10/29/07

When Opportunity Knocks...

Something I've been learning lately, is that life is all about seizing opportunities. For most of us, great opportunities rarely come by, and when that door is opened, you must walk through boldly, or else condemn yourself to that haunting "What If..." reverberating in your head.

Ironically enough, I was thinking about opportunity on my commute this morning. My alarm failed to go off, so I woke up late, and was running really behind. It was also one of those days when I waited for what seemed like an eternity to catch the bus, and when it finally came it was pretty full. I managed to maneuver my way to the very back, and wedge myself into a seat. As we headed further South, the bus started to fill up more and more, until finally it was at it's capacity. People were crammed in like sardines, and it was at this point, two and a half stops away from where I get off to transfer, that I was trapped. There was no way I was going to get out when I was supposed to without causing a calamity. I had pretty much resolved to just stay on the bus until it got downtown and then just walk the mile or so to my office. But just then, a stop before mine, the woman sitting a few feet away decides she's not going to be taken prisoner by an overcrowded CTA bus...and she starts to barrel her way through the mess of people towards the door. This was it, it was my opportunity to travel along with her to that distant door in hopes of reaching the other side. I jumped up (or rather slid out) of my seat and followed behind her. She pushed and pulled and divided the people like Moses parted the Red Sea. My own raven-haired Moses in a black North Face fleece jacket.

I walked a few blocks to my other bus route to finish my daily adventure downtown to the office. Naturally, I arrived just as the express bus I would normally take pulls away, so I'm forced to get on the next bus (a non-express version that gets me to the same place, but takes twice as long to get there.) When I get on, the bus is relatively empty, so I get my choice of several seats. As I make my way towards the back, I almost don't see her...the cute girl from my guitar class is sitting along the window reading a book. I take a seat and debate whether I should get up and move closer in an attempt to talk to her.

Before I go on, there's a little back story here I think I should fill you in on. Last week at my guitar lesson, cute guitar girl (hereby known as CGG) came up to me and asked me if I take the 151 bus. I said yes. She then asked if i got off at the Roslyn stop to which i said yes, again. Then she told me she saw me that day on the bus, but wasn't sure if it was me so she didn't say Hi. I playfully called her a stalker, to which she kind of smiled, but kind of turned away like I might be a creep. (I know there is a short list of things you shouldn't say in front of a woman you barely know, and I realize that the word "stalker" is one of them. I just tend to talk before I think)

As I sat there in the back of the bus, I thought about all the things that had happened that day to put me in that seat, on that bus, at the same time as CGG: My alarm didn't go off, so I was late and had to wait for a bus, which would have trapped me had it not been for that woman who forged the way to the door. I just missed the bus I normally take only to end up 13 feet away from her. It seemed as though opportunity was knocking.

Casually I make may way up to the front and say hello. She cheerfully greets me back and marks the page of the book she's reading. We have a nice casual conversation about the weather, our guitar class, the city in general. It was a great "get to know you" conversation; something that after 8 weeks of barely being casual acquaintances we hadn't yet had the chance to do. Before I knew it, I looked out the window to see my office building as we approached my stop. We said we'd see each other later, and with a smile, I waved good-bye as I bounded out the door. It was like a scene straight out of a movie; One of those hopelessly romantic ones starring John Cusack or Sandra Bullock.

At least that's what could have happened had I actually gone up and said something to her. Instead, I sat there like a dope playing imaginary versions of that could-be conversation in my head all the while contemplating over and over again whether I should get up, or wait until she gets to her stop, accidentally running in to her on the way out.

In the end, I did nothing. Mr. Opportunity had opened door, and instead of boldly walking through. I nervously side-stepped outside of it until it was slammed in my face, and he called me a pansy.

8 comments:

J.T. - said...

Will you please write a book?

The General said...

Seriously! What are you doing with your life? I'm sitting here laughing out loud (not to be confused with LOLing, which is almost never really out loud) in my office.
You are hilarious in real life, but you are somehow even funnier in writing.

Do it!

Anonymous said...

PHIL!
dude, so i heard of your blog through the houseward grapevine!
my best memory of you is when we took the d.i. car to get ice cream at mcdonalds...or dairy queen...or meijers...somewhere in champaign. i have one beast of a memory.
are you still with the trib? phill me in! teehee...

philthy said...

Jenny Ha...holy crap. I have no recollection of taking the company car to get ice cream, but that sounds like something that i would definitely do.

J.T. - said...

Phil, thanks for directly addressing Jenny ha!, while deliberately ignoring House and me.

Quit your job today, and write an F'n book.

philthy said...

Teef, House, Sorry. I'm just sorting out some contracts with a few publishers. you can expect a book in your local store by Christmas

Unknown said...

i love it. and i'm going to go easy with the exclamation marks. kinda going crazy there.
anyhoo buckaroo, i'm moving to los angeles! got a rockin job at ucla in their design dept. and will start jan. 08! word is that i get my own golf cart to scoot around campus in...how amazing is that?!?!
about that book...i want at least 2.86 chapters devoted to me and all the ways that i could have sold ice to eskimos!
okay, really...enough with exclamations...

JMH said...

It's not your fault, man. It's not your fault. Say it with me. Then get drunk and think about it. Think twenty years in the future, beyond the moonlit guitar serenades, beyond the passionate chords.

When you discover CGG is truly, clinically insane.