Sarah Jo Smith, Nowhere Man

 

 

 

 

Nowhere Man

 

Nowhere Man

I didn't know Wes. I haven't ever seen him in fact. I do

know of him, simply because the facts surrounding his life and death were related to me and made me wonder whether there was more to him. And now neither I, nor anyone else, will ever know what he was really like.

Famous people leave trails of documents so that their

admirers can truly know them. Their private diaries and

correspondences somehow become public property when they die, and their fans learn their innermost thoughts and feelings. It is almost as if these people anticipated their own fame, and helped it along by ensuring posthumous records which, in the very process of shedding mystery, make their lives more enigmatic.

But your average Joe, the guy you pass every morning on

your way to work, the person in front of you in the grocery line— these people live out their lives in silence, rarely give voice to their inner ramblings, and even if they do, nobody will ever know. It makes one wonder how many brilliant thoughts are lost for lack of anybody to share them with.

Wes was the type of guy you see every day, but never

notice. That is, until you don't see him for a while. And that's all

there is. I didn't see him every day, of course, only about twice a year, but the people he rode the bus with must have seen him every day, sometimes even shared a seat, sat next to him in the bar, worked next to him, and never really knew him. Nobody ever inquired about his life—because he had (presumably) nothing interesting to say—no kids to complain about, no grandkids to brag about, no house to bemoan the replacing of shingles and shutters, he was extraordinarily ordinary.

 

I must cross paths with people like Wes every day, and never really realize it. After hearing his story, though, I don’t think I’ll ever pass a stranger unwittingly again.

 

 

 

 

AddThis Social Bookmark Button