Lisa Spear, principal social welfare examiner for Jefferson County Department of Social Services stopped to talk with him on Wednesday morning. She said she deals with a variety of mental illnesses and people who suffer from them, but has never experienced anyone like Mr. Nefer. “This is definitely one of the very oddest things I’ve ever come across but he seems very happy,” she said.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgm16HhmA-P5jwYQDFTLFg-nQPJ8U_-ZajiymruQfpkkLgtp4yKbhBSwbb9i25d2EL4Ci1P-jfHLB1cLT5O6Kck93UQK4BCfrTAOcc_NxnOllYfUjWpElL56jlWT8o7Vh2sxZA7LvxcCKs/s400/Mannequin+in+wheelchair+man.jpg)
“I wouldn’t classify him as dangerous at all. He seemed quite happy in his own little world.” Mr. Nefer said he was born in Syracuse and in the 1980’s spent some time at the Children’s Home in Watertown, where he said he met “Teagan” when she was just a head. He said he built a body for the mannequin and the two were married Oct. 31, 1986, in California.
They are travelling to the former Children’s Home on State Street, where the two met, he said. Mr. Nefer said he has not been back to Watertown since 1988. Ms. Spear said she heard he may have been married to a human but that his wife had died. “I’m not sure if this is his way of dealing with the death or that this is some way of coping with PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder),” she said. “But he seemed sincere.”
No comments:
Post a Comment