Irrelevant “Table Setting” (For atmospheric purposes, and as
a literary “Throat Clearer” for the writer):
Every visit to Groundwork
Coffee Co. now elicits “Priority Treatment” from the Picard-headed manager
of the emporium.
When I arrive, he immediately leaps from the behind an
adjacent counter, assuring the “coffista”
taking my order, “I’ve got this”, after which he carefully prepares my Venice
Blend pour-over himself. Frequently, there are whispered instructions,
concerning a discount. When he misses
the timing and I have already paid, he fills my cup to overflowing with bonus individually
prepared coffee.
And I have no idea why this is happening.
Three possible hypotheses have come up:
He has mistaken me for someone important.
Having studied medicine before entering his current field of
employment, he intuitively detects that my time on this planet is running out.
Or three – daughter Anna’s idea –
He believes I am a homeless person.
For whatever
reason, I now consistently receive individualized attention whenever I arrive. Which feels inordinately odd to me, as I am
given, at best, perfunctory attention
everywhere else. If you sense a hinted, irrational expectation
of the former, well… leave us not
jump ahead in the story.
I am standing at the counter. The “coffista”
announces the charge for my Venice Blend pour-over:
“Four dollars.”
I produce a premeditated five-dollar bill from my
pocket. And, though I have never done
this before in my life, I startlingly “Frisbee” the flattened money in the
direction of the “coffista.” And it surprisingly takes off.
“That flew!” I
respond, with giddy enthusiasm. The “coffista’s” response is more muted.
“It’s usually handed,” she replies flatly.
“It’s usually handed,” she replies flatly.
My contributed dollar-in-change into the “Tip Jar” –
deposited, not flung – comes repentingly too late.
The damage had already been done.
As the drops of my “drip-coffee” plop into the appreciative
cup below, I proceed across the room to the shelf where the coffee cup’s lids
are assembled. As I do so, I obliviously
almost collide with a waiting customer, checking the messages on her cellphone.
“Excuse me”, she responds.
Although it is clearly I
who should be apologizing.
Later, on my walk home carrying my coffee, I step around a
dog standing in the middle of the sidewalk, its nearby owner retrieving its
evacuated debris.
“Excuse me,”
exhorts the upset poo-picking dog owner, as if I had committed some egregious ambulatorial
faux pas.
“I was just walking around the dog,” I defensively explain.
But she remains resolutely irate.
Maybe I was wrong.
Which was developing into a trend.
I had been wrong, sailing the five-dollar bill at the “coffista.” I had been wrong, jostling the waiting customer,
checking the messages on her cellphone.
Guilty by nature, and curious by inclination, I begin to
ponder,
“What the heck is going on?”
And then I realize… (This will feel like a “Jump” but it
isn’t.)
More than anything in numerous years, I had become genuinely
excited by the possibility of attending a summer Adult Education class at The University
of Oxford. (England, not Mississippi
– meaning to clarify, not to compare.)
I do not recall where I found out about this, but I really,
really wanted to go. I quickly imagine
us, gathering on “Day One” in a venerable classroom for “Political Thinking in
the 20th Century”, or, alternatively, my second choice – “Ideas of
Freedom”, the professor going around room, asking each student in turn what
brought them to the program, and me (as I had already begun to rehearse) saying,
“In America, they have these things called “Fantasy Camps”,
where, for a week, wannabe ballplayers who wound up becoming accountants… and
such, put on uniforms and pretend they are professional athletes. For me, coming here is a “Fantasy Camp” for
thinkers.
That would have
been good, wouldn’t it? To me, it
succinctly hit the spot. (And in my own
inimitable patois.)
Our instructions required us to to scan our applications
onto our computers (I had found a class for Dr. M to attend as well – “Five
Hundred Years of Gardening”) and transmit them to the Oxford Admissions Department.
(Oxford – hallowed background
for the Morse and Endeavour mysteries.)
Since we do not know how to scan things onto computers (I
found a class for Dr. M to attend as well – “Five Hundred Years of Gardening”),
younger family members generously assisted with our submissions. (Actually, they did the whole thing.)
With appropriate pomp and circumstance, we dispatched our applications
on the first day we were permitted to do so, accommodating the eight-hour “time
difference” so we’d be, hopefully, the first applicants n the door.
Champagne and teacakes!
We were going to Oxford!
Two days later, we were informed the classes we had selected
had been filled.
I do no know what we could have done differently. But whatever we did, other applicants for those classes had – apparently – done sooner.
I have no words to describe the depths of my disappointment
about not getting in. But I do know this.
However I felt,
I had taken it out on a blameless “coffista,” a waiting customer checking the messages on her cellphone,
and a dog.
Writer’s Note:
I have for some time wanted to write a post about the visceral
dimensions on “Personal Entitlement”, but I could never quite get a handle on
how to adequately describe the volcanic power of that self-centered sensation.
Well…
That raging knot of anger in my throat, that has, as yet,
not entirely subsided?
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