One dark weekday morning and I am standing in my spot at the
bus stop, waiting for my bus to work. A car pulls up near the bus stop and a
laughing passenger gets out. He’s carrying a plastic bag of clinking beer
bottles and wearing a Knights of Columbus satin jacket with a large back patch.
He turns and shouts something to the passenger before laughing and starting to
walk away.
The sees me standing there in my glum workday “business
casual” finery and offers me a beer from his plastic bag. “No thank you,” I
tell the man, being appreciative of his generosity. He puts the beer back in
his bag and offers me a bottle of hard cider instead. I politely decline again.
He sees I’m going to work and he jokes that he is just
getting home from work. He smells of alcohol and emits drunken joviality. Though
I leftthe drinking life nearly a decade ago, I am familiar with this
stumbling generosity and the allure of unending good times. Had I followed a
different path—different not necessarily meaning better—I could easily be the
one drinking until 6:30 in the morning.
I didn’t envy the man being drunk at the crack of dawn, but
I envied the ease and appreciation he had for his working life, whatever it is
or was. When I get home from work, I am not a bundle of generosity towards
strangers but a tired commuter eager to spend some time with my kids before I
go to bed, fearful for what work emergencies might consume the rest of my
waking day.
This came to mind later that same week when I purchased some
tickets for the Mega Millions drawing for a prize that has since ballooned past
$1 billion. By any stretch of logic lottery tickets are a waste of time and preyon the poor and working classes. It is people who can often
least afford it who spent their money on these dreams printed out on small
slips of paper.
The millions of tickets sold for a chance at that prize
money was purchased by people dreaming of riches but not necessarily because
they want to be rich. People spend their money on lottery tickets because they
want to escape the present workday lives that consume much of their time.
A few weeks ago I was able to work from home on a Tuesday
and I took my older children to their Pre-K classes. It was one of the best
weekdays I’ve had in a long time. The 40-odd minutes I had with my older girls is
time I rarely get outside of the rushed weekends. It’s time you can’t get back,
and time burns faster than money.
If I had the choice of doubling the money I make at work
currently or cutting that in half and not having to go to work every day, no
question I would take the latter. And so would a lot of the people who stand on
line for lottery tickets. It’s not big mansions or luxury cars we fancy, it’s
buying more of our time back for ourselves.
Good luck everyone.