In what has now become a tradition at sc.net, here is my serialized tale of mayhem culminating with an evening at Madison Square Garden.
At 6:00 a.m. on July 24th my family woke up to the sound of its matriarch, me, screaming, "I won! Oh my gosh! I won!" I had just opened an e-mail from Derek Power. All my bottled up frustration related to the MSG ticketing fiasco dissipated as the reality of the situation sunk in. I was getting a primo seat to the show courtesy of Stewart Copeland. With a week to go before departure, I now had a clear mind to prepare full force for my multi-concert family road trip.
Later that morning I was driving to the mall with my daughters to stock up on green T shirts. Seriously. As I was going through an intersection, my car was t-boned. The driver of the other vehicle somehow hadn't noticed that his light was red. My light was definitely green. I'm a Nutter. I know green. Fortunately, nobody was hurt, but my brave little Echo, my brood's only vehicle and veteran of so many mad-cap excursions, was toast. I was days away from embarking on a week-long, 1800 km odyssey and I was sans auto. "Breath," I told myself, "breath."
The rest of the day was a whirl wind of tow trucks, police reports, insurance companies and car rental agencies. By late afternoon, I had procured a temporary set of wheels and got my eldest daughter to her scheduled job interview on time. After only a few minutes, a triumphant Sporterella returned to me in the parking lot. She had landed her first ever job. She was to be a part-time cashier in a new supermarket.
"And you'll be happy to know," she said with agrin, "that the mandatory training session is on August 1st. We'll still have no problem getting to our first concert in Saratoga on August 2nd."
No problem, except that the Saratoga show, for which I had bought the whole family tickets, was on August 1st. And the drive from Toronto to Saratoga Springs is seven and a half hours without slow downs, stops or border crossings.
"Breath," I told myself, "breath."