Just Stuff

Apr. 8th, 2008 11:12 pm
sherron0: (Default)
Today's been one of those frustrating days where I had a list of 200 things I needed to do, and I actually got 100 things done, but almost none of them were also on the 200 list.  Sigh.

I mean, it was still a productive day, just not necessarily in a manner I would have chosen.

And T went to school by himself today.  I told him last night that I was through with Calculus, that he was now going on his own.  And he was okay.  Then he got there, and there was a test that he thought was Thursday, and he did the worst he's ever done on a test, 85, and he was STILL okay.  These are giant steps for my Aspie.

And I finally wrote a long email to the clarinet lady, telling her how I felt, in a calm and polite and non-hostile, but still firm and clear way.  This was about the 5th version.  I was rehearsing it as a speech, until I realized I was getting too much pleasure out of the thought of embarrassing her.  Plus, I don't care to hear her defense. So I did it the written way.

And I'm still avoiding the taxes.  I know I'll have to pay, and i don't think our rebate will be as much as the paying, so I'm in no real hurry.  I just got my K-1 form from L.I. Smith & Assoc. today.  I own about 1% in my folks' surveying & engineering company, which is an S - corporation.  No, I do not know exactly what the S is for.  For years it was great, because, after everyone's salary and equipment, and all that, it lost money.  But in the last few years it's actually made money, and I haven't been able to use it as a write off.  In fact, last year it added about $200 to my tax bill.

so, that's my life, in a nutshell, a very appropriate container.
sherron0: (SilverSorceress)
I went to the school, and most of the ladies who heard Dianna gloat to me (about taking advantage of me over a clarinet to the tune of $1500, for those of you joining our story in progress). But Dianna was not. Her daughter was sick, and so not in classes. So I went ahead and told the ladies why I'd come. That I just couldn't get over it. That I felt what she did was just wrong, and gloating about it to me was beyond the pale. And even if she never makes it right, she needs to know that in this part of the world, among the crowd she moves in, that it was not an acceptable way to treat someone you'd been pretending to be friends with. And all of the ladies there thought that if I could do it I should.  So I will.  I'll catch her sometime this week or next, and in th mean time, I will continue to tell the story.  People should know who they're dealing with.  I know I no longer trust her.
sherron0: (Default)
I finally broke down and told Mark last night, because I couldn't stand it, (it's awful when your husband is on of your best friends, and you're used to doing your complaining and thinking with him) and it really pissed him off.  He said, "You know, after Katrina, we gave away that car that was worth more than that [not a lot more, it was prob worth about $2000] to that young girl from Louisiana, and I thought nothing of it.  But she REALLY needed the car, and was in bad circumstances, and we really wanted to get down to two cars instead of three for insurance purposes.  We didn't have to sell the clarinet, and she didn't have to have it."  And I agree.  So, I think I'm just going to tell the story around too. She told it the first time in front of at least 4 other people, so it's not like I'll be complaining behind her back.  Let our peers decide how they feel about it.
sherron0: (Default)
I sold a clarinet to an acquaintance.  we are in the same home school cover, and have known each other 2-3 years.  She was talking about her son wanting to learn the clarinet, and buying one, etc.  I told her that my husband still had his clarinet from high school or college and was never going to play it again, and we'd be willing to sell it.  So I asked her how much were the ones she'd been looking at, etc, and told my hubby.  I suggested $100 and he said, aw, just get $50, it's so old, it's probably not worth any more than that.  So we sell it.  All well and god, I'm glad to have one less useless thing in the closet.

Then, yesterday, the woman I sold it to thanked me for the clarinet (after someone else thanked me for some books I'd given her).  I said, "No need to thank me for that, you paid for it." 

She said, "Not enough. -- The man who cleaned it up for us told us that the mouthpiece alone is probably worth $165 dollars.  He said your husband took excellent care of it and it's really wood.  Most are plastic now.  He said it's probably worth $1500."  I was a little stunned.  I just muttered something about Mark always taking care of things, and kind of moved on toward the class as she's saying, "well, at least you got it out of your house."

And that's true.  And that was my aim.  And I should let it go.  But it just bugs me a little.  I couldn't have done that to someone I know.  if I'd bought a valuable thing from a "friend" (or anyone I was going to have to run into regularly) and it turned out to be worth 300 times what I paid for it, I'd have to go back and even that up some.   At the very least, (say I really needed whatever it was, a coat, or food for my children say, and couldn't afford to pay more for it) I'd at least have the decency not to GLOAT to the person I took advantage of!  And we're talking musical instrument, and a woman who well could have afforded to pay fair value for it.  I'm sure she's quite proud of herself for getting a bargain. I just wish she'd never told me.

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