By Dr. Jeri Fink
Time. It's not
what it used to be.
Old time didn't automatically
(atomically) adjust to power failures, time zones and daylight savings. You had
to set and wind regularly.
Time changed. One
day my son gleefully announced that he was "done" with time. He
exchanged a collection of corny birthday and graduation wrist watches for his iPhone.
"For now on," he grinned, yanking his phone from his pocket like a
switch blade in West Side Story, "I
only tell time from my cell."
He invited me to join
the next generation. I didn't dare confess that I liked clunky tick-tocks. Me - old fashioned? I stopped wearing
watches on my wrist, around my neck, and on pinky rings. Secretly, it felt
retro - a return to the ancient days
of pocket watches. It reminded me of the White Rabbit in Alice in Wonderland.
I'm late! I'm late! For a very important
date
Low-tech problems
with iPhone time-keeping began immediately. I couldn't see tiny digital numbers
without glasses. They were blurry lines floating atop wallpaper photos of my
grandchildren. There were aps that had larger numbers but I couldn't make out
the icons on the home page. The truth was chilling. I needed reading glasses to
tell time.
Time became a two-step
process: locate the iPhone and whip out the reading glasses. Of course we all
know that reading glasses disappear like socks in a washing machine. Where did
I leave them? Were they cowering beneath pages from the crazed psychopath in my
latest book? Did I abandon them in the refrigerator between untouched low-fat
and sugar-free snacks? Or were they among toys scattered by my staggering grandson
when he wore my readers and played dizzy?
17-year old Shari intervened.
"A
watch," she said sagely, "isn't about time anymore. It's a fashion
statement."
That's when I fell
off the fashion cliff.
I didn't need
glasses to tell time on those "fashionable" old-fashioned faces.
There were no buttons to push, dim digital numbers or iPhones to locate. It was
real time.
My first
"fashion statement" was a large purple device called an "Ice
Watch." It came in a plastic cube with endless potential.
I had to have one
in pink as well.
"Try Swatch watch," Shari
advised. "You can match every outfit."
I took her
suggestion. The moment I walked into the Swatch store I was hooked. Who knew I
had the soul of a geezer fashionista?
I bought a watch
to match every mood as well as every outfit. They came in flavors - Strawberry
Jam, Dragon Fruit, Fresh Papaya and Berry Sorbet - all zero calories. What could
be better? I began to hum my version of the 80s song:
So many watches, so little time. How can I choose?
I bought a watch
case to store my rapidly growing collection. I bought a second watch case. I
waved my fashion statements in front of envious eyes, languishing in timely
heaven. And I ignored those nasty remarks about Freud and metaphors.
Now I have a new problem.
Everyone knows. I'm greeted with
glares if I ask an innocent question like what
time is it?
No one will answer
me.
Will you?
Dr. Jeri Fink is a proud geezer
and the author of hundreds of articles and nineteen published books. Trees Cry For Rain, her latest book, is
a gripping historical novel where the past crashes ruthlessly into the present.
It can be purchased at amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com.
Her new series, Broken,
consists of five separate novels that follow dramatic, related paths from
the Spanish Inquisition to modern times, including the psychopaths who lived in
each era.
5 comments:
Does anyone really know what time it is? Does anyone really care? Old philosophical questions from the band Chicago.
KP
Cute story, Jeri. Times certainly are a changing.
Yes, times certainly are a changing, and I especially loved your part about vision. It is a sad day when I leave my glasses in any place other than their designated spot!My favorite watch is huge and has big numbers!
I wear one watch. Can't give it up even though I have to squint to read it. I'm so boring!
Loved the post.
Great post!! What fun you have with time!!
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