Category: Growing Up

DoUDo Commando?

I’m sure if you’re reading this you’ve heard Jimmy Buffet’s song “Pencil Thin Mustache.”  It’s supposed to be a nostalgic look at his childhood as a senior citizen.  He released…

I’m sure if you’re reading this you’ve heard Jimmy Buffet’s song “Pencil Thin Mustache.”  It’s supposed to be a nostalgic look at his childhood as a senior citizen.  He released the song when he was 28, so how much did he know about life as a senior citizen?  The song is on a playlist on my phone and every time it plays as soon as I hear: “Yeah, but now I’m gettin’ old, don’t wear underwear,” I wonder where did he get the idea that seniors commonly don’t wear underwear.  There’s no way you’d catch me going commando.  My urinary system is a bit leaky and it really bothers me when the last dribble runs down inside my water-resistant cargo pants into my socks (cargo because I need lots of room for my keys, wallet, glasses, phone, and geocaching tools) making my legs, pants, and socks smell like urine.  There’s no way I’d skip underwear; I’d be washing my outerwear every day.

 

In spite of that I like the song in spite the stereotypes of us seniors.  So what else is there in the song?  Here’s the lyrics (in bold) annotated by me (not in bold).

 

Now they make new movies in old black and white

With happy endings, where nobody fights

So if you find yourself in that nostalgic rage

Honey, jump right up and show your age

For the life of me I haven’t a clue why this is in the lyrics or what it means.  New movies in old black and white?  But since lyrics are poetry set to music maybe it doesn’t have to convey a crystal clear idea or concept.  Maybe it there to cause me to emote—it failed.  Clearly he never anticipated Game of Thrones where every episode ends unhappily with the inbred characters.

I wish I had a pencil thin mustache

The “Boston Blackie” kind

This is a reference to the Boston Blackie television series which ran from 1951 through 1953—before we had a TV, so I had to look this one up.  It turns out that before TV, there were quite a few Boston Blackie movies (58 to be exact) from 1918 to 1949.  Boston didn’t have a mustache let alone a pencil thin one in the movies.  But when Kent Taylor played the lead in the TV series, he had one.  As part of my rebellious nature I grew a mustache in the Marines and still have it.  Marine Corps regulations during the 20 years I was in dictated a pencil thin mustache.  It couldn’t touch your top lip or extend past the corners of your mouth.  The Marine Corps Grooming Standards and Body Composition Program also states that the “The individual length of a mustache hair fully extended must not exceed ½ inch.”

 

A two toned Ricky Ricardo jacket

 

Everyone should know that Ricky Ricardo (played by Desi Arnaz) was Lucille Esmeralda Ricardo née McGillicuddy’s (Lucille Ball) husband on the TV series I Love Lucy.  The marriage between Caucasian Lucy and Latino Ricky marked the first appearance of an interracial marriage on an American TV show; I Love Lucy debuted in 1951, sixteen years before Loving v. Virginia legalized all forms of interracial marriage in all 50 states.

 

And an autographed picture of Andy Devine

Andy played Roy Roger’s sidekick Cookie.  That was back when Roy Rogers was a film and TV show star, not a fast food restaurant.

 

Writin’ fan letters to Sky’s niece Penny

Again speak for yourself; my heart was reserved for Mickey Mouse Club’s Annette Funicello not Sky King’s daughter.

 

Sky King’s daughter Penny

 

Annette Funicello

 

Oh I wish I had a pencil thin mustache

Then I could solve some mysteries too

Oh it’s Bandstand, Disneyland, growin’ up fast

Drinkin’ on a fake I.D.

 

In downstate New York we didn’t need fake IDs, we were served anywhere we went.  Maybe that was because it was New York, not Alabama where Jimmy spent his formative years.  The legal drinking age in New York at the time was 18, so of course we were practicing drinking around 15.  We commonly cut study hall in high school and went to the Newbridge Inn for pizza and beers.

And Rama of the Jungle was everyone’s Bawana

Another TV show that died before we got our first TV.

But only jazz musicians were smokin’ marijuana

Maybe in Alabama, but in New York not only were people smoking mary jane, but hashish, and doing tabs of LSD.  Louis Armstrong was famous for smoking marijuana starting in the 1920’s and then throughout his career.

But then it’s flattop, dirty bop, coppin’ a feel

Grubbin’ on the livin’ room floor (so sore)

 

I’m sure everyone has seen a veteran (active and retired) with a flattop (not me, never had one).  The bop was a dance, and coppin’ a feel and grubbing on the floor should be obvious to anyone who has gone through puberty.

A non-compliant military flattop

Yeah, but now I’m gettin’ old, don’t wear underwear

Maybe it’s because he forgot.  Below is a survey from the Huffington Post.  Clearly not many men go commando, but the results are a bit suspicious since 3% of those surveyed said they go commando, but the total of all the men that buy underwear is 100%

 

 

I don’t go to church and I don’t cut my hair

 

This might explain why he doesn’t have a pencil thin mustache—he’s probably has a full beard knotted up with his nose and ear hairs.

 

But I can go to movies and see it all there

Just the way that it used to be

That’s why I wish I had a pencil thin mustache

The “Boston Blackie” kind, a two-toned Ricky Ricardo jacket

And an autographed picture of Andy Devine

Oh, I could be anyone I wanted to be

Maybe suave Errol Flynn or a Sheik of Araby

 

I was surprised that The Sheik of Araby is a song, not a movie.  It was written in 1921 in response to the popularity of Rudolph Valentino in the film The Sheik.  Even the Beatles did a version of the song!

If I only had a pencil thin mustache

Then I could do some cruisin’ too

Yeah, Brylcreem, a little dab’ll do yah

 

Brycreem was British brand of hair styling products for men. The first Brylcreem product was a hair cream released in 1928. It’s available at Walmart!  The cream is an emulsion of water and mineral oil stabilised with beeswax.  Their byline was, “a little dab’ll do yah.”  Back in my days it was iconic of the “greaser look.”

Oh, I could do some cruisin’ too  

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Does looking good = good health?

  I am at the age where I have a number medical diseases and condition that can’t be cured.  This isn’t anything that people don’t associate with aging.  My primary…

Is this a extremely good looking guy?

 

I am at the age where I have a number medical diseases and condition that can’t be cured.  This isn’t anything that people don’t associate with aging.  My primary doctor told me not to worry.  The rule of thumb amongst internal medicine docs is:

 

50’s = heart attack

60’s = cancer

70’s = stroke

80’s = a hospital visit terminated by pneumonia

 

As you age your “baseline” changes.  If I had gotten up feeling like I do now when I was 30, I’d be asking myself what it was I did yesterday and make sure I don’t do that again.

 

So why is it that people keep telling me that I’m looking good?  Are they just being polite or am I so good looking that people can’t see through my beauty?   All of a sudden it dawned on me…maybe it’s my attitude.  Maybe I act younger than others of my age.

 

So I took a bunch of those less than scientific online tests that purport to tell you your mental age.  Most of them are pretty simplistic with questions clearly aimed at the younger crowd; particularly women in their teens and twenties.  It was hard for me to come up with good answers to questions about how I handle my homework assignments or boyfriend problems.  In the end my “mental age” averaged over eight different tests was 33.5.  What?

 

I suspected that it might be impossible for me to come up with a mental age that was even close to my real age.  So I took all the tests again answering all the questions as my mother might have (a bitter curmudgeon who died at 82).  The average results of those tests was 50.2 years.; 35% less than my physical age  That seems to lead credence to my impression that these tests aren’t the most reliable.

 

I did some more research and found that there really is a scientific concept of mental age.  At the beginning of the 20th century Alfred Binet, a French psychologist, developed the Binet-Simon Scale at the request of the French Ministry of Education to determine which students did not learn effectively in standard classroom environments.  Below is a picture of a sample of one of the test questions.  The test has since fallen out of favor since it was designed only for children 6 through 14 and later used by the eugenics movement to show that whites were smarter than other races; among other things.  It has since been replaced by the IQ test.  But before the IQ test became generally accepted, intelligence quotient was determined from one’s mental age using the following formula (this is where the “Q” in IQ came from).

 

(mental age ÷ physical age) × 100 = IQ

 

Well that’s disappointing.  If those online tests are valid my average IQ is 49!  That means more that 99% of the world’s population has a higher IQ than I do.  I’m a knuckle dragging drooler! I took an IQ test once long ago when I was in my twenties and had a “very high” IQ; I don’t remember what it was.  So I took another IQ test.  Plugging the results into the formula above shows my mental age to be 78.6—I’m mentally slightly more than 10 years older than my physical age.  Ugh!  Though if you have an IQ over 100, which indicates you are better than normal, then your mental age will always be higher than your physical age.

 

So much for that.  I found an article called, “8 Habits Of People Who Look Younger Than Their Actual Age” written by Nancy Collins.  She seems to have about as many creds on this topic as I do.  Neither of us have a degree in psychology, mental health, or psychiatry, so it must be fairly reliable.  Though from her picture she hardly looks as experienced in life as I am.  She says the secrets are:

 

  1. Age Gracefully
  2. Add Some Spice to Your Diet
  3. Accept Life for What it Is
  4. Sing!
  5. Spend Quality Time With Your Dog
  6. Wondering How to Look Younger? Sleep!
  7. Get Religion
  8. Google Can Help You Appear Younger

 

I noticed that plastic surgery isn’t on the list, thank goodness.  I have a few still work on, but maybe those are really the secrets to aging and looking good.  It does seem clear that looking good doesn’t necessarily mean you’re healthy.  I think a lot has to do with your attitude, which clearly isn’t related to one’s mental age.  The better your attitude, the better you look.  Perhaps I do act and think younger than many of my peers.  So go out there and “just do it.”

 

“Which of these two faces is the prettier?”

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When I Was a Kid

This was supposed to be more than what’s below, but I realized that it was turning into a dissertation not a blog.  So I’ve decided to unleash stuff incrementally.  So…

This was supposed to be more than what’s below, but I realized that it was turning into a dissertation not a blog.  So I’ve decided to unleash stuff incrementally.  So the first thing to address is what it was like “back in my days.”  So here goes.

 

I grew up in a severely dysfunctional family right out The Game of Thrones, according to more than one of my therapists, and that probably had the largest impact on how I turned out.  So let’s just say I didn’t enjoy my childhood and get on with the rest of the stuff.

 

School didn’t provide much solace, especially in grade school (now elementary school) and junior high (now middle school).  In West Virginia in the sixth grade, we went to a three room schoolhouse.  The sixth grade faced one end of the room and the fifth grade faced the other end of the room.  The teacher would instruct one grade and then give us an assignment and then to the other end of the room to instruct the fifth grade.  Social studies was a two year curriculum, so both grades turned to the side of the room where instruction was combined.  Our teacher was also the principal, so every once in a while he would leave the room to go to his office to deal with disciplinary issues.  This usually involved getting spanked, on the bare bottom, with a wooden paddle with holes in it.  Everyone knew about visits to the principal’s office since they were the ones who stood for the remainder of the day.  Happily I never had the pleasure.

 

Then there were those air raid drills.  What was that all about?  We had to get under our metal and composite wooden desks.  In a world of mutual assured destruction (MAD) exactly what special about those desks that would protect us from a thermonuclear explosion?  According to Bert the Turtle the desks would protect us from flying debris and sunburn.  But things have moved into the 21st century and there are no more air raid drills; it’s now lockdown drills.  Today there are really no more dress codes for school.  Back in my day girls’ skirts and dresses had to touch the ground when they kneeled.  There were no shorts and all shirts had to be tucked in—no t-shirts allowed.

 

I didn’t get an allowance so starting in junior high I started working; first as a paperboy delivering Newsday.  I got up every day before school to make my deliveries on school days.  I had to buy the papers up front from the distributor at a price slightly below the cover price and got to keep whatever I collected.  I loved it when I was tipped.  In high school, I got a job behind the counter at Frank’s Luncheonette in Bellmore.  It was there that I demonstrated the cleaning power of a mixture of bleach and ammonia to get stains out of composite marble floor tiles.  I almost lost my job when the mop bucket tipped over as I pulled it over the threshold from the back into the seating area.  I cleared out the place in under a minute.  But the floor was not only spotless, but clean enough to eat off.

 

It wasn’t until I was in high school that we got a television.  Of course it was black and white with channels 2 through 13 on VHF frequencies and 14 through 83 on UHF frequencies.  UHF and VHF had separate tuners.  VHF clicked from channel to channel while the UHF channels were selected using and analog dial like radios had.  At first all we could receive were three VHF channels: ABC, CBS, and NBC.  After a Sunday dinner, large enough for leftovers for the next couple of days, we would all watch the Ed Sullivan Show.  However, most of my entertainment was listening to my transistor radio or records.  The radios were relatively inexpensive then, but the first commercially available one was the Regency TR-1 made by Texas Instruments in 1954, which sold for $49.95 ($454.54 in 2017 dollars).  Records came in two basic flavors: 45 rpm and 78 rpm.  45’s only had two songs on them, one on the A side and one on the B side.  78’s were referred to as LPs (for Long Playing) and usually had about 15 minutes of music on each side.  I still have boxes of them in the basement, along with a record player.

 

I don’t remember anything about health insurance, but then my father was a doctor and doctors treated each other’s family gratis; though I’ve since been told this was illegal.  Back then you only went to the doctor (or asked to have the doctor to make a house call) if whatever you had was critical.  Instead you used aspirin, over the counter cough medicine with codeine, Vicks Vapour Rub, cough drops, lemon and honey, and bedrest.  It was a rite of passage to contract chicken pox, mumps, and measles.  Those of us that in that cohort also have a round scar on out arm up by our shoulder from smallpox vaccinations.  We didn’t worry about peanut allergies, but muscular dystrophy thanks to Jerry Lewis and acute lymphoblastic leukemia thanks to Danny Thomas, the founder of St. Jude Children’s research Hospital.

 

We didn’t have microwaves, convection ovens, espresso machines, etc.  We ate Swanson TV Dinners, Maypo, Jell-O; drank Ovaltine, and used Blue Bonnet Margarine instead of unhealthy butter.

 

Of course we didn’t have video games and instead we played board games.  Among my favorites were Rick, Monopoly, Clue, and chess.  My mother used to make me play bridge with her friends when they needed a fourth.  I wasn’t big in sports, but since our high school was the state wrestling champions for as far as anyone was allowed to remember, we all had to work on our wrestling skills in gym (now called physical education).   I never understood wrestling, it seemed to me after the starting position it was just wrassling.  We even had to do all that “get you weight down” by working out under the mats—yuck!  Of course everyone had to go through the year without washing any of your gym gear.  The boys’ locker room had a very distinctive odor.  My jock strap was probably the perfect media to grow death cap mushrooms.

 

I didn’t care but my sisters were mortified when, because we didn’t have a clothes dryer, their undies were hung on the clothes line to dry.

 

Most of the “cool stuff” I bought was from ads in the back of magazines like Popular Science or Popular Mechanics.  We could buy pretty much any chemical we wanted except for the radioactive elements and compounds.  We played with mercury without ever acquiring a third eye or losing our minds; at least as far as we could tell.  After graduating from cap guns to BB guns to finally pellet guns we found we were left with expended CO2 cartridges.  So John Wesley and I ordered all the chemicals we needed to make explosives and packed the cartridges with our mixtures and plugged up the opening with the end of a kitchen match (the kind with white phosphorus on the tip).  Then we would cut an X in a detergent box, stand the cartridge upright in the X (without any attached fins or other aerodynamic aids), light the match, and watch the cartridge fly up and out of sight.  It would return to earth somewhere close by and bury itself about a ½ inch in the yard.  We didn’t realize how powerful our rockets were until we were reusing a “launch pad” and it caught on fire and the rocket took off parallel to the ground.  I flew out into the street, passed between the front and rear wheels of a passing car, and blew four inch hole in the curb across the street.  After that we tried to be a bit more careful; we didn’t succeed.  John’s dad had a workshop in the basement with a vise.  We would clamp the cartridges in the vise and load the fuel.  The last time we ever did that, the fuel exploded as we were tamping it and the cartridge took off and blew a hole in the cinder block basement wall right below the well window.  As our underwear filled up we watched as the blocks under the window frame crumbled and fell onto the workbench.  I’m not sure but there’s a good chance that we’re still be grounded.

 

Soon after that we moved into my maternal grandparents’ house when my father apparently decided that he preferred company other than his family.  In order to accommodate us all some of the rooms were repurposed.  I got the furnace room in the basement for a bedroom.  This wasn’t as bad as it sounds—I think it’s probably the largest bedroom I’ve ever had.  It was a favorite gathering place for my friends and me.  Since it was unfinished we could write and draw on the walls.  Of course back then the drinking age was 18, so we started getting experience around 16 so we could hold our liquor when we became “legal.”  One of the great things about my bedroom was that the top plate didn’t completely cover the top of the cinder block basement wall.  So after consuming our illegal liquids we could drop them into the holes in the cinder blocks and listen as they fell down to the bottom of the wall.  Sometimes we were rewarded with the sound of breaking glass.

 

My grandmother had a Nash Rambler with a Torqueflite automatic transmission.  You shifted by pushing buttons.  You could chose reverse, neutral, drive, second, and first.  Unlike automatics today there was no park.  So routinely we’d be sitting in the house and here a crash.  We knew that grandma had forgotten to put the parking brake on and the car had rolled down the driveway into the street stopping only when it hit the telephone pole across the street.  My sister lost two bikes to the car.  It was built like a tank, only the pole and the bikes were damaged.

 

Ah yes, those were the good old days.

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