• Hair cuts & more

    From George Pope@1:153/757 to Joe Mackey on Fri Feb 4 13:06:06 2022
    Yep. I prefer the old days when people dressed nicely in public, not
    like they had rooted around in the dark for just anything to put on.

    I miss mty nmeighbour in the old buyilding; actually, two of thenm, onewho became a good friend; the first was next door in the apartnent & was 88; the other was at the ooppopsiote end of the hall & was late 60s.

    Neither would leave the house without a tie on. The older one would be fully dressed up, including a jacket. Maybe because he walked on his own, while the other had been in a wheelchair since Polio at age 12. This one would wear a nice shirt & tie, but only a jacket if the weather indicated the need.

    At work I listen to podcasts on my phone I've downloaded and use only one Bluetooth ear bud. The volume is down low enough so I can hear what's going on around me and if speaking to someone that earbud is either turned off (pausing the podcast) or removed,

    Of course. Same here. I only use them for talking on the phone. Asa my hearing ain't qwhat it used to be & I'm not one to put my converasations on loud speaker. I know I'm the odd duck on that these days -- people, young & old, male & female talk in to the speaker with volume at max. Maybe they all went deaf from loud music in headphones when younger. . .

    I never we4nt for cranked in my headphones music -- sometimes loud in the open room, or outside, but not right near me (ouch)

    My dying hearing is officially tested & diagnosed as presbycutia (normal age- related diminishment of hearing, beginning with the higher registers)

    I have often been to 10 feet from a student with earphones/buds in and
    can hear what they are listening to. I can only imagine their hearing problems in the future).

    Yup, as above. . . :P I've witnessed same. These are the ones who stand up against the concert amps at a concert, or a club.

    I know how sucky it is to start losing hearing -- they'll discover this at a younger age than I did.

    or you're calling out transfer points
    Our buses have a recording that says things like the upcoming street is whatever.

    Ours do for the main points, but not every stop on every riote, so the driver is actrually, rtedcvhnially supposed to, to ensure consi99stency. The GPS trackers arten't always accurate enough to give time to find a bell & push or pull in in time to get the just-announced stop. So you walk back 2 blocks -- that normally won't kill anyone.

    One of the most annoying messages is when the turn signal is on and its announced in a very loud voice "this bus is making a left/right turn" over and over until the flasher is turned off.

    Thankfuly ours don't seem to have that, or it's turned off from the outset.

    If I'm in my wheelchair, facing backwardsm, behind the driver, I often can't get to the strip that's between my chair & the other folded up seat, so I holler out "ding! ding!" (double ding means a wheelchair or other accessible debarking is required.)

    Yup, the times they are a-changing! *sigh*
    And not always for the better.

    I was going to add thatm, but I figured you'd automatically hear it at the end anyway, as I do these days. . .

    tattoos and the rest.
    I was reminded after I wrote that: Never get a tattoo where the judge can
    see it. :)

    Good plan. Unlike tyhis one homeless guy whose face is cobvered in prison tatts (obviously his fellow cons in juvey thought it was funny that he'd accede to any suggestion; he's early 30s now & most definitely unemplyable -- there's no mistaking these for bad regulasr tattoos -- definitely prison (using pen ink
    & cigarette ashes)

    Of course now some of the judges are inked up themselves I imagine.

    No doubt! I don't care to have it proved. . .

    Never met a judge yet that I'd want to see what's covered up in court.

    I wonder how many people when they get older will ask themselves about
    being inked off over "What was I thinking?"
    At least back in my day a lot of foolish things weren't permanent.

    True.

    One elder pal explained how in the '50s girls (& their parents) worried about her kissing on a date -- consequences were mono. Now you got to worry about pregnancy, herpes, & HIV. . . Potentially deadly consequences.

    don't wear a hat, even on cloudy days.
    I very rarely ever so outside bareheaded.
    In the winter I wear a wool cap (one light for cool days, one heavy for
    cold days) and my cap. And I wear a cap year round. In the summer to keep the sun out of my eyes.

    I have a cap that's topless, so it's basically a visor with an opaque bill. If it's cold I have a very heavy wool toque I wear, for sure (hate the cold & learned that if your feet, hands, & head ar warnm, you're basically warm enough (I hate the cold, but I've gone out in short sleeves when it's freezing, but those key areas warm & manage it if there's no wind, even a breeze. The visor cap lets the UV hit my scalp & protects my eyes (I never got the sense of wearing it backwards or sideways--seriously -- there are photos from baseball stadiums who have cap backwards & hand shading their eyes!

    People say they won't wear one because it messes up their hair. I would rather have messy hair than pneumonia.

    Ditto. Plus I keep my hair short enough (or gone) that it can't really become messy except maybe on haircut day. . .

    Nor do I wear shorts outside. Even to take out the trash. Though I did
    once and felt half naked.

    Got some English in you? In English society, shorts are for children & men wear lonig pants (trousers); I wear "garden shorts" in the house when staying home on a hot summer's day. I might go check mail in them -- doesn't bother me, but my time is a bit off from yours. . .

    People always say the more clothes I have on the better I look. :)

    You have such nice people around you! They want you wearing a burkha & having a viking beard, eh? *LOL*

    like "how does it matter what colour they are?"
    I recall one time talking about someone, something silly they said or
    did. Later the person I was telling this to asked why didn't I mention the
    fella was black. I asked "what difference did it make?" and they had no reply
    Unless its pertinent to the story/conversation a persons skin colour
    means nothing to me.

    Exactly. I'm afrtaid to report crimes involving operson of colour because apparently the police dispatchers can get rude if you just mention race or colour (I guess especially if it matches their own)

    One woman reported that a browb-skinned man was breaking into her neighbour's garage. The 911 dispatcher(usually a cop) upbraided her everty which way for being racist then hung up on her! This isn't isolated, either -- I've heard several similar tales.

    If they ask for race/skin, I'll give it, otherwise I'll reserve for when it's going to be necessary for the identification (like in a neighbourhood predominantly the other shades)

    & I'd especially, up here, not mention if a guy seems to be native indian, as then the cops show up ready to hurt them. I'll go as far as to say "dark skinned" especially if the clothing isn't notable. Of course, I want them to recognize the perp when they find him. . .

    But up here, the cops are towards Natives as a lot of yours are to blacks.

    Sad in both instances -- people are just people, regardless of anything else.

    Tghe % of bad cops is likely similar to the % of bad doctors, teachers, nurses, or even clergy!

    Regardless of all other points, they are all human people.

    "Have a nice day... somewhere else". LOL ==swipe==

    I stole it off a forward way back. . . I think it was a list of Workisms for when you're just tired of everybody's sh*t.

    I've seen it represented as a bumper sticker, or a button/pin.

    I've never aid it & meant it -- but its nice to think about to relieve some of my own tension after a tense interaction, to know I could've, in all fairness, used it aptly.

    --- BBBS/Li6 v4.10 Toy-5
    * Origin: The Rusty MailBox - Penticton, BC Canada (1:153/757)
  • From JOE MACKEY@1:135/392 to GEORGE POPE on Mon Feb 7 06:10:42 2022
    CP wrote --

    Neither would leave the house without a tie on.

    I knew a guy one time to compromised on ties in the summer.
    He went without one, but had the top of his shirt buttoned.

    I never we4nt for cranked in my headphones music

    I have never cared for loud music in general, where you have to shout to
    the person beside you to be heard over the music.

    If I'm in my wheelchair, facing backwardsm, behind the driver

    Our buses have wheelchairs facing forward.
    The first few rows have fold up seats and the wheelchair is strapped in
    by the driver.
    When they reach their stop they are unstrapped, the door opened and the
    ramp extended again and they roll off.

    I have a cap that's topless, so it's basically a visor with an opaque bill.

    I had one of those many years ago.

    (I hate the cold, but I've gone out in short sleeves when it's freezing,

    I see students on campus all the time when its in the teens in shorts, tee-shirts, etc like its a summer day. I get a chill just seeing them.

    (I never got the sense of wearing it backwards or sideways

    I guess they think the bill is keep the sun off their necks. :)
    Joe
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  • From George Pope@1:153/757 to Joe Mackey on Mon Feb 7 21:42:56 2022
    CP wrote --
    Neither would leave the house without a tie on.
    I knew a guy one time to compromised on ties in the summer.
    He went without one, but had the top of his shirt buttoned.

    No thanks on that, too, for me, as I get overheated too easily.

    I never we4nt for cranked in my headphones music
    I have never cared for loud music in general, where you have to shout to
    the person beside you to be heard over the music.

    Deffo -- I don't return to pubs that are too noisy for comfortable conversations.

    If I'm in my wheelchair, facing backwardsm, behind the driver
    Our buses have wheelchairs facing forward.
    The first few rows have fold up seats and the wheelchair is strapped in
    by the driver.

    We had those, but we replaced the one, on the driver's side with a rear-facing self serve bsy with a bumper to back against.

    When they reach their stop they are unstrapped, the door opened and the
    ramp extended again and they roll off.

    Yup, so much better than when it was an elevator-type platform, that seized often, if the driver wasn't parked exactly 'L' thus to the sidewalk.

    The new one is an electic ramp that, in caes of failure, only requires 6lbs of lift to deploy or stow it.

    So handy, plus the bus fronts 'kneel' to accomodate seniors, walkers, crutches, strollers, et al.

    (I never got the sense of wearing it backwards or sideways
    I guess they think the bill is keep the sun off their necks. :)

    You know you're a true redneck when. . . ?


    --- BBBS/Li6 v4.10 Toy-5
    * Origin: The Rusty MailBox - Penticton, BC Canada (1:153/757)
  • From Daryl Stout@1:2320/33 to JOE MACKEY on Tue Feb 8 16:21:00 2022
    Joe,

    I guess they think the bill is keep the sun off their necks. :)

    They want to try to keep from becoming a red-neck. <G>

    Daryl

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