I
I read once that every action, no matter how big or small, causes a chain or reactions, such as:
A couple of
people have emailed me wanting to know
if I was OK because no chicken-fat blog in past couple of days.
The bottom
line is that life keeps getting in the way:
Sunday both
of us had an interview with Global IS (whatever) which I think is U.S. Customs. I think this is what some travelers elect to
do, it prevents being in a long lines at the airport; it boils down to you have already proven you
are not a flight risk so you get to avoid the long lines of being scrutinized
at the airport by the authorities.
Our
appointment was at a Global office in an office park near the Atlanta Airport
at 11:00. In looking over the fine print
it said do not be early and do not be late, or your interview may be
delayed.
Well
shoot! I arrive at appointments
early. That is what I do. I do that in case of traffic problems, car problems, or any other unpreventable
problem. We don't know how to be late.
Sunday we
learned how to be late.
We gave
ourselves one hour and fifteen minutes to get there. When a mile from home I felt in my pockets
did not feel my cell-phone. I turned
the car around and went back home to get it.
When home I felt it in my pocket.
I just didn't feel around good enough.
Back on the
road again, now we had one hour to get to our appointment.
The last few
times we were going south on the i-75 the traffic was backed up in a stop and
go mode. This time we were lucky,
traffic was speeding along rather nicely.
We got to
our destination, in the office park at 10:45.
There was a
note on the door. It said the computer
was down and come to their office at the International Airport and gave us the
address.
We hopped
into our car and fled to the mentioned airport.
Went to an hourly parking, went into the huge building and found their
office at 11:15.
The
interview went fine. They took our
pictures and finger prints and the finger prints passed.
The only
snarl was that they do not mail to PO Boxes.
Our little approval package will be sent to our street address, which
then, would not be delivered because there is no mailbox. Duh.
Then, we dropped by to visit Sabrina, Benjamin, and Rocky and had lunch with
them. Very enjoyable to see our grandson
and his parents.
The first
thing after the dog park Monday morning I went to the post office and told them
my dilemma and wanted to know if they could tell my route carrier to be on the
lookout and hand it off to the box section.
There were a
bunch of "Ahs" and "Errs" but the bottom line was no. My name and street number wasn't even on the
carriers' case.
By the way,
the reason we do not have a mailbox, because my drunk/high neighbor knocked it
down four or five time while backing out of this driveway. Each time he fixed or replaced it but it was
a hassle I did not want to deal with.
But he is
dead now.
I decided we
needed a mailbox in our yard.
I went to
Home Depot and bought a mailbox.
Then I went
back to the post office and gave them my address on a sheet of paper and
requested they add my name to the carrier's case, I said I was going home and
put it up now.
It wasn't
that easy to "put it up now".
The problem was it has to be 30 inches in the ground. I could not dig any deeper than 12 inches
then I ran into rock. I tried digging
and pounding it just couldn't go any deeper.
I was getting very sweaty, dizzy, and nauseas. The last time I had that combination I had a
stroke.
Therefore, I
dropped the shovel and sat in the shade wishing for it to be finished.
Wishing
doesn't work.
Anna looked
up a handy man company, on line,
locally, and found a company with good reviews.
Today, I was
on lookout for the mail person to drive by.
I planned to rush out, flag her down, and explain I had planned for
someone to put up a mailbox today so please be on the lookout for letters for
me.
Then, I took
my mind and eyes off the street and the mail lady went by. I ran out but before I could get into my
truck she was turning on another road.
I road down our street and turn
on the street the mail vehicle
turned. There it was three or
four houses down. She got out of her
postal vehicle and ran up the street to the next mail box. I parked behind her mail vehicle and watch
her take the mail out of another box and carry it to the next box, and looking
at what she put in. Apparently she
caught herself being one address off,
all the way down the street. I don't
know if she figured it out but I think I know what happened: After I turned in my request to add my
address to the carrier's case I think they did, without notifying the
carrier. Then, when she lined up the
mail in order of delivery she placed mail as her memory remembered how it
went. So after my address she was one
off until she caught herself.
I introduced
myself to her and told her I was her new addition, even though we have lived in
the same house for over 40 years. She
looked puzzled. I probably did not
explain myself well.
And also Two men came from the handy man service and did an excellent job and kept me entertained as they did so. They were full of down-to-earth wit.
I can find a
silver lining in any thing.
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