Old Coot University.
By Merlin Lessler 8-06
I watched a middle age couple cross the street, a little
over 10 years ago. It inspired this article, which I’m repeating, sort of, as a
PSA (public service announcement). They got out of their car, hiked to the
corner, pressed the cross button, walked inside the crosswalk lines to the
other side and then back to their destination, directly across the street from
their car. They walked an extra block. I would have J-walked. I don’t know if
they were motivated by fear of getting run over, lack of confidence in their
ability to look both ways, fear of getting a ticket or they just were people
who stayed between the lines. .
The same principal is at work when it
comes to walking across a lawn. Most buildings have squared off sidewalks; they
look great on the architectural drawings, but if you walk around a lot, like I
do, you’ll notice that a squared off walkway is the longest route to a
building. If you take the diagonal you get there faster. The paths worn in the
grass at an angle to the walkway show that a lot of people defy the designer
and travel the shortest route. Good designers take this into account; it’s
called the “human” factor. Great designers don’t bother with a walkway layout.
They build the building, plant grass, and then after a few months, send in
landscapers to build walkways where the grass is trampled down.
This is why old coots are valuable to
society. We take the short route in everything we do. The world would be a
better place if the architects and engineers paid more attention to us. One of
my old coot friends developed a “short route” to getting dressed. He got tired
of putting his belt through the loops every time he put on a different pair of
pants. He went to a thrift store and bought a dozen belts. He put one in each
pair of his pants. Now, when he gets dressed, he just slips on his pants and
buckles up. Some old coots avoid this entirely by buying pants with elastic
waistbands. This is not approved by the old coot society I belong to. Elastic
waist pants are something we couldn’t wait to grow out of as kids. We started
down the fashion runway in short pants, then knickers (usually made of itchy
wool) and then elastic waist pants. Once we moved on to “big boy” pants, with
belt loops, we vowed to never go back. You couldn’t pay my old coot crowd to
wear anything with an elastic waistband, except maybe sweat pants to workout
in. The old guys you see wearing elastic around town give us old coots a bad
name.
The public school system would be well
served if they added a new course to the curriculum. It might be called - Short Route 101. High school students
would be broken into teams and required to follow a bunch of old coots around
and then meet as a discussion group to report what they observed. They’d learn
to take short cuts across public green spaces. And, as a bonus, they’d learn to
fake a language problem when it served their purpose: when challenged by a
store clerk for unloading a cart full cart of groceries at a “ten-items-or less”
counter, or asked to leave an “invitation-only” event to which they weren’t
invited, or when walking up to a closed teller window, and refusing to budge
until the clerk doing paperwork cashed their check. Responding to a challenge
in each case with, “No speaka da-englise.”
They’d also learn the fine art of
J-walking. Which is the safest way to cross a street these days. DOT has spent
millions (wasted in my opinion) to install pedestrian crossing signals at
thousands of intersections around the state, including the intersection at the
junction of the Hiawatha Bridge and Route 434. The last known pedestrian to
cross the street at that place was on April 7, 1996. DOT’s idea of a safe
crossing zone is what I call the danger zone; it’s where pedestrians get run
over. The right on red after stopping regulation is the culprit. People don’t
stop. The crossing light says go to the pedestrian, they step into the
crosswalk and a car comes zooming around the corner and runs them over. Old
coots cross in the middle of the block where there are no surprises. We learned
to look both ways before crossing before we were five years old and that skill
has served us well. Want proof? Just ask Daren Merrill; he got run down in the
crosswalk at the corner of Front and Church.
At what “DOT safe” corner are you gunna get yours?
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