Friday, February 26, 2021

The Old Coot remembers Valentine's Day - Tioga NY Courier Article 2/24/21

 

The Old Coot & the Valentine’s Day massacre.

By Merlin Lessler

 It’s Valentine’s Day as I write this. Martha Stewart just demonstrated how to make French Toast on the CBS Sunday Morning Show (my mother called it egg toast when she made it). Martha’s process was a complicated one, adding ten ingredients to the eggs and topping it off with a splash of Grand Marnier. My mother’s egg toast was made with beaten eggs and a dash of milk. Plain old store bought bread was dipped in the eggs and fried. Martha Stewart sliced off thick slabs from a crusty baguette.

 Ok, I’m no Martha Stewart, but that’s not the point of this rambling. The point came to me when Martha talked about her schooldays, when she and her CLASSMATES handed Valentines to each other. That term, “Classmates, “got caught in my old coot filter. It’s a word I never used, or heard when I was growing up. We simply said – kids in our class. We speak a slightly different language, us people of vintage age. We never said siblings either; we had brothers and sisters, not sibs. Just like today; we don’t use the word spouse; it’s husband or wife. We’re out of step; but our Valentine’s day had much greater significance than it does today.

 Back then, Valentine’s Day was a report card, an annual evaluation of our behavior by our peers. A kid in class, in our case Phyllis Otis, brought in a cardboard box decorated with red and white crepe paper with a heart shaped slot in the top a week before the big day. It was perched on a table at the front of the room.

 Each morning we were allowed to make a deposit. I, like the rest of the "chickens," would drop in one or two joke cards every day or so. A special card for a heartthrob never made it until the very last day, if it made it at all. A few times in my years at grade school, I mustered enough courage to buy a mushy card, sign it, and bring it to class, only to answer the dismissal bell with it safely hidden in my pocket.

 When the big day came, the box seemed to glow and vibrate, as though alive, holding its secrets in silence. The teacher called a halt to formal classroom activity late in the afternoon. Homemade cookies and glasses of juice were passed around. The box was moved to her desk, the lid opened, and the distribution ritual began. One by one, valentines were pulled from the box. She (all teachers were women in my school) called out the name on the envelope, and when summoned, we made our way to the front of the room, grabbed the treasure with a sweaty hand and sheepishly returned to our seats, depositing the card on the top of our desk unopened. After fetching our "first" card of the day, we breathed a sigh of relief, knowing we would not suffer the humiliation of "getting stiffed" by the entire class. The respite was brief, and the tension returned as we remembered the sentimental mushy card we had signed, sealed and deposited in the box.

 Valentine's Day was a day of atonement. If you'd been a jerk, teased the girls, overdid the "double-dares" to the boys, or was a tattletale, then it was likely you could sit through the entire valentine distribution ritual without hearing your name. You became a victim of a Saint Valentine’s Day massacre. Then you learned the meaning of, “You reap what you sow.” It’s different today; kids are required to bring a valentine for every kid in class. They miss out on a valuable life lesson.

 Comments? Send to mlessler7@gmail.com

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, February 19, 2021

The Old Coot's memory lost his name files. Tioga County NY Courier Article 2/17/21

 

The Old Coot is a name dropper.

By Merlin Lessler

 I was in a conversation about the movie, A Quiet Place, struggling to come up with the name of the actor who starred in it. Finally, it surfaced in my head and I shouted, “It’s John Kashablosky, or something like that.” That addendum, “Or something like that,” is how I cover up my inability to remember a name. I can get close, sort of close, 1st letter in the name close, but not the correct answer. (Incidentally, the actor’s name is John Krasinski; he was Jim on the TV show, “The Office.”)

 The, “Or something like that” affliction most always flares up when talking about actors and athletes, two groups I like to watch, but don’t really dedicate “name space” in my aging brain. I’m starting to prepare for a significant eruption of the affliction. When the pandemic comes to a close, a new epidemic will start. I’ll run into people I haven’t seen for more than a year and I won’t remember their name. The section of my brain where names are filed is coated with rust due to lack of activity.

 I might recall the first letter of the person’s name. Those files are separated from the name files in that blob between my ears. I use that tidbit of information to run through the alphabet in hopes of jarring off some of the rust. In this new epidemic, I’ll stare at a person talking to me, with a blank look on my face, not hearing a thing he or she is saying. My mind will be going, A – Alan, Abe, Adam, B- Bob, Bill, Barty, and on through to Z. Usually, a lap or two will pry up the information. Sometimes, I have the first letter wrong and have to go to other means to solve the mystery. Asking my wife or texting old buddies to ask them, “What is the name of the guy who used to live in the yellow house on Main Street, who was always messing with his lawn and gardens wearing bib overalls?” It probably won’t help; their brains will be as rusted as mine..  

 It’s a scary thing, the prospect of a Covid19 induced memory loss. We’ll be a nation of citizens conversing without listening. A second wave of the condition will be experienced when we get home and try to tell our spouse who we ran into. I know my report will be reduced to, “Jim Snuckerson, or SOMETHING LIKE THAT.”

 Comments, complaints? Send to mlessler7@gmail.com

Friday, February 12, 2021

February 10, 2021 Old Coot Article (Tioga County NY Courier)

 

The old coot rediscovers the “Huffer.”

By Merlin Lessler

 A few articles back, I remarked on the “Um” people. Those poor souls who are in line ahead of you at a counter in a place where you have to make selections, like in a deli or a donut shop. Um people draw a blank when the clerk asks what they would like, and respond with, “Um,” and then repeats it after each selection. When it’s time to pay and the clerks asks, “Cash or credit?” A whole new series of UM’s accompany a search through pockets and/or purse.

 This article is about a Huffer, another phenomenon that emerges in lines. It’s one I’d forgotten about until brought to my attention by friends, Paul and Carol. They were at a pharmacy where they observed a “Huffer” in full bloom. They were at the “drop off a prescription” counter; the Huffer was at the “pick up a prescription” counter. The clerk was waiting on them; the Huffer was impatiently waiting her turn, as only a “Huffer” can; arms crossed and recrossed, weight shifted from right to left with huffs coming from her pie hole each time she switched arms and legs. They said she sounded like a steam engine, idling in a train station.   

 Paul and Carols turn was taking a little while since it was a complicated situation with a doctor from another state at their side trying to negotiate through the web of two different sets of state regulations. It just added steam to the Huffer at the other counter. The intensity of folding and unfolding her arms and the sideways back & forth pacing increased as each second passed. As did the frequency and volume of the huffing.

 Finally, their transaction was completed, and as they walked out of the prescription area, they were greeted with a goodbye Huff and then heard a portion of her comments to the poor clerk, “…..and they don’t even live here.” A line behavior experience like this is pure entertainment to me. (It doesn’t take much to entertain an old coot.) There is no reason to let something like this irritate you. When you find yourself, huffing, puffing and uming, remember, someone is probably watching you and suppressing a chuckle.    

 Comments? Complaints? Send the former to mlessler7@gmail.com. Keep the latter to yourself.

Friday, February 5, 2021

Old Coot February 3, 2021 Tioga County, NY Courier Article

 

The Old Coot is stuck in place.

By Merlin Lessler

 I sat in my car. Frozen in place. Stuck in a hyper state of indecision. All I wanted to do, was back out of a parking space between two extra large SUV’s and drive home. It was a busy lot, with cars pulling in and out, pedestrians crossing hither and yon. Some with cell phones held to their ear, paying scant attention to the danger zone they were transgressing. A perfect storm! All set for an old coot to run over someone or smash into a car racing down the travel lane.

 I started the car, put it into reverse and took a glance into the rearview mirror. It seemed OK to move back, but just to be sure, I glanced down at the image in my back-up camera, then over to my sideview mirror, then to the passenger sideview mirror and finally out the backseat, passenger side window. It took so long I wasn’t sure if it was safe to go or not, so I went through the routine again. And again! My neck was sore from all the rotations. That’s when I froze in place. Too much input; I was in overload. Something that never happened when I first drove a car; it only had a rearview mirror and a single sideview mirror (on the driver’s side) and no tall behemoth SUV’s blocking the view. 

 I now understood why some old guys say the heck with it and just back up without looking. They think they have better odds with luck, than with a comprehensive study of the surrounding environment. But, I don’t want to join that club. My crowd has a bad enough reputation as it is: driving for miles with our blinkers on, getting into the passing lane and not leaving until we get to our exit, turning left on red as well as right (Why not?), sitting at traffic lights when they turn green until a chorus of honking horns gets us moving. I don’t want to add backing up without looking to my driving habits. So, I’ll continue to try it on my own, and when I get stuck, I’ll wait for a good Samaritan to come along to hold up traffic and wave me out.

 Comments, complaints? – Send to mlessler7@gmail.com