The Old Coot is an eavesdropper.
By Merlin Lessler.
The Old Coot is an eavesdropper.
By Merlin Lessler.
The Old Coot took the Camel Cigarette, 30 day test.
By Merlin Lessler
The Old Coot saved “Old Blue.”
By
Merlin Lessler
,It was a Tommy Hilfiger creation; I purchased it in his outlet store run by his sister in Elmira, New York. As far as I know, it was the only outlet that sold his high end clothes at bargain basement prices. Probably, because Elmira was his home town and he wanted to share his fashions with the local people. He put Elmira on the map as did Mark Twain, who wrote Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn and other books in a cabin on his wife’s sister’s farm where he summered for many years. The cabin now resides on the campus at Elmira College; he resides nearby, with his wife, in Woodlawn Cemetery.
The Old Coot is a “read-dozer.”
By Merlin Lessler
I have acquired a new pastime. I call it “read-dozing.” I’m
a reader, primarily books and newspapers. I’m also a napper. When I first
started working, and getting paid for it, I found myself a little sleepy between
2 and 3 in the afternoon. I worked for Compton Industries, an electronic firm whose
primary business was calibrating oscilloscopes for IBM corporation. After we
finished adjusting the devices, we set them up in a test room to “age” the
calibration since some adjustments would wander out of spec after initial use. The
room was warm, from the heat generated by a sea of oscilloscopes. They also emitted
a gentle hum, produced by their internal fans.
I had to go into the “aging” room to check and readjust the
calibration every afternoon. Between the warm temperature and the hum of the
fans, it was difficult to stay awake. So, I didn’t. I napped, just like I did
in high school study halls, with my forehead nestled in my hand and my elbow on
the desk. I figured the teacher thought I was concentrating on reading information
in a text book on the desk. Once in a while, my arm would buckle, and my head would
come crashing down on the desk, waking me up and scaring the kids around me.
Anyhow, my naps in the “aging room” started a lifelong
habit of dozing in the afternoon for 10 minutes or so to snap me out of the
doldrums and let me be more productive than I otherwise would have. Now that
I’m unemployed (retired) and out of high school, there are no impediments to my
napping routine. I read a few pages; then doze off for a few minutes. I often
dream about the story I’m reading and move the plot along. When I wake up and
start reading again, I discover that my dream version was way off. I read; I
doze; I dream - I read and doze again. It’s a great pastime! Try it; you’ll
like it.
The Old Coot pans public speakers
By
Merlin Lessler
The Old Coot’s arms are crossed.
By
Merlin Lessler
At coffee the other morning, one of the “klatsch” boys asked me why I had my arms folded. Was I cold? I didn’t know I had folded my arms. I guess I did it without knowing. I wasn’t cold. It’s just another trait that emerges when you are an old coot. Changes like this happen and we don’t notice. We walk funny, groan when we get up from a chair; when we glance in a mirror, we see a memory of what we used to look like, not an old man’s face. It’s a long list of oddities that we are blessed with. Cheapness is a big one. It’s a perspective thing. We remember when a BabyRuth candy bar cost a nickel, a pizza was a dollar, and a Pepsi was ten cents. When we look at a restaurant bill, it’s a shock, especially when we calculate a 20% tip that amounts to what we once paid for the entire meal.
The Old Coot shrugged off a nag.
By
Merlin Lessler