My drive to work has turned out to be the most draining experience of my life; I can commute five hours a day, and have to pay five dollars in tolls to get home during bad traffic days. My day starts at four in the morning when I get up, shower, eat a quick bite, and then run off to beat the morning traffic going into Orange County. Most days go smoothly enough, and the morning ride can be somewhat decent, not causing me to rip out my hair. Lately, it has been a little bit rougher because of heavy traffic, making my mornings almost as miserable as my afternoons.
The worst of mornings came when I was driving to get to the freeway and I might have run over a possum in the dark. I never ran over a mammal before, and the shock of it all put me into a horrible depression over the poor (possibly smashed) possum. In my despair, I reached for my lunch pail to drown my sorrow in food; obviously, I must be an emotional eater if after killing a possum, I needed to reach for my lunch. When I started reaching over to find my pail, I grabbed nothing but air. I looked over to see that I forgot my lunch at home. My day was then ruined and my thoughts never strayed too far away from my hunger afterwards.
When my lunch break finally came, I tried to ignore my grumbling stomach, but that lasted all of two minutes of my break. I thought that I would cave and buy something at the vending machines, but when I tried to put in my cash, the machine did nothing but twirl and flaunt its selection of lunch items. I tried several times, and then decided that it must be a broken cash slot, so I went out into my truck to grab some quarters from coin stash. Along with my quarters, I grabbed a random piece of paper from my truck and pulled out my cell phone, chatting wildly to nobody, so that it would seem like I had to go out to get some paperwork from my truck.
After coming back to the vending machines, I tried to get my selection from the machine with the coins, but the machine just continued to twirl, laughing at my attempts. Whenever a coworker of mine would walk over by the machines, I would walk away from the machines so that it didn’t look like I was having issues; I would hate to be the new guy who can’t even operate a vending machine. After skulking back and forth past the vending machine, I realized that I should just give up on getting some type of real meal for lunch.
I remembered that I had eaten a pop tart the week previous, but didn’t finish the whole thing, so I left it in my truck under the mountain of empty water bottles on floor. My hunger had made me desperate, and so I went back outside to go find it. Obviously, I broke out my phone and had a fake phone conversation with an apartment manager who needed my license plate number so that I could have an excuse to go back out to my truck (I don’t know why I am so paranoid to think that all of my coworkers are standing at the receiving bay, laughing at my repetitive trips to my truck, but I am).
The tart was smooshed, stale, and a bit dusty, but it was my only form of sustenance that I could muster up, and after eating the chalky tart, my appetite grew. Now I was completely out of food, so I went back to my cubical to drink copious amounts of water, hoping that the pop tart would swell in response, making me feel fuller. After I had gone through three bottles of water, I was still feeling hungry, and now had to pee like a race horse. I had a few minutes left before I had to go back into the lab, so I chewed and swallowed five pieces of gum, my last possible chance of making it through my day without undergoing ketosis. And even if I did develop ketosis, the gum would hopefully cover the acetone breath of starvation. The large bolus of gum in my stomach somehow made it so I didn’t die.
After work, I race out to my truck and try to make it onto the freeway so that I can experience heavy traffic. If I stay at work for more than five minutes, heavy traffic bumps up to morbidly obese traffic, and I may as well read a book while parked on the 91. I find that I can get through traffic much quicker if I can find an obnoxiously colored mustang and follow it through traffic as it bobs and weaves though the parking lot of cars. I always try to then pass the obnoxiously colored mustang and beat them to my exit. When behind the car, I always imagine the owner to be a bodaciously voluptuous woman, but whenever I catch up to them, the driver usually ends up to be an overweight woman with horrible bangs, or a man with long hair, whose manboobs looks amazingly similar to actual boobs from a tailing angle.
After I get home, I usually lapse comatose on the couch, and then end up in bed for a few hours, only to repeat the whole process again the next day. I guess that is the life of a commuter. And as much as I love sitting in traffic for a fifth of the day, staring mindlessly at racist bumper stickers and listening to random podcasts, I have realized that I am not meant to be a commuter. So I made an impulse buy and signed a lease for an apartment by a lake, and when I move in, I can start being independent again. Unfortunately, I will be poorer than dirt, but thankfully, being poorer than dirt makes the best of stories.