The Old Coot bends and stretches.
By Merlin Lessler
Here we go again, being offered yet another way to eliminate
a simple chore. FINDING A KID’S SNEAKER! When a kid said, “Where’s my sneakers,”
their mom or dad responded, “Go look for them yourself!” (Unspoken, but on the parent’s
mind, “That’s your problem. I’ve got my own, trying to figure out how to help
you make a miniature volcano for show and tell.) That may be a slight exaggeration, and I’m
sure a large swath of the population disagrees with my perspective. But, why else
would a major footwear company like Sketchers think that a lot of parents want
to be relieved of the challenge of finding misplaced sneakers? They already proved that people don’t want to
be bothered with a simple chore like tying the laces in their sneakers. The enormous
sales success of their “Slip- ins” verified that assumption.
But this new product, a sneaker for kids with a hidden
compartment, where a parent can insert an air tag chip to solve the problem when
a kid says, “Mom, Where’s my sneakers.” At least, that’s how they are promoting
the product. A quick glance at an app on a cell phone locates the sneakers. What
the heck, another task is now eliminated from the modern-day world. I guess the
lost sneaker issue takes too much effort: looking, thinking, bending and moving
stuff around.
We’ve eliminated many common day chores. We don’t wash our cars,
push a lawnmower, rake leaves. We can’t even dry our hands with a towel in many
public restrooms; we are forced to use a screaming, high-pitched, ultrasonic
blow dryer, a definite threat to hearing. I don’t know about women’s restrooms,
but in men’s, most guys give the blower a few seconds, get impatient and
bothered by the noise and finish the job by wiping their hands on their jeans.
The list of physical stuff we no longer do is endless. Some people replace the
exercise that was lost by going to the gym. Or more often, with nothing at all.
I’m not going to put a chip in my sneakers. I’ve opted for all
the bending, stretching, looking, thinking and moving things around that I can
get. Us old timers need to stick with the credo, “Use it or lose it.” I know I
can’t afford to lose any more of it .
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