I struggled to find a topic for the letter G in the A to Z Blog Challenge. My original prompt word—gullible—just wasn’t coming together. I picked it because if my nickname growing up wasn’t “gullible,” it should have been. To this day, someone can tell me something totally off the wall and I’ll believe them, which usually ends with me becoming the butt of their joke.
After staring at a blank computer screen long enough to drink two cups of lemon tea with French vanilla creamer, I finally resorted to asking my MS AI copilot for suggestions. I have a love/hate relationship with how AI can spit ideas out so fast that it makes me feels like my brain could break, trying to keep up. Jasper (because I insist on personifying my copilot) gave me twelve possible G‑words.
Grace, Grit, and Glimmers, he said, have “hidden depth.”
Grandmother, Games, and Gatherings “lend themselves to storytelling.” I didn’t tell him I’m not a grandmother nor did I have any in my life, and I’m saving Games for the letter M. As for Gatherings, long‑time readers are probably sick of hearing about the events we have here in my Independent Living building.
Goofs, Gumption, and Gaps, Jasper claimed, are “words with winks.” I didn’t ask what that meant because he can get long‑winded with explanations—like every professor I ever had who thought we should care about the boring stuff he was going to put on a test.
Growth, Goodbyes, and Guidance rounded out his list, and he claimed they echo my overall A to Z theme the best.
In the end, I chose Goofs because I’ve had plenty of them, and many of my best ones came right out of my mouth.
Like the time I spent two hours manning a refreshment table at the senior hall. After many times repeating, “What can I get you? We have coffee, tea, and water,” I was absolutely shocked when, out of nowhere, the words “We have coffee, tea, or me” rolled off my tongue. It was embarrassing, of course, but I laughed it off. That didn’t stop the phrase from popping out two more times. By then I was mortified, though thankfully half the people in earshot were hard of hearing and probably thought they misheard me. Needless to say, I didn’t volunteer for that job again.
I did have a revelation that day: the old guys who wanted to be friendly or flirty all used the same opening line—“Did you girls make all these cookies?” I’m guessing they didn’t notice the gray hair and the orthopedic shoes that no “girl” would be caught dead wearing. Girl, gal, lady, woman—pin a pronoun on my back and see if I answer.
“Coffee, Tea or Me” was the title of a book in the ’60s, and it became a pick‑up line back in its day. It was a flirtatious code for “If you ask me out, I’ll go.” Those were the good old days when girls were still halfway coy and boys didn’t shout about our body parts as they drove by. “Nice rack!” “Bodelicious butt!” And they wonder why older people get flaky as we age. We have decades of memories merging with our present‑day adventures to form a perfect storm of confusion.
There’s no confusion about another goof that came out of my mouth in my late twenties. It was at a family Christmas party. We were all opening gifts when, for reasons I no longer remember, I said the F‑word. Loud and clear. If you knew my mom and dad, you’d know they kept swearing out of their vocabularies. You’d also know why the proverbial pin dropping could be heard in the silence that followed.
My nieces and their boyfriends stared at their hands, shoulders shaking in silent laughter. My shocked mom’s mouth formed a perfect O. My dad stuck a finger in his ear as if trying to clean it, probably hoping he’d misheard. My brother’s wide grin made it clear he was delighted to witness me screwing up in front of our parents. The silence dragged on for what felt like an hour before someone finally picked up a gift and thanked the giver. In all the years that followed, not one person—NOT ONE—ever brought up the F‑Word Christmas, but it lives in infamy in my memory bank.
Swear words are as rare as ten dollar bills growing on trees in my continuum care community. But one day another resident let the F word slip and immediately slapped her hand over her mouth, eyes darting around to gauge the reaction. I laughed—at her, and at the memory of the day I made the same goof in public.
Sometimes I think my word goofs are just life’s way of tapping me on the shoulder, reminding me not to take myself too seriously. They turn into stories, and the stories turn into the glue that holds all the years together. ©
Note: If you normally get email notices of when I publish, you won't be get during this April, daily Challenge. I have the free service which limits how many times a month they send them and I've reached my limit for April.

I can identify with your goofs. As a kid, my Dad nicknamed me "Aunt Blabby" because I would sometimes say things aloud that would embarrass my parents. When meeting their old friend, Mrs. Ploss, I patted her on the arm and said, "Oh, aren't you a nice fat lady!"- thinking about how nice she was but everyone blushed! And I was teased about that for most of my life! ;)
ReplyDeleteLOL Kids say the darnest things. Wasn't that the name of a TV show?
DeleteNice and entertaining post. Goof-ups can be tricky. I remember once putting salt instead of sugar in a cup of tea. Once, while giving the headline for a news item that spoke of World Bank giving some amount that was in billion, I wrote in the heading million.
ReplyDeleteBillion. Million. makes no difference. You can't carry either one around in your pocket. LOL
DeleteI do a lot of verbal gaffing and goofing, which is why I prefer communicating in writing!
ReplyDeleteMe Too! If I have something serious to say, I do it in writing. Always have.
DeleteThis is why I prefer texting to calling; I have a written record of what I said or agreed to. After a brain injury, sometimes I forget things (plus I'm old).
DeleteI love texting because you know you're not bothering someone when they are busy. If they are, they can get back to you when they have time. I've always hated making phone calls, still do.
DeleteI'd much rather text than call someone out of the blue. That said, I prefer to talk if we're going to chat, but it must be on their terms.
DeleteMy list of goofs would be so long if I chose to try and remember them. I recall having a flushed face a lot!
ReplyDeleteI can relate to that. I have one almost daily.
DeleteIt's good to look back on these goofs and laugh if one can. We all say and do embarrassing things. I think my worst memories are those when I've said or done something unkind, which has happened more often that I'd like to think.
ReplyDeleteThat's when you wish you had a retractable leash on your words, doesn't it. I agree those are the worst kind of goofs.
DeleteIf you are gullible as you claim...please realize that over half of each of my posts (especially for the A-Z Challenge) are silly. They're certainly not gospel.
ReplyDeleteOr anything to do with the Bible.
I had the figured out that out already. If not, I'm laughing at all the wrong parts.
DeleteI've done more goof ups in my life than a person needs to do. Somehow, I survived!
ReplyDeleteI'm right there with you.
DeleteThe phrase "Coffee, tea, or me?" was also in a movie with Melanie Griffith and Harrison Ford titled Working Girl. I love that movie
ReplyDeleteIt was also a 1984 movie by the same name.
DeleteSorry about the redundant comments on your blog. I'm embarrassed that one of them as spelling errors.
I am known for the shock I feel when I hear the things that come out of my mouth. I mispronounced something at Easter, knew it the moment I said it and my kids were teasing me. An hour later I did it again. . . .
ReplyDeleteDo you find it getting worse as you age? I am and I'm getting to the point that I find myself pulling back in speaking up in large groups.
DeleteThose goofs happen, and I think they are more embarrassing to us than they need to be. I can say to laugh them off and move on, but when they happen that's not how I'd react!
ReplyDeleteLaughing it off and an apology seems to be the best response.
DeleteI have tagged my blog posts of goofs "blunder". I've had quite a few. We all have. They make for great stories.
ReplyDeleteYes, but it takes awhile for the embarrassment to go before I can tell on myself.
DeleteI had a similar goof in front of my Mother and my body still freezes up when I remember it. She didn't say anything but I'm sure she didn't forget.
ReplyDeleteWouldn't you love to go back and ask her what she thought at the time? I know I would.
Delete