Now that I'm awake and a little more coherent, I'd like to write a bit about Dennis Farina.

He got the gun in Arizona, and claims he completely forgot that he had on him. And you know what? I believe him. I can relate on a much smaller scale. How is that? Well, I have this tendency to carry potentially dangerous items in places where they have no business being.
Back in 2002, when I went on a cruise through the Inside Passage of Alaska, we were going to fly into Vancouver where the ship shoved off. On the flight there, I was the randomly selected person for a more thorough search. My family joked, knowing that that person didn't know who they were dealing with when having to search my stuff. That guy had to search my bag of tricks, and when I mean tricks, I mean lots of little random junk. He did the best he could, but after running his hand through a pool of stuff, he just let me go on my way. No problem, because I had nothing to hide...or so I thought. The day before we were to return to California, I was searching my bag for something, when I discovered that amongst all the other junk in there, I had a Swiss Army knife in there. Oops. I kind of freaked out, knowing in the post-911 United States, having a nail clipper was a big deal, and here I am smuggling a multi-purpose sharp selector around. I was afraid to think what would have happened had the searcher found it, and was glad he didn't.
Going home, I just kept it in my bag, and nothing happened beyond that.
Back in the days when I had a Disneyland Annual Passport, I would just meet up with my best friend after class or something and we'd head off to the Magic Kingdom for the day. Of course, I didn't have time to switch my personal items from the bag I used for classes and going to Disneyland, so most of the things I needed for my various classes and projects went with me. One time when getting searched, I was scolded when I tried entering the park with an Exacto knife. Oops. I just removed the blade (which was sad, because it was a new one) and went on my merry way.
Good thing she didn't notice that I had the pack of refill blades on me too, and it's a good thing that I kept my box cutter in my locker.
Back in October, I went on my first airplane flight in two years. As usual, I brought a bag with me that I carried on a daily basis, thinking that I had no problem doing so. Going through the TSA Security Check, they took my carry-on bag from the line and began searching it. It seemed the agent was having trouble, so she started asking me questions.
TSA Agent: Do you have any sharp objects or weapons in your possession?
Me: No, I don't.
Agent: Are you sure you're not carrying any kind of weapon?
Me: Yeah, I'm pretty sure...
Agent [slightly flustered at this point]: Do you have a hammer in your bag?
Me: Oh yeah! I do!
So I had a little hammer in my bag. The reason I had it was because at the bottom of the handle, there were three screwdriver bits that came out of it, and one of the heads was the perfect fit for opening up my laptop hardrive section. My computer crashed earlier that month, and borrowed the hammer from work. I meant to return it, which is why I had it in my everyday bag, but the thing settled to the bottom of my bag and I forgot I had it. I was told that I could keep it, if I checked in my bag, but I couldn't do that, since my bag didn't have a zipper. I felt badly for surrendering the hammer to them, but I really didn't want to cause any more trouble than its worth. So the TSA Agent took it away, softly swinging it as if she was employing the super hammer in Smash Bros. to wherever they keep the pile of contraband they confiscate from people.
So Dennis Farina, I totally feel you, I know how it is to completely forget you're carrying something not good. but I'm very lucky I haven't been as unfortunate as you.
5 comments:
"which upped the bad doings ante from a felony to a misdemeanor. "
In the immortal words of Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka - Strike that, reverse it. Perhaps you are still exhausted from the previous night.
Actually, I am. You don't know how many times I had to try uploading that image of Farina's mug, because I kept pressing the Cancel button instead of the Upload Image one, and was wondering why it didn't post.
Thanks for finding that! I like friends who try to help me look less like an idiot.
Now I feel guilty. Someone corrected my grammar on Yelp just today and I felt vaguely annoyed. Sorry. Mostly I just wanted to quote Willy Wonka...
Do you feel badly because you pointed out an egregious error on my part and were kind enough to point out my mistake?
And is being vaguely annoyed a lot worse than being distinctly annoyed? I would think so. Liminal states make me feel not funny ha-ha.
PS - no need to apologize. Sometimes, I shape conversations just so I can use lines from movies sometimes. Call it conversational landscaping.
Speaking of conversational landscaping, it looks like I need to weed out some "sometimes" from my side.
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