The Old Coot is a fire bug.
By Merlin Lessler
The Old Coot is a fire bug.
By Merlin Lessler
The Old Coot is “opener” challenged.
By Merlin Lessler
Those water bottles get me every time. I grip on the tiny
cap and grasp the body of the bottle which is made of ultra-thin plastic. So
thin, it squishes in the middle, looking like an hourglass. I strain, grasp and
twist, in what I think is a macho-man effort. When it finally does break free,
a geyser erupts, spraying me and anyone nearby. It’s best not to do this on an
airplane. I learned that lesson the hard way.
Those bottles are not the only
containers that cause me consternation on a regular basis. Opened a can of
Campbell’s soup lately? They now have a lift off lid with a tab attached to
pull it off with. The company thinks a can opener is beyond our capability. The
tab is tiny and hard to lift. When you do get it up and give it a yank, nothing
happens. So, you give it a he-man yank. It breaks free of the can and the soup sloshes
all over the place. It’s best to open it over the sink.
It's not just liquid products that I have opening issues
with. Even a bag of chips causes me a problem. I have to use my teeth to break
into it, or pull it from each side, getting a potato chip shower when it breaks
apart.
My list of hard to open items is getting longer and longer.
How about that little metal cover under the cap on a tube of toothpaste? It has
a microscopic tab to pull it off with. I use the tweezers in my Swiss Army
Knife. A handy tool that helps me survive in a world of irksome food and
beverage containers. The first multi-purpose knife I had ended up in the hands
of a TSA agent at the Elmira Airport. I hope he’s putting it to good use, opening
his containers. Or better yet, he gave it to his favorite old coot, who will be
forever grateful.
Comments? Send to mlessler7@gmail.com
The Harris Dinner turns 100! By Merlin Lessler
This article about the Harris Diner was first published on
December 18, 2004. Nothing has changed since then, and last week the diner
celebrated its’ 100th anniversary by using food prices from the 1950’s. I
stopped in to join the crowd (and it was a crowd) and to congratulate Sam.
The Big Lie -Fast
Food
“A Few weeks ago, I took three of my grandchildren, Jake –5,
Hannah- 3 and Abby – 2, to MacDonald’s in Westchester County for lunch. It was
the day Jake and Hannah’s sister Callie was born; my part in the process was to
watch the kids while my daughter, Wendy, was at the hospital. I sat at the
table trying to entertain the antsy threesome while Abby’s mother, Kelly,
waited in line for our “fast food” order. It was the longest thirty minutes of
my life. I like going to MacDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s and all the rest of
the fast-food restaurants, but I think it’s time that they admit the obvious,
and stop referring to themselves as “fast.” Fast applies to the service at
Harris’s Diner; a small locally owned restaurant, housed in a cramped Quonset-like
hut next to the fire station in Owego, the village where I live. It doesn’t
provide customer parking, special menu items for kids or an indoor playground,
yet it beats the pants off the international fast-food chains.
Congratulations Sam! Thanks for keeping the tradition going.
The old coot is tired of being a referee.
By Merlin Lessler
Early voting is underway! Not with ballots, but with yard
signs. Back in friendlier days, these signs were better tolerated. People even
wore pins – “I like Ike,” for example, for us old coots. They walked around
with little fear of getting a punch in the nose. A family would drive by a sign
in the neighborhood and say, “Oh look, Bill is supporting John F. Kennedy. I’m
a Nixon fan myself. It’s been a while since we’ve gotten together; we should
invite them over for a backyard picnic before the weather turns cold.”
Not anymore. “Oh look, they’re supporting “What’s-its-name.”
What idiots!” – or – “Oh look, those
morons are for Who-you-ma-call-it!” We are extremely divisive in our political
positions today. Best friends no longer speak to each other. Family members
disconnect. Thanksgiving gatherings turn into a food fight. Signs stir up the
same animosity. We should go back to the days when folks didn’t overtly discuss
religion or politics. In person, on their shirts and hats or the front lawn.
Sure, it’s a right, guaranteed by the 1st amendment, but now it’s approaching
the “yelling fire in a crowded theater” level.
We can’t look to our leaders for this guidance. We’ve got to
get the ball rolling ourselves. Calm down on Facebook, all social media. Many
of us like a little of the policies from each side; we’re middle roaders. But right
now, it’s like we’re traveling down the road in different directions; any move
to the middle causes a head on crash. Is it so hard to accept that others can have
a different position? On issues and candidates? And not think of them as idiots?
Maybe? It’s up to us to do it. We need a small child to lead us. The ones who
learn in kindergarten how to get along. Afterall, who is more important in your
life, some politician in the White house or your family, friends and neighbors?
Comments? Keep them civil; I know I stirred the pot with
this one. That’s what old coots do. Send them to mlessler7@gmail.com. Or, to the publisher
of the paper you read this in.
The Old Coot wants to see the zeros.
By Merlin Lessler
Even the TV & radio media drop the ball. $1.2 trillion.
Ho Hum. How about saying, twelve hundred piles of billion-dollar bundles. Or
better yet, twelve hundred thousand piles of million dollar bundles. It might
perk our interest a little more.
They do this type of clarification all the time with the
weather! “It’s going to be 86 degrees today, but the heat/humidity index will
make it feel more like 100.” Or, “It’s going to be 16 degrees tomorrow morning,
but with the wind chill factor it will feel like five below.”
Once the money that Washington and Albany threw around got
to be more than a million, a disconnect occurred between the spenders and the
people that pay the bill. A billion here, a billion there. We hardly knew the
difference between a billion and a million after a while. It didn’t dawn on us
often enough, that a billion is one-thousand million. Line up 1,000
millionaires, each sitting on a pile of one million, dollar bills, take a
picture, and that’s what a billion looks like. A trillion is 1,000 times as much
as that. Now you’ve got the average American’s attention. Oh yes, we need the
media to pay as much attention to the politicians’ love of spending as they do
trying to scare us about the weather, which is a trillion times less important.
Comments? – Send to mlessler7@gmail.com
Old Coot can’t handle it!
By Merlin Lessler
I first aired this complaint in 2011. I’m still struggling with the issue - the shower and sink, water control joystick. A single handle controls temperature and flow rate and I can never get it to do what I want.
The Old Coot’s phone took a train ride.
By Merlin Lessler
My friend Rick lost his cell phone the other day. I won’t
mention his last name, but if you want your wood floor refinished, I’ll give
you his number.
He was in a panic. Well, not actually a panic; he’s pretty
even tempered. Let’s just say, he was concerned. He went through the house and
his truck. No luck! Then he extended his search to the places he had been that
morning. First, the grocery store. Nobody had turned it in. Over to Home
Central - Not there. Then across the tracks to Scott Smith and Son where he had
gassed up. Nothing doing! He knew he had it when he was there because he
remembered checking his messages.
He did a lot that morning. A week’s worth of stuff for me.
Finally, he went back home and gave it an FBI search. Nothing! He stood there
scratching his head, “What am I missing?” Then it hit him, the chest freezer in
the basement. He had put some groceries in there. Without much hope, he pulled
up the lid. There it was, peeking out from under a package of ground beef.
We’ve all had this experience. Usually with a similar
outcome. But not always! Sometimes it’s gone forever. I lost one on a train
ride to Florida. I’d discovered it was missing when I got to the room we had
rented. I knew I’d lost it on the train. I used my computer to track it down.
Sure enough, it was on the train traveling north through Georgia. I called
Amtrak. In hopes they could check the seat I’d been in and get it. I won’t get
into what a nightmare that process turned into. Bottom line, I watched the
phone go north to the auto-train station in Virginia, and then head south again.
Then it disappeared. Lost forever. Wedged down in the seat cushion on an Amtrak
train. I like Rick’s story better.