Thursday, March 22, 2012

Letters From The Road

My sister, Bonnie, and I just got back from a road trip to Arizona to help out our parents. This trip involved 42 hours together in a car, with a few strategic stops along the way to eat unhealthily and use bathrooms of questionable cleanliness. In short, it was a rousing success. Here are some deep thoughts from along the way.
---------------------------------------- Dear Foil Packet of Cheap Shampoo,
I tried to open you as I stood in a robin's egg blue hotel bathtub somewhere in Kansas, surrounded by mango-colored tile, with a weak stream of lukewarm shower water drizzling down on me. I could not get you open. I tried with one hand, then the other. I dried my hands on a towel outside the shower curtain and tried again. I finally resorted to using my teeth. On the third try, I gnawed a tiny hole through. I was rewarded with a quarter ounce of vaguely soapy liquid with the scent of Generic Grandmother. Why did that have to be so difficult?
Sincerely,
Sarah
--------------------------------------- Dear Texahoma,
I appreciated you for using a name that makes your town's position on the border of Texas and Oklahoma obvious. I also appreciated your 25-foot paper mache cowboy as a photo opportunity, even though some unkind soul had taken the liberty of punching a hole through his nether-regions. I wonder if it was the same unkind soul who shot a bullet through the groin bits of every sign with a cow on it in the entire state of Texas. Regardless, thank you Texahoma.
Sincerely,
Sarah
---------------------------------------- Dear New Mexico Stuckey's Gift Shop,
I admit that when I saw the first poorly-formed, half-life-size plastic figurine of a Native American of Indeterminate Tribe, I thought it might be tacky. But when I saw that they were 50% off, so that I could get both of them as a culturally insensitive matched pair, suddenly that made it all better.
Sincerely,
Sarah
----------------------------------------
Dear Eagar Arizona Fire & Rescue,
When an anonymous caller phoned you on Monday to report that there was a large bonfire blazing out of control behind my parents' house, and that "two little girls" were running around it frantically with a garden hose trying to keep the nearby tree and woodpile from catching on fire, what they really meant was that Bonnie and I had the situation completely under control. I promise. Thank you for coming to hang out with us for a while anyway. Inviting the ambulance along was a nice touch, too.
Sincerely,
Sarah
----------------------------------------
Dear Unnamed Officer of the Joplin Missouri Police Department,
Thank you for pulling me over at 1am as I turned into the parking lot of an utterly deserted gas station near the freeway, to remind me that a turn signal is important even if absolutely no one is around to see me use it. More importantly, thank you for not giving me a ticket, as you must have recognized from my frazzled hair and car full of McDonald's trash that I had clearly suffered enough already.
Sincerely,
Sarah

Monday, March 12, 2012

Hey, Big Spender

Why is it that people like putting quarters in slot machines, but they hate putting quarters in parking meters? I've given this a lot of thought because I live along the busiest street in a trendy night-lifey neighborhood that gets a lot of parking action on Friday night... and a lot of parking tickets at the unpaid meters on Saturday morning.

People will plan an entire vacation around going to Vegas and spending huge scads of money on the One-Armed Bandit, but they gripe and grouse when it comes to paying the meter. Both accept quarters. Both have digital displays. And all things considered, the parking meters are a much better wager, so why do we hate them so much?

Maybe it's because we all believe parking should be a free right.

Maybe it's because it's a pain to carry coins around.

But maybe, just maybe, it's because the parking meter is a sure bet. I know that when I put a quarter in, I'll get 20 minutes out. No question. No risk. No thrill. No pleasure. It's a boring certainty, and therefore dislikable.

Would people enjoy it more if there was some unpredictability to the meter? If sometimes, you put a quarter in and got 20 minutes, but other times you got 40 minutes, and sometimes you got nothing? And maybe if some bright flashing lights and jingly bells went off when you won big (60 MINUTES!!!!!! YOU'RE THE KING OF THE WORLD!!!!!!)

Would gamblers line the streets of my neighborhood, trying to hit the big jackpot? Would people who won more minutes than they really needed find an excuse to stay parked there longer, just to fully enjoy their winnings?

Would these:

get redecorated to look more like these:

Would the whole parking paradigm be shifted?

How would it change your parking experience if the meter was a gamble?