David confronts a thief brandishing a knife to retrieve a purse stolen from a lady.
Something that I never expected and that caught me by surprise, I witnessed a crime, at of all places, at the symphony. An affront to who I am, feeling personally violated, I was angered that he'd disrespect such a beautiful institution by defiling it with his common thievery. Not allowing the man to get away, ready to teach him a lesson, he was going down, and I'm the one to take him down.
As if I'm Denzel Washington as Robert McCall in the Equalizer, a highly trained commando, who gave victims the benefit and the satisfaction of his fair fight help, I decided to take matters into my own hands. Trained in Kenjutsu, not only the use of the samurai sword but also the knife, the stick, and the open hand arts. I'm disciplined and skilled in self-defense techniques. I'm always ready to put my skills to good use in real life situations even when facing a knife wielding thief.
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It all started one bright and sunny day. The birds were singing and I was in a good mood. Tired of staying home and doing nothing, I wanted to do something different other than wandering my house. Bored to death, I needed to break my routine. An advertisement on television caught my interest. The informercial on Public Service television advertised symphonic DVD's given to donors for donations. The ad motivated me to attend the symphony.
Having never been to the symphony, something that I had always wanted to do, I've always wanted to go. Yet, hating to go alone, more enjoyable when going with a friend, I wished that I had someone to go with to the symphony. Thinking of all the people that I knew from my work, from my dojo, and from my past, I quickly scrolled through anyone that I thought who may be interested in going with me to the symphony.
Unfortunately, with everyone busy with their own lives, with work, with nagging wives, and with demanding children, no one came to mind. Having divorced my wife years ago, and with us not having any children, seemingly, I was the only one who had the free time enough to attend the symphony. Yet, no matter. Better off alone, I usually did everything alone.
I could donate to the symphony and send away for the DVD's. Then, when they arrived, I could stay home while watching the symphony on television and listening to the symphony on my speakers but I wanted to go there. I wanted to see the symphony in person.
Watching the symphony on television, even on a big screen television with speakers, is not nearly the same as being there. Hearing the orchestra playing their music on television is one thing but feeling the music wafting through the huge, concert hall live is something else entirely. As if something haunted me to go, I needed to go to the symphony.
A moving experience and a total body sensation, there's nothing else like it when listening to the symphony orchestra in person. The entire orchestra playing in unison in volume, in softness, and in perfect timing attacked my senses in the way of a Kenjutsu, live blade match. Even if I ventured there alone, I needed to attend the symphony.
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Unfortunately, with me a loner, in recent years, more like a hermit while hiding in my house, I didn't have any friends. With my family continually moving around the country for my father's work, I found myself in a new school nearly every year. With me always the tallest boy in class, sticking out to show that I didn't belong there, not wanting anyone to know that I had a speech impediment, remaining silent instead of talking, it was hard for me to make new friends.
Kind of a nerd in high school, back then, before no bullying policies were established, when nerds were bullied and beaten up by jocks and popular kids, my height saved me. More intimidating than they were, I was taller than they were. Nonetheless, keeping to myself, I ate my lunch alone. Besides, I knew that I wouldn't be at that school long. I'd be transferring to a new school as soon as my father's company transferred him again.
Before personal computers, tablets, smartphones, and the Internet, with my pocket protector, my Texas instruments calculator, and my slide rule proudly displayed, even back then, I fit the bill as a nerd. Even now, especially now, with my life continuing in that lonely vein, sadly and depressingly, I had no one to ask to go to the symphony with me. Even though I searched my mind again thinking of someone who'd like to attend the symphony with me, I had no one to ask.
Preferably, my perfect date, I'd much rather go to the symphony with a woman, a beautiful, sexy, and shapely woman, than with a man. Only, I didn't have a woman in mind to ask. As shy as I was clumsy in introducing myself to the opposite sex, I wasn't smooth or suave in meeting women.
Picking up women was never my thing. Talking to women proved difficult. I don't know how I ever established and maintained a relationship with my ex-wife but, somehow, I did. Actually, now that I think about it, she was as much of a nerd as I was.
I'm not the kind of man that women would fall in love with at first sight, I wasn't the type of man who women dated. Not that I wasn't good looking, I was just inept when it came to the opposite sex. Not knowing what to say, with me not carrying my side of the interaction, the conversation always stalled before petering away. Cocktail parties were my social nightmares. More comfortable sitting in a chair in the corner while people watching, I'd rather remain silently aloof.
While waiting for women to approach me, unfortunately, unless they were a little drunk, they seldom made the first, sexual moves. Most women wanted to be swept off their feet and romanced by the words and/or the physical actions of men. With me awkwardly uncomfortable when trying to make conversation with the opposite sex, I didn't know how to do that.
Stumbling over my words, I never knew what to say. Always too nervous, I seldom made a good, first impression. I was never the one chosen to make a presentation at work.
Yet, now that I think of it, hard for me to believe, not dating after my divorce, never mind having a sexual relationship, I haven't had a date with a woman in fifteen-years. The last time that I had sex was when I danced with a woman at a bar. Even then, she made more moves to sexually seduce me than I made to sexually seduce her.
Perhaps, because I had a few drinks, and felt more relaxed than nervous, I danced as if I was John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever. I loved to dance. Surprisingly, with her taking the lead, she agreed to spend the night with me at my brother's house where I temporarily lived until I found my own place.
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