Well today was better than yesterday and that’s good. Nice to start off on a positive note. Ending on a positive note is another matter entirely.
The mellowness was from the fact that Vivek and Sanjay were in India and not coming back to the States until Wednesday, meaning they won’t be in until Thursday which is my last day of the week I think.
I say I think because I think Vivek is expecting me to work 5 days a week, which will be nice to get that money again, and also it means that the cleaning of the hallway will be done on Saturday or Sunday.
That’s not so bad. We shall see when Vivek returns.
I had a good talk with Greg Stevens and he was totally supportive of my situation, having dealt with Vivek for a number of years. His advice was very much the same as Annemarie’s and Harpy’s, hang in there. I don’t have much choice but to hang in there.
I’ve been hanging in there for so long that I am considered well hung.
Tomorrow I’m supposed to be going to Avenel with Abby. For what, I don’t know. He’s supposed to be picking me up here in Hoboken so that saves me a commute. That should make for an interesting experience.
I was planning on writing the other day about my driving experiences. I’m giving it a shot tonight. In 1981, a friend of mine, Derry Pedovitch and I had an idea to move to Los Angeles.
Derry had family there and he made arrangements to stay in Canoga Park. Derry had a van and we decided to drive Route 80 to Utah, then whatever highway would take us to Southern California.
It wasn’t that pleasant a trip. The northern route was dull, it took most of a day to get through Pennsylvania, the Pennsylvania Turnpike was a four lane highway, two lanes going east and west.
We made it through to Ohio and parked in a campground in the middle of the night. We were on the road the next day, looking at nothing but corn as we drove though Indiana, Illinois and Iowa.
We slept in Nebraska and I got into a fight with Derry almost abandoning me in Nebraska when the van’s cassette player ate one of my tapes. After that we made it to Utah, sleeping in Beaver.
Then it was onto Southern California, getting a room in Alhambra after sitting in traffic for a few hours. In Canoga Park I found Derry’s family were nice, a little rough around the edges though.
We realized once we got there that everyone travels to Los Angeles to start all over again and we weren’t so special. It was a weird couple of weeks that also included a trip to Las Vegas were I lost all the money I had.
That was also the last time I gambled, not counting playing the lottery. It was one of the stupider weekends in my life.
Our money and dreams were depleted and we headed back to New Jersey, driving the same route, only this time it was nonstop.
I went back to work, and eventually got Derry his job back in the same warehouse. 6000 miles in about a month.
I wouldn’t recommend it, but it did get me the courier position when it became available a few months later.
Derry betrayed me a year or so later and I never spoke to him again.
a cool “on the road” story!
Thanks Dave. Of course it’s a lot deeper than what I wrote here….
OMG that was Crazy Carol and me driving across country. Thanks for the flashback. Insert PTSD here.
PTSD is the phrase of the month for you, isn’t it Harpy?