A member of the
family
By
Cathy Brauner/ Wellesley (MA) Townsman Staff
Thursday, July 28, 2005
Tim Boyce will
never be an official member of the Wellesley Fire
Department, but few people inside or outside the station
can match his passion for the firefighting life.
His parents have been bringing him to the fire station
since he was a small child - he had his birthday party
there when he was 4 - and now, at 18, he is one of the
guys. He owns firemen's boots and helmets, gifts from
people who know how fascinated he is with everything
associated with the fire department, and reads a
firefighting magazine.
When the fire department has open houses, Boyce is
there to lend a hand, and each year, he volunteers at the
camp the fire department runs for middle school-age kids.
Last Friday, on the last day of camp, as the campers
ate their lunch in one room and the firefighters chowed
down next door, Boyce swung between the two groups, joking
with everyone.
His outgoing persona - his "cocktail party
personality," as his mother, Kathy Boyce, describes it -
is characteristic of those with Williams syndrome, a rare
congenital disorder whose symptoms include below-average
IQ and a variety of physical and developmental problems.
Even his fascination with firefighting is something he
shares with just about every young boy with Williams
syndrome that his mother has met.
But if outsiders think pity is the reason the
firefighters tolerate Boyce in their midst, they're wrong.
As Lt. Paul Delaney, whom Kathy Boyce said was
particularly instrumental in bringing Tim into the fire
department fold puts it, "He's just a great kid."
Boyce makes it abundantly clear that he values their
friendship, inside and outside the fire house. When
firefighters come into Roche Bros. while he is working as
a bagger, he shouts out a greeting to them.
One of his buddies is firefighter Dave Anderson, with
whom he shares a love of wrestling. Anderson is a friend
of Red Sox great Mo Vaughn, who introduced Anderson to a
wrestler known as "The Rock." When "The Rock" gave
Anderson an autographed picture, the firefighter passed it
on to Boyce.
"Every year, he tells me, "I still got your picture,"
said Anderson.
On Friday, Boyce sat on the floor with the
middle-schoolers, waiting for a program on the state
police arson dog to begin. The black lab came over to lick
his face, and the delighted Boyce said, "Now she knows
that I have a dog." A few minutes later, he was on his
feet, part of a line-up of kids whose shoes the dog was
sniffing for clues hidden by her trainer.
"It's a lot of fun working with the kids that want to
be firefighters when they grow up," said Boyce, who said
he still hasn't decided what he wants to do when he
graduates from Wellesley High School at the end of the
year.
Kathy Boyce said that Tim is very knowledgeable about
fire department equipment and vehicles. If he's out on the
street and hears a fire truck, Tim can identify it before
his mother is even aware that the truck is on its way.
When firefighters came to visit the child lab at Wellesley
High School, Tim helped them demonstrate the clothing.
Wherever Tim ends up living and whatever he ends up
doing, Kathy Boyce is sure volunteering at a fire
department will "always be part of his life and bring him
great joy."
She said the family feels very fortunate that Tim's
had the opportunities he has with the Wellesley Fire
Department. The men have "totally embraced" him, she said.
"He's become part of the firefighting family," Delaney
said.