Twitter

Company Blog

Lucky, Blessed, a Miracle or It Doesn’t Matter?

by Adam Zack — July 25, 2018

Was I just lucky?

This. Is. A. True. Story.

I take the train from near my house to my office 4 or 5 days a week. It’s about an hour train ride each way, but compared to fighting San Diego traffic it’s proven to be a savior. I keep an old 1995 Nissan pickup at the destination train station to drive the 3 miles from the station to the office. I make it a terrible practice to really push the timing to the point that I am often actually running from the car to the train. And I hate running. It’s a bad habit and it’s stressful. I don’t know why I can’t break it. So a couple weeks ago on a Friday afternoon I was running late and threw my briefcase in the back of the truck and sped off towards the station. I got there just as the train was pulling up, locked the truck, grabbed my briefcase and ran for it. I made it with about 15 seconds to spare and was happy to be heading home for the weekend, the truck staying behind in Old Town San Diego until Monday morning. Around Sunday morning I asked my wife if she’d seen my wallet. Nope. I looked in my briefcase in the pocket I usually keep it. Nope. All through the briefcase. Nada. In the drawers and in the other car. No sign of it. Tracing my steps I was convinced that I had left it sitting on the truck seat, and I’d be returning Monday morning to a smashed window and a missing wallet. Old Town San Diego Transit Center is not in the best part of town. Arriving Monday morning I was relieved that the window wasn’t smashed, but after looking under the seats still couldn’t find my wallet. Crap, I have NEVER lost a wallet. I walked around to the driver’s side, glanced in the bed of the truck and I’ll be go-to-hell if there wasn’t my wallet. Right in the open in the truck bed. Mind you, the 1995 Nissan pickup is a low truck, with the top of the bed about 4 feet off the ground. Anyone can see into it. My $23 cash, credit cards and ID were all there. Intact. I call it the Transit Center Miracle. So I started thinking, was I just lucky? Was my provenance the result of good karma, always trying to be a good person? Was I blessed from above? Or was it just how fate had laid things out? I still don’t know, but it really made me think about how lucky I really am, in all ways. And it made me even happier that I didn’t have to got to the DMV and wait in line to get a new license.

Read More – Perspective

Filed Under: Company Blog

2 responses to “Lucky, Blessed, a Miracle or It Doesn’t Matter?”

  1. Adam, I agree with your being lucky. Last week I had a flat tire after coming out of a restaurant form a dinner business meeting at 10:00pm. No problem right, I’m a handy guy, just change the tire on my 2013 Chevy Avalanche. Well this was now the 3rd time trying to drop down a Chevy spare tire from underneath a Chevy truck. It rained a little earlier and the parking lot was wet. After 2 hours of watching youtube videos and trying every possible option to get the rusted spare tire release to turn and drop my tire, nothing worked. So I decided to use brute force and bend the rabbit ears metal clamp that secures the tire with the claw of a hammer, until it dropped to the pavement. Success! As a grocery store owner perseverance pushed me through. I could have been all upset getting wet working underneath the bed of my truck in the dirt and rust, but I was so grateful. Why? Because life could always be so much worse and its all about the lens that you view life that sets your attitude. Always be grateful, because in any situation, even bad ones, it could always be much worse. Had the storm that passed through 2 hours earlier dumping 2″ of pouring rain for over a hour, come when I was leaving the restaurant, I would have been in 3″ of water trying to remove my spare tire. I got home at 1:00am and was happy to be just damp and not soaked to the bone. I guess I was just lucky!

  2. Lila Fulton says:

    a miracle……pretty much…….
    blessed……..yep, you are and a blessing to many of us…….

    xo Ma

    ps see you in September….

Leave a Reply to Lila Fulton Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

 

  • Archives

  • Categories

  • Tag Cloud:

  • Our Work: