The Old Coot is a cut-up.
By Merlin Lessler
Comments? Complaints? Send to – mlessler7@gmail.com
The Old Coot is a cut-up.
By Merlin Lessler
Comments? Complaints? Send to – mlessler7@gmail.com
The Old Coot counts to ten.
By Merlin Lessler
My friend Wesley came laughing into our coffee klatch the
other morning. He had been in a store where his purchases came to $10.06. He
gave the teenage clerk a twenty dollar bill, a nickel and a penny. A puzzled
look crossed her face. She froze, as though in a catatonic state. After a few
seconds, she snapped out of it, fumbled in the cash register drawer and handed
him a five dollar bill, four ones, three quarters, a dime, a nickel and four
pennies, and left the six cents Wesley had originally handed her on the counter.
I guess this shouldn’t be a surprise. Kids grow up today
with a series of electronic devices doing a lot of thinking for them. My
generation is “Device Stupid.” We struggle to use them. We call their
generation, “Common Sense Stupid.” It’s important for us to mix with each other.
We can both learn to be less stupid.
When I swim laps in the YMCA pool, I count lengths by
reciting, “One two, buckle my shoe, three four shut the door,” on and on with
the counting rhyme. When I finish with, “Nine ten, the big fat hen,” I switch from
the crawl stroke to the back stroke. I do this over and over for about
thirty-minutes.
I wondered if kids today still learn to count using the “One
two - buckle my shoe” method. I asked around and apparently they do, even
though the rhyme is out of date. Its origin goes back to the 1780’s, when shoes
were fastened with a buckle. The industrial revolution in the mid 1800’s
replaced the buckle method with metal eyelets and shoe laces. I grew up with
laces, but it was much harder to learn to tie, than it was to learn to count. My
son grew up with Velcro. Kind of like the old buckle. Now, you don’t have to
tie at all. Slip-on shoes and Velcro have entirely changed the shoe landscape.
Terms like, dial a phone, turn a screw counterclockwise to
tighten, tick-tock goes a clock and a slew of others commonly used by my crowd
are as out of date as buckle shoes, but we still use them, and chuckle when a
youngster has no idea what we’re talking about. We probably need to do more
teaching and less chuckling, but gosh the chuckling is so much fun.
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The Old Coot takes a ride.
By Merlin Lessler
You don’t have time to meditate? Or lay on a couch
in a therapist’s office? Then do it the old coot way, take a ride in your car (after
the sun comes up) on a Saturday, Sunday or a holiday morning. Go alone; turn
the radio off and go exploring to nearby areas, but places you’ve never been. Learn about your surroundings; put a new map
in your head; get rural if you can; go slower than you normally would and look
around. Really see what this other world is really all about.
I find it fun to contrast how wealth is displayed
in so called upper class areas versus middle income, poor and rural areas. In
wealthy areas it’s all about the house: big, fancy, extensive landscaping,. Often
jammed together on small lots. Rural is different. People live in moderate
sized houses with huge yards. It is amazing how many hours of mowing it must take
to keep up with it. But mowing isn’t really a chore, it’s another form of
meditation; you are all alone, doing something monotonous, so your mind wanders
and digs out stuff and helps you solve your problems. Just like this “Sunday”
drive I’m suggesting you do every once in a while.
The thing I like most about rural areas, aside
from the huge mown lawns, is the people who show their wealth by filling up
their acreage with old, decaying cars and tractors, discarded household
appliances, farm equipment, rusty swing sets. You name it; if it doesn’t work
or look good anymore, you will find it there. Some people think this is ugly,
but you can see it as beautiful; it is like modern art that appears to be blobs
of paint, but draws you in to find the beauty if you lose yourself when viewing
it.
You never come home from one of these rides
without being entertained and changed a little bit. But, most of all, a little
more relaxed, calmed and mentally healthier. Happy Riding!
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The Old Coot is a birder?
By Merlin Lessler
There was a bird on a rooftop across the street from
me in Florida yelling, “Blow-Ah, Blow-Ah.” It was a call I’d never heard before.
It looked like a crow, but I know what a crow sounds like and that wasn’t it. I
should know, after all, Cornell Ornithology Laboratory has a free bird identifying
App that is named Merlin, just like me. I have the App on my phone; I use it quite
often, like when I’m sitting on the porch. I use the “bird sound” function to
call birds in the vicinity to come to me. I pick one of several mating calls
and soon enough, a bird flies over, but quickly figures out that I’m not a proper
mate and flies off to tell their friends to stay away; it’s just an Old Coot
calling, not the Coot Bird. (Coots are dark, chicken like waterbirds)
It is a fun thing to do, but it can get out of hand,
as it did one evening at our friends, Paul and Carol’s house in the early evening
while we were sitting in their lanai at the back of their home. Carol said a lonely
screech owl flew over and sat on the fence next to where we were sitting. It
was quite regular; it came every night.
Just one owl, all by itself. She thought it was the only one around. I
pulled out my “Merlin App” and scrolled down to the screech owl section and
tapped on one of several available calls.
It didn’t take
long. First one owl came by, then another and then another. One flew into the
screen around the lanai, then did it again. Being the jerk that I am, I’d
overdone it. A single screech from Carol, not the owl, got me to shut the thing
off. I felt the same fright as she did; it was like being in the Alfred
Hitchock movie, “The Birds,” where the whole town was trapped in their houses
by angry swarms of birds that attacked and tried to kill anyone who ventured
out the door.
Anyhow, back to the bird that was chirping, “Blow-ah.”
It flew off before I could get the Merlin bird ID” App going to identify what
it was. I tried artificial intelligence on Google; It wasn’t sure, but thought it
might be a “Fish-Crow,” and then suggested I install the Merlin Bird ID App. It
didn’t say it, but I could sense it thought it was appropriate for me, since
I’m a bird brain.
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An old coot remembers his best Christmas present ever.
The Old Coot found an ally.
By Merlin Lessler
A recent article by Dan Smith in the Volusia
Hometown News caught my attention. In it, he realized he sounded like that grumpy
old man in his neighborhood he hated as a kid, as he listed the things that
irritate him: dances in the end zone when pro football players score a
touchdown, fake butter on popcorn, men wearing too much jewelry, names he can’t
pronounce or remember. His list went on and on, several dozen in total. I’m
that grumpy old man too. Look up grumpy in a dictionary and you’ll see a
picture of me.
It was a good start, but he left out a lot of things
that bug me: stuff you are interested in buying, but it’s sealed in plastic and
you can’t see what you are getting, stickers – on everything: apples, oranges,
but the hardest to get off, are stuck in the worse possible place, like on the
lens of a pair of glasses. The liar at the check in station who says the doctor
will be right with you. You sit, and have no idea when you’ll be called. Meat
and deli counters solved that issue 100 years ago, giving you a number. But, not
modern day medical centers, in spite of having computers that could easily be used
to reduce patient’s anxiety. My blood pressure is always high after sitting in a
waiting room.
Stretch jeans bug me. It just allows them to replace
some of the cotton with a synthetic substance, probably derived from oil, like
plastic bags. Stores that offer 50% off on a second item, but you don’t want a
second item. So, as the Soup Nazi from Seinfeld might say, “No sale for you!”
How about socks that are so tight they cut off your circulation and socks that
are “one size fits all,” which means they don’t fit anyone properly.
It's just wrong to advertise prescription drugs on
TV. Just like it’s wrong for ambulance chasing lawyers to dominate the
advertising landscape. Adds in general. Too many and everyplace: every App,
every website, every streaming service. New Year's Eve celebrations, and worse,
New Year's resolutions - nobody keeps them. Names for moons, every 28 days, a
new, made up name. Naming winter storms, like the overzealous weather, people
do with hurricanes. Weather reports dominate the news and make us focus on the
disaster headed our way with DANGEROUS lightning. No longer called a simple
thunder storm. They want us scared and tuned in.
My list is long, but I’ll cover it over the next
year. That’s my new year’s resolution. For now, I’ll end with shoe laces that
don’t stay tied, airplane seats for those of us in “the back of the bus,” glass
bottles replaced with plastic, no free air at gas stations and crappy ones you
pay for that hardly are up to the task. A rule against taunting in pro football.
What’s wrong with the good old, “Na- na, na- na- na,” that my generation grew
up using to celebrate, and rub it in, after scoring a touchdown. It’s a war out
on the football field, and the insults exchanged that we can’t hear would make
even a salty old sailor cringe.
The Old Coot made a split decision.
By Merlin Lessler
I’ve been, or it seems like it, a Siamese twin for
the last dozen years or so – one-twin that
grew into adulthood and old age, constantly saying, “I used to …..” or “I once could
do…” and the like. The other one, trying to look ahead, not back. I’m in a struggle
to separate the two. It’s a tricky process because we are joined at the head.
It’s pulling away from those old brain cells from the past and moving to a new
beginning. I should have done this ten years ago, but I’m a late bloomer.
I’m just starting
to get used to the separation. I limit my looking back, to the day I turned
80. Not much going on since then to
reminisce about with longing. A clean slate. I walk; I swim; I bike, do push-ups;
wash the car and putter around in the yard. No real changes in my 80’s. Oh
sure, I have a few ailments and physical limitations to put up with, but not
bad, when I don’t compare myself to the memories now in the hands of my
separated twin.
Life is happier when you get rid of a “I used to”
focus. Sure, a few brain cells from my twin cling to me, but for the most part,
they are fuzzy, weak and fading. It took all these years to learn to live in
the “here and now.” My coffee-buddies in both New York and Florida are younger
than me, except for 100 year-old Lester. Some, by a few years, others younger
than three of my oldest daughters. This kind of daily interaction helps a lot.
My memory lane trips still come out on their own, but
only when I take pen (or keyboard) in hand. It’s not a conscious thing. It just
happens. When I look at the output, I’m always surprised. It might come from my
twin, but seems more likely to be produced by the subconscious in a process
similar to the one that produces dreams. So, you still have to put up with the
Old Coot. Sorry.