Community tends to be a trusting environment that brings out the best in people… mostly.
This
is especially true at community-focused events, where attendees are
getting a long, cool drink of cooperative water amidst the competitive
desert of their everyday lives. Attendees often respond by becoming more
casual about leaving things in common spaces and having them be there
when they return—something they might never do otherwise. This is not
about risk taking or tempting fate; it's about trusting the village once
you sense its presence and feel a part of it. Mostly it's a good thing.
As
a veteran community networker, I've been to gobs of community events
over the years, something in the vicinity of 100. (This year I'll attend
four, for example.) And my personal experience pretty well lines up
with the generalities I've stated above. Thus, it was all the more
jarring when I encountered a couple bumps in the road last week.
The Missing Cushion
Over
Labor Day Weekend I attended the annual Twin Oaks Communities
Conference in Louisa VA—something I've been doing for at least the last
20 years. Per usual, I ran the conference bookstore (for the Fellowship for Intentional Community)
and positioned myself in the midst of the books, both to assist with
book sales and so that folks who wanted a conversation with me as a
community resource would know where to find me.
Since
I injured my lower back last October, I've taken to traveling with a
cushion so that I have back support wherever I sit, and I naturally set
that up in one of the two chairs located inside the book area. It's
common for me to leave a certain amount of personal stuff in the
bookstore area overnight, to eliminate schlepping it around every day,
and in two decades I'd never had a problem with it getting messed with.
While
everything was proceeding normally (excepting for the thundershowers
that drenched the conference site in hail and rain Friday afternoon),
when I got to the bookstore Sunday morning I noticed right away that my
cushion was missing. What could have happened? Frustrated, I looked all
around the bookstore area and on nearby seats and hammocks, but to no
avail. When no one brought it back during the morning, I made a public
announcement at lunch about its having gone missing, but that produced
no joy either. It was just gone.
While
it made eminent sense why my cushion might be desirable amidst all the
wooden seating, how do you just take something that doesn't belong to
you and then ignore the plea of the person who needs it for support? I
felt taken advantage of, and it shook my sense of trust. In the end, I
never did find out what happened and I didn't recover the cushion. I
don't know if it was stolen, or simply borrowed temporarily and then
left in a place I never looked.
To
be sure, by itself it was not that big a deal. The cushion was not a
needlepoint heirloom and my back is better enough now that I don't
strictly need the cushion as I did when first injured, and it had as
much sentimental value as practical (as my trusty support and a memento
of my life together with my ex-wife). That made it no less precious, but
I also knew I would function OK without it.
Then it got worse.
The Missing Money Box
For
more than 40 years I've been living in northeast Missouri, which is the
headquarters of FIC. Almost always, when participating in the Twin Oaks
Conference I'd drive out to VA with a carload of books and DVDs and
then turn around and drive back with the unsold products and the money
(cash, checks, and credit cards slips). I'd be the one unloading the car
in Missouri and handing in the paperwork.
This
year was more complicated because I'd moved to North Carolina in June. I
made arrangements to visit northeast Missouri ahead of the conference
so that I could drive out as usual, and I made the trip with someone
from Dancing Rabbit, a videographer named Illly (yes, he spells it with
three l's)—both so that he could shoot footage at the event in
preparation for an FIC crowdfunding campaign, and so that he could drive
the rental car back to Missouri afterwards while I traveled north from
Virginia to conduct a facilitation training weekend outside Boston.
Though
the conference continued through Labor Day Monday, Illly needed to
depart late Sunday afternoon in order to get back home in time to turn
in the rental car within a week, to avoid extra charges. That meant we
needed to conduct a final inventory and pack everything up for the trip
home expeditiously Sunday afternoon. While the weather was good, there
was a lot to do and Illly was going through the routine for the first
time. While his attitude was great and we worked together well, it was
all on Illly's shoulders to get everything back to Missouri in good
order.
When
I got confirmation Tuesday that Illly had made it home safely, I
breathed a bit easier. (I wasn't expecting trouble, but you never know
when someone needs to drive solo long distance.) I figured at that point
that conference logistics were behind me, but it turned out they were
just about to bite me in the behind, which is not quite the same thing.
The
day Illly had returned I got an email from Kim in the FIC Office,
asking where the money and sales records were. Huh? The cash, checks,
and credit cards receipts were all in a cigar box that we've been using
for that purpose for years, as Kim well knew, and the sales records were
in a manila file folder. I had been present when these were packed up
at the conference and was sure they were in the boxes shipped back to
Missouri. How could they be missing?
As
you can imagine this started a series of emails with gradually
escalating anxiety as no one had any idea where the cigar box and sales
records had gotten to. After none of the innocent suggestions solved the
mystery, dark thoughts started creeping into our collective
consciousness.
Did
Illly take it? Was he careless at a rest stop? Did I do something I'm
not remembering? Could someone at the conference have ripped us off
while Illly went to the parking lot (suddenly more thinkable following
the missing cushion)? All of these thoughts were awkward and led to a
sense of being violated (excepting the scenario where I had done
something stupid; which was simply embarrassing).
We
had never had this happen before, nor was there any solid reason to
think that it had happened now—excepting that the money box was missing
and had to be somewhere.
After
two days of fruitless back and forth, where everyone was asking each
other to rack their brains and check twice (and thrice), we were
beginning to contemplate asking the event attendees to help us out in
recreating what had happened. While the cash was gone, we might be able
to stop payment on checks and credit card charges—about two-thirds of
the total income. While this was an unsavory task, it was better than
just kissing all the income goodbye.
Then the sun came out from behind the dark clouds.
The Missing Sunshine
Three
days into this misery, Kim remembered that part of what Illly brought
back were some things for me, to be temporarily stored in Missouri.
Perhaps the records and money box had been mixed up with those items?
And that turned out to be the needed insight: the cigar box and file
folder had been inadvertently covered up beneath my yoga mat. Whew! It
turned out that none of those bad things had happened at all. Everyone one collectively sighed.
Part
of the problem was that Illly was doing all the transporting home and
he hadn't ever been through the drill of unpacking from an event. It was
just so many boxes to him, and he was under some time pressure to get
the car unloaded an returned to the rental company. He did his job fine,
but everything didn't get placed where it could easily be sorted
properly: there were books to be reshelved; unsold auction items to be
stored until next year; Laird's personal stuff; Illly's video equipment,
and records and money to be handed in for accounting.
Someone
once said that the veneer of civilization is only about three meals
deep, and it was humbling seeing how quickly dark thoughts started
surfacing when the money went missing for three days. While we were
holding out hope for a happy ending, our confidence had been shaken. I
think Kim summarized it well when she wrote, after the money had been
found, "We can all regain our faith in humanity again :) … maybe."
Now if I could only get reunited with my cushion, I'd be able to put this unpleasantness behind me entirely.
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Visiting the Dark Side
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Glad you got your money and receipts back and that nothing untoward had happened. A lot of people have a very formal protocol around money - something I learned quickly when working as a cashier. Usually, it involves making it extra-clear to all concerned when money is changing hands, exactly what is being exchanged and then putting the money away/out of sight as quickly as possible.
Oddly, there's been some experiments that cash money left out is less likely to be stolen or "borrowed" than other things. Dan Ariely described one involved leaving cans of Coke in a dorm refrigerator along with dollar bills on a plate. The Cokes all disappeared - the dollar bills stayed right were they were left. Most people seem to "respect" money they isn't their own.
Post a Comment