Vaughn, your reply was the absolute best: a simple, transparent attempt to understand my mind and the dimensions that I embrace. When the blacks in NYC sit in the subway or in Philadelphia on the bus, and stretch their legs so no one can get a seat (called by the NYPD as 'manspread', but race is always left out because of political correctness mandates even though everyone knows who they are) I do not get upset that my 'rights' are violated. Such hogging, pure and simple, emanates from a lack of security and a desperation to assert their 'superiority' over others. People who do this are insecure, even though, outwardly they are passively aggressive. The real victors in those situations are those who bear and persevere, knowing that resolution of that specific topic will not be forthcoming in an immediate sense.
For those who say that Tyler Seelig is ugly or dead wrong or other pejoratives, I say this: He was raised by a very decent man, Kurt Seelig, and Tyler is a highly desirable member of the human race. He was not trying to screw me; perhaps he was a bit flummoxed that I would delve (so intelligently?) into his inventory as I had done and he was probably privately embarrassed that his staff would be deficient in not noticing something being sold for peanuts that had real potential. I said that he needs experience with life and business relations, nothing more pejorative than that.
Do I need to always need to assert my rights? (On the bus or subway I do not dare; I would not win and I would be called a racist, to boot). Instead, maybe my 'largess' will do Kurt's son something positive after the dust settles and he has had time to think this out, privately, without threat. When I gave him the camera he did not seem to think that he was the victor. He did not even check it out! I think that his angst was more out of fear, loss of control, that someone had 'found gold' in that box and he did not want to be 'outsmarted'. These are human traits that we all went through on the way to maturity. (The 'manspread' crowd will have to learn this, as well.) Experience settles the stumbling in life and points the direction towards character improvement. Thus, immediate 'winning' falls by the wayside in terms of importance. Too few understand that factor because we live in an 'immediate' culture. I have no regrets for what I did and whatever I feel that I have lost, I feel I have gained more in other areas. - David Lyga