The Law of Economy, 1 The Law of Economy

The Spiritual Traveler


        I awoke on an early April morning and suddenly remembered that the Eckankar Springtime Seminar was taking place that weekend in Washington, D.C.  I hadn’t planned to go, hadn’t even thought about it, but there was no reason I couldn’t go!  There was little to keep me home that weekend.  The few commitments I had made I could easily get out of.  The Springtime Seminar was one of a handful of major seminars sponsored by Eckankar year.  The normal attendance was between four and five thousand people—so it was a big event.  I called up John Zissis, whom I knew was going to the seminar with his daughter Athena.  He was driving down Thursday evening, and planned to spend four nights there—Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday—and drive back on Monday.  
         “Do you want to ride with us?” he asked.
       “No.  I’m not that comfortable riding with other people,” I replied.  “I prefer to drive myself.  Besides, I’m leaving a day later, and probably will only spend a couple of nights.  But I wouldn’t mind sharing your hotel room on Friday and Saturday night.”
       “That’s fine with me,” John said.  “The room costs $95 a night, and I’d be happy if I could split the cost.”
         I called my mother in Florida and told her that I was planning on going into Washington for the weekend.  “If I had a place to stay for another night or two, maybe I could do a little job hunting in the area,” I said.
       “You could stay with Geoffrey Lanning in Arlington,” she suggested.
        The Law of Economy, 5Geoffrey Lanning was a man who had recently invited my widowed mother to live with him.  She was not adapting well to life alone in the apartment she had shared for the last few years with my father.  Her apartment was expensive, and she had places in Maine and Florida where she stayed during the spring and summer.  The weather in Michigan during the winters was always gloomy and depressing.  I was sick of it, myself, and determined to move to a warmer location.  I knew someone who had just moved to Virginia, and loved it there.
       “You could move to Virginia,” I had suggested to my mother, without mentioning where the inspiration had come from.
       She treated the suggestion with derision.  “Why would I possibly want to move to Virginia,” she wanted to know.  “I don’t know anyone there!”
       “Well, you could meet new people.  You could find a more reasonable apartment.  You would be in a better climate.”
       “That’s impossible,” she said.  “My home is here.  I’m familiar with this place.  I can’t just move somewhere completely different at my age.”
       “Why not?”
       I kept after her, bringing up the subject every now and then, but finally dropped it.  Finally, she went off to Florida for three months.  One day she called me up from Florida and told me of her recent correspondence with Geoffrey, and his invitation, which was initiated through some mutual friends.  She had never met him, and was curious about him.  “Since you’re planning to be in the area, you might as well call him,” she suggested.  “You can check him out for me.”
       I agreed to this, and my mother called Geoffrey to ask if it would be OK if I paid him a visit.  The next day I spoke to him on the phone, and made arrangements to visit him after the seminar.
       When I got to Washington, the seminar had already been in full gear for a day.  It was about ten o’clock in the evening when I made my way through the hotel lobby, and got in touch with John on the house phone.  He and Athena were just getting ready for bed, and I came right up.  John was short, solidly built, about ten years younger than I was, with dark hair and glasses.  His daughter Athena was about nine years old, blonde, pixyish, and very precocious.
       “Do you want to order a cot?” John asked.
       “No.  I really prefer to sleep on the floor,” I told him.  
       “Are you sure?”
       “I’m sure.  I just need an extra blanket is all.”  John called down for an extra blanket to be delivered.  I brushed my teeth, and the blanket arrived.  John turned off the lights.  I stretched out at the foot of Athena’s bed, and fell asleep quickly.
       I enjoyed the seminar on Saturday, and spent another night sleeping at the foot of Athena’s bed.  The next morning I asked John if he had any plans after the seminar ended at noon.  “I don’t have to go to Arlington until the evening,” I said, “so I wouldn’t mind tagging along wherever you’re going.”  
         John seemed agreeable to this, and we arranged to meet in the hotel lobby about three hours later.  I hadn’t registered for the Sunday morning session, and decided against paying additionally to attend it.  I was satisfied packing up my things and getting them loaded into my car early, to escape the post-seminar crush.  I munched casually on some food that had still been in my car, and enjoyed the spring morning.  When the morning session was over, I spotted John and Athena hanging out with a couple and their two children.  They didn’t seem ready to go out yet, so I wandered around the hotel lobby.  After a while, I came back.  Now John and Athena were no longer in sight.  I struck up a conversation with the couple, who said that they were also going out with John and Athena.  I felt my enthusiasm for going with them beginning to wane.  It seemed like it was going to be a parents-with-children kind of thing.  The only thing was that I hadn’t settled my share of the hotel bill with John yet.
         The Law of Economy, 3Just then, Gary and Helen, two other friends of mind, appeared.  “Can you help us jumpstart Gary’s car?” they wanted to know.  “It’s down in the hotel garage.”
       “It’ll mean losing my parking spot,” I replied, “But sure, I’ll help.”  I walked out with Gary.  My car was parked just across the street.  We got in, and I drove down into the garage and helped him jumpstart his car.  Afterwards, I drove past my old parking spot, but it was taken.  Suddenly, there didn’t seem to be any reason to stay, so I drove off.  I didn’t have to call Geoffrey until later in the day, so I decided to kill some time by visiting the Washington Cathedral.  It was Easter Sunday, and when I got there, an Easter mass was in progress.  I parked my car, and looked in at the service for a while.  Then I went back to the car, fished out some fruit, and sat down at a bench to eat it, with the church bells resounding in my ear.  I called Geoffrey from a pay phone, and arranged to call at his apartment a little later that day.  Then I drove across the Potomac in mid-afternoon, stopped at a visitor information center, and got some maps of the area.  
         I continued on to Crystal City, a colony of high-rise luxury apartment buildings sandwiched between Reagan National Airport.  It seemed like a very cold and pretentious place to live, but I screwed up my courage and knocked on the door of Geoffrey’s suite.
       He turned out to be a man of my father’s height and build.  He also had the same type of face, a little gaunt, with a prominent nose.  Although he was clearly in better shape than my father had been during the last five years of his illness, he made a frail impression overall.  In particular, he walked with a stoop and shuffle that was reminiscent of my father in his later years.  His apartment was not huge, but it was elegantly furnished.  He had some marvelous oriental art on the walls, and some beautiful furniture.  The place was in a huge clutter, however.  A large easy chair was wedged between the entrance hall and a stairway that led to the bedrooms on the second floor.  There were so many papers and other paraphernalia strewn around this area that it was almost impossible to get past the hallway into the rest of the apartment.  My impression was that this was a man in dire need of someone to manage his household, but I couldn’t see my mother in that role.
       I spent a pleasant evening with him, however.  He put me up in a spacious guestroom for the night, and the next day I went with him and a female friend of his to a restaurant on the banks of the Potomac.  It was about three o’clock in the afternoon when we got back to Geoffrey’s apartment, and I felt suddenly restless.  I had done everything I wanted to in the Washington area.  Although it was very late to start driving back to Michigan, I figured that if I got onto the highway by four, I would have a shot at getting back home my midnight or one a.m.  So I bid farewell to my host, thanking him for his hospitality, and assuring him that I would report back positively to my mother regarding our encounter.
       After about an hour on the road, called my mother, and gave her a full report.  “He’s very nice, very sincere,” I said.  “He’s loaded, so you don’t have to worry that he’s after your money.  But what I’m worried about is that you’re going to have the same problems with him that you did with Dad.  He’s getting on in years.  Do you really want to get into a situation where you’re caring for someone else again the way you had to with Dad?”
       “No, of course not.  I couldn’t go through that again.  That’s why I have no intention of letting this get that serious.  He’s just a friend that I’m going to visit for a while.”
         “My point is that it may get more serious that you think.  And that means you may find yourself in the same situation again.  So just be careful!”  With that admonition, I rang off and hit the road again.
         The Law of Economy, 4In another hour it had gotten dark and I was approaching Breezewood.  I was going in my mind over the whole seminar, thinking of the people I had met.  Something was nagging at me, and I realized that it was the fact that I had not paid John for my share of the hotel bill.  I had rushed off to help Gary jumpstart his car, and never returned.  John must have thought I had disappeared in a cloud of smoke.  I was thinking about how I should approach the subject of paying him—whether he would bring it up when we saw each other in Ann Arbor, whether I should bring it up… Just exactly at that point, I was slowing down on the highway off ramp, looked at the lane to my left, and saw a blue car next to me—with John and Athena waving their hands to get my attention!  I followed their car to a gas station up ahead, and stopped right behind them.
         “Do you have any idea what I was thinking about at the moment I saw you two?” I asked.
         “No, what?” John inquired.
         “I was thinking that I hadn’t paid you for my share of the hotel bill!”
         John shrugged.
         “I’m serious, John.  That’s what I was thinking when I saw you!  What are the odds of that?”  In fact, I was trying to calculate in my mind the odds of simply meeting up with them in Breezewood.  About thirty hours had gone by since I had been with them.  They had spent the intervening time at the Hilton in Washington, while I had been in Arlington with Geoffrey.  Even allowing for the fact that we must have left at approximately the same time, the chances against it seemed astronomical.  
         We decided to have a bite to eat at a nearby Taco Bell.  The lights were characteristically bright, and the place almost empty.  Athena played with a bunch of pastel helium balloons.  John looked tired.
         “What time do you think we’ll get to Michigan?” I asked him.
         “Right now, we’re looking at about two-thirty or three in the morning.”
         “That’s crazy.”
         “I know.”
         “Look.  Why don’t we drive a few more hours, past Pittsburgh, or to the Ohio line, then look for a motel, and share a room again.  I’ll pay for it.  I owe you for the two nights at the Hilton anyway.  This way I’ll get to pay you back.”
         “The hotel in Washington cost $95 a night…” John was figuring it out.
         “Well, consider it a partial payment then.”  I was doing arithmetical calculations myself, wondering whether it was quite fair of John to ask me to pay for half the bill when Athena had also occupied it and I had slept on the floor both nights.
         “OK.  It sounds like a plan,” John replied.  After consulting a map, we agreed to continue driving, and to meet again at the first service plaza on the Ohio Turnpike.
         “How fast do you drive?” John wanted to know.  “Eighty?  Seventy?”
         “Not eighty,” I said.  “Seventy sounds about right.”
         We took off, and I lost John in the night right away.  Every once in a while I glanced at my speedometer and saw that I was doing nowhere near seventy—more like sixty-two or sixty-three.  I figured John would probably have to wait at least a half an hour for me at the service plaza, and wondered if he would get impatient and drive off.  When I finally arrived at the service plaza, I saw no one around.
         “Did you see a man and a little girl hanging around here the last half hour?” I asked the server at the McDonald’s station.  
         “We get a lot of people in here,” she said, gesturing to the empty tables.  I was about to leave when John walked out of the men’s bathroom.
         “Where have you been?” he asked.
          “Driving.”
         “At what speed?  Fifty-five?”
         “Well, not quite that slow.”
         “Yes, at least that slow.”  
         “Where’s Athena?”
         “Asleep in the car.”
         I realized I had imposed on him, and was grateful that he had stuck around.  I called up a motel on one of the courtesy phones on the reservation board and reserved a room four miles up the road.  We got back into our cars and arrived at the hotel.
         “Just wait here, and let me make the reservation,” I told John.  I’ll get a room with two beds and tell the clerk that it’s for my little daughter and me.  They don’t have to know that there’ll be a third person sleeping on the floor.”
         “Do whatever you’re comfortable with,” John said.  I went in and ordered the room.  
         “I guess your little girl is still on vacation from school today,” the desk clerk said.
         The Law of Economy, 2“Uh, yeah.  That’s right,” I ad-libbed.  I grabbed the key hastily, stumbled outside, and led John to the room.  Once again, I brushed my teeth and spread out a blanket at the foot of Athena’s bed, just as I had at the Hilton.  I was thinking of the strangeness of sharing a room with them again, and wondering what it meant.  
The next morning, we had breakfast together in a café next to the motel, and then I paid for the room.  The charge was just a little over $60.  I started figuring what my share of the Hilton bill would have been if it had been split three ways, between John, Athena, and me.  My share would have been a little over $30 a night, or over $60 altogether.  It came out about the same.  I concluded that the whole encounter was providing a way for me to pay John back in the most efficient way, without a lot of dickering and hassling.  The whole incident was showing me something about how the ECK, or Spirit, operated—in the most efficient and economical manner.  This was the Law of Economy, often referred to in the Eckankar writings, in action
 
Date Submitted:
1/2/04
Copyright Information:
Copyright © The Spiritual Traveler, 2001