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Taxes Schmaxes

By
Real Estate Agent with GenoPetro.House IL 471.018331

I was half-listening to a lady being interviewed on NPR a few Tuesday mornings ago as I drove in a gazy daze out of the city and toward the general direction of Canada. I was running late for an appointment with my tax Wizard, a fourth generation accountant who fled from the tangle of the city 10 years ago to kick back On Golden Pond and perform his magic in a more bucolic setting. His father was an accountant, his grandfather was an accountant and every first born male for the last 500 years in his family were accountants--all pencil and paper sort of fellows from what I gathered.  My guy however, has flat screen plasmas throughout his office suite with a different financial news channel on each, and the latest in electronic everything to get his fiscal point across to the rest of the universe. He also has an IQ that hovers around the batting average of a Major League 2nd baseman.

"Taxes, schmaxes," was his response to my initial phone inquiry a few months back. That, and something about $200 an hour. I thought he was kidding.  The mutual  business acquaintance who ultimately hooked us up would soon after assure me otherwise.

"He's pricey and a little odd but he's a genius. A tax genius. A wizard, really..."

"Yeah, but $200 an hour? I don't pay my shrink but half of that," said I, lying about the shrink part.

"Your shrink sounds about as good as your last accountant." Which was true. I was my last accountant.

The lady on the radio, a spry sounding 65 year old, was talking about being 'in oneness with the all,' or maybe it was  ‘one with the allness,' I'm still not certain. I immediately shot over to the shoulder of the interstate to enter the lofty, if not misquoted, phrase into the Note section of my new iPhone for later review.  This is my biggest gripe with my car radio; no digital replay-no RiVo, as it were.

Normally, I would have just continued along with the 70 mph flow, eyes darting up and over, to and fro, steering with my knees in and out of the morning suburban egression and typing the qwerty with my thumbs, but I have yet to master the nuances of my newest tax-deductible gadget with its slick, electromagnetic glass face and all those colorful, vascillating screens; shrinking, expanding and spinning sideways with even the slightest tilt of the wrist.  Ah, iPhone...mere marconian radio is but a relic in comparason.

The truth is, I haven't had an original conveyable thought in weeks so I risked the morning rush triple lane change maneuver and found a semi-safe idling spot alongside the poor, frozen remains of some animal who wasn't nearly as deft at negotiating the northbound lanes of I-94 as me. I looked out the window and half-wondered if it too, was now one with anything besides the pavement and the ice and the rumble of the highway.  Bad omen, I thought. I said a prayer in my own way for both of our souls, remembering again, for a quick nauseating second, the box of tax records in my back seat and the IRS auditor waiting my arrival in exactly 37 minutes.

She was attending Maharishi University and studying flying yoga or some type of meditation where one can eventually learn to ‘hover,' continued the lady on the radio. She went on about sitting in silence and levitating in her mind and, well...just becoming one with everything, or allness, and I have to say, at that particular moment, I felt pretty darn mortal. It was snowing very hard, I had a back seat full of bank statements; money long spent and barely accounted for, and to be quite blunt, an IRS agent was the last person I felt like encountering that day. I believe I also experienced a sudden sensation of levitation but it wasn't of the transcendental nature nor was it anything even remotely close to what the lady on the radio was discussing.  Traffic screamed by my window while I took a few seconds to gather my senses, enter my notes of oneness onto its proper screen, then push hard and away toward the Illinois/Wisconsin border town of Genoa City for a few hours of fun and games at $200 per.

An Accountant, an Italian, and an IRS agent walk into a bar...

It was the wrong day. A Treasury Department representative was in fact, in the conference room but he wasn't there to see me. My own red letter day had been moved 'indefinitely into the future' according to my Wizard. Somehow, even with all the technology on both ends, I never got the message. This was fine. This was oneness, floating above the ground, with sugar on top, as far as I was concerned.

"Let's get some caffeine," said the Wizard, grabbing his hat and overcoat while motioning toward the conference room with a head tilt.

"Tell him he can come, too. His appointment just called to reschedule. Too bad, huh?" He said, chuckling away at 5.5 cents a second.

I froze. Why did I have to break the bad news to the G-Man? I was the one who drove an hour through a blizzard to stick my neck on the block for a tax year ending in a very foggy period of my life from a previous century I barely recall. And, I was on time, too. At $200 an hour I just wanted to about face and bolt. 

We made eye contact. The IRS guy got up from the table and approached me just as my iPhone pinged my e-mail with a blast of news alerts; the Dow was fighting hard to recover, the foreign markets were going apeshit, Heath Ledger was found dead...

"How do you like that?" 

What? How do I like what? Why is he talking to me? My appointment was rescheduled indefinitely into the future. I was on time. I prayed for a dead animal. My Wizard said everything was cool...

"Your iPhone. How do you like it?"

I forgot I was still  holding it. The little fellow couldn't have been more than 30 years old. He wore a black shirt and wrinkled black tie with equally wrinkled pants and scuffed-up shoes. He had one of those haircuts that Starbucks baristas and bank tellers in grocery stores like to sport these days--kind of shaved, kind of not--you know what I'm talking about.   He had a very soft voice. I handed him my phone for examination.

"Heath Ledger just died," was all I could think of to say.

He took my device, read the screen and looked me back in the eye. I thought he was going to cry. He waited a few seconds before speaking.  The young civil servant, with his watery blue eyes and stark, unpressed attire indeed, appeared to have a soul. His face showed compassion and remorse. He fiddled with the screen for a moment or two before handing it back to me.

"Tax deductible if you use Schedule C," he said.

"Yeah. I know,"  I thought to myself. "It's my favorite Schedule. It's the whole reason I'm even here to begin with..."


Geno Petro

Charlie Ragonesi
AllMountainRealty.com - Big Canoe, GA
Homes - Big Canoe, Jasper, North Georgia Pros
The Tax man cometh. It is a scary thing. Hey you could be Wesley Snipes
Feb 03, 2008 01:15 AM
Carole Cohen
Howard Hanna Cleveland City Office - Cleveland, OH
Realtor, ePRO

Geno, Geno Geno, I sooo empathize about the IRS.  I had my own issues up until four months ago! No audit but it was still stressful!

More importantly, when are you going to write a book? Or have you already? I am serious, this is soooo good.  I'm going to hound you until you tell me where I can buy the book LOL

Did you continue North to the casino? Cause it seemed like it was your lucky day :-)

Feb 03, 2008 03:00 PM
Geno Petro
GenoPetro.House - Chicago, IL

Hey Charlie, I just read WS just got acquitted. Anyway, Mine was for something from 1999 concerning the Alt Min Tax which ironically, is not part of the tax code anymore. All resolved.

Carole, This one got buried in the weekend submissions so only you and Charlie read it apparently. This is the main reason I post more on Bloodhound these days. Trying to get something read in a pool of 70,000 is a little disheartening when something interesting enough to write about does occur in my life. But thank you so much for the encouragement. I do have a few chapters of a novel currently in progress but the process requires a different side of my brain than does selling R.E. I'll let you know if I get to the point of trying to submit anything to Publishers.

Regaeds,

 

Geno

 

Feb 04, 2008 01:45 AM
Chris Hendricks
Walnut Creek, CA
Your little bank teller/barista will do his time and then migrate to Ernst Young or one of the other money houses and soon be able to buy and sell all of us-- or so it was with the little whippersnapper cousin of mine that he sounds like....
Feb 04, 2008 06:32 AM
Rich Dansereau
Positive Real Estate Professionals - Knoxville, TN
This is fantastic! I was led here by a blog posted by Jim Ludes entitled Hidden gems In The Rain...or should we say Chicago snow. I am so glad I came over to check out your blog! I really enjoy your prose and am looking forward to more!
Feb 05, 2008 10:19 AM
Geno Petro
GenoPetro.House - Chicago, IL

Thanks Rich. I appreciate the read.

Hey Chris, haven't communicated in a while. Hope all is well.

 

G

Feb 06, 2008 02:42 AM
Sara Bonert
Zillow - Atlanta, GA
Real Estate Internet Marketing

I don't know how you make ordinary event, such as driving on the interstate, seem like such an interesting drama.... definitely talent. 

So was he worth the $200?  I am going back and forth between doing it myself again or hiring.  Don't know that I would be willing to drive to Canada for it though. 

When in the world are we going to see the sun around here again!!!???  I am sick of shoveling.  You need to send some of those shovel pixies that I read about in a previous post of yours to my house!

Feb 06, 2008 01:39 PM
Geno Petro
GenoPetro.House - Chicago, IL

Sara...your hubby is supposed to do the manual labor so no more shoveling for you.  But enough of the domestic advice;...now as far as the finacial side goes, definitely have an accountant do your taxes. My guy is super expensive because he's a wizard but most normal CPAs charge in the $50 a page range.

And for the episode, of course I exaggerate a little.  That's why everything seems interesting, I guess. Example: my guy is really just north of Lake Bluff but it feels like Canada. He does, however, charge $200 an hour and when it comes to making a mistake with the IRS and getting it all cleared up then yes, it's worth it.

Hope you're having a good year.

Feb 09, 2008 09:44 AM
Lizette Fitzpatrick
Lizette Realty - Richmond KY - Lexington, KY
Lizette Realty, Lexington KY MLS - Kentucky Homes
I feel like I am late arriving to the party. Sorry... WE have had snow, it's been cold! Clients are running me out and about looking at houses and horse farms. In 2 days I went over 700 miles of Central KY. What day is it anyway? Isn't it about time for a tropical drink(w/ umbrella)?
Feb 28, 2008 06:36 AM
Amanda Evans
DFW Living - Fort Worth, TX
Real Estate Broker - Fort Worth Texas

Geno, you have to keep posting here in the Rain as well.  I've been a fan and a subscriber of yours since Moby Dick was a minno and I also get excited when you post up.  Just for me, don't limit your posts to Bloodhound--I never go there.

The IRS is the drunk uncle no one wants to mess with to be sure, but your stories always make me miss Chicago!  You have to meet up with us at Kingston Mines the next time hubby and I are in town.

Mar 27, 2008 02:37 PM
Geno Petro
GenoPetro.House - Chicago, IL
Thanks Amanda. I'll be posting some of my Chicago's Home Weblog stuff here in the next few days. It's just that whenever I post on Bloodhound I'll get a dozen or so comments and at least a hundred unique visitors routed to my main webpage and CHW site.

On the contrary, my last 2 AR submissions yielded '0' results with no comments so I just removed the posts. I do appreciated you reaching out, though. And by all means, drop me an email when you guys come to Chicago. The Mines haven't changed a bit and Big Time Sarah is still wailing away.
Mar 28, 2008 04:41 AM