Down with Weekends!

 Posted by at 17:55  Down with
May 042013
 

Retirement changes your perspective-like, for example, how you value your time.  My priorities shifted but it is a slow process after 60 years of routine.  Like Pavlov’s dog, I’d been conditioned but instead of food, I salivated for the weekends.  I’d learned that weekends were when I was in charge.  On weekend days I could sleep late, go where I wanted to go, spend time with the kids or just goof off.  Monday through Friday were defined by work- the activity that supported my lifestyle and provided my limited free time.  On a normal weekday, I would rise at 4:30 and get home about 12 hours later leaving me about four hours before bedtime.  My work wasn’t onerous- some of it I liked doing- but I wouldn’t have followed that schedule if I didn’t need the money.

fat retirementIt’s no wonder that weekends became so important.  I remember counting down the weekdays to Friday and dreading Sunday night, knowing that tomorrow morning at 4:30 my slavery would begin again. Weekends were a treasure.

Well in retirement, life isn’t like that at all.  You can do pretty much anything you want any time you want.  You can sleep all day and carouse all night if that makes you happy.  Unfortunately, it doesn’t.  What was wild and crazy at 25 no longer is appealing- or even possible- at 65.  By retirement, it seems you get drowsy at 8- or else you can’t sleep at all and find yourself listening to talk radio all night trying to stay sane.  You still aren’t in control.

Aging isn’t the only problem however.  Put aside the monkey wrenches that aging throws into the equation.  You can attempt to ignore them and pretend that they aren’t obvious to everyone else but whatever you do it won’t make you young.  The issue I’m talking about here is controlling your time.  It’s a problem whether you are young or old but old people have so much more of it.  While you were working, out of each week with 168 hours, 52 (31%) were under your control with a lot of pressure on that time.   After you retire you have the entire 168 (100%).  Imagine what that would have felt like 20 years ago.  What would you have done with that time?  If you are like me, the list would have been a mile long and you would have been as excited as a teenager getting a driver’s license.  So what happened when you retired?  Where is that list and why isn’t there any excitement?

What is sad about retirement is that life goes on pretty much like always and instead of treasuring those hours and filling them with living, they just dribble away, unloved and unappreciated.  Nobody takes retirement seriously.  It gets no respect.  It requires no commitment.  At a time in your life where the possibilities are limitless, why hide your head in the sand and let life flow around you?  Have you forgotten how to live?

Still life does go on and inevitably, without thinking you make adjustments.  You shift your shopping patterns.  You eat when you feel like it.  You take a nap.  Without actually thinking about it, your schedule adjusts and one of the big surprises is how you feel about weekends. You discover to your amazement that weekends suck.  Instead of looking forward to Friday, you now long for Monday because Monday gives you freedom.  Monday is when the wage slaves are back at their desks and out of the stores, shopping malls, freeways and parks.  Monday through Friday, the world is your oyster and you can search for your pearl without the madding crowds.  What a surprise!

Maybe it’s a small thing after all.  Maybe it can’t compare to the daily challenges and satisfactions of a job or raising a family.  And maybe that small satisfaction stands in the way of making a real lifestyle change- like becoming a beach bum in Fiji or joining the Peace Corps but it is important none the less because you turned your working lifestyle on its ear.  Mondays are when you savor that cup of coffee on the front porch watching your neighbors begin their commute to work, remembering the ‘good old days’ when you were with them.  You have a wonderful day ahead.

So I say up with Retirement Lifestyle and up with Mondays when the Retirement Lifestyle Week begins.

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Apr 202013
 

For those of you familiar with the TV show, Cash Cab this is a shout out question. Here’s some background if you haven’t seen the show. Unsuspecting passengers get into a cab only to find they are on a quiz show and if they don’t answer the questions, they get dumped on the street. Passengers/contestants can ask for help if they don’t know the answer to a question. They can ask friends or even people on the street to help them get the right answer. It is nice to get help when you feel clueless and that’s exactly how I feel today. I have a serious question and I’ve got a hunch that guessing wrong could be a big problem so let me know what you think. Here’s the situation.

Was it innocent TV watching?  0r. . . .

Yesterday I was working hard on a new post for Coot’s while my wife was busy elsewhere. Finally I got the post all finished and decided to take a break so I looked for my wife. In the TV room I found her deeply engrossed in a TV show. Normally I wouldn’t pay attention to my wife’s afternoon viewing but as I moved past, I heard a voice say ‘evil women’. I turned to see a woman injecting arsenic into her husband’s arm. Riveted I stayed to learn that this woman had told her husband that the Doctor had advised this treatment and, trusting soul that he was, he believed her, It seems that this was husband number three and the widow would quickly find a replacement. This evil woman was only one of many in a marathon lasting all day and even into the night.

At first I was amused, but then…

You don’t see many shows focusing on killer women. I watched for a time too As I continue to think about this program and my wife’s interest, I am getting a bit concerned. Was this show just a diversion for my wife or was she doing research? I thought that we were getting along fine lately making up for some conflicts earlier in our marriage. Now I’m wondering if I am deluding myself. Maybe everything isn’t so rosy as I thought. Should I be worried that my wife is researching ways to put me out of the picture? I was extra nice to her last night just to be safe but in the meantime I’m being very cautious.

Help!

So here is where I need some help Am I being paranoid and delusional or merely cautious and concerned? How can I be sure that my wife doesn’t plan to do me in? And what should I do in the meantime to show her that I’m worth more alive than dead, There is a lot at stake here. I don’t want to get this wrong..

Apr 052013
 

I was looking at a magazine the other day and there was an ad for the new Toyota mini-van.  A couple of things really bothered me about it.  First it was a Toyota.  I was always raised that the only cars you should buy should be American.

Right or wrong, those slant eyed Hirotito followers are not going to get any of my money.  Thank you Grandpa.  I guess if you fought the Japanese in WWII you are entitled to that opinion and can drill it into your kids.  I have never owned a Japanese car.

Anyhow, this minivan has a 180 degree camera in the back of it that is hooked to some little communist plot view screen up front so you can back out of the driveway without running over Juniors tricycle or even junior himself.  Bad enough in and of itself, but the tagline “Daddy Like” just made me want to find that copywriter and shove one of those cameras up an orifice.  Choose one, I don’t care.

I am very frustrated that people need to have things like cameras in their cars.  What happened to that simple convention of actually turning around and looking out the back window?  Are we that soft?  What happened to people being able to DRIVE their cars???

I used to work at U-Haul.  There were several employees there that could not park trucks to save their butts.  They couldn’t back up using only their mirrors.  If they lacked the training beforehand, they should have learned fairly quickly.  Some couldn’t even drive a stick, but that is another post.

I want to find an older car for my kids to learn how to drive.  Stick shift, AM radio, no airbags, no air conditioning, power steering if they are lucky.  I want them to be able to drive forward with confidence.  I want them to be able to look, actually look, behind them and drive backwards.  I want them to be able to use their mirrors to back up! I want them to be able to avoid an accident.  They don’t even get a cellphone.  Too distracting.

I think the world would be safer if we didn’t spend so much time trying to make cars safer, and make the drivers better.  I don’t know the stats and I am not going to look them up but I would be willing to bet that there are more accidents now than there were 40 years ago when people didn’t have all of the crap to distract them.  Airbags are great, but so is a 4000 pound car.  Hang up.  Drive.  Learn what your vehicle can do.  Pay attention.  None of this should be hard.

I don’t want any of this sissy crap foreign cars with “Daddy Like” as the tagline.  I would seriously doubt that a man wrote that ad.  At least not a real man who has ever field dressed something.  Or changed an alternator out.

“Daddy Like” in my book should be changed to “Whoever like this ad can cram it and get some real driving skills.”

But I’m just saying.

Tomorrow a digest post!

-Justin

Apr 042013
 
Old Gestapo Prison in the EL-DE Museum

Old Gestapo Prison in the EL-DE Museum (Photo credit: Aaron Olaf)

You HAVE to act on this, folks. You just have to.

Today’s video is a bit longer than normal…a few second shy of 30 minutes…but it is important. Very important if you are a little boy in Utah.

Today I’m just going to tell you a story…a story about a mom, her little boy, a vindictive ex-husband, and an abusive government official who thinks she is above all control.

Now…let’s see if I can piss you off enough to get you taking action:
Continue reading »

Up with Tea!

 Posted by at 10:57  Up With
Mar 252013
 

I’ve been drinking more tea lately.  It’s not that I like tea so much.  It is for my health.   I read somewhere that three cups of tea a day would help with the arthritis pain in my knees which is beginning to annoy me.  I’ve been in denial about the arthritis for a few years now figuring that if I ignored it long enough it would go away.  Well I formed  a new plan.   Last month I decided that it was time to mention it to my doctor.  He told me that yes I did have arthritis and to tell him if I needed something to handle the pain. So much for modern medicine.

I’ve been cynical about medicine since my brothers died back when I was in high school.  Medicine couldn’t keep them from dying then and I don’t think it has made much progress since.  Notice that my doctor didn’t tell me he could do anything about the arthritis.  He only offered me relief from the pain.  So much for doctors.

It’s all up to me!

I did some research about arthritis and learned that tea is supposed to help reduce inflammation.  I’d taken up green tea a few years back as a health thing but the stuff tastes like dishwater and I gradually stopped.  At the timeI understood  that green tea was the best tea to drink but my new research said that there wasn’t  any difference between the benefits of green tea and black tea so now I’m drinking black.  It’s got more flavor.

A tin of loose Earl Grey tea

A tin of loose Earl Grey tea (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I think one of the problems I have with tea is watching too many old British movies.  Tea always suggests overdressed people in over decorated rooms sipping tea from delicate bone china cups.  Tea is effete snobbery that I can’t relate to while coffee is how I live- a legacy from my father’s Swedish heritage. For me, the only American way to drink tea is iced.

Still I am finding that black tea has enough taste to at least partially satisfy my craving for something hot and stimulating while I work.  I have decided to get better acquainted with the different types.  I just worked through a box of Oolong.  The description on the box said it was perfumed and delicate which is how they try to sell you on insipid green tea so I was skeptical.  It was perfumed all right but still tasty enough to know I wasn’t drinking plain hot water.

Today I opened a new box- this one is Earl Gray- or is it Grey?  This is much more like the Lipton’s I grew up with.  It has more flavor but unlike Liptons I can smell some perfume as I hold the cup under my nose.   I took a break from writing to brew a fresh cup and discovered that Earl Grey tea is enhanced with oil of bergamot (a kind of orange).  I guess that makes it a predecessor to Constant Comment.

How long can I keep this up?

I don’t know how long I can continue this tea trip.  It’s not as bad as I expected but I just don’t get the satisfaction from a cup of tea that I do from coffee.  Right now it’s a mind trip to improve my health and improve my understanding of tea.  Sipping my second cup, I can imagine the orange scent.  At this point I can’t be sure if I really smell it or just imagine it.  It’s got flavor but it doesn’t compare to the rich café dobles that I remember fondly from my days in Buenos Aires.

What will make or break my new commitment to tea is if I believe that it helps with the arthritis.  I know that I will not eliminate it.  My goal is to mitigate it’s destruction to my knee joints and keep the pain levels manageable.  So far I’m managing to feel positive about the effort.  The pain seems less.  The tea is more tasty than I expected.  Still, it’s coffee that stirs my soul and rouses me to action.  Time will tell.

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