BSO

BSO

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Forever Young

In your head.

This is me when I was two. Some people would say that I'm still two years old - psychologically.






Just kidding! I mean at age two I wasn't concerned with sex, so mentally I've gotta be at least thirteen or so. But physically, well it's a little harder to stay forever young. On MSNBC there is a great article by Douglas Coupland about this very subject:

A few days ago, I had a business lunch with a guy I thought was about 10 years older than I am. I'm 46, and he looked to be 55 and resembled every English teacher you've ever had. At the end of lunch he said, "You know, I was born the same week as you..." and went on to discuss all the same music we listened to in high school. Meanwhile, it was all I could do to compose myself while looking around for a reflective surface — a knife blade, the hologram on my Visa card — to convince myself I didn't look 55 like this guy did. I felt as if I had progeria, that disease in which you age half a century in five years. That's what growing older does to a guy.

We've all bumped into friends who look like hell. Our first thought is always divorce, booze, or one of those other wicked speed bumps on the road of life. What's really happening, of course, is that your friend is in the middle of a progerial plunge. Time passes, and more time passes, and then you see that friend in the checkout line of a Safeway one afternoon, and you realize he's not drinking or having troubles. He's just aging. The kicker: So I must be too. That's when you head to the produce department and check yourself out in the mirrors above the lettuce and celery.

I have this theory about men and aging. We have two ages: the age we really are, and the age we are in our heads. Most men are almost always about 31 or 32 in their heads — just ask them. Even Mr. Burns from “The Simpsons” is 31 in his head. One of the most universal adult male experiences is of standing before a mirror and saying, "I'm sorry, but there's been a horrible mistake. You see, that's not really me in the mirror there. The real me is tanned, throws Frisbees, and kayaks the Columbia River estuary without cracking a sweat."




Someone sent me this hot scene from a Batman comic:





Here's a whimsical poem by the Aunt Jennie of the late Springfield attorney and eccentric activist J. Wesley Miller.

 




A Trip to the Occulist
by J. Wesley Miller's Aunt Jennie



I went to the doctor to get my eyes tested.
The doctor came in; he was coated and vested.
His face wore no smile, in fact t'was quite sour;
It should have been my face; I'd been waiting an hour.

I'd tried to find something current to read,
But the magazines there had long since gone to seed.
He showed me some figures and letters to guess.
I read what I could, but not all, I confess. 

He put in some drops and told me to wait,
So I resumed my seat and pondered my fate.
When I finally made it back thru his office door
It was almost as long as I'd waited before. 

He glanced in each eye, then scribbled a line.
"Drop this with the nurse, come back any time.
That's fifty bucks, and your eyes are just fine."



Yesterday I went to be a paid participant in a test of this new DVD downloading software called EZTakes, which is located above the corporate offices of Spoleto's in Northampton.





This was the testing area. The software itself seems like a promising breakthrough in the exploding field of movie downloading.





These are the owners of the venture, Jim Flynn and Joe Dugan.





I was paid to participate in the test, but not to recommend the software. That I do sincerely and voluntarily, suggesting you check it out here



After the testing I went to the King Street McDonald's, where the radio station known as The River was broadcasting live. This is the radio host Monty Harper.





It's the last week of classes at UMass, meaning the library coffeeshop Procrastination Station is open 24 hours.





The Amherst Survival Center had a community Christmas party yesterday. I still have a hard time calling something a party that doesn't involve getting high or taking your clothes off. Motown Bennie was there, entertaining everyone when he wasn't eating.





Some ladies from UMass came to entertain by singing and dancing.



5 comments:

Jeff Hobbs said...

That video is f'n mint

Don Schneier said...

The sense of age is usually mistakenly correlated with ones immediate feeling of physical vitality. But, in fact, our past resides in the weight and depth of memory and experience, meaning, for example, that if we can remember the 60s, we are older than that now.

Anonymous said...

Did you try that free coffee @ McDonald's? I wasn't too impressed.

Anonymous said...

that little douche bag in the video is a punk ass mama's boy

Anonymous said...

I came across your piece about J. Wesley Miller after searching the name on Google.

Last year I purchased at auction an antique cigar store indian. Only today did someone noticed that inside a crack in the back of the carved statue there was glued a business card.

On the card it says:

J. Wesley Miller, Esq.
Arts Law Letters
Five Birchland Avenue
Springfield, Massachusetts 01119
413-782-4188

Underneath, in ball pen ink, it says "purchased 2002".