You would hate how the world has changed since I last visited you. First, we are in the midst of a global pandemic. Remember in Atlanta, when I went with you to the safety conference? Remember all the masks we saw? You could have made a killing now. United First Aid and Safety would be making serious money. If only you had hung in there long enough. Every business is clamoring for masks, gloves, sterile cleaning supplies. If you had only stayed and limped through the tough years, this would truly have been your turn around! I honestly think this might have been the year you could honestly have told people that you made a million dollars…you would have needed a warehouse to keep everything.
Oh and Armour Gel? If that had been a real thing, that too would have been a business worth noting….anything that kills the COVID 19 virus! You were perhaps just a little ahead of your time. I’ve thought about you often when I’ve read or heard something about masks and even remember throwing away hundreds left over from your failed business. How would things be different?
One thing that would have been a challenge would be staying at home together. You never left the house when you were alive. And you certainly never left me alone when I was in the house. The pandemic has forced me to work from home most of the time. I can’t imagine the potential conflicts we would have had trying to share space and time. I know you would have struggled with the many conversations I have with the men in my professional world. I see you trying to catch a glimpse over my shoulder at an unfamiliar voice and I can only imagine the bizarre accusations and assumptions you would make as you listened in.
And I would have been even more frustrated that you didn’t have a job and weren’t actively seeking one. Which would have only resulted in more opportunities for you to lie about the job search you never actually started. I have so many memories of you and your job searches. Where do I even start? Perhaps I should start with Menards…you said they wouldn’t hire you because you were overqualified and would quit within a week. What about driving trucks for the bouncy house company? You said you went to talk to them but they thought you were more management and wouldn’t be satisfied with driving trucks and setting up birthday party entertainment. And of course, Tommy Bahamas…they wouldn’t hire you because of your tattoos.
And then there was Clear Me. You actually got one paycheck from them! And then you quit because “it was making your PTSD come back because you had to fingerprint people.” I can only imagine the real reason. I suspect it was because you couldn’t see yourself as a “lowly” salesperson after being a self-proclaimed successful business owner. I also suspect it was because you disliked taking orders from someone younger than yourself…or someone with less experience…or from ANYONE, actually. Either way, you quit.
Right before you died, I begged you to call Grant He had told you he frequently had openings. You told me that you had asked him and he had nothing. After you died, I heard differently. Grant said he had begged you to come and work for him and had even offered a place for you to stay at the hotel. That you turned him down told me you never intended to work. Why should you? You had me to take care of you. And you wanted everyone to feel sorry for you. And you wanted them to blame me.
So the pandemic would have been just another excuse for you. You would have told me it was too risky for you to work because you had asthma, yet you wouldn’t have hesitated going out with your friends on the bike. Would you have worn a mask? I’m not really sure. It depends on how much attention you wanted to draw. If it won you sympathy, I think you would be all about masks.
The other newsworthy event was the killing of George Floyd by the white policy officer who knelt on his neck. You would have had strong opinions about this and would love talking about all the times you did the same thing, but with obvious different results. After all, you were a cop. You know these things. You would have loved responding to the rioting and looting and when John went to provide security, you might have even asked to go too. On the other hand, you would have asked, but then withdrawn your offer because of the “PTSD” it would undoubtedly trigger. You would have watched John’s live feed and I can hear you question, “Can’t you see his eyes? Can’t you see the PTSD?” Again, John was one you bonded with over his likely PTSD. As if comparing several tours in Iran and Iraq to time as a reserve officer were the same thing. This embarrassed me to no end.
How many police officers would you have thanked? You would have watched the riots live and criticized the police response. You knew how to handle riots. After all, you were a cop. OK, time for me to go back to the real world and leave your memories on the page. Could you stay behind this time? I could use some time away from you. Even with you dead, there is still too much together-time.