As I was visiting Ossington Ave on Friday, October 29 in Downtown Toronto, I was observing the everyday life of the people in Toronto; the people are very different if you were to compared them with people from other cities of Ontario. The people in other cities are more quiet, they like to keep to them selves, they're not sociable to one another, which cause them to be quite rude. Where as the people in Downtown Toronto are more sociable, multicultural, and diverse in their own style and attitude. Surprisingly, the people in Brampton, Hamilton, Caledon etc. lack all of these things which makes Toronto as one of the best place to be!
The people over their are fun! You have people who dress their dogs, who wear color-dye in their hair, who have a comfortable aurora to be around. They are people who are not scared of expressing their cultures and their selves. There are a lot of people down in Downtown Toronto with different personalities, which is quite easy to adapt down there!
Downtown Toronto has so many homeless people that the homeless people actually prefer to live on the streets rather than having their own homes to live in. When I was down there I noticed something important, that know matter how homeless a person is or how unpleasant the person may look, homeless people are quite intelligent people; despite not taking care of themselves, they have talent. This one guy who I met was homeless, and he was a poet! He was creating poems out of thin air, like when a seagull blasts off for people food. When I heard his poem I was, I thought "Man I gotta give this man something", so my group members and I gave him $4.00.
I also took a picture of him. Here He Is:
Homeless people in general taught me a valuable lesson that everyone should know by now! Don't judge a book by its' cover, because you don't know what your up against. But Wayne Deyer said it better himself, and I quote, "When you judge another, you do not define them, you define yourself." Now that is what you call Karma...Lol
Thank You....And God Bless!
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
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