Have you ever been approached by a scruffy looking person with a long story as to why they are asking for some change for the pay phone, only to write them off as a lying crack addict?
Well, last night the stars aligned and my husband was that guy.
He’s been remodeling a commercial bathroom for a local law firm at night, so as to not interfere with their fancy-schmancy office, and last night was no exception.
However, it was my sister’s last night in town before returning to Oklahoma, so we brought him some clean clothes, took him to dinner, and then dropped him off on our way back.
A few hours later, he decided to call it a night and walked out the door, only to discover that his truck keys weren’t in his pocket. In fact, nothing was in any of his pockets.
He had changed back into his work clothes and left everything in his nice pants. His wallet, his money, all of his keys, his cell phone, all snuggled safely in the pockets of his other pants. Which were in a bag. In the bathroom. Of the locked building.
Do you realize that in this day and age of cell phones, you aren’t required to remember anyone’s phone number anymore? Yeah.
And have you ever noticed that pay phones aren’t on every street corner, the way they used to be? Yeah.
Also, have you ever wondered what would happen if you had to creep around a professional building in the middle of the night, dressed in scruffy clothes that are covered in tile dust, checking all the doors to see if they are locked? Yeah.
Basically, you end up hanging out on the curb outside of a gas station in a questionable neighborhood, hoping that your wife will answer when you call the house from an unknown (pay phone) number, using the only change you could scrounge up.
Of course, your kids are asleep and your wife can’t pick you up, but at least she can try to arrange a ride for you, once she stops laughing.
And that’s how it happens: a successful business man spends a couple of hours in the shoes of a hobo.
Category: Life in general
Loyalty
In this economy, most people are focused on exactly where every one of their pennies is going.
That’s a good way to live, in general, (have I mentioned we’re cheap frugal?) but there are some things that are more important than a dollar.
My husband and I own a small construction business, and I know from experience that cheaper isn’t always better. I can guarantee you that we’re not always the cheapest bid, but we’ll be the best at everything from setting up appointments to making sure the customer is completely satisfied, to follow up care.
In the long run, isn’t that worth a few extra dollars?
We renew all of our business insurances around the first of the year, and we’ve been with the same insurance agents for the past 12 years. They are awesome – just all around great at everything.
Not to mention, having all of our insurance needs taken care of under one roof eliminates a ton of stress for me. We need an insurance certificate? One email = done, for everything, in a matter of minutes.
I’ve had insurance agents crawling out of the woodwork to try and win my our business for the past couple of months. Some have been a tiny bit cheaper than my agents, but I refuse to transfer, anyway.
And then I have to defend my decision. Those other agents don’t understand why I wouldn’t immediately switch carriers if I can save a few dollars.
It comes down to loyalty. It comes down to business relationships. It comes down to my belief that the grass is not always greener, even if looks that way from this side of the fence.
Wouldn’t I be pissed to discover astro-turf when I got there?
One Choice
Right now, you are one choice away from a new beginning.
~Oprah Winfrey
Tradition
It’s New Year’s Eve, 2009, and I can’t help but be incredibly excited about what 2010 holds in store.
But I also reflect on this year, all the lows and the few, but incredible, highs.
I think back to all the New Year’s Eve’s of my past, and fondly remember the girl I once was.
When I was a kid, my paternal Grandmother, “Grammy” lived with us for awhile.
She was what you might call “upper class” and had some habits that reflected her upbringing.
The absolute most vile of these, in my childhood opinion, was the fact that we had to eat oysters on New Year’s Eve. Every year. Without fail.
I would sit there at the table for hours on end, refusing to eat the gloopy balls of stink on my plate.
According to Grammy, I would have bad luck in the New Year if I didn’t eat them.
We’d sit there, the two of us with our iron wills, and ring in the new year over a plate of cold oysters.
I never did eat them, and I never will…. just in case she’s still watching from a table in Heaven.
Do you have any New Year’s Eve traditions? Any you’d rather live without?
Stray
I found this puppy.
I was on my way home from a late night ice cream run when I noticed something odd in my headlights. There she was, a tiny little lump in the middle of the street.
She was soaking wet, shivering, and oh my goodness she gently licked my hand when I put it toward her to sniff.
The girls are calling her Rory. She has the sweetest disposition, and is just amazing with the kids.
I hate to think that someone just dumped her out here in the country, but it happens more often than you’d probably care to know. So far, no one has claimed her.
Jeremy laughed when I brought her in, because, see, it’s not the first time I’ve walked through the door with an animal in my arms.
I’m a stray magnet. I’ve rescued strays my whole life, at least 50 of them if I were to try and count them.
Cats and dogs of all colors, shapes and sizes. Even a pot-bellied pig, once, when it showed up after a storm.
Does this happen to everyone?
Do animals just offer themselves to you?
My husband thinks most people just look the other way. But that’s not possible for me.
One time, a dog offered itself to me and in my rear view mirror I could see it watching me as I drove away.
The next day I went back to look for it, and it was nowhere to be found. I was so ashamed of myself for not helping it. I promised myself I’d never do that again.
So, I’m the crazy cat/dog lady. It’s just who I am. At least I’m always in good company!