A few weeks ago, after a long drive home from visiting my 31-year-old daughter up in Boston, I opened the door to my apartment and heard the land-line ringing insistently.
The Harass-for-Profit
telemarketing industry with the support of our so-called public-servants,
places an estimated 2.5 billion robocalls a month—that’s almost 1,000 a second,
if you do the math, which you probably shouldn’t.
I suppose like those ad
people who retarget us and cookie us and track our every movement, if you asked
the various politicians and other flim-flam artists behind these calls they’d
tell you they’re providing a public service because people want to hear about
their electoral options and time-shares situated alongside a mosquito-infested toxic swamp.
Nevertheless, unusually,
it wasn’t a robocall, it was Uncle Slappy. The only person besides robos to
actually call my house phone.
“Boychick,” he began. Uncle
Slappy needs no introduction and seldom makes one. “Boychick, she’s trying to
kill me. She’s trying to send me to an early grave.”
“It would hardly be
early,” I reminded the old man, “you’re 91 now.”
Uncle Slappy retorted
with the classic Yiddish rejoinder. It worked when Shecky Greene used it. It still works today.
“Ninety-one, schminety-one, Mr. Wisenheimer. She’s trying to kill me.”
“Ninety-one, schminety-one, Mr. Wisenheimer. She’s trying to kill me.”
“Who is, Uncle Slappy?”
I assumed the cleaning woman had upset his universe again by not ironing his
handkerchiefs.
“Your sainted Aunt
Sylvie. The one everyone assumes has put up with me all these years. They don’t
know what she’s doing to me.”
“I can’t imagine…”
“Then you have no imagination,
Mr. Smartypants.”
I was chastened by that
but said nothing. Fortunately, Uncle Slappy continued.
“Remember last November
around my birthday Aunt Sylvie bought me an Apple Watch.”
“Well, Dr. Cohen said
you should walk more.”
“Dr. Richard P. Cohen,
the cardiologist,” Uncle Slappy clarified. “Not Dr. Richard T. Cohen, the
podiatrist.”
“He’s a good man, Dr.
Cohen.” I’ve been seeing Cohen, the cardiologist, myself and for nearly 40
years. Like every other one of Dr. Cohen's thousands of patients, I could lose a little weight.
“So, every morning, come fahtutz or come schmutz, out for a walk I go. Usually to the shuffleboard courts
and back two times. That’s a mile.”
“That’s good, Uncle
Slappy. You feel better?”
“Like a spring chicken I
feel. Unfortunately, an already-cooked spring chicken, served with a side of creamed spinach. Rotisserie, maybe”
He paused for his laugh like
an old vaudevillian then continued.
“So, I shouldn’t get
woozy, Aunt Sylvie packs for me in a little Ziploc baggie a handful of walnuts
she gets down at the Costco.”
“You can save a lot of
money at Costco,” I lied. “The other day my wife bought me a package of 3,000
razor blades and must have saved 17-cents.”
“I understand. Back when
I was in my 70s, Sylvie bought a canister of walnuts about the size of a World War II depth-charge. There must have been 1006-pounds of walnuts inside. I’ve been eating these
walnuts since Spiro Agnew resigned.”
“But think of the
savings,” I said.
Uncle Slappy ignored my stab at commentary.
“I’m out for my walk,
and in the heat with the global warming, a little dizzy I feel. So into the Ziploc
baggie I take out a few walnuts.”
“They helped, I hope.”
“No,” Uncle Slappy said, “they hurt. They were rancid like Socrates drinking hemlock. Still in my mouth
a bad taste I have. Two hours later.”
“So you made it home and
threw them out?”
“Ach, and waste food? I suppose you waste food. But you're Mr Big Shot advertising moneybags. And I'm just a retired Rabbi living on my 401(K). That's K as in kvetch."
And with that the old
man hung up the blower.
I looked at our land-line. I brought the receiver up to my eyes and thought hard about ripping it from the wall.
I looked at our land-line. I brought the receiver up to my eyes and thought hard about ripping it from the wall.
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