Seeing Around Corners

Recently, on a commute home, when cruising through my neighborhood, I came upon a typical summer scene.

Indeed, nothing says summer quite like young girls selling sidewalk lemonade. Sidewalk lemonade is the one item for which I don’t mind overpaying “the market price.” I mean, does anyone ever really asked for their change? Of course not. And neither did I. I simply handed over a fiver and drove on.

The lemonade was exactly how I expect it to be by four in the afternoon: a little on the warm side and diluted from all the melted ice. But what does it matter; I’m not buying lemonade; like all summer’s past, I’m supporting and encouraging youthful entrepreneurship and ambition. And thus, the earth revolves, a new summer arrives, bringing with it new girls with the spark of ambition in their youthful eyes. It’s a time-honored summer theme that has repeated ever since humans discovered and squeezed the first lemon. But then something occurred to me when rolling home and sipping lemonade whose ice cubes had long since melted: What will happen to these sidewalk entrepreneurs once we become a cashless society? I chuckled imagining a lemonade stand run by eight-year-old girls holding a sign that reads: We take bitcoin or Apple pay appreciated. My humor was short-lived as it saddened me to think how a cashless world would sideline the spark of youthful ambition as I have always known it to thrive. It’s a corner I wished I hadn’t peeked around.

Enjoy your Sunday and the summer’s dwindling days. And if you happen to roll by a sidewalk lemonade stand, tell that youthful entrepreneur, “Keep the change, and I hope to see you next summer.”

4 responses to “Seeing Around Corners”

  1. Nice read . . .

    The Nigerian government is chasing after a cashless society too, and despite its awkwardness, the fire seem to be catching on, slowly but surely – seemingly illiterate and quite old market women and a good portion of the populace doing on-line transactions via mobile telephony into their bank accounts as well as receiving payments through same from customers.

    Alternatively, their are POS vendors whose business is to receive your transfers while giving out cash for a small commission to those in need of urgent funds.

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    1. In The States, a cashless society would put to death all youthful enterprises because young girls selling lemonade in the summer can’t have access to such merchant services as debit cards, credit cards, or Venmo. Not all progress is progress. But, then again, when has the world’s youth ever really been a priority?

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  2. Ahhhh…so true! ::sigh:: Sad to consider. (But an excellent read. ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘)

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