"God, to whom our lives may be the spelling of an answer." -Abraham Joshua Heschel

Friday, January 13, 2006

It's Friday the 13th, and something bad happened. . .

Today, I was going to go grocery shopping. I always put off stuff like that, forever. I hate going to the store. So, I took my sweet ol' time getting ready and eating breakfast and doing laundry all morning. I finally was ready to leave for the store at noon, and when I walked out on to my porch, my car was no where to be seen. I double checked all up and down the street. . . .and it was GONE. I had parked it last night at about 8 pm on the street, and sometime during the night, someone broke into it, hotwired the steering column, and drove it away.
Well, shit.
This is the second time this year that my car has been broken into, but it wasn't stolen the first time. I think I might need to buy a club for it this week.
I spent about two hours in the police precinct office this afternoon, and I actually had a really good time. You'd think (because my car is shit and it's Friday the 13th, of all days) that I would be super crabby, but I met some great people at the office. There were two older ladies and a guy who were from the community organizing committee, and we had a really good conversation, and they gave me some good advice about how to be smart about living in the city. Then I spent another hour chatting with Carla, the office manager, about volunteering in the city, working against crime, and how we both love working with handicapped people and such. I learned so much from them. And one of the ladies said to me (she actually used to be a Bethel prof; she's so tongue-in-cheek when she talks about it now), "Well, if anything, this teaches you to hold your possessions loosely." Amen to that.
The last time that my car was broken into, it was the day after I had come back from Mississippi, working with hurricane relief. I had spent a whole weekend, seeing the vast devastation of an entire town on the coast. Those people's possessions were nothing but crap after the hurricane. So, now I think that we should all constantly remember that there are MANY people, all throughout the world, who don't have anything. And we have SO much.
I shouldn't assume that having a car is a given thing in life; it's just as uncertain as the next thing. I chose to live in this neighborhood in Minneapolis, so I can't complain when my car is stolen. It will be fixed soon (as soon as I get it towed from the impound lot. . .I'm sitting here waiting for my dad to give me a ride), and I will have it back again. I take it for granted all the time that I have the freedom of a car. I have so damn much, so I have no reason to be upset. I should be grateful.
And it's a damn beautiful day as well. Friday the 13th and a stolen car can't get ME down. . . .

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Mel! On the one hand, it sucks that that happened to your car. But what a refreshing attitude about it!

I left my wallet in a mercado in Mexico and it (obviously) got taken. Made me wonder why I was so attached to the money in the first place. I had no problem buying myself maracas, but I wouldn't take the time to buy lunch for one of the poor people on the street. And then my money was taken from me, and I was just as broke as the beggars I passed on the way back to the bus. Ironic, huh? What makes me better than anyone else? Posessions are here one day and gone the next.

11:53 PM

 

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