The Old Coot explains the “knee” generation.
By Merlin Lessler
The Baby Boomer Generation was designated as the “Me-Generation”
by author Tom Wolfe in 1976. (Me, Me, Me - I want it all and I want it right
now!) But, I think it would be more accurate to call it the “Knee Generation.”
That’s the subject that infiltrates their conversations. My crowd, the old coot
generation, have knee issues, but we’re not obsessed with them the way the knee
generation is. Our knees creek, grown, snap, ache and “kill” every once in a
while. We wait it out, hope it goes away, and use it to get sympathy.
But, not the knee generation. They are experts on the joint
between the femur and the tibia. They get technical – “What’s your problem?”
someone will ask. “Is it the meniscus, the MCL, LCL, ACL?” That’s a lot of
“alphabet” talk, the kind that sends me searching for my old anatomy textbook. Old
coots simply say, “My knee hurts.”
I think the me-crowd, over reacts to their knee condition.
They get Symptom Disease. It’s a condition that usually affects medical
students. When they study heart disease they think the next twitch in their
chest is a heart attack. The next headache is a brain tumor. Every mole is skin
cancer. The more they study, the sicker they get. We all suffer from symptom
disease to a degree. The pharmaceutical industry exploits that susceptibility,
and flood the airways with symptoms that they can cure. Just buy their magic
pill. They have us right where they want us, our wallets too! So much so, that
we hardly pay attention to the possible side effects.
If you discuss your knee ache with a Knee Generation person.,
they will ask about your meniscus, your medial and anterior collateral
ligaments. That’s when you need to get up and leave! If you don’t, they’ll convince
you that surgery is the answer. Sure, some people have an issue so bad it requires
knee surgery or replacement, usually after years of chronic pain. But, many others
get caught up in the science, fall victim to Symptom Disease.” Knee surgery has
become a status symbol. It introduces a whole new line of conversation that
starts with, "Who did yours?”
The knee is a marvelous, flexible joint, but it gets mad
when we mistreat it. And, it lets us know. Old coots know this better than
anyone. We don’t know if it’s because of the ACL, MCL or another of the knee
structures. We do know how to use it to get out of unpleasant tasks: shopping,
weeding, art shows, operas. It doesn’t seem to hurt when we go to a car show or
wander around the golf course. Use it or lose it, is our motto. Not the knee,
the excuse!
Comments? Send to mlessler7@gmail.com