By
David
K. Crabtree
CG (certified geezer)
I’ve
decided to turn over a new leaf in 2013,
although I was very happy with the
leaves I turned over in 2012. No matter. The New Year is always a time for
forging ahead with bold thoughts and ideas. Seeing the situation that this Country
is in, I have come up with a new way to approach…anything.
All you have to do is to apply the concept of “Geezer Think”
This method, which has been in the testing phase since the early 1800’s, applies none of the complicated, intellectual, critical thinking, and I might
add, overrated, and high tone ways to look at a problem.
Nope, “Geezer Think” will revolutionize the
way problems are solved whether it be a crisis in the middle East, a school
board needing a decision on funding allocation, or if it’s a good idea to plant
another acre of corn or beans. It doesn’t matter. “Geezer Think” solves all problems in a quick decisive manner, and
without a strike, another committee, or an Executive Order. Sounds too good to be true doesn’t it? That’s only because it’s too logical.
Here’s the concept.
Let’s say you need an insightful decision
about, oh let’s say plastic bags for groceries. Seems that many State and local
governments are banning the single use plastic bags we all get anytime we buy
something. You know those bags don’t you. They are the ones that rip two steps
before you get in the house, spilling the leeks all over the front porch which
is covered in wet slimy leaves. A Certified Geezer or CG would have asked a
simple question to those decision makers. “What did we use before paper and
plastic bags?” All geezers worth their salt will instantly remember totes made
out of flour sacks or some other piece of cloth. Nothing was wasted was it. So,
here we are a hundreds of years later and we are once again using…wait for
it…cloth bags.
All the controversy, hearings, committee minutes, protests and
squabbles could have been avoided simply by asking a CG. You see, we remember.
Not all at once anymore, but generally or with a bit of time and a wee dram of
whiskey. Take something like parental responsibility.
A CG knows that they had
to pay the price to repair that broken window when their youngster and his
friends decided it would be fun to throw rocks at the neighbors cat, sitting
peacefully on the inside ledge, looking out of the window. We made the kids
wish they were never born by having them rake the neighbors leaves, shovel snow
from their driveway, or Heaven help us, paint their new fence. Now a days, the
kids think we have “people” for that. Most often though, the “people”, are still
Mom and Dad. There is a line between discipline and cruelty of course, though
today it is often some “administrator” that’s making the mark very fuzzy,
rather than the parents who generally have a view unobstructed by bureaucracy.
“Geezer Think” turns out to be a combination of Yankee frugalness, Southern practicality, Western resourcefulness, and of course that simple logic I mentioned. The point is that decisions, business and personal, are made so complicated that we are unable to move ahead. If we would ask, and follow, the advice of those who have been there and done that, the Country and our own lives would be better off.
David
I am the youngest of three sons and was
born in upstate New York. My mother, an immigrant whose family escaped from
Germany in the mid-1930s, became a registered nurse. My father, a Mainer and
noted architect, moved to the young family to a suburban town outside of
Boston, Massachusetts. While taking night classes at Boston University in order
to get into their School of Communications
I was advised that my draft number was about to come up. So, including a
year in Vietnam, I spent 10 years in the Air Force before going to work for a number of commercial airlines in the
production and materials management areas. Later, as the airline business
waned, I moved into technical writing. Currently I write novel and work as a
consultant in the security field. I have been married for over 40 years and
have one married daughter.
Writing
seems to have been a part of my life. From an early age, I would make up
stories or write songs, but rarely keep them. The urge finally got to me and I
have actively written since the early 70s. I also have been a writer and editor
on numerous organizational publications, newsletters and technical manuals.
“Destiny and Decision” was my first full-length novel written for publication
and is the first in the “Wands of Merlin” series. I also expound on some daily topics at www.dkcrabtree.wordpress.com
I
enjoy a wide variety of leisure activities including riding my motorcycle,
leather work, and photography. Some of my photographs can be seen in the
Gallery section of my website www.dcrabtree.com or at my blog www.krabtree.blogspot.com
Books
by David K. Crabtree currently available in print or Kindle.
6 comments:
I loved reading this! Yes, it's true that times have changed and how we raise our children is one of the changes. Back in "geezer" days, our parents gave us a smack when we disobeyed but they also showed us unconditional love. Those of us who suffered abuse back then, if we could we overcome whatever we dealt with and we became stronger persons.
Write on, David! Cancel the special meetings, disband the subcommittees, send the attorneys packing! You got a tough problem? Ask a Geezer. And he'll get back to you in a couple of weeks, when he gets around to it, and remembers the sage advice.
KP
Great post, David, sounds to me like you're the perfect Boomer Lit author! You should check out our group on Goodreads, I bet you'll find it very congenial: we discuss boomer novels, memoirs and more (currently reading Confessions of a Mutinous Baby Boomer by Marsha Roberts and loving it). Here's the link: http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/81261
See you there! I'm the founder of the group (started back in October 2012) and we now have nearly 320 members and some 90 boomer books on our bookshelf - many with the wonderful kind of spirit you exhibit here!
I'm forwarding this to several geezers on my mailing list. I know it should be sent to the young-uns, but they wouldn't pay any attention to it, since they're all texting each other.
Marilyn Morris, Certified Geezer (age 75)
A man should be himself responsible, with goods, health, and life, for his behaviour...
and not really the poorer if government, law, and order went by the board; because in himself reside infinite resources.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
Can I join your club? I will now officially call myself a CG and be proud of it! This is a great blog and I'll be sure to send it out to all those non-CGs.
As a novelist, I've discovered that it's CGs who continue to read a book longer than 50 pages and actually think about it. I'm trying to convince my children that it's fun to "visualize" a story rather than watch it played out on their screens. But that's a geezer concept as well!
Post a Comment