The Old Coot never gets the whole story.
By Merlin Lessler
The Old Coot never gets the whole story.
By Merlin Lessler
The Old Coot Avoids Back-Seat Drivers!
By Merlin Lessler
I’ve learned (sort of) to be compatible with my driving supervisor. I guess things will change over time; I won’t even be at the wheel. I’ll be perched in the back seat of a driverless car, doing some screeching of my own.
The Old Coot graduated stupid.
By Merlin
Lessler
I’m kind of
irked that I graduated from high school, STUPID! I knew nothing about anatomy,
a critical subject to help one get through life. Wouldn’t you think that
knowledge of how this mechanism works that travel around in all our lives would
be important?
Anyhow, I
learned anatomy the hard way. Waiting for the doctor, in the “little room,” and
reading the information and looking at pictures on charts hanging on the wall.
It was a long, slow process that I’ve been at for more than sixty years. Oh
boy! So that’s where my kidneys are. Man, a liver is big. Look at all the bones
in the ear. Who would think there were so many bones in such a small space?
I learned
some stuff from doctors. It usually started out OK, but when they switched to
Latin I was lost, even though I took several years of it in high school. I
wasn’t familiar with any of the words I heard in the little room. When I got
home, I looked them up in a dictionary, to see if I could figure what the Doctor
was talking about. It was a lot harder in the pre-Google years. Not so bad now,
but too late for me since I already know enough to qualify for an anatomy certificate.
I don’t know
what’s taught in school these days. All we had on how the body functioned was a
single semester in Health Class that focused on hygiene, nutrition and dental
health. And, a single afternoon when an embarrassed elderly Health teacher
tried to cover the subject of sex education. I don’t know who was more
uncomfortable, the teacher or us. There were no questions; we couldn’t wait to
get out of the room.
These days
when I find myself lacking some medical information, I use Google to help me
out, but more importantly, I have a collection of old coot friends that are a
wealth of knowledge and advice on just about any affliction that comes your way
in old age. They’ve had it all and now are heart specialists, joint replacement
experts, digestive system affliction pros and many more afflictions encountered
by old men. And, you don’t have to wait in the “little room” for an explanation,
that you’re probably not going to understand anyway.
The Old Coot Takes A Language Lesson
By Merlin Lessler
I had a conversation in Owego-speak the other day. It’s a
language I’ll never be fluent in. It’s spoken by native Owegoites. They give
you the genetic history of anybody whose name comes into the conversation. “Oh,
there’s Tom Smith,” the Owegoite declares. “Who’s he?” you naively ask. “You
know,” they respond, in perfect Owego-speak,
“His sister’s, husband’s, first wife is the one who set fire to the house next
to the Great American.”
Now you’re confused. “Where’s the Great
American?” you ask, in a puzzled voice. “It’s where the CVS is now,” they
explain. You start to get a little irritated. “Why didn’t you say, next to
CVS?” But you’ve been down this road before. You chide yourself for not keeping
your mouth shut. You know you’ve just kicked off a whole new round of Owego-speak. They pick up your fumble
and take off down the field, “Because it wasn’t the CVS when she lived there,
DUH!” They go on and on, entwining more local names into the discourse, ending
with, “And, it doesn’t matter anyhow because she now lives on Front Street.”
You do it again; you ask another open ended question, “Where on Front Street?”
- They reply in Owego-speak, “Across
the street from the Bassett house. I lived in the Bassett house when I first
moved to Owego. Then I moved to the Ross – Farrington – Loring - Rutherford
house, depending on who you are talking to. You never live in your own house in
Owego-speak.
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 .
The Old Coot has nothing.
By Merlin Lessler
I was on the road in my 1983, Sears, Free Spirit, 10 speed
bicycle last Sunday afternoon. It was a perfect Autumn Day with the temperature
in the 70s paired with a beautiful collection of clouds sweeping across the
sky. I was hoping to stumble onto a germ of an idea for this week’s column. And,
getting nowhere! I peddled past a swath of houses along the river, with
manicured lawns, well-kept gardens and inviting front porches that faced the
Susquehanna River. No people in sight,
no walkers, no bikers, no porch sitters. I crossed Main Street into the village
park. No Pickleball players, no kids shooting hoops, swinging, coming down the
slides, sweeping across the monkey bars or buzzing around in the skateboard
park. No People and no ideas for an article.
I kept on peddling, crossing the railroad tracks into what
the residents there call, “The Flats.” It’s primarily a residential area with a
few commercial entities in one quadrant; it’s separated from the rest of the
village by an active set of railroad tracks. I didn’t see any kids as I peddled,
no games of tag, hide & seek, no Cowboys & Indians for sure, a
childhood obsession in my day, long gone now. I next rode into the school K -
12 campus. The elementary school playground was empty. All that beautiful play
equipment sat idle.
I peddled on and on through the complex, but not a soul in
sight, not on the tennis courts or on the track around the football field. So, I
stopped to “speed” walk, as I call it, on the artificial turf, going from one
end zone to the other, dodging imaginary tacklers as I ran kick-offs the length
of the field, scoring a touchdown every time. You can do this when there’s no
one around. And there wasn’t!
There also wasn’t anyone on the Little League or the high
school baseball fields, nor on the soccer practice grounds. No one was playing
a pick-up game of baseball. Kids don’t play pick-up games today, for the most
part. Everything is organized these days, maybe with a little too much parental
involvement. Not like my day, when no one but the players and the coaches
showed up for Little League games. How could they; we played in the afternoon
when dad was at work and mom was tending to things at home.
But mostly, we played pick-up (sand -lot) games: baseball,
football and basketball. Even if there were only two of us, we could devise a
World Series game with Mickey Mantle at the plate.
I still had no idea for an article. It felt like I was in a Stephen King novel where I was the only person left in an empty town. I guess I’ll give it another try next weekend. All I can offer is this, my lack of anything interesting to comment on. Nothing going on in town; nothing going on in my head.
The Old Coot skips the socks.
By Merlin Lessler
I'm in the YMCA in Florida, sitting on a bench in the locker
room, getting dressed after swimming laps in a 24- lane, outdoor pool. Why am I
in Florida? In August? I had to do some mid-summer yard work, to keep bushes
from overtaking the house so I came down for a couple of weeks. It’s exciting to sit and watch the
thermometer move toward 100, and then keep going. At least for a guy from the
north country. While I was in the YMCA locker room, a guy on the other side of
the room was groaning and grunting as he struggled to put on his socks. An old
guy, like me. He finally got them on and then swore, “Darn it! I put on my dirty
socks, not the clean ones I brought with me,” and started the whole process
over again. I hadn't gotten to my socks yet; it can be quite a challenge for an
old guy to get a sock started over his toes. But I did just fine; I skipped the
socks and put on my sneakers. Socks are overrated.
Then, a younger guy came in; he got dressed standing up,
socks, shoes, pants and shirt. I looked over to him, and like the guy in the
Progressive Insurance TV commercial who is told to stop talking to strangers
and acting like his parents.” I said, “I'm so jealous. I haven't been able to
do that for 20 years.” He laughed and said he was 52, and already could tell
that his time of getting dressed while standing up was coming to an end.
He’s smarter than I was at that age. I remember getting
dressed like that at the Binghamton YMCA when I was in my 50’s. Three old guys
sat on a bench nearby working hard to get dressed. One of them broke the ice.
“Sonny, enjoy it while you can. Your time to sit on a bench to get dressed is
coming.” I never forgot that encounter. Even now, I can clearly picture the
three of them sitting on that bench, but the image in my mind, now has me
sitting alongside them.
The dressing problems I had back then were to avoid mixing
plaids with stripes, not getting into my clothes. Now, beside the sock issue,
it’s avoiding going around with a T-shirt, or pants with an elastic waistband
on backwards.
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