His expertise is philosophy. We talked that fine North Carolina autumn day about the Turing test -- some esoteric measure of a machine's ability to think and be human. It's a topic he's woven into his lecture, he tells me.
I am 24. He is heading towards 80.
My thoughts are, mainly, about what can I do to get ahead, make the boss happy, make a name for myself, find love. Mostly, find love. I am past college now. A fine school.
But, I am learning now, in this conversation.
All these years between now and then, I am in that moment.
That lesson at a college I am not attending but working for, selling my expertise in writing, communicating and marketing.
I am his student in that moment.
Sun comes in through the dusty window. His glasses, plain black plastic rims and lenses, are not the cleanest. His eyes are old man eyes. Brown going steel-gray.
I wonder what he made of me in my rush to fill the faculty mailboxes with a flyer on some insignificant meeting about some not-very-important project to promote the college to newspaper reporters -- my concoction.
He's struggling to get the papers out of his box.
"You know, Mark, someday you'll wear out your fingerprints."
Today, in a meeting with farmers struggling to make ends meet, I noticed I was having a hard time handing out copies of a report I thought might be useful to them. Rubbing my thumb to my index finger I feel a definite lack of a fingerprint.