Back when I was young (and wrote with a quill pen), I never got tired of anything. For years, the whole world was new and wonderful, mostly. In those days I didn’t know about the rest, and my elders were not as anxious as they are nowadays to let us in on everything, so soon.
(Of course, nowadays, you can’t stop the young from learning everything there is to learn, whether you want them to or not. Nothing is hidden, darn it.)
Anyway, I am now old enough that I can get tired of anything I want.
The Salahis, for instance. You know, that gorgeous couple that took over the television a few weeks ago, earning their little spotlight of celebrity for crashing the White House State Dinner? Little did we realize how lucky we were before that. We will never be free of the Salahis again. But I must say, far more upsetting than that, was her hairdo. You may say, “What hairdo?” and you would be right, for it consisted of perfectly straight hair sloppily cut. Granted it is considered stylish now, but we used to go to the beauty parlor to get rid of that kind of hair. Well, she went to the beauty parlor, all right (say the news accounts) for six or seven hours on the afternoon of the great day, and many hundreds of dollars — and she came out with that? Now you know, I could understand all the effort and money, if this were France in the time of Louis XVI, when women wore ships on their heads, and miniature villages. But anyone with a manicure scissors and a wet hairbrush could have gotten the same effect as Ms. Salahi got for al her time and money. Oh, yes, I forgot, she was blonde too. Hair dye of all shades is available for $20 at your nearest Wal-Mart, ma’am. Good to keep in mind for your next adventure..
I am tired of claw foot tubs. Tune in to HGTV and all you hear about is claw foot tubs, claw foot tubs Somebody on one of their programs paid $1500 for a claw foot tub, for heaven’s sake. I was brought up in a claw foot tub, so to speak, and they ain’t that pretty! Worse yet, you have to clean under and behind them, which involves leaning over, using some sort of long-handled brush, and a lot more effort than it deserves. Lose the claw foot tub obsession. Please.
I am getting tired of the “Got milk?” ads. Maybe because I never liked milk (except frozen.) But those things will never change my mind. And it seems to me that someone who can’t be bothered to wipe his or her mouth while eating and drinking is not a great role model, even for milk lovers.
Other commercials are beginning to get to me too. I am tired of the Schmuckers and Goya commercials which somehow seem to find it legal to use pretty much the same slogan. (“With a name like Schmucker’s, it’s got to be good” and “If it’s Goya, it’s got to be good.”) I thought there were laws against that, but I guess not. I do have to admit that I do like some commercials no matter how often they come on. Like the guy who is flatulent in three languages.
I am also getting tired of the common expressions of amazement that we are all using these days. You can’t watch any HGTV show (I admit it — I watch a lot of HGTV) these days without hearing dozens of “Wow!”s per night. But more grating are all the “Oh my God”s. (Sorry, I’m conservative in this respect, I know.) Mostly, for some reason, from females. Now, it’s all very well to call upon God at moments of emotional fervor, and I am all in favor of it when spiritually amazing things happen. But when you see the ratty wallpaper in the living room of a house you are considering buying? Or, in the store, when you see exactly the sweatshirt you’ve been looking for all day? Come on, folks, let’s leave God out of it and substitute that good old euphemism, “gosh.” (Or even my old standby, “goodness,” if you don’t mind sounding like the 1940s) Somehow it seems like a good idea to save the name of God for real emergencies.
I’m very tired of emails that threaten you with a fate worse than death if you don’t send them on within the next three minutes or so. Sometimes the messages are good and I hate not to send them on — but I refuse to be bullied.
I am getting tired of my towels. I didn’t realize this until a daughter gave me a spanking new set of bath towels and wash cloths for Christmas. The leap of joy in my heart was unbelievable. I hadn’t even realized until then that the tacky old towels I’d been using for the last 57 years (all of them dating back to original wedding gifts) were hopelessly shabby, scruffy, and frazzled. After that flash of insight, I am now working on getting up the courage to throw some (a lot) of them out and replace them with bright, fresh perky new ones.
And I am getting tired of new expressions. What, for heaven’s sake, is a “bucket list?” What are “memes?” And does “redacted” mean “censored?” What was wrong with the old word, that we had to adapt something else to mean the exact same thing? And “angst?” (We used to use that in school but we pronounced it “Awhngst,” not “aankst. ‘) “Charismatic” used to mean something like channeling God. It’s a bit of a comedown that now it seems to be just another adjective for someone with an attractive personality.
Oh, yes, and I’m tired of snow too.
Maude McDaniel is a Cumberland freelance writer. Her column appears on alternate Sundays in the Times-News.
Maude McDaniel - Living
When the time comes for it, you start getting tired of things
- Maude McDaniel - Living
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History of chopsticks and related subjects
Now there are some big questions in life, like where did we come from, and even bigger questions in life, like where are we going? Today, however, I prefer to talk about chopsticks.
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Wondering? Here’s how cards began
Just in the last few years, I have become quite the cardplayer .My father would be amazed, because he would not allow me or my brothers to play cards (with the regular cardfaces) when we were growing up. We were, however, allowed to play other games that had cards of their own, like Touring and Flinch.
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By now, we should know all the answers
Here I had expected that, by the time I reached this advanced age, I would know all the answers there were to know, or maybe even more. But apparently it was not to be, for, lo and behold, I seem to have still more questions lining up, like all those thousands of blackbirds on the lines in front of the M&T Bank on Industrial Boulevard.
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Here are a few laughs to start the new year
Nothing’s better to start out a new year with than jokes! Even if they are other people’s jokes. And some of these are not so much laugh out loud, as just wry observations on the world. But then that’s what the best humor is often about!
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Many happy holiday returns — or remains
There are a lot of things in this world one wouldn’t mind living over again. You know, the standard stuff, the day you got your absolute favorite Christmas gift.
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Hobbies are often other people’s ideas
Sometimes collections just happen.Those are the ones that owe their existence to the kindness of others.
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An admiring ode to the wonders of dirt
Let us all praise — dirt.Yes, that’s what I said, dirt.
The most common stuff in the world, right?
What we wash off ourselves, morning and night. Over and over again. What whole companies make huge profits getting rid of.
I want you to praise dirt? -
The older she gets, the less tolerant she is
You probably haven’t noticed this, but I seem to be getting less tolerant with age. Sort of like the mellowing of fine wine, but in the other direction.
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By these standards, they were everything
Back in the day, as we were preparing for a golf tournament at Maplehurst, a fellow on my team observed, “Whaddya know. I’m playing with three columnists: Jack Anderson, Jim Bishop and Jim Goldsworthy.”
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Idea of man caves resurrects memories
One of the things that annoy me most about one of my favorite TV shows (House Hunters), is not just the irrational need to “upgrade” everything in sight, though that really is pretty awful. Here are these kids, often in their early 20s, who think their first house should have everything from the start.
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History of chopsticks and related subjects





