a
crane or an egret -- a large bird. He would sit on his perch,
flapping his arms and then he’d take off. I don’t mean he flew, of
course. He would jump off his perch and run awkwardly up the
sidewalk, arms flapping while he emitted a squawking sound. This was
disconcerting or amusing, depending on your perspective, but
relatively harmless unless you were a small child for whom it could
be rather terrifying to see this grown-up galumphing toward you,
screeching at the top of his voice. I don’t know whether parents
complained or he got carried away and tried to peck someone, but the
bird man eventually disappeared.
The bird man was rather unique. It was much more common to see a
person who talked to people only he or she could see. In Corona del
Mar, there was a woman who would walk up and down Coast Highway
carrying on the most animated conversations. You’d see her speaking,
gesturing, and then she’d stop and listen for her invisible
companion’s response. If you happened to be standing next to her, you
found yourself listening for the response as well, so real was the
world she had created for herself. Her conversations were energetic,
but not angry. Whoever the companions she had invented for herself,
she seemed to have an amiable relationship with them.
Then there was a change. If you saw someone talking to himself, he
wasn’t neatly dressed. He certainly wasn’t bathed. His hair was long
and unkempt, his clothes tattered and dirty. His conversations were
often rants, and he didn’t look that harmless. These people hadn’t
seen their families for years. The era of the homeless had arrived.
They weren’t all violent. In fact, the vast majority weren’t, but
they all looked like they could be. You didn’t feel like you wanted
to be part of any conversation they were having.
And then there was another change. Or so I thought. In the last
year or two, I noticed a whole new group of people walking the
streets, talking to themselves. Once again, they were neatly groomed
and dressed, in fact quite fashionably so. Clearly, their families
were outdoing themselves to support these afflicted members of their
clan. I was so impressed with this new trend I felt compelled to
comment on it to my daughter, who just stared at me. It was one of
those looks that makes you check your fly to see if it’s open, check
your shirt to see if you missed your mouth with the soup you had for
lunch, wonder if maybe you’ve been talking to yourself a little too
loudly.
“What?” I asked, having ascertained that I wasn’t guilty of at
least two of the three.
“Those people are talking on the phone,” she told me.
“Oh, no,” I assured her. “They weren’t holding a hand up to their
ear.”
Then she explained that they have these phone devices -- you
basically don’t need the phone. You have this little thing you talk
into, an earpiece as a receiver and you can chat away wherever you
are. This is supposed to be a great triumph of technology. To someone
who hates the telephone, it sounds like technology gone awry, but my
real concern is -- with all these people walking around looking like
they’re talking to imaginary people, how are we going to know who’s
crazy and who’s not?
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.