Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Girlfriend had shopping karma

This weekend I was a grateful recipient of good shopping karma. I must say that it was fun and wish if it happened all the time.

Went to the mall to get some groceries. Here every mall has a large grocery store as a part of it. How handy. It was Sunday. Apparently, they stopped charging for parking on Sunday. I apparently didn't know about it so it was a nice surprise. Parking here is paid parking in most areas, parking garages especially. Went in and out in a jiffy.

Then went to another store, no waiting at the register, parking right at the door.

As I was driving to the third store (I was running a lot of errands, mind you), I realized that every traffic light that I could recall going through was green. Now I was on a roll. I felt good and was really in the mood to spend some money now. :) At the third, and final stop, I met some friends at the checkout. Talked to them for a bit, so I got held up a few minutes. Store was remodeled and freshly reopened so they were running a customer appreciation game. I honestly didn't even know what it was until my friends pointed it out. Customers took their shopping carts through a makeshift door at the exit. If a bell went off, you got the entire purchase for free. I went through, and, what do you know, the bells went off so I got the purchase for free. did I wish then that I had listen to my "buy more stuff" instinct when I was going through the store. Either way, it was great and it totally made my day.

This was the first time ever that the universe has bestowed upon me such a positive shopping experience. I am not putting down that special feeling when I find perfect shoes or piece of clothing at a bargain price. This was different though. Heck, I got paid to shop that day.

I am ready for another day like that. Just doubt it'll happen any time soon. :)

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Split second

We currently live close to a railroad track and frequently cross it by car on our daily errands. I grew up next to it and have been taught to always respect the train as trains are large, fast and dangerous. As a first grader I started crossing the train tracks on foot at least twice a day. Since I was a child, I remember hearing about accidents involving careless cars or pedestrians and trains. As a grown up, I read about them. I just never thought that I'd witness one of those accidents first hand from really close up.

There are currently three train crossings in the immediate vicinity of our home. I had just picked Chris up from the airport and we were headed home. While still far away from the crossing I saw that the lights were flashing indicating an oncoming train. I slowed down. By the time we got to it the lights were still flashing but the ramp (barrier) hadn't been lowered yet so I thought that maybe the train had already passed. So I stopped and slowly inched closer to the track so I could check for the oncoming train. At that moment the ramp started lowering behind us. I have to admit that made me very anxious. But, since the ramp and a train track are more than a car length apart, I backed up a little bit and waited for the train to pass. I could see a fast approaching train from the left. Ahead of us and to the right, an elderly man was approaching on foot. It all happened within seconds. We looked over and suddenly realized that the man didn't see the train at all and kept on walking. Both Chris and I started waving and screaming at him to stop. He didn't stop and neither did the train. I couldn't look and have averted my eyes just as the two were to meet. I had to look away and prayed that the man was just fast enought to have made it across. He was just a few feet away from us as was the train. I looked up and saw that the passing train threw him some 10 feet to the side. He wasn't hit directly but being hit by train at all isn't a minor accident. Chris and I rushed out. He was still alive. I rushed back to the car to get the cell and called an ambulance. There wasn't much to do but hold the man's hand and be scared and think about how a moment of carelessness has just changed many lives.

The man's daughter in law appeared maybe a couple of minutes later. She was just passing by when she saw us on a patch of grass next to the track. She scrambled to find his heart medicine as she thought that he had had a heart attack not realizing that he was hit by a train. Until I told her. Before long the ambulance was there. After they whisked him away there was nothing else to do but go home. I read in the newspapers today that he has passed on earlier this morning. That's just very, very sad. Chris got many extra hugs from me this weekend. Many of them because I've missed him so much over past weeks. And then many more on account of this reminder of how fragile life is.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

The year of many suitcases

We're back in Croatia after our 5 week trip to the US. As I was sitting in Chicago airport watching kids run around during our mega layover (5 hours), I've realized that this marks a total of 9 weeks of being away from home just this year. I must say, that may have been a bit much. What a fun year but all of the traveling, airports, cars, constant packing and unpacking can wear on a person. After just a couple of days though, we were back in our daily routine as if we haven't left home at all. School started a week ago. It's nice to be home.

Still, many memories were created in the last 9 months. For years, I've hoped that some day we may be able to make certain trips. As if by magic, much of it came true this year. Kids got to enjoy their first trip to Disney World. Even though it was January, weather was just perfect. Though short, it was a wildly successful, memorable and wonderful family trip. Eight of us went together. It'll be close to impossible to manage that again. It was a once in a lifetime thing and I have hundreds of awesome photos to remember it by.

This summer, we went on our first cruise. We've spent 8 days visiting foreign places and enjoying a high life of the cruise ship. We visited Italy (Venice, Bari), Greece (Olympia, where Olympic games started), Turkey (Izmir and Istanbul) and Croatia (Dubrovnik). I snapped away hundreds of photos while enjoying the sights of exotic (to us anyway) locations. More terrific memories. We had a cabin with a balcony and could sit outside and enjoy the beautiful and calm seas of Adriatic. Food was great. Every night we got to see a theater performance. Theater was the kids' favorite part. Even though they weren't too keen on sightseeing, I hope that sights of far away places and different people will stay etched somewhere in their memory.

Then we headed to Alabama to spend an entire August (and then some) there. I worked, kids played. Time simply flew by and now we're back to our every day grind. Well, almost everything was back to normal. Chris stayed in the US for an extra week. We worked out an arrangement so he could attend DragonCon in Atlanta with his best friend. He stayed in Croatia for three and a half weeks after we left. Then joined us for a week and a half and then stayed another week after we returned home. Though it all worked out like a charm I missed him terribly. Probably even more than I did when we were three months apart two and a half years ago. We've been together for 14 years, 12 of those married. You'd think that we'd have enough of each other by now. Still... I was relieved to have been able to pick him up at the airport. The moment he got home, all was well and life returned to normal.

We have no further trips planned at this time. Unless a trip to Slovenia's water park counts. We'll have to do that some time soon. But that's only 30 minutes away.