On the day before Thanksgiving, Larry Bauer-Scandin sat alone in his wheelchair in the bedroom of his apartment in an assisted-living complex in Maplewood. Alone, but in a way, surrounded by family.
Pictures lined the walls in neat rows, dozens of photos in matching frames of the ones he calls "my kids."
Bauer-Scandin is legally blind, and his motor functions are weak and erratic from some still uncertain nervous-system disorder, a disease that has put him at Ecumen Seasons of Maplewood facility, though he's only 66.
He takes a laser pointer and fixes it on a skinny kid with a wary smile.
"This one, his mother and boyfriend rented him out at night to the bar crowd," Bauer-Scandin said bluntly.
"He would come to my room at night and complain of a toothache or something. That would be my signal to pick him up and take him to the rocker and rock him until he could sleep."
Bauer-Scandin put the laser on another boy. "He committed suicide about three years ago."
Then onto another photo.