"Transporting a Dream" by Old Poet MK, brought back to mind an episode when I was in my 20’s, and working in an insurance office in San Diego with a night job as a waitress at a Beatnik Coffee House. I was in love with a wandering folk singer who had left to perform at a club in Oklahoma City and I missed him terribly. He called late one Friday night and said why not come there and drive back to California with him. At first I told myself all the reasons it would be impossible. Then my heart told me I had to find a way to do it. I called my supervisor and told a fib about my mom being sick and I had to fly to Washington State for a few days. I emptied my piggy bank and the tip jar from my coffeehouse night job, but I didn't have enough for the ticket. I did have a series E savings bond tucked away, but nowhere to cash it in on a Friday night. This was long before we had computers and cell phones, so I had only my land line to help me. I called Greyhound and got their schedule and all the stops they made along the way to Oklahoma City. As it happened they had a 20 minute rest stop in Mesa, Arizona at 10:15 AM. which was about as far as my gathered money would buy a ticket for. Good enough! I grabbed some clothes and my E-Bond and raced to the bus depot. I gave them all my money, much of it in coins, and bought a ticket for Mesa. Soon the bus was loaded and I settled in as we rolled on through the night. Too excited to sleep, I wrote several poems along the way. When we got to Mesa for the rest stop the next morning I leaped off the bus and flew into a nearby bank (Talk about miracles - it was just across the street from the depot ) I pleaded with them to cash my Savings Bond so I could continue on. The handsome teller listened to my story and then called the bank manager over to hear it as well. That was the day I learned that very pretty girls can do things ordinary folk might never manage. Without knowing me or really checking out my ID, the bank manager and handsome teller actually cashed my savings bond for me. Had they not done that I would have been stranded alone and penniless in a strange city. Only the confidence of youth and beauty could lead someone into a situation like that. I raced back to the bus as it was loading again and bought my way on to Oklahoma City. I wrote more verse as I looked out the bus window on the way. Some of it very good. There was tragedy though. I filled one little notebook with poems and was well into a second one when it came time to change busses. I somehow left the first notebook on the bus as I got off and didn’t realize it until well away on the second one. I was heartbroken. All I could do was write a sad poem about lost poetry - which I did. When I arrived in Oklahoma City I was met with love, music and wonderful moments. The drive back to LA. was exciting and romantic as we stopped to admire the scenery and take photos of each other. What an exciting escapade that was. The folksinger was a lovely period in my life, filled with other adventures and Whippet dogs, but alas, not permanent. The relationship didn’t endure past two years, but the love of Folk music and Whippets did.
Twenty five years later a similar adventure on a bigger scale befell me, but that’s a story for another time. LJM
Hoping you won't do the math and figure out how utterly old I am.