-
Recent Posts
Archives
- July 2021
- December 2020
- November 2020
- October 2020
- May 2020
- April 2019
- April 2018
- March 2018
- September 2017
- July 2017
- May 2017
- April 2017
- September 2016
- August 2016
- February 2016
- December 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- April 2015
- March 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- July 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- September 2013
- August 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
Categories
Meta
Press 1 for English, Press 2 for Insanity
I know I’m not the only person who seems to be cursed when it comes to electronics. I buy a new gadget and within two weeks I’m on the tech support line bouncing from satellite to satellite, country to country, with the manufacturer hoping I’ll wear down from the futility and bite the bullet and forget it. No Sir, if I’m going to pay good money for something that’s supposed to make my life easier, I’m going to see it through to the end even if I have to take multiple crash courses in Rosetta Stone.
I dialed an 800-number support line. An inalienable truth about these help lines is that this will be the first and only time the voice you hear will be in understandable English, and it’s automated. Strap yourself in, you’re going to feel like the sole interpreter at a Star Trek Klingon convention.
I ask Big Business, why give us any hope that the receiving individual on the other end of the line understands a fraction of what we’re saying? I mean if you want us to just forget it, let the person who did the automated voice speak in broken Mandarin Chinese. Before making the message, have them inhale helium, keep them from sleeping for 48 hours, and give them laryngitis. I know if I heard that voice first, I wouldn’t even try to go to the next level.
You see, corporations are toying with us. They route our calls through countries we can’t pronounce, to converse with individuals who think Taco Bell is a Mexican phone company. Then, when we finally arrive at the right department, the individual has such little grasp of the English language, we all sound like Tarzan. We then try to describe our problem with only an 18 letter alphabet.
Is there a solution for the next time my computer or radio kicks the proverbial dust? Yes there is. Remember the learning game, Hooked on Phonics? I suggest a foreign version called, Hooked on Farsi. Imagine speaking the language of 50% or more of support technicians! I’m already making plans to get advanced dialect training in Hindi too with my next upgrade. I’m excited! I’ll finally be able to ask any hotel proprietor in 80% of US hotels that I want a king bed. They’ll finally be able to understand what I want. It’s a good thing too, those sleep sofas were killing me.
A Laughing Matter
My wife works in a college writing center. Her passion is to help young students achieve something they never thought possible, an education. I’m sure her task is at times daunting when the students submit a paper and can’t even seem to master the basics let alone the proper syntax.
At times, she has recommended her students study and read a “good” newspaper so they can get the feel of writing. The Murray State College department of Journalism some years ago issued some of the best bloopers they found when combing newspapers throughout our country. Here are some of the finer ones that are a laughing matter, but only if they aren’t concerning you:
* Police Begin Campaign to Run Down Jaywalkers
* Drunk Gets Nine Months in Violin Case
* Survivor of Siamese Twins Joins Parents
* Iraqi Head Seeks Arms
* Farmer Bill Dies in House
* Panda Mating Fails; Veterinarian Takes Over
* Eye Drops Off Shelf
* Teacher Strikes Idle Kids
* President Wins on Budget but More Lies Ahead
* Squad Helps Dog Bite Victim
* Shot Off Woman’s Leg Helps Nicklaus to 66
* Enraged Cow Injures Farmer with Ax
* Two Sisters Reunited after 18 Years in Checkout Line
* Never Withhold Herpes Infection from Loved One
* Red Tape Holds Up New Bridge
* Man Struck By Lightening Faces Battery Charge
* New Study of Obesity Looks for Larger Test Group
* Deer Kill 17,000
* Cold Wave Linked to Temperatures
* Astronaut Takes Blame for Gas in Spacecraft
* Kids Make Nutritious Snacks
* Chef Throws His Heart into Helping Feed the Needy
* British Union Finds Dwarfs in Short Supply
* Local High School Dropouts Cut in Half
* Man Minus Ear Waives Hearing
* Air Head Fired
* Old School Pillars are Replaced by Alumni
* Hospitals Sued by Seven Foot Doctors
* Sex Education Delayed, Teachers Request Training
* Include your Children when Baking Cookies
These headlines may be a nightmare for an editor, but it sure brightened my day. I’m still laughing.
I feel like a teenager with a cane!
My children think I’m old. I mean the kind of old when someone asks you if the Dead Sea was only sick when you were born. Each morning the moment my feet hit the floor I feel as though I’ve made a gang of midgets with ball-pein hammers angry at me because everything hurts from the waist down. As I walk to the bathroom,I sound as if I’m walking on packing peanuts. I crack and pop louder than a bowl of Rice Krispies. I barely recognize the gray haired fellow in the mirror and I still shun those things that make me feel old. You know, black socks with sandals, scooters at Walmart, reading glasses on a chain around your neck. Must I continue with more examples?
Pondering my present circumstances I asked myself, “When did I go from hip to hip-replacement?” I think I missed a step somewhere along the way, life is passing me far to quickly. I freely admit I’m getting older because my life has all the charisma of a Q-tip and I like it that way. I shun noisy restaurants at all costs. For example isn’t the restaurant Buffalo Wild Wings just a Chucky Cheese for grownups? With all the televisions blaring and shouting one must do to be heard, I leave feeling like the actor Don Knotts with Saint Vitus Dance. No, I love my sedate life. I even tap my feet to elevator music. I can’t deny it, it is a bit unnerving to listen to a remake of a song your parents forbid you to listen too now done in an *AARP format. There you are in the store shopping for corn pads and the announcer says with the voice of a hypnotic undertaker, “Here is Aerosmith performed by oboe and pipe organ, played at the pace of a defective metronome.
So driving one day, I was listening to one of my favorite stations on the radio, the 70’s channel. As my son sat next to me, I sang a familiar song that brought me back to my youth. In my mind I was once again a carefree young kid with dreams and not a care in the world. Halfway through the song, like a bucket of cold water poured on you while tanning in the backyard, my son said, “Can’t we listen to something else, because that song is soooooo old?” The first thought that came to my mind was, “Music has an expiration date?”
Well I learned one way to feel young. Next time I leave home listening to expired music, I’m leaving my kids behind!
* American Association of Retired People
