I finally decided that maybe I shouldn't be going into the office all the time with everyone freaking out about being around other human beings.
I'm the sports editor for a newspaper so people need to see me in person quite often. Editors, photographers, staff writers, and all those behind-the-scenes people that folks who aren't in the business never think about. (Do you wonder why the sports section is sometimes 3 pages and sometimes 6 pages? Well, don't come to me. That's not my call. Never has been. It's some other person's job to decide space in a newspaper and weirdly over the last 30 years that person never knows anything about sports).
But there isn't much sports going on right now so the demands on my physical appearance are low. I was showing up out of habit as I put out the sports section from my office computer as normal but it was gnawing at me, not just because of the virus, but merely wondering: "If I had to, could I do all this from home? Shouldn't I be able to?"
This isn't simply a matter of getting your email at home and being able to download the teams app. There is work-specific software and the like, which made Tuesday a logistical disaster as I drove back and forth and back and forth and BACK AND FORTH between work and home trying to get set up to produce the section at home. No doubt the IT people were sick of me.
But the last three days I've produced the sports section from the comfort of my home computer -- the same one I use to write blog posts. And, let me tell you, this working from home is as great as I thought it would be.
Everything is much more efficient. It cuts down on time driving and yapping and ... hell, even wearing clothes ... and I can stop any time I want and find a snack in the fridge. If work stresses me out, I can go right to the card room and detoxify. There's nowhere in the office to do that.
And, I can also get the mail between reading stories!
Cards are still coming to the home office while all this is going on. I expected things to dry up by now (I'm definitely not sending stuff out as often), but that hasn't been the case.
Some people -- like Jeff from Cardboard Catastrophes -- have sent me two separate envelopes lately.
The first envelope contained some 2019 Topps Gallery needs.
This is a set that could disappear forever and I wouldn't miss it. That's why my want list is so large, I didn't bother to buy a single pack of this stuff last year.
Does that look like Corey Seager to you? Not to me.
But anyway, happy to get these out of the way. They were mere protection though for the point of the envelope.
Behold!
This is just my second Topps Venezuelan card. (Both happen to hail from the '60s).
I can't stress enough how fantastic these are. They may look identical to Topps cards -- except for the much scruffier card stock -- but there is something powerful about a variation that comes from South America. Also, they're well-known for being difficult to land.
Nate's got some paper loss -- or something -- on his jersey but it doesn't make this any less thrilling. I go wacky for OPC cards and the Canadian border is 30 minutes from me. So I'm impressed.
Several days later, I pulled another PWE out of the mailbox from Jeff. This was a total surprise.
In a note, he explained that he discovered he had two of the same card and had no idea how that happened.
I totally understand. I'm one of those collectors who likes to believe they know exactly what cards they have at all times -- and in most cases I do. But there are so many cards and so many trades and so many purchases. And life. There's life, too. Did you know I used to actually have to drive to work?
So it happens.
You sometimes acquire a dupe without knowing it.
Sometimes it's a dupe of the Mad Puncher. Lucky me, the card is now mine.
This was one of the needs on my 1956 Topps want list. One of the "lesser" names, if you will, although everyone knows Billy Martin.
I'm down to needing 25 cards to complete the '56 list (more if I want duplicate Dodgers). But I'll be working on it for years to come because Kalines and Clementes and Mantles and Aarons don't cost 5 cents like they did in 1956.
Maybe I'll start a '56 fund with the money I'm saving on driving to work.
Yup, I can get used to this.
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P.S. Down to 25? That's awesome! You're living the dream.