Busting Down The Walls

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
193
63
Nakusp, BC
Busting Down The Walls
One day a friend and I were walking down University Street In Montreal. As we approached Sherbrooke Avenue we saw about forty people standing on the corner waiting for the light to change. A commotion at the centre of the crowd caught our attention. As we drew closer we recognized a familiar bag lady pushing her face into the face of each individual around her, one at a time, and sticking out her dentures and clacking them at these harried commuters.
These people were moving back away from her, recoiling in horror. The rush hour traffic on the street was very heavy and it was difficult to move away without stepping into an oncoming vehicle or forcing someone else to do so. Soon she found herself standing in a small clearing at the centre of the crowd.
Now I must explain her attire. She had on one of those Swiss alpine-type green felt hats with feathers in them, pixie boots with curled-up pointy toes and about forty ragged skirts that were so holey and shredded it took that many to give adequate coverage. At this point she gathered up the hems of her skirts, hoisted them up over her head and began performing some suggestive pelvic tilts while shouting, “Doesn’t anybody **** anymore?!!”
Several people risked being killed by jumping off the sidewalk into the traffic while a few others were almost trampled into the pavement as others tried to run away down the sidewalk. My friend and I fell into the grass in a fit of hysterical laughter.
Now, here was a lonely old lady, rejected by society and vice versa, who, in an act of desperation and a lapse of social grace, was reaching out to a crowd of strangers for a little attention and social comment. There was a group of commuters, who were probably strangers to themselves, being shocked back to reality in a most bizarre manner. They recoiled from a person who was being completely honest and real. Sure her methods were a little unorthodox, to say the least, but she was reaching out to touch someone and without a telephone at that, only to find there was nobody home.
I often think of this lady and my friend, who is no longer among us, and the implications of that day. Too often we are stuck inside our shells, silently screaming in our isolation. Locked behind our protective walls, we wonder why our spouses ask “Why don’t you talk to me anymore?” Most of us walk a fine line between being lost and alone behind those walls and trying to be ‘normal’, somehow managing to, at least to some degree, function in the outside world. How did we get here and where do we go from here?
The last time I saw that woman was in a laundromat washing two garbage bags full of used Kleenex. She approached my friend and asked him to walk her home because the children on her street taunted her and threw stuff at her. He walked her home.
I shied away. I couldn’t face that part of myself. I have regretted it ever since.
My friend used to say, “Life is but a joke and the joke is on you”. One day he couldn’t take the joke anymore and died of an overdose of cocaine. I ran away from the city and hid in the woods, near Quesnel, for ten years.
It seems most of us live lives of quiet desperation. We become comfortably numb to the suffering around us. The space that separates us from the next person is filled with walls of our own making. There is a very fine line separating us from that bag lady. “But for the grace of God go all of us.”
As a society, we have become soulless, spiritless automatons consuming mountains of material goods trying to fill the emptiness we feel inside. I doubt this was the intention of the Creative Force that caused all this magnificent beauty we call Earth to come into being. Our civilization is destroying that beauty and replacing it with plastic, concrete and pavement. It may be time to become uncivilized. Free the Earth of our civilized bonds. Free ourselves of those same bonds because those ribbons of highway, those fences and walls by which we have bound the Earth are the same as the chains with which we have imprisoned our souls.
Awaken to your freedom and TEAR DOWN THE WALLS.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Busting Down The Walls
One day a friend and I were walking down University Street In Montreal. As we approached Sherbrooke Avenue we saw about forty people standing on the corner waiting for the light to change. A commotion at the centre of the crowd caught our attention. As we drew closer we recognized a familiar bag lady pushing her face into the face of each individual around her, one at a time, and sticking out her dentures and clacking them at these harried commuters.
These people were moving back away from her, recoiling in horror. The rush hour traffic on the street was very heavy and it was difficult to move away without stepping into an oncoming vehicle or forcing someone else to do so. Soon she found herself standing in a small clearing at the centre of the crowd.
Now I must explain her attire. She had on one of those Swiss alpine-type green felt hats with feathers in them, pixie boots with curled-up pointy toes and about forty ragged skirts that were so holey and shredded it took that many to give adequate coverage. At this point she gathered up the hems of her skirts, hoisted them up over her head and began performing some suggestive pelvic tilts while shouting, “Doesn’t anybody **** anymore?!!”
Several people risked being killed by jumping off the sidewalk into the traffic while a few others were almost trampled into the pavement as others tried to run away down the sidewalk. My friend and I fell into the grass in a fit of hysterical laughter.
Now, here was a lonely old lady, rejected by society and vice versa, who, in an act of desperation and a lapse of social grace, was reaching out to a crowd of strangers for a little attention and social comment. There was a group of commuters, who were probably strangers to themselves, being shocked back to reality in a most bizarre manner. They recoiled from a person who was being completely honest and real. Sure her methods were a little unorthodox, to say the least, but she was reaching out to touch someone and without a telephone at that, only to find there was nobody home.
I often think of this lady and my friend, who is no longer among us, and the implications of that day. Too often we are stuck inside our shells, silently screaming in our isolation. Locked behind our protective walls, we wonder why our spouses ask “Why don’t you talk to me anymore?” Most of us walk a fine line between being lost and alone behind those walls and trying to be ‘normal’, somehow managing to, at least to some degree, function in the outside world. How did we get here and where do we go from here?
The last time I saw that woman was in a laundromat washing two garbage bags full of used Kleenex. She approached my friend and asked him to walk her home because the children on her street taunted her and threw stuff at her. He walked her home.
I shied away. I couldn’t face that part of myself. I have regretted it ever since.
My friend used to say, “Life is but a joke and the joke is on you”. One day he couldn’t take the joke anymore and died of an overdose of cocaine. I ran away from the city and hid in the woods, near Quesnel, for ten years.
It seems most of us live lives of quiet desperation. We become comfortably numb to the suffering around us. The space that separates us from the next person is filled with walls of our own making. There is a very fine line separating us from that bag lady. “But for the grace of God go all of us.”
As a society, we have become soulless, spiritless automatons consuming mountains of material goods trying to fill the emptiness we feel inside. I doubt this was the intention of the Creative Force that caused all this magnificent beauty we call Earth to come into being. Our civilization is destroying that beauty and replacing it with plastic, concrete and pavement. It may be time to become uncivilized. Free the Earth of our civilized bonds. Free ourselves of those same bonds because those ribbons of highway, those fences and walls by which we have bound the Earth are the same as the chains with which we have imprisoned our souls.
Awaken to your freedom and TEAR DOWN THE WALLS.


You mistake organization for civilization I think.
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
8
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Sorry.

Fake news.

I come from Montreal ...

One day a friend and I were walking down University Street In Montreal. As we approached Sherbrooke Avenue we saw about forty people standing on the corner waiting for the light to change. A

.... and NO ONE (except for tourists from Ontario) would ever wait at a street corner for a light.

Besides, crossing at a cross walk there is a suicidal thing to do, even if the light is on your favour.
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
193
63
Nakusp, BC
Sorry.

Fake news.

I come from Montreal ...

One day a friend and I were walking down University Street In Montreal. As we approached Sherbrooke Avenue we saw about forty people standing on the corner waiting for the light to change. A

.... and NO ONE (except for tourists from Ontario) would ever wait at a street corner for a light.

Besides, crossing at a cross walk there is a suicidal thing to do, even if the light is on your favour.


This happened in the late 60s. Rush hour on Sherbrooke was bumper to bumper going at break neck speeds. We were on the corner just outside McGill University campus. Yes, crossing the road anywhere at the time was suicidal.
I was born in Verdun in '46, left there in '72. Maybe things changed after the Pepsis revolted in '73.
 
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Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
8
36
This happened in the late 60s. Rush hour on Sherbrooke was bumper to bumper going at break neck speeds. We were on the corner just outside McGill University campus. Yes, crossing the road anywhere at the time was suicidal.
I was born in Verdun in '46, left there in '72. Maybe things changed after the Pepsis revolted in '73.
I had a friend who was hit crossing at a crosswalk on St. Catherines downtown (Peel-Mountain +-),with the light who was sent ass over teakettle until she landed with a bad brain stem injury. We were told that, at best, recovery from that sort of injury was 1 in 10. Amazingly, she came out of the coma after nine months more-or-less herself (the "sparkle had left here eyes but she was a functioning person, anyway).

This happened about three-four years after you left. What we learned from this was to NO WAY trust the traffic code and just cross when one deems it to be safe. J Walking is a foreign term, anyway and you do what you have to do to survive in a city with 409s roaring by with shag carpet on the outside of the car.

Tabarrrr...
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
8
36
This happened in the late 60s. Rush hour on Sherbrooke was bumper to bumper going at break neck speeds. We were on the corner just outside McGill University campus. Yes, crossing the road anywhere at the time was suicidal.
I was born in Verdun in '46, left there in '72. Maybe things changed after the Pepsis revolted in '73.
I was born just across the street in that great Gothic castle looming over the McGill Campus.
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
193
63
Nakusp, BC
I had a friend who was hit crossing at a crosswalk on St. Catherines downtown (Peel-Mountain +-),with the light who was sent ass over teakettle until she landed with a bad brain stem injury. We were told that, at best, recovery from that sort of injury was 1 in 10. Amazingly, she came out of the coma after nine months more-or-less herself (the "sparkle had left here eyes but she was a functioning person, anyway).

This happened about three-four years after you left. What we learned from this was to NO WAY trust the traffic code and just cross when one deems it to be safe. J Walking is a foreign term, anyway and you do what you have to do to survive in a city with 409s roaring by with shag carpet on the outside of the car.

Tabarrrr...
I used to tell anyone who asked where I was from, "Canada's largest insane asylum, Montreal". I hear Toronto is now.
I was born in the Verdun General but we lived in Crawford Park. Our backyard fence was the 8 foot fence that separated our property from the Douglas Hospital for the Insane, which, I believe, was the largest nut house in Canada at the time.


"And they think I'm mad, Balderdash and Folderol, remember them?"
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
8
36
I used to tell anyone who asked where I was from, "Canada's largest insane asylum, Montreal". I hear Toronto is now.
I was born in the Verdun General but we lived in Crawford Park. Our backyard fence was the 8 foot fence that separated our property from the Douglas Hospital for the Insane, which, I believe, was the largest nut house in Canada at the time.
"And they think I'm mad, Balderdash and Folderol, remember them?"
Do you remember when that whole block of housing blew up in Verdun?

Sorry. That was in LaSalle.
 
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DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
After I worked for the pipeline company in Petrolia in the fall of '75 when the mill was shut down for several months, I got transferred to Rigaud Quebec for the winter.
Since no one ever got hurt on pay-day the boss would send me in the ambulance to get the payroll cheques in montreal.
You can bet those revolving lights came in handy driving among Quebeckers !
And I had to learn to drive just like them.


But Toronto is not much better especially with impatient drivers leaning on the horn, if you're a split second late taking off on a green light..............
 

Curious Cdn

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 22, 2015
37,070
8
36
After I worked for the pipeline company in Petrolia in the fall of '75 when the mill was shut down for several months, I got transferred to Rigaud Quebec for the winter.
Since no one ever got hurt on pay-day the boss would send me in the ambulance to get the payroll cheques in montreal.
You can bet those revolving lights came in handy driving among Quebeckers !
And I had to learn to drive just like them.
But Toronto is not much better especially with impatient drivers leaning on the horn, if you're a split second late taking off on a green light..............
I was driving through Rigaud just about every weekend, at that time going between Ste Anne de Bellevue and Alexandria, where my girlfriend's family had an old farmstead.