My Life
Funny things happen to me and my family.
Senior Citizen
I was sent this story today and it made me laugh. So true!
$5.37 I am not a Senior!!!! or am I?????
$5.37! That's what the kid behind the counter at Taco Bell said to me.
I dug into my pocket and pulled out some lint and two dimes and something that used to be a Jolly Rancher. Having already handed the kid a five-spot, I started to head back out to the truck to grab some change when the kid with the Elmo hairdo said the hardest thing anyone has ever said to me.
He said, "It's OK. I'll just give you the senior citizen discount."
I turned to see who he was talking to and then heard the sound of change hitting the counter in front of me.
"Only $4.68" he said cheerfully.
I stood there stupefied. I am 56, not even 60 yet? A mere child! Senior citizen?
I took my burrito and walked out to the truck wondering what was wrong with Elmo. Was he blind? As I sat in the truck, my blood began to boil. Old? Me? I'll show him, I thought.
I opened the door and headed back inside. I strode to the counter, and there he was waiting with a smile. Before I could say a word, he held up something and jingled it in front of me, like I could be that easily distracted!
What am I now? A toddler?
"Dude! Can't get too far without your car keys, eh?"
I stared with utter disdain at the keys. I began to rationalize in my mind! "Leaving keys behind hardly makes a man elderly! It could happen to anyone!"
I turned and headed back to the truck. I slipped the key into the ignition, but it wouldn't turn. What now? I checked my keys and tried another. Still nothing.
That's when I noticed the purple beads hanging from my rear view mirror. I had no purple beads hanging from my rear view mirror. Then, a few other objects came into focus: The car seat in the back seat. Happy Meal toys spread all over the floorboard. A partially eaten dough nut on the dashboard. Faster than you can say ginkgo biloba, I flew out of the alien vehicle.
Moments later I was speeding out of the parking lot, relieved to finally be leaving this nightmarish stop in my life. That is when I felt it, deep in the bowels of my stomach: hunger! My stomach growled and churned, and I reached to grab my burrito, only it was nowhere to be found.
I swung the truck around, gathered my courage, and strode back into the restaurant one final time. There Elmo stood, draped in youth and black nail polish.
All I could think was, "What is the world coming to?"
All I could say was, "Did I leave my food and drink in here"?
At this point I was ready to ask a Boy Scout to help me back to my vehicle, and then go straight home and apply for Social Security benefits. Elmo had no clue. I walked back out to the truck, and suddenly a young lad came up and tugged on my jeans to get my attention. He was holding up a drink and a bag.
His mother explained, "I think you left this in my truck by mistake."
I took the food and drink from the little boy and sheepishly apologized.
She offered these kind words: "It's OK. My grandfather does stuff like this all the time."
All of this is to explain how I got a ticket doing 85 in a 40 mph zone. Yessss, I was racing some punk kid in a Toyota Prius.
And no, I told the officer, I'm not too old to be driving this fast.
As I walked in the front door, my wife met me halfway down the hall. I handed her a bag of cold food and a $300 speeding ticket. I promptly sat in my rocking chair and covered up my legs with a blankey.
The good news was that I had successfully found my way home.
Where’s a Cop when you need ’em?
Driving could be an enjoyable endeavor if it weren't for all the other idiots driving around you. How many times have you wished, when some clown cuts you off or does something dangerous or stupid, that there was a cop around?
I'm driving to work this morning in a 35mph zone. Peering into the rear view mirror, I see this large SUV (Escalade) quickly bearing down on me. I glance at my speedometer and see that I'm doing about 38mph.
The vehicle is so close, I can see the driver as clear as a person sitting in my back seat. Thinking to myself, "I wonder what his problem is and why he's in such a hurry?"
He's a young guy (late 20's) with his 'fancy smancy' sunglasses. I decide I will not be intimidated and maintain my speed.
"Lucky for him that I'm not driving my truck 'Bad Boy' (quite possibly one of the biggest and baddest trucks on the road)," I mutter to myself.
I turn into the left turn lane to turn onto a 5-lane road (two each way with center turn lane). He follows me as though he is my Siamese twin. As we turn left, I quickly signal and move over to the right-hand lane as he roars past me (no doubt to let me know how I've inconvenienced him).
"Where's a cop when you need one?!!!" I ask.
No sooner than I spoke those words, a police cruiser goes sailing past me with siren and lights flashing. I thought to myself, "He's probably headed to some call and not after the clown that tailgated me like crazy."
To my surprise, he pulls Mr. Fancy Smancy Pants over only a few yards from where my business is. As I turn onto my street, I yell "JUSTICE!!!" (my windows were closed) and chuckle to myself.
Today has started out well…
The Eclipse
My wife gets up very early in the morning for work (around 4:45am) when it is still quite dark. One morning, she stirs me from slumber and gets me out of bed to see the lunar eclipse. In what would be mistaken as a drunken stupor, I stumble with half-glazed eyes to the bedroom window.
"There it is!" she exclaims in a high-pitched voice of excitement. She is trying to have me look out into space. Heck, I can't even make out the clock face 5" away without my contacts in.
"Isn't it magical!" she coos. "Breath-taking," I respond.
"W-A-Y-Y-N-N-E!!! You're not even looking in the right direction! It over there!"
I look out the window and see but a sliver of lighted fuzz. With 20/400+ vision, there's not much to see. "Wow!" I say. "You can hardly see the moon." (in my case, that was true).
"That's not the moon, that's the streetlight!" she says. "It's over there!" as she points in the opposite direction.
I decided to be honest. "I can't see a thing without my contacts on."
"Well get them on and hurry!" she responds.
Have you ever tried putting contacts in sleepy eyes that are nearly 'glued' shut. Not a pretty site. "Hurry!" she commands.
Finally, I manage to get those crater-size discs into my eyes, to which I squint and react negatively. "Owwww!" I cry out. My eyes well up with tears. "Hurry!" she reiterates.
Finally, in pain and only half-blind by now, stumbling over every obstacle in the darkened room, I manage to make it to the window.
"Ahhhhhhhhh," she laments. "Clouds have completely covered the moon."
She continues as she walks out of the room, "Oh well, maybe you can catch the next lunar eclipse in 2014."
The door closes behind her as she whisks away down the hall. I'm left standing, in the dark, tears dripping from blood-shot eyes, dressed modestly in my robe….all alone….
"Magical," I mutter as I climb back into the bed. "Just magical."