I am not a people-watcher. That gene skipped right over me. I think I
got the smartA$$ gene instead. That's what Hick thinks, anyway. Not so
much the lack of people-watch-itude, but the bonus of the other. My mom
LOVES to people-watch. Ever since I was a kid, she has declared her love
of this pastime. I think she used to park on Main Street when I was a
kid, just to watch the world go by. It was either that, or watch the
Not-Heaven's Angels when they parked their hogs outside the laundromat
and took off their clothes to wash them. They were not a leather crowd.
Today
I went to give some blood at the doctor's office lab. I could have
recorded this visit and made a good bit of 44 oz. Diet Coke money
selling the DVD. Here. I'll let you live vicariously through me. Because
that's the kind of gal I am.
My doctor dwells on the
fourth floor of a doctor's building that is attached to a hospital.
Parking is sometimes in short supply, but I got a decent spot at 8:15
a.m. Coming from the other side of the circular drive was a chubby
little boy and his obviously-genetically-related mother. They were a bit
ahead of me, and went in first. I was kind of lollygagging, having not
been there since last November, looking around at how they'd finished
off their new ER wing, and pondering the big Blood Drive Today sign over
the main entrance. I was hoping my blood would reach its intended
destination.
There are two elevators. Without thinking,
I knew Li'l Chubby and his not-so-li'l mom got on the left one. Imagine
my surprise when I heard, "Here you go!" Li'l Chubby was holding that
door open with his pudgy doughboy arm. He was the cutest thing, about
five years old, with a bit of light-brown stubble on his buzzcut head.
What a chivalrous little guy! I wondered if he knew that dude who let me
go ahead of him in the gas station chicken line.
I stepped in and announced, "Thank you. I'm going to the fourth floor." Li'l Chubby controlled the panel.
"Oh,
so are we," said his mother. Li'l Chubby did a little kid tap dance,
without sound, in sandals. He must have been headed for a checkup, not a
sick call. The doors opened and we walked toward the reception desk.
"Oops! We're on the wrong floor." I think she saw a sign that had been
set up about Suite D and Suite E. Whatever that was. "Come on. We can
take the stairs down one floor. Do you want to take the stairs?" Li'l
Chubby was all for it. No sooner had they passed through the stairwell
door than an announcement came out of the ceiling:
"All doors will now close without warning. Repeating, doors will close for a test of the fire system."
Poor
Li'l Chubby! I was worried that they would get trapped in the
stairwell. Very few people use those stairs. The doors are always
closed, though they're marked for use in case of fire. A smocked lady
came up to the door by the reception office, and had to punch in a
number code to get it open. Funny how they were testing the fire system,
but let the elevators keep running.
So many people to
watch, so lengthy a blog post! I'll expose more medical building
denizens tomorrow...but in case you're wondering, I never saw Li'l
Chubby again! I'm sure he was fine. He looked like a kid who would
whistle in the dark, and tap dance in a locked stairwell. He would
probably hold the door open for the firefighter who rescued him.
This chubby little boy sounds like quite a character.
ReplyDeleteStephen,
ReplyDeleteYou know how sometimes, you can look at a kid and see that he's a little stinker? That was NOT Li'l Chubby. He was the type to grab life by the horns and suck out the marrow.