column is going to get just six paragraphs
down.
A car cut me of while I was on my way
to the airport, only to get caught behind someone making
a left turn. I breezed by in the now vacant right lane.
It was fun to watch the car in my rear view mirror. It
was even more fun when it happened to another car within
a block. That's right - even glancing behind me, I was
still able to think ahead.
I don't understand people who leave windows
open when they leave the house and wonder why it's cold
when they get back. I don't understand people who don't
close the potato chip bag and wonder why they all the
chips are stale. I don't understand people who watch Dr.
Phil and wonder why they got bogus weight loss advice
from a phony doctor that's a real fat guy. That's right
- I said it.
Life is cause and effect. The longer you
live, the more causes you should learn to produce your
desired effects. My first flight touched down, and there
was a full ten minutes between arriving at the gate and
the row in front of mine deplaning. But a woman in front
of me waited until no one else was in front of her to
get her bag down. I know I was only delayed by thirty
seconds. But those are thirty seconds I could have used
to take cheap shots at television personalities.
Why would she not get her bag while she
was waiting for that ten minutes? You have two jobs when
you deplane from a plane you have previously planed: gather
your belongings and leave. Since she was unable to levitate
(I'm assuming), she couldn't leave while there were dozens
of people in front of her. So the logical thing to do
would be beginning work on her other job.
I tried to imagine a scenario in her head
where not getting her bag would be the right choice.
"There are several people behind
me who look like they're in a hurry. My bag is within
arms reach. There is room for my bag to sit next to me
once I retrieve it. I have several minutes before I can
start moving forward, and there is nothing to keep me
otherwise occupied. I do not know how to levitate. Therefore,
I should.oooh, shiny."
That's the best I could come up with.
While driving last week, I noticed a bright
orange car on the interstate. And not just because redheads
gravitate to all things orange. It was an orange Dodge
Neon with a spoiler - the very same kind of car I'd rented
a few weeks earlier. I have a philosophy that while renting
a car, I get the kind of car I would never own myself.
Like when I rented a Kia Rio. I'd never buy one on my
own because I like cars with engines.
But this orange car was also noticeable
because the driver made it do crazy things. Like go 90
in a 55. And get stuck behind two trucks. And go 90 again.
And get stuck again. And speed into a line of cars at
a toll booth. Without realizing that though the truck
line seems longer, it contains fewer vehicles.
I know all of this because the entire
time, I was on cruise control at 63 miles per hour while
passing and being passed by a Neon-drathal alternating
between 90 and 45. Until we came to the toll plaza twenty
minutes after I first noticed the car, I didn't hit my
breaks once. I drove through the toll ahead of the Orange-utan
(was that stretching?) and watched as he faded in my rear
view mirror, stuck behind a dozen drivers not forward
thinking enough to fish for change before they got to
the booth.
Of course, I'm not perfect. If I truly
had foresight, I'd have booked a later flight this morning.
Steve Hofstetter is the author of the
Student Body Shots books, which are available at SteveHofstetter.com.
E-mail him at steve@stevehofstetter.com.
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