Friday, June 19, 2009

To Update

From a few posts below:

It's been two weeks and I have yet to see my $40.00 show up at my office. I think I may have gotten worked.

That's really too bad. I thought that I was doing a good thing at the time, helping someone out who was genuinely in need. But now it looks like my kindness may have been taken advantage of. It would be nice to get it back, but I'm no longer holding my breath.


It was 97 degrees in Atlanta today. I climbed onto a roof around 2:30pm. It was so hot that I could feel literally feel the heat rising up through my shoes, and found myself shifting my feet around wondering if I was going to get burned. They call it "Hotlanta" for a reason. But it's hardly the hottest city in the country. Phoenix and Tucson in Arizona are renowned for their "dry heat", but I've always heard that Houston is the "hottest" city in America. I can believe it too, from the three weeks I spent down there last November. I can only imagine that place in August. Some people also say that Atlanta traffic is the worst in the country, but I know that isn't true. Traffic is worse in Houston and Seattle, those two I can personally vouch for. Boston and New York are also infamous for having some of the worst traffic in America. I guess the point is that what seems bad here is worse in Houston (haha).... Or better put, it's always worse somewhere else. And while nobody wants to deal with unbearable heat, anyone who tells you that they'd rather be cold than hot has never REALLY been cold. But get this, here's something I never knew. I learned this from a "Welcome to Atlanta" book I picked up right around this time last year. The city of Atlanta actually has more days during the year where the temp is under 32 degrees than over 90 degrees.

So I guess we have misconceptions here about heat, traffic, and the veracity of someone's promise to pay back $40.00 borrowed in a grocery store parking lot.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Swing-and-a-miss

So I dug into the right handed batter's box... although it would probably more accurate to say that I "fell" into it, given that my left foot sank into the indention there that has been rutted out by countless players before me. I wanted to take some pitches this time, I felt that in my last at bat I had been too aggressive and swung at a pitch that I didn't really like. I still got on base, but I didn't square the ball up the way I wanted to. It was a 2-0 count and the pitcher dropped in a called strike, so it was now 2-1. I hate looking at pitches. The longer I stand up there, the more I think and the worse I go. If it were up to me, I'd swing at the first pitch every time just so I didn't have to stand up there, think about my stance, remind myself to keep my back foot "in the bucket" as I always tell myself, continually size up the 3B and SS, make sure my back elbow is up, am I open enough?, what does a good pitch look like?, are my hands in the right place?.... I hate it. The longer I stand there, the more questions I ask myself and the more unlikely it seems that I'll get a hit.

So after looking at three pitches in this at bat, I wanted to swing, dad gummit. I didn't want to have to continue going over that silly checklist in my mind... In the batter's box, I'm like a fat kid at the swimming pool; just a little bit uncomfortable.

The fourth pitch was getting swung at, no matter what. It came in and was pretty far outside. By this time, I'd convinced myself that I couldn't tell a bad pitch from a good one. I stepped toward with my front foot and put a long, loopy swing on the ball. And missed. Before the catcher could throw it back to the pitcher I turned around and said "That won't ever happen again." And so far this season, it hasn't.

One of my all time favorite songs is Solsbury Hill by Peter Gabriel. See the live version of it here.
I've spent a good deal of debating on what the song was REALLY about. Some years ago I thought I found an answer. I thought it was about coming to terms with your faith. But not just coming to terms with your faith, but CELEBRATING it. This analysis seemed to fit the song perfectly and for a while I was content that I'd solved it.

I read an interpretation of it once that put the terms in context of a person being committed to a mental institution, not by his choice, and his feelings of being taken away from (or to?) there. But I never liked that one very much, and always felt the my faith my interpretation was more fitting, particularly given some the lines in the song: "turning water into wine"... "I will show another me/ Today I don't need a replacement/ I'll show them what the smile on face meant"... and "I did not believe the information/ I just had to trust imagination..."

I would also be remiss if I didn't point out how often I'd sing this song to myself on my nightly walks around Queen Anne in Seattle when I'd reach the Kerry Park viewpoint (because I'm awesome like that). No matter how many times I saw this, I always admired it. Often, I'd repeat the first two lines of "Solsbury Hill" to myself when passing by or admiring this view of the city.

So the other night, completely randomly, I read Peter Gabriel's entry on Wikipedia. There was a section devoted to Gabriel's departure from "Genesis" to go out on his own. And there it was, in cold black and white.... "Solsbury Hill, Gabriel's début single as a solo artist, was written specifically about his departure from Genesis." Read the entire entry here. While I do know that one shouldn't trust completely what is found on Wikipedia, I was still a little bit floored. If I had a nickel for everytime I've listened to "Solsbury Hill" and been moved by it, on one level or another.... well, I'd have a lot of nickels. I just couldn't believe that I missed it though, what the song was actually about. I didn't need to listen to it again, I knew that it fit Gabriel's departure from "Genesis" like a rubber glove. And sure, it COULD be about accepting and celebrating faith. But it isn't. At least, now I don't think it is. I just think it's about Peter Gabriel leaving "Genesis"... And that's fine. It doesn't diminish my apprecation of the song any, and to be honest, when I hear it, I'm still going to go to my analysis of it, I think. It just bothers me that, for all the time I put into it, I was probably wrong. Or was wrong.

There's no catcher to turn around to and say "that won't ever happen again".... But still, that same ticked off feeling is there, of a swing-and-a-miss.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Thoughts from the Arizona Trip

I originally posted the following on a message board shortly after my trip to Arizona for the UGA v. UA baseball series that took place back in late Feb.

So last weekend my brother and I went to Arizona for the weekend to see UGA play baseball against Univ of Arizona. We both had a really good time at the Arizona State football game last year and we both got some pretty good deals on airfare for this trip. So why not?

He flew down from New York to Atlanta and we were both on the same flight to Phoenix. I really like the Delta 767's and 757's that have the TV's built into the seatbacks... This was one such flight, and those things really make the flight go by faster. Not to mention they have to be a good revenue generator for Delta.... I know I personally buy something pay-per-view on about every flight that I take.

So we land in Phoenix around 1:00pm local time. It was funny. Walking outside, I remembered how, the last time I was there, EVERYONE was wearing Georgia stuff. That football game was really an invasion, I was so proud of the way our fans traveled for that. But this time, it was a little cooler outside, and no other oval G's to be found.

We rented a Jeep Wrangler for the drive down to Tucson, which is a little under two hours (keep that time in mind). I got a pretty good deal on the Jeep from Fox Rental Car off of Orbitz. I'd never heard of Fox before, and was wondering if it was just some guy named something like Mike Fox, who was going to let us drive his Jeep for the weekend. But it seemed to be a legit operation. We had to wait around for several minutes at the counter while someone "retrived" our rental. The first person who was helping us shifted to another terminal to help another customer. While she was doing that, a manager walked out, looked at us, and then looked at the first woman who had assisted us. The manager said "Is anyone helping them?" The clerk responded "Yeah, Carlos has gone to pick up the Jeep." Right on cue, I said "Yeah, he took the coat hanger with him." Moderately funny I guess. But both my brother and I started laughing and couldn't stop. I was legitimately doubled over for a good two minutes imagining some kid stealing a Jeep Wrangler, running it through a car wash, and then renting it to us. Guess that just spoke to what kind of mood I was in.

So we peeled the top down on Jeep, which is a whole lot more trouble than taking the top down on a Ford Mustang like we rented last time in Arizona. Still, it was nice and warm, and always good to feel the wind in your hair as you drive down the interstate. We stopped for lunch at an In & Out Burger, right next to that theater where I'd watched "Burn After Reading" when I was trying to kill time on the Monday last September, in Casa Grande Arizona.

It's always neat to me to be able to remember locations in far away places like that. I remember going to Seattle back in summer 2006 for a week long trip, it was before before I found out I was moving there. Anyway, I'd been to this restaurant on Bainbridge Island once before, all the way back in 2003. But I wanted to go again and wanted to take the ferry and what not. Without any directions or anything, I was able to walk right to that restaurant. Things like that make me happy, to see something and "know" a place, even if you haven't been there for several months, or even a few years. Incidently, the weekend after the Tucson trip I made a trip to the northwest, flew into Seattle and drove with some friends to Whistler BC. We were there for a few days and had a day to spend in Seattle. I had several hours of alone time to spend in Seattle on that Monday and I spent it walking around my old neighborhood and wound up eating lunch at the same Bainbridge Island restaurant. I think two of the best days of my life included eating a meal there. I don't know how things like that happen, they just do. You live a day and remember it months or years later and wish like anything you go back and do it again. To know that there is a place like that literally thousands of miles away and I "know it" and I've experienced it... It's a feeling that I take great pride and great comfort in having. And Casa Grande Arizona is one such place. I don't know for sure, but I bet I'll see Doc's on Bainbridge Island once more and I bet I'll see Casa Grande again one day too.

We pulled into Tucson around 4:30pm. Game started at 7:00pm. The Arizona stadium was about 3/4 of a mile from the hotel, easy walk. After getting settled into the hotel, we had a beer at the hotel bar and proceeded to the stadium to see UGA's first real test of the year. Though we came in 5-0, the five wins were over Youngstown State and Presbyterian. We knew Arizona would be in a different league. Driving and walking around Tucson in the dry heat, I tried to imagine what it would be like to go to school there, to live there. What a different "place" in so many ways, than Athens.

All of Frank Sancet Stadium is general admission. I like sitting as low as possible at ball games, so that worked out great. We grabbed a seat on the second row, just to the right of our 3rd base dugout. Row one is essentially at field level, and you could hear the players and coaches in the dugout from our seats. That was really cool, I thought, we'll get to hear a lot of coaching. In the first inning, Colby May, our #3 hitter, lay down a sac bunt to move Jonathan Taylor to 3rd and Michael Dempario to 2nd. Coach Perno was the first person out of the dugout to shake May's hand. I was impressed with that.

Part of the Arizona student section was to our right. This one guy had a big dry erase board which he would change during the game. He was funny. At the start, he had a grid comparing Athens to Tucson, it compared everything from population to nickname (though he incorrectly wrote that Athens had no nickname) and he even included "air quality index".... It was funny stuff. He and his friends were hecklers, but in a good way.

Another part of the Arizona student body, unfortunately, was not the same. Several guys came and sat in the Georgia section down low, on our row, and just heckled our kids unmerifully. And that wasn't funny, because they just kept repeating things like "Poytress you're sooooffffttttt" over and over. These guys were real low class, just immature college students. Probably sophomores if I had to guess. Anyway, one kid really crossed the line when he walked up to the net, stood right over Bryce Massanari, who was on deck, and started calling Mass everything under the sun, but namely "you f***ing f***ot" and may have even spit on him. That got Coach Perno out of the dugout and he walked up to the net and pointed at that kid and his friends and yelld "You guys say what you want, but lay off that cussing." The kids tried to give it back to Perno, and he was standing there yelling "You lay off that cussing." A cop came and hauled the kid away from the net, but not before he followed Perno back toward the dugout and got into it with our pitching coach. It was pretty loud at that point so I couldn't hear the exhange, but Widerhold (the pitching coach) had some veins popping out of his neck from yelling. It was testy. And completely un-neccesary. Bryce Massanari is from Las Vegas and probably had 30 some odd people there to see him play. But you get that with college kids sometimes, though I'm happy now to say that I mainly avoided that kind of garbage. What those kids didn't realize, and what I realize today, is that acting like that really is embarrassing to you down the road. I'd hate to think of someone associating me with UGA and thinking "man, what a douchebag" or "that kid was such a tool." All of those kids sitting in that section were ejected by the 8th inning. They promised to be back Saturday.

UGA broke open a fairly close game Friday night in the later innings and won 11-4. It was a great series opening win, and I was really proud of the way that the players, especially the freshman, kept their heads in that environment. Those Arizona students really got on our guys hard, but they didn't seem to let it faze them. Our kids wear the "G" the right way.

After the game, we walked back to the hotel and looked up some good Mexican fare, which we found in the form of some hole in the wall place whose name I can't recall. This was a Mexican restaurant where most of the patrons looked to be Mexican. Most of the men were wearing cowboy hats. You knew it'd be authentic. And it sure was. Apparently Bill Clinton had eaten a meal there once upon a time based on some picture on the wall.

Leaving the restaurant, the air had turned cooler, as we heard would happen in the desert. Putting the top up on the jeep proved to be a chore that was deemed too demanding on the spot, and we drove the couple of miles back to the hotel with the top down, heater on, and hunched under the windshield glass.

Friday had been a long day of travel and we hit the rack pretty early.

Next day we got up and did some exploring, though not too much since we had a Cactus League game to see at 1:05. We drove out on Hwy 86, southwest of Tucson, and wound up eating at this small road side cafe in the middle of nowhere (it was close to Three Points Arizona). Driving through rural Arizona, you'd swear that the population density for the state is less that a person per sq mile. Nothing is there. It's a pretty awesome sight.

The Cactus League game was the Dodgers and Rockies from Hi Corbett Field in Tucson. Great day for baseball, blue sky, warm... make that hot. I got a picture of the scoreboard with the reading of 91 degrees. The game was pretty unremarkable as most of the starters didn't play very long. Matt Kemp homered for LA. Russell Martin had a nice throw down to second to nab someone stealing. The Dodgers won, but I can't remember the score. Drinking my first cold beer under the blue sky and warm sun, I couldn't help but think that there could be nothing more American than baseball and there was very little that I'd rather be doing at that moment.

With the Georgia game starting at 6:00pm, we went back to the hotel and grabbed a few beers and appetizers from the hotel bar. We rolled into the stadium around 5:45 to find the Georgia fans packing the lower rows above our on-deck circle. That was good. We sat on row three for that game and all the Georgia fans made sure to leave no rows of several empty seats. We were loud too. Those Arizona kids had pissed us off, most of us I think. That game had a real intense feel to it and we jumped off to an early lead and never looked back. Second night in a row we scored in the first inning. We got out to a 9-0 lead before winning 12-5. Joey Lewis hit a monster homerun and Matt Cerione finished a homer short of the cycle in his season debut. Without those idiot students sitting down there, you could hear a lot of coaching coming from our dugout. I never realized how much of that goes on during the game. At Foley, you sit up higher off of the field, so you don't hear much at field level. But the coaches are always talking to the players from the dugout though, whether it's a ground ball and you hear "Stay down Levi!" or hear someone shout "RICH!" and see some hand signals from the dugout rail. Jason Eller, the hitting coach, talks A LOT in the coach's box as well, coaching whichever hitter is at the plate. Arizona's third base coach didn't seem to do that as much.

After the game, we hit the hotel bar again and then a sports bar for dinner. As the drinks flowed and we reminised about Georgia games past, one thought kept coming to my mind, which I iterated more than once: "We've gotta sweep those bastards tomorrow."

Around 8:00am on Sunday, my phone rang. Through the cotton mouth and headache I picked it up to see a 1-800 number on the caller ID. I answered, and much to my chagrin, heard an automated recording saying that my flight from Phoenix that night had been cancelled. Delta rebooked me on a flight out of Phoenix at 6:00am on TUESDAY morning. So what did I do? I went back to sleep. But after that, and after trying to call the 800 number to get rebooked on something else only to get a busy signal, I had another idea. We both got dressed, hopped in the Jeep, and drove to the Tucson airport. I figured I'd just talk to someone at the Delta ticket counter. There was no line and I approached the clerk and told him my story, about how I had to get home earlier than Tuesday. I offered to fly out of Tucson. To my surprise, he was able to put me on a Monday morning flight to Atlanta, leaving Tucson at 9:30am. I couldn't believe how easy it was. Being that it was already around 11:00am, I thought "I should go ahead and just check in for this flight now"... but decided against it. I could just do that Monday.

Less intense atmosphere at the game Sunday. It was noon start, very bright, hot, and the Arizona students were mostly nowhere to be found (except the dry erase board guy, but I kind of liked him).

Throughout the three games, various Georgia people would ask me or my brother if we knew someone on the team. We don't, but we both got into baseball when we were in college, and thought this trip would be fun. I'll go to at least one SEC road series this year as well. I'm just a fan. People thought that was neat, being that most of the Georgia folks there were parents or relatives. I talked with several player's parents while I was there about their kids and their experiences and what not. It was really fun.

We jumped out to a 7-0 lead after two innings, though this one felt different. Arizona just wouldn't go away and I never had a good feeling about it. Michael Pallazone and Dean Weaver came on and pitched great over the last five innings and we wound up winning 10-5. Big road sweep. Another great day for Joey Lewis and Matt Cierone. Another great weekend for Jonathan Taylor.

As we filed out of the stadium, I was sad to see the weekend come to a close. It had been a good time and a very impressive series by UGA. To come that far away from home, take that kind of verbal abuse in the opener, in an unfamilar place, and play that well, you just can't say enough about it.

After the game, we hit another Mexican place called Rosa's, which was also delicious, and drove out the Saguaro National Park, southwest of Tucson.

This was some legit desert here. Scrub grass, huge saguaros every where you look, rocks and sand... it was neat. The road into the national park looked like a radio wave... it kind of reminded me of the road that Snoopy drove his motorcycle over in "Charlie Brown goes to Camp".... And I always thought too that you might see a Saguaro every few hundred square feet, but not so, not at all. Those things are EVERYWHERE.

My brother was set to fly back to Newark on Continental from Phoenix that night. We learned that his flight was cancelled, so we went back to the sleepy little Tucson airport to try and rebook him. Only problem was, with so few Continental flights there, they just shut down their ticket counter at like 4:00pm. It was 6:00pm now. Too bad. The 1800 number for Continental was overwhelmed and offered no help either.

We had to take the Jeep back to Phoenix that night and I was the only one who'd signed up to drive it. So we decided to rent a second car, list us both as drivers, and caravan back to Phoenix. He would go to the airport and rebook there, since we figured the Continetal counters would be open in Phoenix, and I would take the Jeep back. If he could fly out of Tucson, we'd drive back down there. If not, we'd find a place closer to Phoenix and I'd drive back to Tucson the next morning. Perfect.

So he was able to get rebooked on a flight from Phoenix to Newark at noon Monday. We wound up staying at the same hotel in Tempe where we'd stayed for the football game. I didn't know if it was going to happen. The place was only a Days Inn, but wanted to charge $114 for the room. The woman said she could offer it for $94. We didn't respond. She asked her manager the lowest rate she could sell. Her manager said "coupon rate, $64." SOLD.

It was nice. I asked for a 6:20am wake up call and planned to be on the road by 7:00am.

And that's exactly what happened. And it dawned on me, as I drove out of Phoenix, looked at the clock and saw that it was 7:25am and saw a road sign saying it was 99 miles to Tucson. I would be cutting it AWFULLY close. And I'd have to stop and gas up the car.

Most of the interstate between Phoenix and Tucson is 75mph. I did 85 in those spots. If only I'd checked in yesterday, I could just print off my boarding pass at the airport and go to the gate, none of that 30 minutes before business. Flight was at 9:30. At 8:50, I pulled up to an AM/ PM to attempt to gas up. The pump wouldn't read by debit card. I had no choice. Take the car back with 1/4 of a tank.

At 8:57 I arrived in the rental garage. The guy checked me out said that the computer changed me $102 for gasoline. Late or not, I wasn't going to stand for that. With gas around $1.80 a gallon, that is about $25.00 of gasoline AT THE MOST that would need to be added. The guy was nice, but told me there wasn't much he could do. I went inside to counter. Thankfully, no line. It was 9:01am. I argued my point with the clerk who went in the backroom to discuss with his manager (just like Seinfeld) and came out and told me that they could reduce to fee to $35.00, which was about $2.50/ gallon. I accepted that and thanked him. At 9:08am, I learned that it was too late to check in for my flight. I'd missed it.

And now, it's complicated. There were a lot of flights cancelled to Atlanta because of the snow, and there was only more more flight out that day, leaving at 1:45pm. The best they could do was add me to the standby list. I offered to fly to Salt Lake City and catch a connection to Atlanta there, but no dice, all the flights to Salt Lake City were booked too. But, the guy at the ticket counter told me that I had a "pretty good" chance of getting on that afternoon flight.

You have to realize at this point that I'm getting pretty haggared. My cell phone battery is almost dead and I didn't bring a charger. My debit card hasn't worked the last two times I tried to use it and I wondered if the bank had frozen my account for all the out of state charges (I later found out the card was cracked along the black strip), I didn't know if I could get home that day, I was leaving for Seattle on Thursday and had a lot of work to do in the mean time, I didn't know what my brother was going to do, if he was going to be able to get out or not... and now I had four hours to sit at the gate and think about it. I was glad I went on the trip, no question, but now I was over budget. And the timing of this trip and the Seattle trip a few days later.... that was tough to do workwise, and it would be really tough when I got back to Atlanta. And there was nothing to do about it now. My laptop and Blackberry were 2000 miles away. All I had was a cell phone with a dangerously low battery.

I did the best I could though. You can fault me for being too optimistic a lot of the time. The thing with the missing flight that morning was on me. I've always been very good about timing things out, but I'd just mis-calculated the drive distance down to Tucson. That happens. But I was able to get myself together a little bit. I called the office to tell the boss man what happened. I work from home a lot, so if I'd made that first flight, I could've been back mid-afternoon and "appeared" to be working all day. Now, I couldn't fake it, so I had to take another day off. No biggie. And I was able to read the rest of "Meat Market", Bruce Feldman's book about the Ed Orgeron regime at Ole Miss, focused on recruiting, which was just fascinating. I was glad to have a chunk of that left to look at. But mainly I sat there and wondered if I'd be able to go home that day or not. I wondered why my debit card wasn't working. I wondered how I'd pay for another hotel room if I had to stay the night.

The flight to Atlanta was delayed a half hour. It looked pretty full, judging by the number of people in the gate area. I never once approached the counter to ask about my spot on the standby list. I just didn't want to know. If it was bad news, I didn't want to know it. If it was good news, it would only be potentially good news until I got that boarding pass. So I waited. And waited. And waited.

They had just called for Zone 4 to board when the person at the desk called for Passenger Peacock to approach the podium. I shot up like I'd been fired out of a cannon. He handed me a boarding pass. I said "thank you so much" and boarded the plane. Crisis averted. I was going home.

I used to hang on to my boarding passes as souviners when I was younger and didn't travel as much. Now, they usually just wind up in the trash. I've been fortunate in that I've gotten to go some places, some on the company dime and some on my own nickel, so flying somewhere isn't THAT big of a deal anymore. And it probably sounds cheesy to say this, but I'm going to save that boarding pass from Tucson to Atlanta. And everytime I feel like I've overextended myself, that I'm in a lonely place where I don't know how things will work out, when it feels like it's me against the world, I can look at the piece of paper and remember what happens when you keep a level head, keep thinking positive thoughts, and keep grinding, how good results will follow. Just it happened for me, and just like it happened for our baseball team.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Worked or Good Works?

So I'm going to try to give some better updates on here seeing as how I haven't had too much to say in several months (on this venue I mean).

I was a little bit behind on laundry last night. Why is that after you go on a trip, it takes so long to get your bag unpacked and get the contents washed? That's always the case with me... I come home and set down my roller bag, and I don't know why, but it's just "hard" to get it unpacked. Usually goes a day or so I think. Besides, I'll typically do a big load of laundry just before the trip, so I always have some clothes when I get home. Anyway, I went to West Palm Beach for a work thing last Saturday - Wednesday, wasn't proactive in unpacking my roller bag, and approached Friday evening with nary of pair of clean blue jeans.

I started getting hungry on Friday evening, as is wont to happen, and decided to go to Publix to procure some food stuffs. I really like their chicken wings in the deli. They do a "mardi gras" flavored wing which is unfried, but has a really good flavor. Felt like a good Friday meal. Since I had no clean non-semi-formal pants (and I don't wear shorts outside of fishing or swimming situations), I decided to re-dress myself in what I wore to work that day; a blue button down shirt, black pants, and my black cowboy boots.

I park in a space very close to the store and start to walk inside. I look up to see a white pickup truck in the parking lot driveway just off to my right. The truck comes to a stop and it sounds like the transmission was placed into "Park". I think to myself "Don't just park in the middle of the &$^#% driveway" and feel my blood pressure spike, so irritated am I by discourteous driving. A woman exists the driver side of the pickup truck and walks up to me. "Excuse me", she says. "Can I ask you a question?"

"Sure."

"I'm from out of town. And my credit card just got eaten by the ATM machine, and I'm trying to make it home....."

She continued talking while my mind drifted to the question of why people like to say "ATM machine." Being that "ATM" stands for "Automatic Teller Machine" you're basically saying "Automatic Teller Machine Machine." It's like "PIN number" or "A/C current".... I don't know why I always notice things like that, and I always kick myself when I slip up and say something along those lines myself.

The woman, who looked to be in her mid 40s, thin, short blonde hair, french tipped pedicure, and thick southern accent went on to tell me how lost she was and how she just had to get back to Thomasville (in very south Georgia) and "call daddy" and now she didn't have any money and didn't know where she was and just wanted to get home and could I help?

Then she said something that you don't hear much. "I'll pay you back, I mean, if you have a card or you can just give me your address..."

I guess she said "card" first because of how I was dressed.... And probably why she approached me in the first place. Not that I mind.... Hey, if I'm going to dress like a "business man", I'd better expect to solve problems.

"OK," I said. "I don't have any cash on me [which was true, I like to leave my cash in a disorganized stack on the countertop, makes me feel like a gangsta(r)] but I'm just going to go in here and pick up some chicken for dinner, I'll get some cash at the register, and you can meet me back here in a second."

"Bless your heart" she said in that southern drawl that came out like "hahwart".

As I walked into the store I wounded to myself why I chose to include my purchase in this new Plan of Action? I mean, did she really care that I was going to buy some chicken? And to think, if all I was going to buy inside was a case of beer or pack of toilet paper, I probably would've omitted it entirely. Was I so excited and happy to eat Publix chicken for dinner that I felt it necessary to drop that fact into conversation? Have I fallen that far?

When I was wondering to myself about the "ATM machine" remark, I heard her say something about $30 or $40. I figured I'd just pull out $40. That should be what she is looking for.

Walking out of the store, I saw the white truck dutifully parked next to my car. "You are such an angel" she said as I placed my bag of chicken (which turned out to be an entire bird, unknown to me at the time. Most of it is still in the refrigerator as I type this, it was a lot of bird, but let's be honest, I doubt I'll finish it, probably like you're doubting that I'll finish this sentence that I started) on the front seat. I didn't have a business card on my person, and had to chuckle internally because I'd thought earlier in the week that I should start carrying one or two in my front pocket just in case. I figured that I may have a card in the center console of my car, since sometimes I'll pull a card out of my front pocket when I'm driving to write something down and sometimes I don't write anything and the card ends up in the console. And sure enough, I did have one.

"Thank you so much," she said, the thankfulness in her eyes. "I'm just so far away from home and didn't know how I was going to get back...." Her voice broke a bit.

"Oh, it's no big deal," I said, handing her her my card and two twenty dollar bills. "Do you know how to get back to the interstate?"

"No, I sure don't. I've just been driving around..."

"OK, well, it's really easy. Just come out of the parking lot and turn right. That's Roswell Road. Just follow Roswell a couple of miles and you'll run into I-285. You can't miss it. Get on I-285 west. It'll be a left turn. Follow I-285 for a couple of miles and you'll hit I-75. I'm sure you know what to do from there."

"Yay-es, thank you again, I'll mail this back to you tomorrow I promise."

"No problem, have a good evening."

While I was talking to her I noticed that the truck had one of those "special" Georgia license plates that doesn't list the county at the bottom. I know my Georgia geography pretty well, and was kind of curious to see if the car had a south Georgia county on the plate. We parted ways and I was stopped at the redlight at the end of the parking lot attempting to turn left onto Roswell, I looked up to see the white pickup truck had exited the parking lot at the exit without the redlight, and turned left. I was sure that I told her to turn right and even pointed that way when I was telling her.

So that made me wonder. Would I ever see my $40 again? Could've been that I just got worked. This isn't a great economy, haven't you seen CNN? You figure that kind of thing is on the rise. Maybe she didn't approach me because I was dressed in customer contact appropriate apparel (per the Amica intranet) and presumably liquid, maybe she approached me because I looked like a mark. Maybe her accent thickened when she heard mine. Maybe she figured I'd be mentally tired on this Friday afternoon (after all, I was dressed in work clothes, it was after 7:00pm and I was quickly walking into the grocery store when she saw me). Maybe she figured I wouldn't ask too many questions.

But you know, I don't believe that. I think she really was in a bad way and needed some help. And I was happy to give it to her. So she turned the opposite way that I told her to. She was still heading in the correct cardinal direction and if you drive around Atlanta long enough, you'll hit an interstate anyway.

I fully expect to see an envelope containing $40 in cash or check on my desk at some point next week.

Until I do though, I guess the question will be: Worked or Good Works?