Thursday, November 02, 2006

Robbed At Gunpoint

Julie came over for her visit last night. Since the woman from the Children's home cancelled, I was able to spend the evening with her, supervising the visit. It started off awkward as Julie insisted we all sit down and watch a DVD of a stand up comedy woman named "Monique". I swear to you, in one minute's time, she must have said the word "fuck" in some manner more than 30 times. I am far from a prude... and I found it extremely offensive. After about 2 minutes of 'waiting for it to get better' the kids (Kayte and Kayla) insisted that I turn it off. Thank goodness! Julie thought she was really funny - figures.

The rest of the night went okay, we had dinner at Burger King, went to Walmart to pick up some fabric for one of Kayla's classes, and then Julie left. She was going into work late (9 to close, which is 11 pm). She works at Circle K in Ruskin.

She was the only one working about about 10 minutes before 11. There was a guy in the store cleaning the floors, and Julie was thinking about closing a little early. She changed her mind and figured it was only 10 minutes and began to count lottery tickets (apparently part of the end-of-night procedure).

Just then, two men came in wearing 'scream' costumes... one holding a knife the other a shotgun. The men demanded that she open the register and give them all the money, which she did - grabbing the 'bait' money first so the police were silently notified. I can only imagine what my sister was feeling at this time.... I can't imagine having to go through this.

The gunman continued to press her for more money. First, asking her to give him any money under the drawer, but there was nothing under there (he checked himself). The then told her to open the safe. When she explained it was a time-safe and she couldn't do so, he jammed the shotgun into her chest and again demanded she open it. At this point poor Julie was frantically telling him it was not possible. He continued to push the barrel of the shotgun into her chest and she put her hands up as high as she could and continued telling him she couldn't do it. The gunman got angry that she was holding her hands so high and demanded she put them down. Again, I can only imagine what my sister was thinking and feeling at this time - but I'm sure her thoughts were of her kids... how they lost their daddy and didn't need to lose their mom.

Finally the robbers took the money they already had from the register, grabbed some lottery tickets and left. Julie had a panic attack and the police of course came out. Apparently the same two guys had hit another convenience store just down the road only 5 minutes prior. The did catch the guys.... they were 14 and 16 years old. Amazing.

Circle K, being the people-friendly corporation they are, gave Julie the day off today - without pay. Sucks, but she's happy to be home and that she doesn't have to work today.

It got me to thinking how quickly life can change.... or end. My Lord... if Julie had been killed last night.............. I can't even imagine how horrible that would be. I then felt bad that I had blogged all the horrible things about Julie, but had never really shared the good things about her with all of you.

One thing I remembered after Ron had passed -- you tend to remember the good things and forget about the bad things after someone is gone. How wonderful - yet sad - is that? Wouldn't you want to keep in mind all the good things while someone is still with you? So - here are some really good things about Julie:

Julie has always had a heart the size of Texas. Even if she was doing something wrong, typically her heart was in the right spot while doing it. She also rarely does something just to be mean. On a rare occasion she will get very angry and vengeful, but for the most part, day-in and day-out, she doesn't do anything mean. She loves her kids more than anything in the world. Sure she may do things that are totally wrong, but never because she doesn't love them. (Boy, it's hard to do this and not put in the 'but' for the bad things... this is hard work, but good therapy!) What I think is most important for any of you that read the blogs and don't personally know Julie to try to realize is that -- she is mentally ill. She isn't a horrible person or a bad woman. She does the best she can with what her brain tells her to do when given a set of circumstances.

Please keep Julie in your thoughts and prayers today. I haven't been able to talk to her yet and am just hoping that she is doing okay today.

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