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Running late for work, I lock the gate
behind me and double-time it down to the Church Street Muni stop. I run
down the station stairs toward the gate, and as I frantically scramble
for change, a guy—normal-looking, maybe a little disheveled—tries to hand me
something. I look at him, brows furrowed, look at his hand, then back
at him. It's his transfer. And it's valid. Weird, right?
Not
really. What if we were all more like Disheveled Guy at the Church
Street station? First of all, we'd save a lot of paper. Surely I'm not
the only one who has two dozen wrinkled Muni stubs floating around my
house. Second of all, it made me
happy—not because I saved a dollar and a half, but it's satisfying so see strangers helping strangers. Like
that corny insurance commercial where a guy goes out of his way to save
Joe Schmoe from being flattened by a falling stack of boxes.
So tomorrow, when you're taking public transportation to work,
after you've gotten off the train and are headed through the gates
toward the office, hand your transfer to someone going the opposite
way. It made my day. And I'm six quarters closer to buying a new alarm
clock. Or maybe a Muni pass.
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