The Regular There was an old woman at the stop where I get on the bus this morning. She has been there for the past few days. I realized, to her, I am a "regular." I'm there every morning. And because I was there the first day that she was there, I'm a regular. The big guy with the dress pants and backpack showed up. He's a regular, too. He comes every morning, goes into the gas station to get change for the bus, the gets on after me. I'm a nice guy. I let the old lady get on first. As I walk down the aisle, there's the old caballero with the cowboy hat talking in Spanish to the older woman who sits facing the "disabled" bench seat. I don't know what he talks about. First, my Spanish is atrocious. Second, I'm wearing headphones and listening to Pink Floyd. I watch him. He smiles, and she laughs, then they continue talking. He's a regular, and so is she. On the other side, across the aisle, sits the man in his twenties who talks to the mother of a teen daughter. The man is talking to the woman, but staring at her daughter. The daughter is staring at her cell phone. All three of them are regulars. About half way to my stop, the short woman who wears a hotel uniform gets on. I hate to stereotype, but I think she's with the cleaning staff. She's always smiling, and I wonder why. She seems like a nice lady. I'd like to say hi to her sometime, but I'm on the spectrum, and I don't really want to do that. Too many barriers. Vaseline man gets on, and he smells bad. Everyone visibly covers their noses, but they are trying to be polite about it. I use hand sanitizer on my hands, then put my hands to my nose. It works well. Vaseline man has become a regular. I get to my stop, right in front of Yummy Donut. A mother comes in with her three children. The oldest is probably twelve and is clearly very effeminate and probably gay. Mom corrects one of his over gestures, hoping against the tide I think. The youngest sees me with my hands folded to my face as if I'm praying, but I'm only watching. The kid smiles at me and folds his hands in the same gesture, bowing as if we are two monks greeting each other. The backup singer from OKGO comes in. He's a regular. He gets coffee. I studied complex dynamics in school because I thrive on chaos and seeming randomness. Yet, I realized this morning, I have become a regular. I'm depressed.