Saturday, September 14, 2013

Men Don't Listen (originally published in 2006)

Men don’t listen. And worse, we don’t know it. We think we’re good listeners. Our wives know we’re not. They have to deal with it all the time. “Why are you getting all dolled up?” we innocently ask. “Because we’re going to the play tonight with Nick and Nancy. I told you about it last week and reminded you again at dinner, just 20 minutes ago.” This is when the wisest among us shut our mouths and start to get ready to go out. Many of us aren’t that smart. We whine, “You never mentioned it to me!” That’s when we get the short version of the lecture on how we never listen. We’ll get the long version when we get back home after the play.

It’s not our fault. We try to listen. We’re positive we hear everything our wives tell us, but we don’t. I think it’s a right brain, left brain thing. When somebody talks to us we are all ears, for about ten seconds. Then our brain switches into a sports mode. It drags up images of scoring the winning basket as the clock winds down to zero. Actually, it doesn’t drag up the image; it makes it up. There never was a moment like that. The male brain can’t distinguish between fact and fiction.       

It’s not just our wives we don’t listen to; it’s everybody. It’s why we get in so much trouble. We’re in a conversation; the other person talks and talks and then stops and looks at us and says, “So, do you think it’s a good idea?” We have no idea what they are talking about, but we never admit it. “Sure,” we respond. “That’s a great idea.” Then we discover that we just loaned our car to our neighbor’s teenage son for the prom. “How could you do that?” our wife asks. “It sounded like a good idea at the time,” we lamely respond. “You had to be there.”

I’m so glad that women are getting into leadership positions in business and politics. It was a tough road without them. If a woman had been in charge of Ford Motor Company in the 50’s when the design team made the pitch to introduce the Edsel, she might have listened to the engineers who warned that it was too soon, that the bugs hadn’t been worked out. As it was, Henry Ford the 2nd, who is a man, may I point out, was daydreaming about the Detroit Tigers when the discussion took place. When asked if they should move ahead and introduce the car in the 1958 model year, he said, “Sounds like a good idea.”

It’s just the opposite with women. They hear everything, even the stuff that you never say. If the words make it into the little waiting room in your brain, the place you put stuff for a few seconds before you let it go public, women hear it. They also have long-term memories. We say stuff that gets them so mad they can’t see straight. But they don’t say anything at the time. We hear about it two months later - “On December 2nd at two in the afternoon you said I looked a little chunky in my new coat.” Here’s where tact has such great value, if only we were smart enough to use it. We have no idea what she is talking about. We don’t even know she has a new coat. We can relate to December 2nd; the Giants were playing the Eagles that day. The stupid among us, blurt that information out, ala, “Didn’t know about the coat, the Giants were playing, etc.” Those of us who hope to live to a ripe old age take a breath and fake it. “I remember saying that. It’s bothered me every single day since then. I almost cried; I felt so bad. It wasn’t true anyhow; you looked great. I was mad because the Giants were losing and I took it out on you. How can I ever make it up to you?” Of course it’s all fiction. No man would ever say those things. How could he? He never heard what she was complaining about to begin with. Remember, men don’t listen.

September 11, 2013 Article


The Old Coot hits it right on the button!
By Merlin Lessler

We’re a “button-fussy” society. If you don’t button your shirt correctly, you’re in trouble! It’s a misdemeanor, maybe a felony, to walk around in a misbuttoned shirt. Alignment is important! “Oh my gosh! Your buttons are one off! Your shirt is on a slant!” It freaks people out. Personally, I love seeing someone in a misbuttoned shirt. It makes them more human. It brings a smile to my face. I never bring it to their attention.

I’m not sure what sets people off when they spot a misbuttoned shirt, the lack of symmetry maybe? We like things to be symmetrical, like our faces - 2 ears, 2 eyes, nose in the middle, mouth directly below. It sets the standard for how we view the world. Put an extra eye in the middle of the forehead and we go nuts. The Tucker Automobile Company made this mistake back in the 1940’s; they put a third headlight in the middle of the front hood. Even though their car was more advanced than any automobile on the market, the company went defunct in a few short years. Mismanagement? Or, was it that third “eye” in the middle of the hood? The Tucker was a misbuttoned shirt.

It’s also not acceptable to skip a button. You’ll hear about it as you go through the day. “You missed a button there,” someone (many someones) will say, and then point to the place of the infraction. It makes us uncomfortable. As do shirt collars. Have one pointing up and one pointing down and you’ll get scolded. Sometimes people can’t help themselves, they reach over and fold down the offending appendage. “There you go. Your collar was up on this side!” You can have two up or two down but not one of each.

Small boys and old coots are exempt from the “button-fussy” rules. (We’re one in the same if you really think about it). Neither of us cares if our shirt is misbuttoned. Or, if we’re wearing two different socks, two different shoes or even if our pants are on backwards.

 The next time you see someone with a misaligned, misbuttoned shirt or with a button or two that is not fastened, use your willpower; try not to give into the temptation to point out the mistake. Just hand them a dollar bill and say, “Thanks! You made my day!” You’ll spend the rest of your day with a big smile on your face.

September 4, 2013 Article


The Old Coot is an at the finish.
By Merlin Lessler

Emma Sedore suggested I write an Old Coot article about people who finish your sentences. (As a public service!) I have to agree; it is irritating when someone does _______(1). Especially, when the finisher is correct 80% of the _______(2). It means the speaker is so obvious in where the sentence is going that anyone can see through it, cut to the chase and finish it  _______(3), while we like to think of ourselves as so clever and insightful, that the listener is hanging onto our every _________(4).

When my crowd (old coots) get together, we all are guilty of this sentence finishing social faux pas. We have to be! The speaker often forgets where he is going with his sentence and starts groping for the end point in a desperate effort to pull it from the cobwebs in his mind. We give him a chance, but eventually take pity and supply the ending. In this situation, finishing someone’s sentence is a kindness.

The rest of the time though, it’s just plain rude! It shows a lack of patience and tolerance for those of us on the lower end of the humanoid species, just because we struggle a little to make a succinct point. It’s showing off, when a sentence finisher does this, a lame attempt to prove they are smarter than we are. If they really were smarter, they would avoid us altogether. But, they don’t; they swoop in and finish our sentences. We are tired of it!

So, if you are a sentence finisher, you have been warned. Proceed at your own risk! Those of us whose sentences you are finishing, are not going to put up with it any ___. (If you thought you could end that sentence with “longer” you are wrong. The ending is “more.”) We’re going to change the ending to every sentence to prove you _______. (If you tried to finish the sentence with “wrong,” you are in error. The ending is “have no manners.”) You can try to finish our sentences all you want. We’ll prove you wrong every time. End of _______(5)!

Footnotes: 1 = this, 2 = time, 3 = off, 4 = word, 5 = story.  

Score your sentence finishing ability: 1 or 2 right, welcome to old coot world. - 3 right, big deal you’re only slightly better than an old coot. - 4 or more right; go to a Mensa meeting and see how you do, but leave our sentences alone!