Welcome to the Misadventures of Widowhood blog!

Welcome to my World---Woman, widow, senior citizen seeking to live out my days with a sense of whimsy as I search for inner peace and friendships. Jeez, that sounds like a profile on a dating app and I have zero interest in them, having lost my soul mate of 42 years. Life was good until it wasn't when my husband had a massive stroke and I spent the next 12 1/2 years as his caregiver. This blog has documented the pain and heartache of loss, my dark humor, my sweetest memories and, yes, even my pity parties and finally, moving past it all. And now I’m ready for a new start, in a new location---a continuum care campus in West Michigan, U.S.A. Some people say I have a quirky sense of humor that shows up from time to time in this blog. Others say I make some keen observations about life and growing older. Stick around, read a while. I'm sure we'll have things in common. Your comments are welcome and encouraged. Jean

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Old People, the Gossip Edition


Do you ever wonder what others think about your foibles and quirks? We all have them. Those little things we often do without forethought or because we've mimicked a mannerism from someone so far in our pasts that we wouldn't know how to break the habit if we tried. Hair tossing is a common foible for teens and young women these days as is the habit of posing for photos with a hand on an outwardly turned hip. Key the fashion model scouts who might see them on the internet and say, "That's the next Kendall Jenner! Another American Mannequin!" Me with my fatty-fatty-two-by-four stature I pose for photos standing behind someone else. That's one of my foibles and I'm owning it.

I had these thoughts while sucking up coffee at our cafe too early in the morning for me to be up and be social at the same time. I was hiding out from my cleaning woman who causes me to get up with an alarm clock the first Monday of every month. I don't like it but I can't change it; I'm in building one, the first apartment on the first floor and she' cleans on a grid, down one hall and up another. She's a nice young woman of color who will talk your ear off if you give her a chance. I usually give her ten minutes then I excuse myself and walk over to the other building to grab some coffee. 

I was alone when I got to the cafe but soon after five others showed up and sat down at another table but they asked what I was doing there; its rare for me to be out in public in the mornings. When I told them, our resident Trumpette said, "Oh, you don't stay around and watch her like a hawk? I do!" Then she shook her head and laughed, presumably at my perceived nativity. Aside from her politics that often gives me blog fodder I like many things about this woman. She's generous, funny, bold and sure of her self and her convictions. But I do wish she didn't turn a blind eye toward the x-president's lack of a moral compass and his many transgressions. Talk about foibles and quirks. I'd be here all week, glued to my keyboard if I tried to gossip-write about his.

Soon after another woman I like to write about showed up---Ms Social Worker. One of her many quirks is she takes an Uber 3-4 times a week to go to Starbucks for coffee. She's constantly falling---well, not daily but sometimes it seems like it. The fire department always comes pick her off the floor and sometime she gets hauled off to the hospital to check her out. In the 25+ times she's fallen since she moved in she's never broken a bone or broke her skin. Me, I've fallen once and broke several ribs. 

The art professor I fan-girled when I first heard about her living here on the continuum care campus told Ms. Social Worker that doesn't get hurt in her falls because she's got a "marshmallow body." Other times she's told Ms. Social Worker that it's her "body fat" that's protecting her bones. Ms. Social Worker is a little smaller than I am and once I spoke up to say, "I've got more body fat than she does and it doesn't keep me from breaking my bones. I don't even have to fall to break something." Foot, ribs, both elbows and wrists and I worn out both knees and had them replaced. Same with both shoulders. Oh, and I've also broken toes.

Ms. Social Worker now bad-mouths Ms. Art Professor at every opportunity which on one hand I understand but on the other hand it baffles me that she can't let it roll off her back because Ms. Social Worker delighted in offending people on purpose when she first moved in. It didn't take much. Several times she announced at a lunch table that she's an atheist and that's all it took in this faith-based, continuum care community to cause a few people to never talk to her again. One time she said she was going to confront our Director about the way the new pastor here ends her prayers before meetings and special events. Not sure if she followed through but the prayers still includes "in Jesus name." To me, you don't move into a place knowing it's Christian based and try to change it. That's like marrying a man thinking you can change a sloppy mamma's boy into an attentive, well-groomed guy. Never works. Or so I've been told. I never tried. Don could go from grease-monkey yucky to Cowboy Cool to Mr. Hot-Damn all by himself.

Ms. Social Worker is good for entertainment and we're both cut from the same political clothe but what's made me back off from sitting near her lately is a couple of months ago she started wearing a strong perfect that I can smell from ten feet away. She leaves a wake of spicy smelling air in the elevator and where ever she walks. It makes my eyes water and my nose get stuffy and---get this, she's always complaining about her stuffy nose. One of these days the filter in my brain is going to break down and I'll tell her she smells like she just took a whore's bath and I'd not only embarrass her, but also myself and anyone nearby. And don't suggest I pull her aside and tell her she's getting heavy-handed with the perfume because it did come up once at lunch and three or four of us said it was strong and she was shocked that we thought so. But she still wears it thicker than a layer of cake frosting.

As you can see from this post there really is reason to believe that old people lose the filters in our brains that normally would prevent us from saying inappropriate things like telling another woman she's fat or she smells like a whore. According to researchers, though, it's not so much a filter that we lose but rather our brains start to shrink as we age out of life, in particular in the frontal lobes. Sometimes it happens slowly over time and other times, when there is brain damage from a stroke or what is known as frontotemporal dementia, it can come on suddenly. I just hope I can hold on to my 'filter' long enough to document the quirky thing others around me say rather than me being Exhibit #1 on the Lost Filter Chart. Yes, and I'm aware that "documenting the quirky things others say" is just another way of saying I'm turning into a gossip. Lord help me!

Until Next Wednesday.  ©

44 comments:

  1. Ugh, the perfume thing. As a migraine sufferer, I'm so sensitive to perfumes and scented lotions, deodorants, etc. Chanel no.19 gives me an instant sick, blinding migraine. I don't even wear a scent myself.

    And calling people fat--what a holdover from way back! I think that particular pejorative shows a person to be completely backward and intolerant. Not to mention just plain mean. Some people refuse to evolve, period.

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    1. Not all perfume bothers me but hers is unbearable. She says it was very expensive. I feel sorry for people who get headaches from other people's perfume and can completely understand why they tell you not to use any sense when you have a medical procedure.

      You think calling people someone fat is a "holdover from way back"? Not me, I still see a lot of fat shaming going on, especially online. I've tried to figure out why Ms. Art Professor used the FAT word and the "marshmallow body" term because she's otherwise a very elegant woman who does not say hurtful things or even negative things to anyone else. The only thing I can come up with is she's losing the filter in her brain, metaphorically speaking or something is going on between these two that I don't know about. The professor runs a church for and helps immigrants, second biggest in town. It had Sunday services in 3-4 languages and has a food bank. There is some community push-back in this era of Trump and I don't think Ms. Social Worker is anti-immigration so I don't think that's it.

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  2. Gossip or observations?

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  3. Some call it gossip, I call it "slice of life" writing. Keep on doing it please, Jean. I find it fascinating and I love your writing voice.

    Deb

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    1. Thank you. I couldn't stop now if I tried and I do on occasion feel guilty that I write about the people around me. But as I age my world gets smaller so there's that excuse.... lol

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  4. Jean, your opening sentence has me thinking. I tend to notice foibles and quirks, but most of my family members do not. Sometimes I almost envy people who go about living their lives without being judgmental or critical of others or themselves. You know the type, those who truly live and let live. As I have grown older, I find myself drawn to that type of person (probably because I've not reached that level of thinking, but I want to!!!). I definitely think most of us change as we age. It's kind of funny that most folks' filters work pretty well, and then they get older and you don't see any sign of a filter at all. I have some friends who have lost them, completely, and it makes me a bit uncomfortable because we never know what they'll say or do. I'm getting used to their new ways, though, and there is something strangely liberating in the way they see things and express themselves. Maybe it has taught me to be more tolerant---that's a lesson I really needed!

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    1. All the great writers, actors and playwrights study other people's foibles and quirks. I don't thing just noticing them/cataloging them is anything to be embarrassed about. It's only judgemental when we use those quirks and foibles to degrade them...at least that's what I'm going with. It's also a cave-age old instinct of protection to read other people's body language. Interesting topic, though, because there are so many degrees of tolerance vs being walked all over. Selfishness vs. Selflessness.

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  5. I never comment but wanted to let you know how much I enjoy your writing. we'll be moving to assisted living in a year (there's a waiting list) so I'm interested in your stories about it. I share your politics & religious feelings by the way.

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  6. Not a criticism but an observation. Why not just say a nice young woman instead of a nice young woman of color. If we stop talking color maybe racism would go away. Watch Morgan Freeman be interviewed by Mike Wallace on 60 Minutes a few years ago. He says stop talking about color.

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    1. I put that in on purpose because I wanted people to draw the (correct) conclusion that our Trumpette watches our cleaning woman like a hawk is because she is a racist. I guess I was a little too subtle.

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    2. With all due respect, just because someone votes for Trump does not make her a racist. Trump has lots of faults but he is not a racist.

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    3. I've lived near the woman for over two years, I see her all the time, hear her opinions in book clubs and other events and at meals. I know a racist when I hear and see one. She is and so is he. Trump talks about Mexican undocumented immigrants as if they are all "animals, rapists and murderers." He supports the Proud Boys and refuses to denounce White Supremacists. He is racist in his embracing birthermism of Obama and when he calls countries in Africa "Shit Hole Countries." He's joked about the Trail of Tears being good for America. I could go on but as there are hundreds of examples of his disrespect for people of color going back farther that his Central Park Five involvement back in the 1980a. His followers don't see him as racist because he and they are tone deaf on this topic.

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    4. No, thank YOU! Anonymous had me really riled there for a minute.

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  7. "the x-president's lack of a moral compass and his many transgressions" Don't you really mean FELONIES? I am constantly abhorred how anyone can think this person should be in any sort of government. Got that rant off.

    You do such a great job blogging about all sorts of topics and why not gossip? There are magazines and newspapers and websites designed JUST for talking about people!

    Because I've been following you for over ten years, I'm going to start blogging again! Aging Awkwardly .. just one post so far. But I had my "wellness" check yesterday so I have fodder for a whole blog just from that! I think I could blog daily about aging! It is NOT for sissies!!!!!

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    1. I'm constantly amazed that Trump fans can overlook so much.

      I'm glad you're coming back to blogging! Let me know how to find your blog and I'll link it in my side bar.

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  8. Or is it that we just stop caring what other people think and tell it like it is? Filter or no? Is it how we're raised? Or how we've never had our 'filter' impact brought up enough (or cared) to correct it? I'm sure the brain comes into it, especially with dementia but I have a feeling some folks never have filters -- even if they already know better. In any event, I like hearing about your co-residents! Always gives me a good grin!

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    1. I like your questions. They bring up good points to ponder.

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  9. I am the type of person who if I could would sit in a coffee shop drinking my hot chocolate, I don't drink coffee or tea listening to the chatter around me and if I heard something worth blogging about I would do just that. I do not like to be around someone who smells like they bathed in perfume, the smell would give me a headache.

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    1. I used to love sitting in a cafeteria to listen to the chatter. I miss being anonymous like that.

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  10. Ooh, ooh, I know about losing your filter! After my stroke ALL my filters were gone! And my volume control. My poor husband tried really hard to help me regain them, and he developed a couple of code phrases and movements to let me know when I was being...let's call it "inappropriate". I was never mean or hurtful, just rather blunt and loud. But also usually funny. Now, 11 years later, I've pretty much learned to think about how what I'm going to say will be received by the person I'm talking to. And a lot of the time, it's fine, but there are times when I realize what I'm about to say shouldn't be said, and I almost always manage to shut up.

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    1. It sure helps to have a spouse who understands and helps, doesn't it. You are a good example of how we can improve and overcome when we don't give up and just accept the status quo.

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  11. I used to be a more meek, polite and a filter user before 2016. Now I can barely trust myself in public, LOL. I have no problem sharing my opinions on anything or someone (and I am being subtle - someone means trump and his cohorts). I do draw the line at personal comments on people's appearances. Except trump and his cohorts.

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    1. Glad to know I'm not the only one who doesn't always trust what comes out of my mouth in public. I am starting to see we can't keep our opinions to ourselves about Trump. He's too dangerous.

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  12. It's hard for me to be around people who support trump. I think your reply is correct. Instead of being politely quiet, I may have to start speaking up!

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    1. I think we've all been too quiet too long. I just hope it isn't too late and he gets re-elected.

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  13. Well, I for one love the stories about your fellow residents. Anyone who writes is a keen observer of people or they have nothing to write about, no? LOL.

    And thanks for pushing back on the racism comment. Living as near to you as I do, I can relate to that resident watching that cleaning woman because she is a POC. It's not uncommon around here. As for Trump not being a racist...puhlease. The minute someone says they support him, they've lost me.

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    1. So true, whether you're writing fiction or any other genre a writer uses what is around them as a basis for what they describe and use to get their message across.

      I honestly don't understand how ANYONE can not see the racism in Trump. He's blatantly racist and a good example is him saying that black people like him because he's been arrested and they can relate to him because he's got a mugshot. He stereotypes groups of people all the time.

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  14. I had to smile at your perfume wearer, and the response of people around her. I've had to stop going into certain shops because of the bowls of potpourri they put out. I've even stopped using laundry detergent and such that comes with a 'fragrance.' Even the best chemistry lab can't duplicate lilacs or fresh air; the scents seem cloying to me, and not at all like the realities they're trying to duplicate.

    I amused myself for a while trying to decide which of my personality traits or behaviors could qualify as foibles or quirks. I have a feeling that others can spot our little oddities better than we can. Maybe one of mine is a distaste for shopping. I'll do anything to avoid it!

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    1. I hate to shop too. Dragging myself around stores until I see something I don't really need but suddenly can't live without is a mystery to me.

      You made me homesick reminding me of the scent of lilacs. Until I moved here 2 1/2 years ago I always had lilacs bushes in my yards. I miss that as a sign that spring is here.

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  15. People are a constant Source of Blog Fodder. My Filter has been broken a long time, so I cannot attribute it to Age or Brain shrinkage, I just tend to say what's on my Mind without sanitizing how it comes out sometimes. I think anyone speaking Truth would never bother me quite as much as those who are fake and say things they don't really mean... I don't Trust anyone like that. The Perfume Wearer is probably like people who have Body Odor, they go Nose Blind to themselves.

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    1. Nose Blind? I didn't know that is a thing but it makes sense. What would we blog about if not for other people doing peopling stuff. LoL

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    2. Nose Blind is a thing, it's actually called Olfactory Fatigue or Adaptation, to where your Brain becomes desensitized to a particular smell over time.

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  16. I like the meme at the end. I cannot imagine how any of us could be this old, yet here we are. I don't like perfume so I'd steer clear of anyone who wears it, as well as any Trumpster.

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    1. It's weird when you realize you're the oldest person left in the family. I don't like it at all but I'm not ready to leave yet either.

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  17. My grandfather never really had a filter and as he got older, it got much worse. Going to a restaurant with him finally became impossible for me. He was not only racist, misogynistic and xenophobic but he was just downright mean, nasty and insulting. Ironically, my mom (his daughter) had dementia but still managed to filter her strong feelings and opinions up until her death. I believe social media, among other things, has contributed to people losing any filters they once had and I think the 'lack of a filter' issue is prevalent in all generations now, not just older ones.

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    1. I think you're right. The Trump era has given people permission to say nasty things to who ever. It's not too late to turn that round but if he gets back in the White House that won't happen, we'll be stuck with the name calling and nastiness for decades.

      Sorry about your grandfather. I saw some of that in memory care and I felt so sorry for the staff that had to deal with it.

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  18. The other day when I wrote about losing ones smell is an Alzheimer sign it got me to thinking maybe this woman can't smell her perfume. When I met my old neighbor she told me she couldn't smell or taste. I never thought a thing about it. She loved to eat so it didn't slow her down. But years later she showed signs of Alzheimer's and I was shocked. She was so vibrant, curious, spent days at the Smithsonian's classes and lectures. But I never forgot that she told me the 2nd day I knew her about her smell. So maybe that's why older women put their cologne on so heavily, they can't smell it. Who knows but that is God awful annoying.

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    1. You know what, that makes a lot of sense in her case because she is showing signs of mental decline. Thanks for sharing this!

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  19. I am trying really hard to understand people's political opinions of those who are on opposite sides. Your readers comments are an eye opener. It is obvious that we are not all the same. The Globalists are pushing for everyone to integrate and become one world, one religion, one currency, and no borders. It is not going to work. The divide is too great.

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    1. You make an interesting point. In many ways both sides have "globalist" views. People on one side or the other isn't content just to rule their own lives, they want to force others to live and think the same way as they do, while compromise has become a dirty word over the last 30 decades.

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    2. True. When everyone thinks they are right, then no one is right. I tend to think it's a clash of cultures. People warm to others who are of a similar mindset and who they feel comfortable with. In the UK there are a growing number of people who are feeling neglected and excluded from a normal British way of life. Those who have worked all their lives and paid into the tax system are overlooked when newcomers are given free accommodation. Some may say everyone is equal no matter where they come from.

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