Boomer to Zoomer

Reaching 65

In less than three weeks I will reach the retirement age of 65.  Lately, I have been nearly obsessed with that fact.  What does it mean?  I never wanted to be here.  Sixty-five was for much older Jimmy to have to deal with.  I was supposed to remain the “Excess” nick-named character from high school, who completed the military, graduated from university and was supposed to never change.

I fully expected, AND, I thought I had a plan to retire; meaning that I had more money coming in than going out, and I no longer had to exert myself to keep it going.  That was my goal.  Life is what happens to you, while making other plans, pertains to my life, thus far.  One conclusion that I have come to, over the last myriad, nightmarish, doldrum of melancholy thoughts, is that I must change my thinking.

I am happy to state that, as has always been, my glass is more than half full.  Not that I am a naturally optimistic person.  I have coddled melancholy to the point of depression on many an occasion.  It is just that I now seem to feel like I no longer have the luxury of sitting on the fence when it comes to planning the rest of my life, starting from here.

What are the questions that people ask as they are getting closer to retirement age?

    • Are my affairs in order, have I sufficiently protected my assets for the maximum benefit of those close to me?
    • How healthy am I and how long do I expect to be mobile to enjoy other than a sedentary life?
    • What are some of the regrets thus far, and what can I do over the next 30+ years to make amends, correct, lay-to-rest, replace with joyous events?
    • Is there some blueprint for what’s left of my life.
    • Have I started, or finished my “bucket list”?
    • Have I answered, lately, what’s really the most important thing in my life?
    • What can I do to avoid being some cranky, solitary, old man that people feel sorry for and don’t want to be around?
    • What can I do to pass on what I have learned to family and the world?

The Beauty After A Storm

HurricancloudsAs I was growing up in semi-rural Ohio, I was often drawn to older folk, mainly due to their stories.  I was memorized by tales of their youth, many in far off places, like Chicago,or New York.

As I grew older I looked to older wiser parents and grandparent-types to learn how to deal with middle life. Suddenly, I am supposed to be one of those older wiser elders!  Well, what if I don’t want to take on that responsibility of having the right answers?  It’s just a lot of added stress that I did not even want as a parent.  There are no rule books on life, and frankly (I am allowed to say Frankly all I want), I have tried many times to ask for forgiveness over permission anyway.

So many times in my life, I thought things looked really bleak and melancholy, then only to discover that things were not even remotely as bad as I thought.  That’s what I have come to call the Beauty After A Storm.  You know, when the air feels so clean and charged with positive energy.  There is just such a rejuvenating feeling, like walking through a wheat field, in the full moonlight, with just the right amount of dew on the wheat to make you laugh as you walk because it is just too silly to be doing that.

Life needs to be a song in every moment.

Kids, It All Began….

What started out as preparation for Molly’s father’s, then her mother’s funeral, got totally out of hand.  Looking back, given today’s technology, it seems like such a feudal attempt to describe a person’s life by presenting a few pictures in a frame.

Which got me to thinking; how much of a mess would I be leaving for my kids to have to clean up? It seemed like some unfinished business that one is supposed to plan for in later years.

So we decided to scan every picture that we had ever taken, and believe me there were hundreds. I lovingly transferred every VHS and Sony 8 cassette to digital.  I scanned every legal document that could be lost or damaged.  I know I got obsessed, but once I got started, It became an addiction.  Then, there was the organizing.  How does one fracture their life into recognizable snippets that can make any sense except to the person living it?

Somehow, eventually, we had to figure out where to store all this personal data. We went from gigabytes to terabytes in very short order.  Then there were the tech issues, like huge losses of data from hard drive failures and “OMG”, I just hit the wrong button. All the reconstruction was so painful at the time.

Where does one store this kind of information?  How is it best inventoried and filed?  With the radical changes in technology, is there a best app, or IP address to provide the cross-referencing for photos, documents, videos, sources?  It became a project with enormous Ganz chart potential.

From here it became a hobby of exciting, enjoyable future.

Figuring Out What Life Is All About

I think as we grow older; which by the way is not for the faint of heart, we begin to reflect more.  I guess partly because we have more to reflect upon.  Does that take away from forward thinking?  I think more about recording the past in some way, in order to keep from losing it.

I remember in my younger years, I just wanted to forget the past and focus on the future, which for me, was to work more hours, in order to amass more material goods.

I have become a business owner, starting out young.  I remember as early as eight years old.  I read on the back page of a comic book that I could purchase all-occasion cards from a company in White Plains, NY, and sell them to my friends, relatives, and neighbors.  All I had to do was come up with the seed money – I’m thinking $20.  I’m not remembering what I did to earn it, but earn it I did – mowing and raking lawns, and delivering papers, probably.

My best friend, and next door neighbor, Marc Ciriello, had a paper route and I helped him deliver.  He earned $30 a week!  Holy crap, that was a lot.  Because he was a year older, he sold his route to me.  I was in the delivery business even then.

I also caddied at the Fairlawn Golf and Country Club, and occasionally at the Firestone Golf and Country Club (a PGA course).

The reason I was so driven by money was instilled in me by my Dad who made it so painful for me to ask for money.   Mostly I had to earn it by cleaning the mortar off of recycled bricks that he wanted to use on the outside of the house.  He paid me a penny a brick.  I remember having to be taken to the hospital because a chip of mortar embedded itself into my eye when I put a hammer to chisel.

So when I asked my Dad for money, he would take out this enormous ledger book and open it.  Imagine this old, crusty, gray, monstrous book, making a creaking sound as it opened, like a basement door, opening upon a black abyss in a horror movie.  Then, slowly, carefully, accurately, he would write, Jim, 1 dollar.  How painful is that?  It drove me to earn and never ask him for money.

Consequently, it led to me working for money, and more of it.  I worked at a bowling alley at 12 years old, fixing and removing lodged bowling pins in the machines.  Then at thirteen, I took on a second job at the filling station next door to the bowling alley.  My Dad said I was too young to be responsible for closing the station at midnight on the weekends, but I did it anyway.

I became an assistant janitor at a Catholic 1-8 grade school – age 14.  I did that until I was 17, while at the same time washing dishes in restaurants and other jobs.  Then, I lied about my age and got a job at St. Thomas Hospital in Akron, OH, as an orderly.  My best friend, Marc had become an orderly and I wanted to be like him, plus the work was interesting, and it was helping people.  It paid, $1.21 an hour, and that included uplift for working evenings while attending high school.

I was one of the few that owned their own car in high school.  The problem was that I had to work; Monday, Wednesday, Friday to pay for the car.  Then I had to work Tuesday and Thursday to buy gas for the car.  Then I had to work Saturday and Sunday to have money when I got to where I was going.  So what did I have to say when my friends said; let’s go out Friday night?  I can’t, I have to……go to work.

It took years for me to hear the words my father repeatedly told me; son, get your money situation over early in life, so you can then figure out what life is really supposed to be about.

The money situation is still not to my liking, but I have definitely figured out that life is not about work!

Blowing Rock, NC

There are some dining experiences that are better than others. Here is one of the best. My sister invited me to take part in a pilgrimage to see Mother Mira. We stayed in a very quaint town of Blowing Rock, NC. While there we discovered by accident this restaurant: Crippens. www.crippens.com. The menu for Sunday May 13 2012 totally inebriated my palate and gave me a recipe that I went on to create at home. The Bittersweet Chocolate Infused  Espresso Crusted Beef Tenderloin was to absolutely live for. I searched high and low for the recipe, but to no avail, so I created the best I could and it was delicious. I would disclose the secret, but then I would have to silence you,

smiles.

Crippens Blowing Rock NC1 Crippens Blowing Rock NC2

Reflections of a New Grandfather

Today I became a grandfather for the first time.  So many negative clichés had previously come to mind – old man, senior, autumn of life.

Jack James Day 1-01 Jack James Day 1-06 Jack James Day 1-04

I had no idea how much fun it could be.  Sure, you’re shelling out even after they leave the nest.  (Man IS the only animal that lets them back in, by the way.)  But when I bought the first present for a newborn grandchild, I was totally hooked.

Today, Molly and I went to a large toy store, the kind that movies are made about.  (I could imagine the shelves coming alive at night.)  I couldn’t help but smile.  I recommend that everyone take the time to experience that feeling.  I immediately became a lifetime member of the store when they offered to wrap it for free.

Headed to the hospital, my mind raced with memories of the past.   Like the day Mary was born.  I remember the weather, and when we arrived at the hospital – the day of Grey Cup in Canada – almost spiritual.  I remember the look on Heather’s face, Mary’s mom, as she was nearing delivering – “You bastard, you caused this!”

I thought about all the times I could remember about Mary growing up.  They became Reflections in my mind.

Reflections of the way life used to be.

Turning 60 Thoughts

The advantage of looking back is you get to use a filter of greater wisdom.

My friend, Tilly Rivers, recently said that we may set ourselves up for failure by trying to fake ourselves out by committing to New Year’s resolutions that are fruitless, and self-deprecating.  I agree!

What I have learned in over 60 years of life – holy crap, am I that old; is that we have all traveled around the sun, on this satellite planet we call Earth, on a journey through space and time.  The real question is: is the planet, and the universe, better off because we have been here?

Wikipedia says we travel each year 590 million miles around the sun. Each and every year.   For sixty years, that’s more than I want to calculate.  So, some 6 billion people travel a huge distance through space each year.  Each of us travels, almost like ants, from home to work and back again every day.  Turning around in circles, (from door to door, bedroom to bathroom, to kitchen, to car door, to office door, and back again) and think we are adding substance to our existence.

Here is my question: Do I add substance to the planet and universe because I am here?  Can I make a difference?  Is the world a better place because I am here?   My resolution each year is the same: not will I lose weight, or accomplish my monetary goals for this year, but will I be remembered for having made some significant impact on friends and the planet because I existed?

Can I bring friendship and pleasure to those who know me?  Would my parents say, well done?  Can I look back and say, that one person is happier because I thought, and acted, for their betterment?

I hope, pray, and wish this for all who know me.

Wikipedia says we travel each year 590 million miles around the sun. Each and every year.   For sixty years, that’s more than I want to calculate.  So, some 6 billion people travel a huge distance through space each year.  Each of us travels, almost like ants, from home to work and back again every day.  Turning around in circles, (from door to door, bedroom to bathroom, to kitchen, to car door, to office door, and back again) and think we are adding substance to our existence.

Here is my question: Do I add substance to the planet and universe because I am here?  Can I make a difference?  Is the world a better place because I am here?   My resolution each year is the same: not will I lose weight, or accomplish my monetary goals for this year, but will I be remembered for having made some significant impact on friends and the planet because I existed?

Can I bring friendship and pleasure to those who know me?  Would my parents say, well done?  Can I look back and say, that one person is happier because I thought, and acted, for their betterment?

I hope and wish this for all who know me.

Kelowna, BC Delivery for Rapidgo

Kids; there is so much excitement surrounding a long, arduous road trip. I took a load of lighting fixtures out to Kelowna, BC in February 2007. I was a bit apprehensive leaving, even though I knew the truck was safe and I had credit cards in case of breakdown. It was the middle of winter across Canada. It takes 13 hours of driving to get out of Ontario, two days to Calgary and then arriving in Kelowna the third afternoon. Grueling. I slept for 24 hours and still felt my body buzzing from the road. Refreshed, I started back at about 4am. To look good, I took the truck through a car wash before leaving Kelowna. That turned out not to be such a great idea when the locks froze and I was on the outside of a locked, running truck, in the middle of absolutely nowhere.Rogers Pass 1 (2) (640x426)

Headed up to Rogers Pass. The Canadian military use howitzers to fire on potential avalanches. There are sections of the road that are covered in concrete to protect from avalanches every year. Rogers Pass 3 (640x426)Rogers Pass 5 (640x426)

Reached Rogers Pass. Cold, cold, cold!

Kelowna Return 1 (640x426) Leaving Kelowna, headed back 4am.Kelowna Return 2 (640x426)

I got out to take this picture and inadvertently hit the door lock on my way out. Thinking I was smart to have a backup key in my pocket, I thought I was safe until I realized that washing the truck before starting out in the cold led to the locks freezing. I went from lock to lock for quite awhile, breathing on the key and then trying it in the frozen lock. Fortunately, it finally worked. A real McGyver move.

Kelowna Logging Rd 2 (426x640)

The road my GPS gave me was actually a logging road that is not used in winter. There are no poles, lanes, roads or anything for 3 hours. Locals told me I could have died up there and not been found until Spring.Kelowna Return Beaverdale (640x426)

Local Beaverdell restaurant, deep in the BC interior. Kelowna Return BC Interior 2 (640x426)

Headed toward the US border. Beautiful morning. crisp, with frozen mist on everything.Kelowna Return BC Interior 1 (640x426)Kelowna Return BC Interior 3 (640x426)Kelowna Return Rd Closed Detour 2 (640x426)

Got into Montana and found out the road I was on had been closed several hours before. This is the re-direct route. It took me 3 hours to go 50 miles. Couldn’t see any further than this for the entire time.Kelowna Return Rd Closed Detour 1 (640x426)Kelowna Return Rd Closed Detour 3 (640x426)

Never so glad to see an interstate again.

Kelowna Return Montana (640x426)

Montana got much better.

Kelowna Return Chicago 2 (640x426)

Chicago skyline. Yay, only 11 hours to home.