Excuse Me, Sir
My Pavlovian response was activated once it registered the teenaged clerk’s up-sale question of, “Will there be anything else, Sir?” Since I had experienced this rote, non-confrontational pleasantry and accompanying misnomer during previous retail interactions, my somewhat passive-aggressive correction of “‘Sir’? Is my father behind me?” was locked and loaded.
However, this time, unlike other encounters, I suppressed the interjection of my rebuttal to this random person’s innocent attempt of pigeonholing me into a respected status that I wasn’t ready or willing to occupy. Restraining the urge to pretend I was not an elder, I politely said, “No, this is all for today.”
And like that, there was no more fight left in me, no more will to hold onto what I use to be. It was a good run, but the charade is over. (I noticed liver spots punctuating my hands while fumbling to remove the credit card from my wallet. When did these appear?) With a sigh, I understood that old is my new normal.
Acceptance is important for making peace. But acceptance requires letting go of the past. And letting go of the past, both the negative and the positive aspects, is difficult. It’s difficult but necessary because without acceptance you can’t deal with the reality of who you’ve become.
So, I’ve stopped thinking of “Sir” as a misnomer. I consider it a badge of honor and utilize the associated benefits to their fullest. Now get off my lawn and turn down that noise you call music.
Toddlers
when eyes roll in
backwards
and the re-wind, on the alarm clock
mechanism,
seems it won't... in the morning
be working;
and we're caught, looking 'round
for glasses, for coffee,
or reading,
and those odd slippers, are waiting
unseen;
we might remember, then
all these things, inarticulate
were once far up
on the table, even more
out of reach
hot sweaty scorched
fussy indolent child
taken to see the zoo
by wits end parents
time out under a tree
mock wooden marker
telling visitors to look
up amongst the leaves
cooly chomping there
tuckered away a koala
seen only to one set to
behave twelve minutes
will you be my teddy?
question whispered up
softly sincerely hoping
I'm not a bear thanks.
