“Not in Assisted Living (Yet): Dispatches from the Edge of Independence!

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, October 1, 2025

Answering the Phone Like It’s 1999 (and Why I Still Do)

In an age of spam calls, scam alerts, and algorithmic matchmaking gone rogue, answering the phone has become a lost art—or a risky gamble. But for those of you who still pick up, there's legacy, curiosity, and a dash of storytelling gold waiting on the other end. This post explores why Jean still answers unknown calls, what happened when a mysterious woman asked for her late husband, and how a $7.98 cell plan became part of her personal history.  AI... 

I’m not one of those old people who is afraid to answer a phone call from an unknown number. Yes, I’ve been to the classes on how not to be a senior citizen who gets scammed by a fake grandson who needs bail money to get out of a Mexican jail. I know enough not to buy gift cards, money orders or bitcoins for strangers who will “pay me for the trouble” by letting me keep part of the money from their (bad) check. I know better than to believe Microsoft would call little old me to tell me my computer has a virus and I need to let the caller remotely control my keyboard. In the world of protecting old people from themselves we are told if it’s a legitimate call, they will leave a voice mail. But what fun would that be? Besides, I tell people who question why I would put myself in harm’s way by answering that very scary phone that I know how to hang up, and I would sooner tell someone on the phone my weight than give out my Social Security number, bank routing info or credit card details. And I don’t make donations by phone. “So save your pitch for someone else,” I’ve been known to say. 

The Mysterious Caller 


I was expecting a call back from my financial advisor when I answered the phone and heard a woman asking to speak to Don. My husband died over a decade ago so I replied, “May I say who is calling?” to which the woman hemmed and hawed and finally repeated, “Can I speak to Don?” Her voice wasn’t crackly sounding like most people in my age bracket or I would have thought it was an old girlfriend trying to get closure—or maybe start something up again. 

But her voice was young and sexy and for a split second I thought about all those young women with cleavage-forward photos that I just deleted from my Facebook Page’s “People You May Know” slideshow. God only knows what I was researching online to give Facebook’s matchmaking algorithm the idea I’d be interested in finding overseas women with names like Cherry whose sweaters are two sizes too small. Clearly the algorithm went rogue. Unfortunately, I knew a man who did click one of those dark-eyed girls to find romance but all he got was an imaginary girlfriend who ghosted him when his bank account was drained.

Then my mind went to the possibility there could be a daughter out there that Don never knew about who is trying to fill in her long lost family tree. We didn’t talk much about our past romantic histories but he was a good looking guy who no doubt sowed a few wild oats, as the saying goes. But I reasoned he would have been found years ago by an unknown child because we didn’t move around much. Nope, I finally decided it was a telemarketer so I told the woman, “You might want to take this number off your call list. Don’s been dead for quite some time.” She hung up. 

When I got off the phone I googled her phone number, as I always do, to see if it came from a known scammer but this time the number the woman was calling from was a local mortgage company. The last time Don’s name was on a mortgage it was near the turn of century and it was paid off long ago. Curiosity can lead us down some strange paths and I can’t stop running scenarios through my head. Should I call the number back and demand to talk to the women who failed to announce she was calling from a mortgage company? Do mortgage companies do cold canvassing? Was there something wrong with that last mortgage or does Don still own one of the rental properties he had back in his prime because a mortgage company screwed up? Her reasons for calling could be anything, and if she sends a follow up in the mail, I will be ready with my Tenacity Hat on and a notepad close at hand. 

Don’s Legacy and a $7.98 Cell Plan

Don had his massive stroke in 2001 leaving him unable to use a phone, but the phone number he used—and I still do use—went back the 1980s when cell service was first introduced to our city. He had rental property, a parking lot maintenance business and a personal life attached to that phone and we didn’t want to give up the number because we still needed many of those people to be able to contact us. The cell company, however, looking for a way out of the contract didn't want to accept my checks for the monthly payments, and they made me jump through hoops to get the contract changed over to my name. 

One of the hoops involved getting a letter from a doctor stating that Don could no longer write or talk and another letter from a contract lawyer basically stating the obvious, that he was not dead yet and while we didn’t have the same last name we were legally married and had the documents to prove it. Because Don was one of the first to sign up for those crazy things called a CELL phone—the contract had a lifetime fixed rate of $7.98 a month. That didn’t change until I wanted a smart phone a few short years ago. If I had wanted to keep a flip phone I could still be paying $7.98. 

Forty plus years of cell service for $7.98 a month was hard to give up but it was worth it because I do like having a semi-smart phone. It’s an android, the stepchild of the coveted Apple iPhone, which is smart enough to challenge me but not outsmart me. My fellow residents are always talking about how long they have to stand in line down at the Apple Store to get one thing or another fixed or figured out. 

When I left the flip phone behind I got to keep our Vintage Phone Number. Or I should I once again had to put on my Tenacity Hat and jump through enough hoops to rival those in an old fashioned circus act involving a pack of poodles to make that happen. So in case, you’re wondering I will keep on answering unknown calls for as long as I remember how to hang up, because I’ve got nothing to lose—except the time I’ve saved by not standing in line at the Apple Store, and because sometimes the best stories start with a ring and a little curiosity. ©

 Until Next Wednesday. 

14 comments:

  1. Nope. I'm not answering unless I know who it is. I just don't want invest my time (and patience) talking about something I don't want to buy. Even if it is a long lost cousin who won the Mega Buck lottery and she wants to share. If you want to talk to me, leave a little message and I will call you back. Ralph used to mess with those cold callers. Ask them their name, where are they from, howl ong have they been doing this job, what city they worked in. After 10-15 of him talking their ear off, he would ask for their number and a good time to get back with him. Meanspirited in my mind!!!

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    1. The telemarketers mess with our time so don't see it as mean-spirited to mess with their time like Ralph used to do. I used to do that as well on landlines, but don't want to run my phone's battery down on the Cell. But you are following the protocol for old people, so you win the debate. lol

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  2. I understand what you went through in getting "ownership" changed. Sorry that you had to go through so much.
    I was told some years ago that only if husband died or moved could our TV/ISP service be changed into my name. Turned out: not quite true. They accepted his durable power of attorney that assigned me as his agent and, post haste, changed the name. (We also used different last names.) Too late for you, but maybe one of your followers needs to know. A POA can be more important than a will. Cop Car

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    1. Wow, I don't remember anyone telling me that a POA would work in situations like that. I had them for my husbands medical and financial both. I hope some readers will tuck that bit of information away in case they need it. Thanks for sharing.

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  3. Rick plays around with them sometimes, asking questions. I think he figures as long as he can keep them on the phone, it's several minutes they can't bug someone else!

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    1. My most fun playing about with telemarketers was when I'd answer the phone "police department". They would hang up right away ...then one day a guy on the other end of the line happened to be from the real police department and I had to talk my way out of why I answered the way I did. I stopped after that.

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  4. I have a love-hate relationship with my phone. So many wonderful features...but such a pain when I cannot figure things out. The mysterious woman who called from a mortgage company--almost seems like the beginning of a good book. A person never knows...

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    1. I know! Who calls someone 12 years after someone they died? Couldn't be anyone close or they would have known it and anything business related would have been resolved by then. My best guess is still an old girlfriend who wanted to reconnect. A year of two ago I was thinking of contacting an old pen pal I had in Vietnam, just to see how his life turned out. We we'ren't romantic pen pals but in the end I didn't contact him because I didn't want to cause him any trouble should he have a wife who would understand our brother/sister type relationship he was overseas and engaged to her.

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  5. Just a week ago, my friend was on her phone when another call was coming through and she hit the wrong button when she meant to delete the call coming in. The person said they were from her credit card company and warned her of suspicious activity and had a lot of her information. They went through transferring her to different departments just like the real company does when she calls and she didn't think she was giving them any information but it was a scam. When she hung up and called her actually credit card company, there was already suspicious activity and they froze her card for her so she wouldn't get charged. It's been terribly stressful for her as she keeps getting notices of activity and applications for more credit cards in her name but she has had help from AARP fraud volunteers and her own credit card company so she has not been charged and all other cards have been cancelled. It's terrible what people do to steal from others. Sorry for this long comment!
    Everyone - be careful!!

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    1. No need to apology! Wow, that's a cautionary tale if I ever heard one. I've heard that once you get caught in one of those scams they keep selling your information and it takes a LONG time for things to get back to normal.

      I have alerts set up on my two credit cards so if anyone uses it including me I get an email. It gives you peace of mind.

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  6. I always answer too, and have had the same phone number for many years. And yes, scammers proliferate. Mostly, easy to spot. But the one that wanted Don is interesting. If you do track it down, please report.

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    1. I know! I had a similar thing happen with my dad maybe fifteen years after he did. I was living in the house he once owned and even had the same phone number he once owned. Never figured out what a similar call was about. That was before caller ID but now I could actually call the number back. I'm reading a book right now where a woman finds out after her husband died that he'd been unfaithful so I don't think I'll be calling the number. even though Don was rarely out of my sight for 12 `1/2 years after his stroke, so any claim of affair would have had to be really old. Another possibility was his high school class was planning a reunion but you would have thought she would have said something to acknowledge that.

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  7. I’m one of those people that still have a landline and a cell phone and I do not have the two linked. But on my landline, I have a great phone that blocks everything but numbers on the OK list. It will, however ask for them to hit the pound key and leave a message if they choose to, so if it’s legit, I can call back. so far I’ve only had that happen one time which tells me it’s just scams or telemarketers, etc.. Mary

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    1. I miss having a landline! I could have one here but they are set up like at hospitals and schools where they are not independent lines like in a neighborhood which basically means we couldn't keep our old phone numbers. They've come a long way if you can block everyone but who you want to call you. Couldn't do that back when I still had a landline. I miss landlines because I could hear better on them. And hold them better.

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