Sometimes, going out on my “Thursday Walk” I am unaccompanied
by my wallet. I have reservations about
such reckless behavior. What if I fall
down unconscious on the street and nobody knows who I am so whoever finds me
calls the police and I disappear into the “System” never to resurface and my
family, after an appropriate grieving period, goes on, as we all inevitably
must, with their everyday lives?
It could happen.
Still, sometimes you are just drawn to living on the edge. So I do it.
I leave home as an “Unidentified Personage.”
I have a good reason for not taking along my wallet. Its encumbering heaviness weighs down my
exercise pants, their precarious descent giving me the incongruous look of a
geriatric gang member. A gang member
wearing lululemon exercise pants.
Yesterday morning, I pocket my keys – which I require to get
back into the house but there are just three of them so they are not
inordinately heavy. I also extract from
my abandoned wallet a ten-dollar bill and a “single”, the “ten” to cover the
price of the coffee, the “one” conveniently available for the tip.
Then, cash and keys but no wallet, I venture anonymously
into the world.
Reaching my habitual “Thursday Walk” destination, Groundwork coffee emporium, I step up to
the counter, ordering my standard “Venice Blend Pour-Over.” The coffisto
rings me up, announcing, “That’ll be four dollars.” I remind him of the “Neighborhood Discount” lowering
the conventional four-dollar “pour-over”
charge to three-sixty. He tells me
they’re not doing that anymore. To which
I cleverly retort, “Then I guess I’ll move.”
The coffisto appears quizzically
confused, so I explain, “I only stayed here for the discount.” The coffisto
cracks the lowest category of measurable smiles.
I reach into my pocket, handing him the “ten” to pay for the
coffee, and slipping the “one” into a miniature fire-bucket “Tip Pail.” By then, the coffisto is ready with my change, handing me back “a ten”, a “five”
and a “one.”
Immediately – and I mean immediately, no shillyshallying
around – named after Augustus Shillyshally who took his sweet time about everything – I say to the coffisto, “Did I give you a ‘ten’ or a ‘twenty’?” To which the coffisto replies, “A ‘twenty’, I think.” “Why don’t you check”, I suggest, which he
does, immediately discovering that he had mistakenly given me change for a “twenty”
when I had in fact only given him a “ten.”
Retaining the “five” and the “one”, I promptly return the
unearned “ten”, the coffisto
collecting it with a subvocal “Thanks.”
But I am not quite done.
“That was a better
deal than the ‘Neighborhood Discount’”, I facetiously remark.
But the coffisto
has “moved on”, probably embarrassed that he had messed up about the change. Either that, or he considered me an idiot. I prefer the original explanation. You
can easily understand why.
Well, that’s the story, which I tell at the risk of shamelessly
blowing my own self-congratulatory horn, but kept deliberately short as a classy
gesture of humility.
And so I could knock off a little early.
The Groundwork
experience makes a connection in my head:
Back in 1977, I won The
Humanitas Prize for writing an episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, which, the judges apparently determined,
deserved acknowledgment for most successfully affirming the prize’s proclaimed mandate
to, according to The Humanitas Prize “Home
Page”,
“… celebrate
television, programs, which affirm the human dignif life, enlightening the use
of human freedom and reveal to each person our common humanity.”
It seemed weird to me to win a prize for writing about “our
common humanity.” What else are we supposed to write
about? Still, in contrast to my recent Groundwork experience, I accepted the
prize money, possibly because it was ten thousand dollars instead of just ten,
and also because it was not accorded to me by mistake. Although, judging by fellow nominee Alan
Alda’s red-faced reaction, he definitely
thought it had been.
The thing is…
It should be normal
to do the right thing.
So why did I feel like I had done something special? Special enough, in fact, to be worth writing
about?
Maybe it was because, more typically in these cases, you
hand over a “twenty” and receive change from a “ten”, making this an unconventional “Man bites dog”
situation, but with money instead of “Man Rabies.”
Or maybe I was genuinely surprised by my upstanding
behavior. Wait, hold on there. That
would mean…
Hm.
Let me ask you something.
Could someone actually be a terrible person and not know it?
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