I got up and walked around the store for what seemed like the hundredth time today. I looked at my watch: 10:33. I looked for books that were out of place or crooked on the shelf. There were none, since I had just checked ten minutes earlier and no customers had come in since then. I wiped the shelves with a dust rag, but there was no dust because I had already dusted twice today. I felt like I had been here forever. I sat back down behind the cash register and looked at my watch again: 10:36. This day was going by so slowly.
I picked up the book I was reading: The Chamber, by John Grisham. It was about a lawyer defending his grandfather, who had been given the death penalty decades earlier and was running out of time to appeal his case. I had just finished reading Grisham’s most recent novel, The Rainmaker, about a lawsuit against an insurance company. I bought The Chamber in paperback using my employee discount, but I was not enjoying it as much as I did The Rainmaker. I continued reading, feeling a little disappointed. I put the book down at 11:02 and walked around to check the shelves again. I knew that nothing would be out of place or collecting dust yet, because no customers had come in since the last time I checked the store. I just needed to walk around again for a change of scenery.
This day was a perfect example of what my summer had been like so far: boring. I went to a roller hockey game with Rachel Copeland, and I had lunch with Catherine Yaras once, and that was the extent of the time I had spent with friends this summer. I had gotten letters from Sarah Winters, who had lived downstairs from me in Building C; Tiffany Rollins, who had lived in Building K and had classes with me; and Molly Boyle, my friend from the Internet who lived in Pennsylvania. But none of them were anywhere near Santa Lucia County. The Fourth of July, Independence Day in the USA, had been last week, but my family stayed home and did nothing. Fireworks were illegal in Santa Lucia County, and the night of July 4 had been too foggy and cloudy to see any public fireworks display. I had some fun creative projects I was working on, though, and I was playing a lot of Super Nintendo. My game of choice at the moment was Donkey Kong Country.
In the front of the store was a tall vertical rack of greeting cards, visible from outside through the window. I looked out the window at the parking lot. Books & More was in a strip mall anchored by a grocery store, which was ahead of me on the left. People were entering and leaving the store, each one of them having a much more interesting day than me, purely by virtue of the fact that they were not stuck in this boring store on a slow day being forced to listen to classical music.
The rack of greeting cards squeaked as I turned it. The cards were all straight and in the right place, just like they were an hour earlier the last time I checked. A poster of a painting of flowers, in a frame behind glass, sat on the floor leaning against the wall between the window and the shelf that held magazines. As I turned around to go back to the desk, I accidentally bumped the poster. It fell forward and landed on the ground. The short, coarse carpet was not enough to break its fall, and the glass shattered.
Crap.
It had happened. The first time I had ever seriously screwed up at work.
My brain shut down for a few seconds. What do I do? I did not know, but I was going to have to tell Jane. I would not be able to hide this. I messed up, and I needed to take responsibility.
Of course, just at that moment, with a mess of broken glass on the floor, a woman walked in. “Hi,” I said, smiling. “Don’t go over there,” I continued, pointing to the broken picture frame. “There’s broken glass, and I didn’t get a chance to clean it up yet.”
“That’s ok,” the customer replied. “I was just wondering where I could find the children’s section. I’m looking for a birthday present for my niece.”
I pointed the customer in the direction of the children’s books and stood near the broken glass. I needed to tell Jane and find out what to do, but I did not want to leave the customer unattended, nor did I want to risk other customers coming in and stepping in the glass or cutting themselves.
After the woman bought the gift for her niece, I went into the back room, where Jane had been making phone calls and doing bookkeeping. “Jane?” I said. “There’s a problem.”
“What is it?” she asked.
I explained about knocking over the poster and breaking the glass. “I’m sorry,” I said. “It was an accident.”
“There’s a broom and dustpan over there, and a vacuum cleaner.”
“What about the poster? How would I fix the glass for that?”
“You can take it to a glass shop.”
“Do you know where one is?”
“You can try the phone book,” Jane told me.
That would work, I thought. Jane did not come across as sarcastic to me; she was probably trying to help me figure things out on my own. I did not ask whether or not I would be paying for this myself; I just assumed I was, since it was my fault.
I carefully picked up the large pieces of glass and threw them in the garbage. I swept as much of the rest as I could into the dustpan, throwing that away as well, and I vacuumed the area for several minutes, making sure to get all the glass. I had cleaned up the mess, but there was still the matter of getting new glass put into the frame. I had never done this before. I did not know how to deal with glass shops. And I had no idea how much this would cost.
I looked up “Glass” in the yellow pages section of the phone book. Back in 1995, search engines on the Internet were in their infancy, and most small local businesses did not have Web sites, since most of their customers were not regular Internet users. I found one not too far away called Bill’s Glass Shop. I had heard that name before; I had seen their trucks around town, and I think my parents got a new window there once, when I was a kid and I hit a baseball through my bedroom window.
I picked up the phone to call Bill’s Glass, but I got nervous and hung up before I dialed. I needed a plan. I would explain to them when I did. I would ask if it could be fixed, how much it would cost, stuff like that. I took a deep breath and picked up the phone again, this time actually dialing the number.
“Bill’s Glass,” a male voice said on the other end.
“Hi,” I said. “I accidentally knocked over a poster in a picture frame, and the glass broke. Can you fix that?”
“Sure we can. How big is it?”
“I didn’t measure it. It’s like a regular poster size.”
“So about 24 by 36?”
“That looks about right.”
“We can get that done for you today. Can you bring it in now?”
“I should be able to soon. How much will it cost?”
“Including labor and everything, let’s see, around thirty dollars.”
That seemed reasonable to me. I did not like the idea of spending money on the fact that I was clumsy, but I had no choice now. “Sounds good,” I said. “I’ll bring it down as soon as I can.”
“You know where our shop is?” the man asked. I told him the address I got from the phone book, and he confirmed that I was correct. “See you soon,” he said.
“Thank you.” I hung up and walked to back room. “Bill’s Glass says they can do it today,” I told Jane. “Should I take it there when my shift is over, or should I go now?”
“You can go now,” Jane replied. “I can take a break from this and work the front until you get back.”
“I’ll be back soon,” I said. I carefully put the poster and picture frame in the back of the car and drove toward Bill’s Glass. It took about ten minutes to get there. I had no trouble finding the shop. When I got there, I parked and took the poster inside.
“What can I do for you?” the man behind the counter said when I walked in.
“I called a few minutes ago about the poster in the picture frame?” I said nervously.
“Oh, yeah!” the man said. “Let me take a look at that.” I handed him the poster, and he looked at it, assessing the work that needed to be done. “We can get this done right now. It’ll only take a few minutes.”
“Sounds good,” I replied.
I sat in the lobby of the shop, staring awkwardly at everything on the wall for a few minutes. I saw a newspaper sitting on a table next to my chair; I started reading that. How did this work? Did glass shops have waiting rooms? Was I supposed to wait here? Should I go back to the car? I felt completely out of place, but I just sat there, trying to act like I knew what I was doing. After I finished reading the newspaper, I stared at the same things on the wall that I had stared at before.
About twenty minutes after I got there, the man brought out Jane’s flower poster with the glass in the frame repaired. “I got you all fixed up,” he said.
“Thank you,” I replied. I paid him, took the poster back to the car, and left.
As I pulled out of the parking lot, “Touch of Grey” by the Grateful Dead came on the radio. I turned it up and started singing loudly. My dad loved the Grateful Dead, and he often saw them live when they were playing on this side of the country. My parents had been eating Ben & Jerry’s Cherry Garcia flavor ice cream, since long before Ben & Jerry’s was trendy, just because the flavor was named after the Grateful Dead’s Jerry Garcia. Once when I was in high school, Dad invited me to come with him to a Dead concert. I said no, because I had heard stories about the kind of things that Deadheads are into, and I wanted to stay as far away from that stuff as possible. Also, although I did not particularly dislike them, I only knew a few Grateful Dead songs at that point in my life. I felt like I would not be able to appreciate the music well enough. A little over a year ago, Dad had tickets for a Dead concert that he ended up not being able to go to, because we were in Jeromeville for an event for incoming freshmen. I do not know if he ever got to see them again.
Touch of Grey was my favorite Grateful Dead song. Many rock bands that stay together for a long time seem to end up having one more big hit late in their career. The Grateful Dead was a product of the hippie counterculture of the 1960s and 1970s, but their most commercially successful album was In the Dark, released in 1987. Touch of Grey, from this album, was also the first Grateful Dead song to have a music video, which I often saw on MTV at the time. I have a theory that the album was successful because many of the Deadheads of my parents’ generation had gotten real jobs by 1987 and were actually able to afford to buy the album.
As I drove back toward Books & More, singing “IIII WIIIIILL… GET BY” along with the radio, I thought about the odd situation I found myself in. I had a piece of fancy artwork in the back seat. Not original artwork, of course, it was a copy, but it was some fine classy painting of nature by some artist with a name in another language that I could not pronounce, the kind of artwork that belonged in a store that played classical music. And I was sitting up front, blasting the Grateful Dead. I guess that’s just me. I don’t fit neatly into stereotypes and cliques.
“It’s fixed,” I told Jane as I walked back into Books & More, holding the poster.
“Thank you,” Jane replied. “I’m going to put this back in the office until I can hang it properly, so this doesn’t happen again.”
“That’s a good idea.”
Jane went back to the office with the poster and stayed back there to work on bookkeeping, leaving me up front at the cash register. Business did not appear to have picked up while I was gone; the rest of the day was just as slow, and I spent much of it reading The Chamber with classical music in the background. It was a slow day, but I felt like I accomplished something. Maybe I would have been better off not having broken the glass in the first place, but now I knew how to get picture frame glass fixed if it ever came up again in the future.
I find it somewhat amusing that I spent the summer working in a stuffy bookstore with art on the wall and classical music playing, yet I have multiple memories of that job that revolve around the Grateful Dead. About a month after the broken glass incident, I arrived at work on a day that I was working the opening shift with Paula, the other part-time employee who also knew my family. Paula coincidentally arrived at the same time I did.
“Good morning,” I said to Paula as I got out of the car.
“I just heard on the news this morning that Jerry Garcia died,” Paula said.
I stood and stared for a few seconds, feeling shocked. “Wow,” I replied.
“Yeah. I hope your dad is taking the news okay.”
“I know. I feel bad because Dad always wanted to bring me to a Grateful Dead concert, and I never did because I was afraid of what kind of things happen at Grateful Dead concerts. Now we’ll never get the chance.”
When I got home from work that day, Mom and Dad were both sitting in the living room. “Did you hear the news?” Mom asked in kind of a somber tone.
“You mean that Jerry Garcia died?” I asked.
“Yeah. People have been calling all day to make sure Dad is okay.”
“Are you ok?” I asked Dad. He shrugged noncommittally.
Every year after that, when shopping for Christmas presents for my family, I always got Dad a Grateful Dead book or calendar if one was available. In recent years, the Bay City Titans baseball team has done some sort of Jerry Garcia or Grateful Dead tribute every year in August, since Jerry’s birthday and death anniversary are both in August, and I have been to this event multiple times with my parents. The last time I attended this event, I listened to the Grateful Dead channel on SiriusXM satellite radio every time I was in the car for a week before the game. But I still regret never having been to an actual Grateful Dead concert with Dad. Sometimes, windows of opportunity close with no warning. It is difficult to find that balance of going out and taking advantage of every opportunity, yet still getting enough rest to avoid exhaustion. I still struggle with that balance today. Sadly, missed opportunities are just a natural part of life. No one can possibly do everything, so all I can do is make the most of what I have and do my best to live my life.
Jerry Garcia bobblehead, from the Titans game on what would have been Jerry’s 70th birthday, August 1, 2012.
That’s a great video, but the song is edited, missing the guitar solo. Click here to hear the full version.
I’ve only ever heard the name of the band, not the music. But I get it about your Dad, I was the same when Elvis died, I was a teenager then and all my friends kept calling in to make sure I was ok lol. Caz
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Yes… that’s exactly it. :) The Grateful Dead is also probably bigger around here because they’re from this part of the USA. I’m still not an expert on their music, but I know more of it than I did back then. In 2015, surviving members of the band with some other guest musicians played three shows out here and two in Chicago as kind of a final set of performances, also celebrating 50 years since the band’s start. I got my dad the CD and DVD of the final day of that, and I copied the CD for myself. It’s good. It ended with a very hippie-like direction from the band to the crowd to remember this good feeling and take it with you and be kind… good advice for anyone anywhere.
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The way you’ve just described that final set CD and DVD makes me want to know more. I’m going to have to google it ;) Caz x
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(oop, it was two shows here and three in Chicago, I said the other way around)
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lol ;)
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Hi Greg, enjoyed the narrative and thanks for introducing The Grateful Dead with Touch of grey. I listen to Alternative usually and identify the feeling associated with a band. Oasis was my favourite band.
Thanks and much appreciated for sharing
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Thanks for reading!
In 1995 I was listening to a combination of what was called “alternative” (although I don’t like that word, it has such a vague meaning these days) and classic rock. I definitely remember Oasis but I didn’t have very strong feelings toward them either way. I heard Wonderwall and Champagne Supernova a lot during the time period I’m writing about, so I’ll probably use those songs in a post sometime.
In this post, when my story got to the end of year 1 at UJ, I made a playlist for all the songs I used in my posts from year 1. I’ll do the same thing every time I get to the end of a school year. https://dontletthedaysgoby.home.blog/2020/02/15/2020-a-note-from-the-author/
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Greg, I look forward to what you want to come up with. No suggestions from my side since you KNOW what YOU want. Following you to keep myself abreast with tracks that you might come up with. Keep the music real is what I really care about.
Thanks and much appreciated for sharing
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Update: Coincidence that I heard Glycerine by Bush and didn’t repent following your blog for obvious reasons🎶
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My dad sat next to Jerry Garcia on an airplane once. Apparently he kept getting up to go to the bathroom and drooling on himself…too bad.
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Also my dad knew his lawyer who saved him twice when he overdosed.
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Aww… That’s an interesting story, though.
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