It was the weekend.
She wanted to get out of the house.
He wanted to stay home.
They got out of the house.
Meaningless Destination: Huntington Gardens.
Featuring: A
library and flowers.
And there you have it – a twenty-five-mile drive for a
library and flowers.
Their daughter Anna – there’s
a coincidence – suggests a nearby restaurant in Pasadena where they can have lunch
before visiting the library and flowers.
The lunch place is called Burgers
and Pie. Getting close to Pasadena,
they recruit their car’s GPS system to accurately direct them to their
lunchtime destination.
Forty-five minutes of circuitous driving later,
They arrive at Dodger
Stadium.
Not Burgers and Pie.
Not even Pasadena. (Dodger Stadium’s located in downtown Los
Angeles.)
Fortunately, their car has an alternate GPS operation, where you can call an actual person who
will install your route guidance destination for you. It is there they learn that the restaurant’s
actually called Pie ‘N Burger. Apparently, their car’s personal GPS system was so annoyed they had gotten the name wrong,
it responded, as only GPS systems can,
by dispatching them punitively to Dodger
Stadium.
(The Real Reason, They Subsequently Surmised: Dodger
Stadium had been their immediate, previous
GPS-directed destination. Somehow, their
GPS system had accidentally burped backwards.)
Though they did not arrive there till almost two, the
burgers and pie at Pie ‘N Burger proves
worth-waitingly delicious. Their more or
less mutually agreed upon pie selection is rhubarb, because, the argument goes,
“Why drive all the way to Pasadena for ‘just apple’?”
Their misdirection to Dodger
Stadium reminds him that the Dodgers
are playing an atypical four-fifteen afternoon game that day against the Cubs.
He mumblingly muses that since they are already on that side of town and
therefore able to bypass the hellacious pregame traffic, they might want to
take advantage of the opportunity and get tickets to that game.
Interpreting “might” as “should”, because she thinks that’s
what he wants, and also because the Cubs
are her beloved “home” team, but mostly because she does not want her “getting out
of the house” time to comprise of simply a lunch, a library and flowers, and
then straight back to the house, while awaiting their burgers to be served, she
contacts a local ticket agent, successfully procuring two tickets for that afternoon’s
encounter.
“Do I want to know how much they cost?” he inquired.
“No”, was her abrupt subject-closing response.
With an impending ballgame on the agenda, the trip to Huntington
Gardens is necessarily curtailed. Picking one building to visit – the vaunted Huntington
library – on their way there, they pass numerous flourishing flower beds, many of
them, he is informed, offering varieties of flowers they grow in their very own
backyard (making him wonder why they hadn’t skipped the excursion and just gone
outside and looked at them.)
The library displays dozens of priceless “First Editions”,
penned by the iconic likes of William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, Isaac
Newton and Percy Bysshe Shelley. His
eyes not being the best, when he bends down for a closer look, he bumps his
nose on the protective glass before getting anywhere close to “reading distance.” (Not to mention “protective glass-judging
distance” distance.)
But it was still pretty cool. On The
Origin of Species, stamped on the inside, “Please return to Charles
Darwin.”
And then it is off to Dodger
Stadium. This time, deliberately.
The first thing they do after parking their car is to take a
dozen or so iPhone pictures of the
surrounding area, so they can find their car after the game, a feat proven more
difficult than it sounds on the two previous
occasions when they couldn’t.
The game itself? For
him, there are only two kinds of ballgame experiences: “Good” and
“Spectacular.” When attending a major
league ball game… I mean, hey, you’re attending a major league ballgame!
The experience is better than “Good” but less than
“Spectacular”, as their seats – amazingly close to the field – are located on
the stadium’s sun-drenched First Base side; plus, the guy behind them keeps
scaring his apparent girlfriend by pretending that screaming foul balls are
streaking continuously in her direction.
(It occurs to him, later, as they are climbing the stairs after the
game, to lean in and whisper into her ear, “You can do better.” But he doesn’t. The boyfriend is drunk and has muscles.)
Another disappointment in the experience. Since they had lunched relatively late, they
were too full to want “baseball food.” (Although
they ultimately succumb to temptation and share a hotdog during the ninth
inning. It occurs to him that that
hotdog, purchased just before the stadium emptied, was almost certainly destined
for the trash bin, meaning they were, in effect, consuming a “pre-trash” hotdog.)
Also, having not purchased peanuts, he would miss out on the
sublime ballpark decadence of tossing empty peanut shells onto the floor. He tore off the adhesive sticker he received
at the Huntington and threw that on
the floor, but it wasn’t the same. There
just wasn’t as much mess.
Heading out after the 5-0 Dodger victory – making one
of them happy – they find their car relatively easily, but then experience a
one-hour traffic jam leaving the parking lot.
You know it’s a bad traffic jam when, up ahead of you, people have climbed
out of their car and are tossing a ball around next to their unmoving vehicle.
They arrive home nine hours after their departure,
satisfying one person’s intention of “getting out of the house.” The other person had an admittedly good time. Still, it was a good time under duress.
It takes a special kind of person to adhere to such a
distinction.
But the evidence demonstrates
Those people actually exist.
1 comment:
"... but then experience a one-hour traffic jam leaving the parking lot. You know it’s a bad traffic jam when, up ahead of you, people have climbed out of their car and are tossing a ball around next to their unmoving vehicle."
You mean people in La La Land don't really put on elaborate dance numbers while waiting for the jam to clear?
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