Adventures in Jury Duty
It all started with the joy of getting up at 5:30 to feed The Cat. . .
I wonder how things went at school without me.
- Train ride
- Four-block walk (ruminating on how much I do not enjoy being in the city by myself)
- Stop for coffee
- Walk too far and--after enjoying the view of Louise Nevelson's sculpture--ask a nice older gentleman who I think was wearing a city uniform (not sure for which service) to point out the entrance to the building (BTW Sara knows why I know who Louise Nevelson is)
- Get purse x-rayed by security, then personally scanned by security and thanked for doing my civic duty
- Instructions delivered live by one person and then via instructional video read by a justice who says "particular" the same way my Great-Aunt E. used to ("par-tick-ler")
- Wait through all the names called and numbers assigned, and there I am near the tail end of the second selection set
- Seeing the inside of a courtroom, with a real judge! Neat!
- Sitting through all the questions. . . I honestly could not say yes to any of the screening-out-problems questions, and being at the tail end--not selected for the jury!
- Back to the waiting room where it is freezing; reading for about half an hour
- Another half an hour later, after all the other "non-selecteds" have returned, we get our certificates and are outta there
- Walk four blocks back
- Have a soft pretzel and some Coke Zero (to settle my stomach which was bothered by "woman troubles" all morning) and people-watch as I wonder what happened to what used to be a nice shopping center (fugly neon and sequined clothes in the display window? Yuck!)
- Miss the train by a couple of minutes, of course; sit and read and people-watch some more
- Finally back to my car by 2:00
I wonder how things went at school without me.
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