Tuesday, January 31, 2006

My latest senior moment

For some reason, I have a great sensitivity to seeing old men by themselves. I have no idea where it comes from, since the majority of my life is spent making sarcastic fun of people in general. It happens nearly every time I encounter an older man who isn’t doing something retiree-esque such as golfing or having coffee with his friends. If I am, say, shopping and I see an older man stocking shelves or worse yet being a greeter in a store, I have the tendency to get a bit teary. To me, they just deserve better. He probably misses his wife and her wonderful beef stew and maybe his kids grew up and live far, far away and don’t call or write and that’s why this poor guy is working his part time hours to pass the time until Wheel of Fortune comes on at 6. My sister calls it my *sickness*. She will burst into gales of laughter in telling the story of my emotional encounters with the older man that used to work in the local K-Mart. Every time I went into the store there he would be stocking the Martha Stewart towels or slowly trying to figure out the cash register in the midst of a bunch of over made-up GenX teens. Once, to my horror, my sister phoned me to say she saw him sitting all by himself, ringing a bell and dressed as Santa Claus in the front of the store. I avoided the place for the entire holiday season. I must have died a lonely old man in a previous life.

Last Friday I was doing my usual grocery shopping. I was moving along, minding my own business in the chip and dip aisle when suddenly I had one of my *senior moments*. Coming towards me in one of those motorized cart-things was an older gentleman. He had on a little pageboy cap and very thick glasses. He motored right for me for a brief moment and suddenly took a sharp left turn right into the potato chips. As he buried the entire front of his cart in the Ruffles I could hear the air-tight bags popping and the chips breaking. Instinctively I wanted to turn around and just go away. Heroically, I might add, I grabbed the *handlebars* of his cart and planted myself so he could bury himself no further into chip and dip hell. Mumbling something about how to stop, he slowly moved his finger from the *gas pedal* and brought the thing to a stop, nearly running over my foot in the process.

As much as I wanted to shake that old man and scream at him for making me all teary and emotional because here he is all alone on his little cart crashing into things with no one to help him because his wife died and his kids never call and how did he even get to the store did he actually drive himself????, I instead smiled all brightly and said, “Whoops, better take it easy there!”

I really do need some help. Really.

4 comments:

Kiddo78 said...

I feel the same way, except about old women. Poor things. I think there was a Hallmark commercial where the young neighbor lady gave the old woman a card and then started visiting her or something...I was a wreck for days.

Christine said...

You have me almost teary just reading this. At least the old men aren't sitting at home alone all the time...

Unknown said...

I really am the same exact way.I want to take the cute little old man who works at the parking ramp at my doctors office home every time I am there.
He does deserve better...living his whole life,probably working hard for his family and now collecting my $2.50 with a gentle,humble little smile...I was at the doctors the other day so many sad lonely little people were waiting there alone...I 100% agree with how sad you feel for them.

ninjapoodles said...

OMG, I'm a total sucker for single elderly people. This has hit hard for me since the death of my father--unexpectedly and at a too-early age--and I see my mother, still vibrant and active, and wonder how many years she will miss him. God, I know I do. And as awful as this sounds, I thank God that it wasn't the other way around, because without her, he would have wasted away in short order.

I'm very glad you commented on my blog so I could find you.