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Absolutely. Whoa! Okay, I am weaseling into, and not the usual direction, parking face, nose in to the senior center in Ballard, because everybody backs in. And when there's pairs of cars in a parking lot where things are going to be tight, I make sure I'm facing the other way so I can put my passenger doors together with two cars, and then leave space for the others, for the two drivers here to get out. And if the other person has a passenger, they can just pull a car out of them that way. That and a lot of parking lots, the spaces are just too narrow. You know, they all should be like Costco parking lots. Yeah, we've been in those. They can handle big trucks and give you a room to load and get in and out of them. Imagine that. So I met a doppelganger yesterday. I had two days at the Ballard High School for a constitute amendment proposal discussion. Two of our five were, five seniors there were, or elders, let's call those, were attorneys. So there were some good questions about rules of evidence. Civil, criminal, all different, because the burden of proof is different. Yeah, I learned quite a bit there myself, and they liked my comments. You know, interesting, very good. And I met a doppelganger, yeah, she's probably a senior there. Carla, I said, do I know your parents? You've got somebody I've seen probably two, three times a year. I've known her for a few years. Maybe she's somebody who walks past the Ballard Senior Center every day, that I just made an impression on my mind or something. Anyways, you can never tell, oh, the teacher is a 30-year-old high school teacher, or 30 years of high school teaching, since she sees the same children now and then. It's as if it happens now. There's enough people in the world and you run into new ones. They're the same as somebody you met a long time ago, exactly. KJ7VU, thanks Dave, 73.
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