This is a tale
about a New Story and Three Miracles.
Yesterday, Troy
and I had to make yet another trip to the appeals court in downtown L.A.. (If you are new to my blog and haven’t been following the long
saga of our fight to keep our dog Stitch, the story is here.) We are currently
in year three of a ridiculously drawn out battle that has been rife with
jaw-dropping errors and bumbling ineptitude. The latest is that on January 3rd,
we filed our appeals brief. The plaintiff had 30 days to respond. He did not.
We were waiting to hear what the court would decide. And waiting, and
waiting…On Monday we were notified that the plaintiff filed a response three
months late. In line with the
dazzling list of injustices that have occurred in this case, the court accepted
it! Three months late!
Our attorney
needed copies of this new response, so yesterday we set out for the courthouse
with a pit in our stomachs. We anticipated the
traffic, the expensive downtown parking ($24 for one hour), the incompetence of underpaid court workers. Documents would be lost, wrong case numbers
would be filed, clerks would stare back at us with lack of concern. We knew the
drill.
At the court, we
asked for copies of this new, three-months late document.
“We don’t have
your file,” an apathetic, goth clerk told us.
I turned to Troy
and threw my hands in the air. “Of course they
don’t have our file! Every time we come here it’s one problem after the next
and blah blah blah…” and suddenly I stopped myself.
Just the day
before, I had posted this blog, listing things I learned from Deepak Chopra, my
favorite quote being: “The story you tell yourself becomes your experience in
the world.”
“Wow,” I said to
Troy, “Listen to me, anticipating the worst. I need to tell myself a new
story.”
“Okay,” he said,
“what’s your new story?”
I took a deep
breath and centered myself, “The new story is…we are going to have a good
experience in court today. We’re going to get the files we need, the clerks are
going to be competent and friendly, and we’re going to get out of here before
our parking meter runs out.”
And that is
exactly what happened. Another clerk found our file easily, was smart and
friendly, gave us the copies we needed, didn’t charge us (at 50 cents a page)
and told us to have a great day. And we made it back three minutes before our
parking meter expired. That has NEVER HAPPENED for us before. So that was
MIRACLE #1.
Driving back, I
worried about traffic, as we had to pick Evan up from school. As soon as we pulled
onto the 405 onramp, we came to a dead stop. Bumper to bumper traffic. Ugh, we
both groaned. This could take hours…
“New story!”
Troy exclaimed, “I’m driving 90 all the way home!”
We both laughed
heartily at this one.
“Good one, Honey!” I said. I mean, this was the 405 on a weekday.
“Good one, Honey!” I said. I mean, this was the 405 on a weekday.
But within
moments, I kid you not, the traffic dissipated and we drove, not 90 but 70, all
the way home to Chatsworth. If you live in L.A., you know that is MIRACLE #2.
And then,
starving, we pulled into In N Out Burger, which has a long line at nine in the morning, at one in
the morning, and three in the afternoon. In my entire life I’ve never been to In
N Out when there wasn’t
a long, long line.
We pulled in at
12:30p.m. and laughingly said, “New story- no line at In N’ Out!”
And I know none
of you Californians are going to believe me but I SWEAR- there was no line at In N Out Burger!
NONE! At lunchtime!
That was a
miracle of almost biblical proportion. That was MIRACLE #3.
Now I can’t say
that all those things weren’t just coincidences, but what is the definition of
a coincidence, anyway?
Coincidence: the occurrence of events that happen at the
same time by accident but seem to have some connection.
(Merriam
Webster Dictionary)
Hmmm…I told
myself a new story. My circumstances changed. In that case, yeah, I guess I’d
call that a coincidence.