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Car Keys (“My Bad” Moments – Part 1)

In April 2003, a set of keys that unlocked the gates and offices of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California disappeared. That’s right, gone. But officials quickly changed the locks to some of the doors and said that national security had not been compromised.

My 1983 Chevy S-10 Tahoe

There didn’t seem to be too much of a ruckus raised at the time.

I thought about that scenario some and realized that sometimes it is more frustrating knowing where your keys are, but not being able to get to them.

Three cases on point:

First: My friends had a two-year old boy. He is grown now. But once, when he was little, they returned from shopping and accidentally locked their keys in the car. But, no problem, they thought, the two year old is still in the car, although asleep. They tapped on the window to awaken their little sweetie and have him simply unlock the door and free him and the keys.

“Sweetie, unlock the door for mommy.”

“Sweetie, unlock the door for daddy.”

Two hours later, and after many false unlock attempts, mommy and daddy were going nuts. It had been a wonderful game for him; he acted like he was going to unlock the door, but grinned, and retreated. They called the fire department. It didn’t work. The kid refused. Eventually, he gave in, finding the game no longer fun after he got hungry enough.

Secondly: Soon after my lovely bride (and I) married, we journeyed to Corinth, Mississippi to interview for a preaching job. I stopped at a gas station just a mile or so from the church building. It was winter and cold, even for Mississippi. As I got out of the truck the door shut – confidently.

That feeling somewhere down in the far reaches of my stomach told me that the keys that would have normally accompanied my hand on the way from the ignition to my pocket lay, not in my then empty hands, but still in the ignition, proudly keeping the engine running. Frantically, I started doing what any sane person about to interview at a church for a preaching job, – cursing at the top of my lungs.

No, I didn’t. But, my keys were still in the ignition. I was supposed to be at the church building in 30 minutes or so and my only mode of motorized transportation was slowly burning the gas out of the tank.

People came and went from the store. A little old lady, perhaps 80, asked if I had locked my keys in the truck. I punched her. No I didn’t, it was actually a gently nudge. I really don’t know how she fell. Thankfully, it was only a sprain. Church people made their weekly trek to the store before church. I explained to one my predicament. Through the help of a delicate instrument especially made for such situations I used my skill to free the keys from the ignition. I still have the bent clothes hanger, framed on my wall.

Finally: I was driving to Fort Smith, Arkansas for court (somewhere along the way I stumbled through law school). I astutely noticed a discarded box of electronics lying on side of road. It had fallen from a satellite service truck or from the truck of thieves. Either way, I decided that it was fair game.

I stopped with plenty of room between westbound traffic and me. I didn’t want to go to all the trouble of turning off the ignition and putting the keys in my pocket.

Who would?

That was way too much work to ask of a busy attorney – on a busy interstate – with big trucks and all.

I was only going to be a minute gathering the “lost” property from the byway.

As I exited my truck, my right elbow caught the door as gale force winds from a passing semi truck pushed the door towards Missouri.

My elbow brushed, ever slightly, the lock.

The door shut.

Confidently – like before.

Seems that my truck has a healthy self-image.

Standing outside said truck, engine running, the keys locked inside, I was not happy.

I tried not to look as stupid as my actions clearly indicated I was. So I walked towards the discarded electronics and threw the box into the truck bed, feigning interest in the satellite instruments that I would never use and only recently gave away to a Salvation Army Thrift store.

I walked up and down the interstate looking down for something that might help me open the door. There’s a lot of stuff alongside an interstate highway.

Praying that God would be merciful and look beyond my stupidity and greed, I asked for a way into the truck.

Several times.

No one seemed the least interested in why I was walking back and forth on the side of the interstate while a perfectly good truck sat – idling – nearby.

I had tried many times to pull the door open. There was space to work with as the door had not shut completely. I had even taken a large rock and began trying to smash in the passenger window. Auto glass is tough.

Thankfully that didn’t work.

As I contemplated my lot, I looked down by the driver’s door and saw the metal remains of a windshield wiper.

Because it was flat, it was perfect for sliding into the space and pulling up the lock, which (of course) had no tip at the top that would have allowed me to grip it. The flat metal worked perfectly and looking back, it was probably the only thing that would have worked considering the smooth lock on those trucks.

One click – and the door opened. Rarely had I been so happy to sit behind the steering wheel and drive away.

So, I hear that OnStar works well in these kinds of unfortunate situations. But my advice is to make sure you have a hammer on board – rocks don’t do well on auto glass.

Putt-Putt Golf and Bambi

I approached the Celeste Road overpass spanning Interstate 65 in my mother’s sky-blue 1977 Pontiac Bonneville station wagon following a particularly gruesome round of Putt-Putt Golf on Government Blvd.

Deer in Pencil

I was exhausted.

All 17-year-old boys should be so blessed to have their mother’s station wagon with bonus room for friends.

And teenager wouldn’t mind being seen riding in such a smooth ride?

Anyway, the point is that the floodlights from the newly constructed 7-11 convenience store were working – well. I turned left and adjusted the Pontiac, pointing it into the vicinity of the right lane.

Did I mention the darkness and rain?

I didn’t mind the lights. It had taken years for the good and thoughtful people at 7-11 headquarters to see the wisdom in placing a new convenient store in our quaint neighborhood. So, a little squinting at a billion watt light bulb wasn’t a big deal.

After all, our little corner of Saraland was nearing the 20th century and change was a coming…

It wasn’t that we had far to travel to find groceries. There was a full service grocery less than three miles away. But the (now closed) Delchamps Foods didn’t have the selection of merchandise that mattered most to teenagers in the late 1970s: gas and pinball.

For the uneducated and socially deprived, pinball is an arcade game with a stainless steel ball that bounces around the playing surface hitting objects (and occasionally the protective glass) adding coveted points to your score (sometimes in triplicate). No video screen or really much computer circuitry for that matter.

With my attention drawn to the floodlights – much like a moth in a fatal attraction plunge (or ascent) to outdoor sports lighting, I did not see or have reason to see a somewhat large creature in the middle of the road.

There are few things in life that get your attention like an unexpected something in the middle of the road on a dark and rainy night.

In the nanoseconds that followed, I realized what it was – lying there in the road…

Bambi.

Or as most of my northern relatives would say, “dinner.”

On cue, her eyes froze as the approaching Pontiac illuminated her face; I expected no less.

Instinctively, she bolted. And although I use the word “instinctively” loosely I don’t know why her instincts didn’t keep her out of the road in the first place.

Regardless, with a 50/50 chance of avoiding disaster, I swerved to my left where, not coincidentally, the Pontiac and the deer met.

The Pontiac almost slid off the south embankment, but stopped just short of the edge, coming to rest on or near the aforementioned Bambi.

Fortunately, for the Pontiac, the damage was minimal; but for the Bambi, umm, life would not be quite the same.

When Bambi and the Pontiac met, an unpleasant thud carried through the humid and sweltering South Alabama summer air 300 yards away to the 7-11.

The scared 17-year-old driver, shaking from the trauma, but better off than the Bambi, sped home – all of two blocks.

As I passed the 7-11 and its nuclear powered lights, I saw two local gentlemen discussing the day’s events while standing besides a pick-up truck. It looked like it might be their lucky day.

The resourceful 7-11 men watched the Pontiac disappear to the west and peered back up the street at the scene of the incident, not knowing what or who might have been struck.

The Pontiac had some unfortunate cosmetic adjustments to its outer shell, which, when later noticed in the light of day, (and for reasons I didn’t understand – I mean I could have died or been scratched or something) displeased my father greatly.

Regardless, after an appropriate time of reflection and an abatement of an accelerated heart rate, I drove back to the 7-11 for pinball and gas, surveyed the area near the overpass, and spotted the gentlemen sizing up what would be a gratuitous windfall.

As they lifted Bambi into the back of their pick up truck, I realized how satisfied I was to have assisted these fine men in providing food for their hungry families – without the need of them trampling into the sometimes unpleasant woods necessitating violent bloodshed.

Not really.

Stupid deer.

The damage was not that bad to the Pontiac chick magnet, but as life would have it; I would later be blessed with more opportunities to contribute to its growing collection of dents and scratches.

(Note: I re-posted this here because I am trying to consolidate all my articles into just one site – paulswann.com)

Best Day Ever!

The Friday before Tax Day was not good. I spent a large part of the day plugging numbers into Turbo Tax Online. By 6:00 p.m., I had managed to overcome my inclination to disregard the whole thing and escape to Jamaica.

Lumber Lost
Lumber Lost
I’ve never been to Jamaica. It would be a blast – for a little while.
I could have used the money that I was going to pour down the bottomless pit (i.e., government) very nicely on my trip to the Caribbean Ocean.
But I thought about my poor family, having to receive post cards from me from afar. And of course, the bottomless pit would not have cared about my little family and would have attached a lien on my home – creating marital disharmony.
So, I filed: federal and two states. I had fought with TurboTax for most of the day as it insisted that I pay a large sum of money to the Feds and lesser amounts to Arkansas and Mississippi.
I insisted that this was not in my family’s best interest and that our children needed that money for things like food, clothing, and continued high-speed Internet service.
TurboTax disagreed and pointed to our taxable income amounts.
“That’s just a suggestion” I insisted. We didn’t really make that amount. At the conclusion of the whole affair, TurboTax won and my family lost – a lot!
As I pondered the coasts of Jamaica and the inequity of our progressive tax system, I drove home. As I approached Highway 98 (which at that point is basically an interstate highway), I saw someone who had a worst day than I.
At least the load his truck was carrying wasn’t something explosive nor did the wood land atop an unsuspecting Toyota Prius.