Good kharma
Feb. 1st, 2010 05:48 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
...or at least kharma neutral.
Shortly after posting the note to "Allusers" on campus, the purse made its way to Security. Here's the full story, cross-posted from FB:
"So, here's what happened. Distracted by students, I leave my purse in the classroom. No worries, I think to myself--Steve is in there, I'll just get it when his class is done. So I go down, wait until I see students leave. Go in and say "Steve, did you find a purse in here?" "Why yes!" says he, "it's right over...[tiny voice] it was right there," pointing to the exact spot I'd left it, at the teacher's station. "It was right there not 10 minutes ago. I got talking to those guys and...." I thank Steve and leave.
So, the Pollyanna in me thinks, maybe someone picked it up to take to Security. I go to security. The guy had been there for over an hour, and no one had turned any purses it.
I go back to my office, work some more, send notes to FB and campus mail, try to find numbers to cancel credit cards, contact DMV (fortunately my new license is already on the way), etc. Get number for insurance company. But, annoyed, I then leave. I get in the car to head home, then think I should go to the Utica PD (since the specific contents make the theft a felony). Then I think, I should tell campus cops. So, I drive to their building, go in, and my favorite male on the staff is there. "Something was taken." He looks very serious but simultaneously hopeful. "What." "A purse. I was here earlier, but thought I should check whether I should do a formal report." "What's your name." I tell him. He smiles. Opens the Lost and Found cabinet. And, Ta Da!!, produces my purse. I say, "I was. here before." "It just came in."
Phone, cash, credit cards, and gift cards all appear to be there.
There are a variety of possible scenarios. Pollyanna is leaning one way, and Rosemary the Cynic is leaning the other (creating sort of a tick-tock effect--not very reassuring).
So, today's drama brought to you by Stouffers (cause after that, a frozen dinner is about all I can manage). Well, that and a martini, if I can find the olives."
So, it is certain that the taking of the purse was a deliberate act. The lack of communication with the resident teacher casts it in even more suspicious light. What do I really think happened? They opened it, saw whose it was, and thought, "OMG, that's a teacher!" and decided it was wiser to turn it in than anything else.
Yes, it could have been a good Samaritan, who waited 40 minutes to turn it in. In any event, I got it back, I didn't have to pay the offered reward, and things seem to be okay.
I'm still gonna change all my passwords, and maybe request new cards. And I hope nothing nasty happens to the person who dropped it off, and maybe even a little good. Positive reinforcement is a g-o-o-d thing.
Shortly after posting the note to "Allusers" on campus, the purse made its way to Security. Here's the full story, cross-posted from FB:
"So, here's what happened. Distracted by students, I leave my purse in the classroom. No worries, I think to myself--Steve is in there, I'll just get it when his class is done. So I go down, wait until I see students leave. Go in and say "Steve, did you find a purse in here?" "Why yes!" says he, "it's right over...[tiny voice] it was right there," pointing to the exact spot I'd left it, at the teacher's station. "It was right there not 10 minutes ago. I got talking to those guys and...." I thank Steve and leave.
So, the Pollyanna in me thinks, maybe someone picked it up to take to Security. I go to security. The guy had been there for over an hour, and no one had turned any purses it.
I go back to my office, work some more, send notes to FB and campus mail, try to find numbers to cancel credit cards, contact DMV (fortunately my new license is already on the way), etc. Get number for insurance company. But, annoyed, I then leave. I get in the car to head home, then think I should go to the Utica PD (since the specific contents make the theft a felony). Then I think, I should tell campus cops. So, I drive to their building, go in, and my favorite male on the staff is there. "Something was taken." He looks very serious but simultaneously hopeful. "What." "A purse. I was here earlier, but thought I should check whether I should do a formal report." "What's your name." I tell him. He smiles. Opens the Lost and Found cabinet. And, Ta Da!!, produces my purse. I say, "I was. here before." "It just came in."
Phone, cash, credit cards, and gift cards all appear to be there.
There are a variety of possible scenarios. Pollyanna is leaning one way, and Rosemary the Cynic is leaning the other (creating sort of a tick-tock effect--not very reassuring).
So, today's drama brought to you by Stouffers (cause after that, a frozen dinner is about all I can manage). Well, that and a martini, if I can find the olives."
So, it is certain that the taking of the purse was a deliberate act. The lack of communication with the resident teacher casts it in even more suspicious light. What do I really think happened? They opened it, saw whose it was, and thought, "OMG, that's a teacher!" and decided it was wiser to turn it in than anything else.
Yes, it could have been a good Samaritan, who waited 40 minutes to turn it in. In any event, I got it back, I didn't have to pay the offered reward, and things seem to be okay.
I'm still gonna change all my passwords, and maybe request new cards. And I hope nothing nasty happens to the person who dropped it off, and maybe even a little good. Positive reinforcement is a g-o-o-d thing.
no subject
Date: 2010-02-01 11:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 12:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-01 11:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 12:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 12:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 12:08 am (UTC)Failing olives, or even post-olive martini, a chocolate martini is never a bad thing...
no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 12:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 04:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 12:25 am (UTC)http://www.metmuseum.org/calendar/ca_event.asp?OccurrenceId={1b88c006-45e2-45c5-ae99-0a9f820b4ad8}&DisplayDate=
Medieval Costume Demonstration
February 28, 2010
3:00 p.m.
The Cloisters Museum and Gardens
Desirée Koslin and Citizens of Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Free with Museum admission
Costume historian Desirée Koslin describes and discusses medieval costumes modeled by citizens of Nijmegen in the Netherlands. Nijmegen was the original home of the Limbourg brothers, creators of such famed manuscripts as the Belles Heures and the Très Riches Heures. The costumes worn are modeled after those depicted in scenes from Limbourg manuscripts, considered among the greatest achievements in late medieval illumination.
This demonstration has been organized in cooperation with the City of Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
The program is offered in conjunction with the exhibition The Art of Illumination: The Limbourg Brothers and the Belles Heures of Jean de France, Duc de Berry, on view March 2–June 13, 2010.
We have one spare room and a good double hight queen airbed in a room with a door, another room with a door and a single air bed, and of course livingroom floor and other less privet places if anyone wants to come with you
Ash
no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 12:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 02:13 am (UTC)Oh, wait...I can't go...
*sigh* Please go and have fun for me.
Oh, check your checkbook to see if all of the checks are still there, in sequence.
no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 02:28 am (UTC)letting out my breath.
I am so glad it was found and returned.
It can not hurt to get new cards. I do that every so often now anyways.
At least you can now plan what you want to do, instead of just react.
I too hope something good happens to the one who turned it in intact.
no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 01:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 11:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-03 02:08 am (UTC)