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rsser
20th August 2013, 09:38 PM
It wasn't that long ago that I was wondering why garments for men in size Med. came with all that extra material on the front.

Have now discovered why :rolleyes:

Am filling them out despite being pretty active all year round and watching the diet.

My weight hasn't changed. I figure it's an evolutionary thing. Extra fat is probably meant to get me through the lean years that an old phart could expect in earlier eras.

Anyway, that's my story and I'm sticking to it :D

chambezio
20th August 2013, 10:57 PM
Went for the yearly diabetes check-up today with the nurse practitioner at the doctors surgery. Same old ...stand on the scales.....same old (from me) "the scales are wrong".....she said "take off your boots"....oh you are 5kg lighter than last time:q.....whats your height......oh that makes your BMI 35. Is that good? No she said it should be about 25. Same old....do you do regular exercise.....must remedy that......

It sure is a boring check up when you know just what all the answers are.

powderpost
20th August 2013, 11:00 PM
I am finding that as I get older I am getting taller, either that or the ground seems further away.
Jim

rsser
20th August 2013, 11:22 PM
Loved Ronnie Corbett's comment about getting old: when he got down to tie his shoelaces he asked himself what else he could do while he was down there.

chambezio: read up on BMI. It's an indicator dreamt up by actuaries. Not to say it's not relevant but it needs interpreting.

A Duke
20th August 2013, 11:43 PM
I am finding that as I get older I am getting taller, either that or the ground seems further away.
Jim
It depends on whether I am trying to reach some thing or pick it up off the floor.
:wink:
Regards

fineboxes
21st August 2013, 08:20 AM
Iv'e notices that my legs grow longer during the period of sleep and retract as the day goes on.

This theory has been proved day after day with the same technical and scientific testing applied.

Testing pattern; Putting Socks on in the morning taking them off at night.

Results: Morning, difficultly putting socks on due to distance between out stretched hand and foot.
Evening, sock easily removed with no noticeable impending muscle strain or cramping.

This leads me to one of 2 conclusions: Legs shrink during sunlit hours or forces of gravity act aggressively on arms making them appear longer by evening.

My preference is for the former hypothesis, as the ritual of removing circular steel rim for head of brown bottle seems to be unaffected no matter what time of day or amount of sunlight available.


Cheers

Steve

AlexS
21st August 2013, 09:37 AM
I am finding that as I get older I am getting taller, either that or the ground seems further away.
JimJust make sure you keep it that way!
Yesterday, on my regular walk, going down a steep hill, I somehow tripped and did a perfect face-plant on the road. I now have a left thumb I can't use, a right wrist in similar condition, ribs that hurt when I breath, gravel rash on my hip, left hand and forehead and a time critical job in the workshop.

Stay upright!

Chesand
21st August 2013, 10:09 AM
I am finding that as I get older I am getting taller, either that or the ground seems further away.
Jim

I blame my multi-focal glasses for that. :D

I figure that if my name is not in that list of adverts in the morning paper, I must be OK and the day will be good.

whitey56
21st August 2013, 10:12 AM
I am nearly 62 and the heaviest I have ever been, so this is my new favourite tool.

rsser
21st August 2013, 11:51 AM
Bad luck Alex.

This won't of course do much for your confidence during the next walk.

rsser
21st August 2013, 11:55 AM
I figure that if my name is not in that list of adverts in the morning paper, I must be OK and the day will be good.

The Fairfax press allows you to enter names in a watch list and get a notification when one pops up. Direct it to your phone so you'll know you should be lying down :wink:

(BTW a few column inches for my Mum cost $570. It's too expensive to shuffle off this mortal coil.)

Mulgabill
21st August 2013, 12:53 PM
Just make sure you keep it that way!
Yesterday, on my regular walk, going down a steep hill, I somehow tripped and did a perfect face-plant on the road. I now have a left thumb I can't use, a right wrist in similar condition, ribs that hurt when I breath, gravel rash on my hip, left hand and forehead and a time critical job in the workshop.

Stay upright!

Bad luck Alex, as they say "Shed happens" :roll: I have found that I certainly do not bounce like I used too, or the ground is getting harder.

Ern! I hear you! I hear you!:no:

jimbur
21st August 2013, 12:58 PM
Remember how long it used to take for tomorrow to come? We now have the benefit of much shorter days.(and weeks and years):D

A Duke
21st August 2013, 01:52 PM
Remember how long it used to take for tomorrow to come? We now have the benefit of much shorter days.(and weeks and years):D
I saw that explained once that made some sense, if you are a year old, a year is a life time but if you are 70 years old a year is only 1/70th of a life time.
Regards

Skew ChiDAMN!!
21st August 2013, 02:03 PM
As a relatively recent entrant to the Hemicentennial Club I was mortified when I was unexpectedly asked to read an eye-chart in the RTA during recent paperwork re my Driver's License.

The clerk, a nice, patient woman about my own age, asked me to stand on a white line about 3 or 4m from the counter and read the chart which was on the wall behind the counter.

This was followed by a couple of minutes of umming and erring... before she invited me to "come up to the counter and try again."

A few squints later and she conspiratorially leaned over the counter towards me, then subtly turned her head and looked away.

I got that hint... I also leaned forward over the counter and - fortunately - rattled it off before she looked back.

Making conversation as she filled out the paper work, I commented "I may not be good with small shapes, but at least I can see the mosquito on the wall next to the chart."

She took a quick look, smiled and handed me the paper work, wishing me a good day.

As I left, the mosquito took off and flew past me down the corridor. It was the hugest horse fly I've seen in quite some time! :doh:

I think it's fair to say that I'm not looking forward to when I'm eligible for membership to the Hexadecennial Club... :rolleyes:

Timless Timber
21st August 2013, 04:12 PM
Don't get me started on the whole drivers license eyesight renewal thingy.

So I have been blind since about age 21 - when I discovered I was myopic (short sighted). Always worn glasses ever since.

One day at a test for skippers quals - the lady eyesight tested me with and without glasses and said - you will have to wear your specs when driving the boat with paying passengers etc, coz my unaided vision was crap.

No worries I think....I can do that - my glasses tint to dark so I always wear them anyway to handle the glare out on the water.

Next time my car drivers license comes back, it has "must wear suitable visual aids when driving" endorsed on the back!.

No biggee I guess, the dept marine safety is part of the same depot transport who do drivers licenses etc - so the info must have got across on the computer records somehow...

So for 20 or more years, that's how it goes..."must wear suitable visual aids" endorsed on the license (and skippers ticket) so that's what I do.

Then I upgraded my skippers from near shore (15 miles) or "coxswains" - to full blown offshore Master 5, and then comes the whole glasses thing. :rolleyes:

You must have 20/20 unaided vision for Master 5... and I am myopic / short sighted - despite passing everything else (exams and commercial sea time requirements), I don't qualify! :doh:

So screw that, off i go to the ophthalmic surgeon, and get laser eye surgery... over $6K worth - and BINGO BANGO BONGO, I can fricken see again!

So I get the Ophthalmic guy to send the eye chart thingy off to marine safety section of Dept Transport, and I am good to go with Master 5 now, as I have 20/20 unaided vision! :2tsup:

Then my drivers license renewal shows up - still endorsed "must wear suitable visual aids". :rolleyes:

So back to the quack & do another eye test - and send the medical form with 20/20 vision - signed by the doc...

Next years renewal? "must wear suitable visual aids". :~

Try one more time - this time my quack says - oops - your type 2 diabetic - and your 3 month Blood sugar levels are 0.1 outside the new national standards.... so you can't get your commercial drivers licenses (truck bus etc) renewed...AND it's LAW that doc patient privielege no longer applies - the Doc MUST send the form to transport saying - your blood sugar levels are not under "adequate" control! :no:

So then he sends me off to see a endocrinologist specialist, who says -'what a load of bullshenyser' or words to that effect.... :wink: and signs a form saying I am perfectly fine to drive commercial vehicles... and prescribed yet another handful of pills to take very night.

Onb the form he sends back to dept Transport - he also fills in now for the 3rd time that IO have 20/20 unaided vision after laster eye surgery and please remove the "must wear suitable visual aids" endorsement from my drivers license!.

So my new drivers license comes back - endorsed to still drive commercial trucks and busses etc as long as I keep taking diabetes meds...

BUT - whats on the back? "Must wear suitable visual aids!".:~

For frick's sake how many times do you have to tell these doults! :(( I have 20 / 20 unaided vision now! :rolleyes:

So what happens the other night.... bout midnight - is wet dark late and raining so I come down the highway at less than the posted 100kph - because I am being cautious... and i went on a section I don't normally travel, and unbeknown to me - they have marked it down to 80kph and I missed it in the dark, so I get a bright orange multinova flash for being 5-10km over! :doh:

Then to top it off...the fine arrives... with the photo of me driving - not wearing glasses (coz I don't need them any more...which I have now told them 3 times on the official medical form), and there's a fine for "not wearing suitable visual aids" on top of the speeding fine! :~

I either hav to go to battlenow with the peopns in transport about why they screwed up my renewals 3 times now, but that's won't fly with Police who are a separate department - coz they want their fine dollars = so the only way OUT of it is to lie and tell them I was wearing contact lenses at the time & was thus "wearing suitable visual aids".

Our whole system is screwed, it's at the point of collapse! The peons running it are inept fools.

So - who pushed my buttons today about getting old and the Dept Transport?

The endocrinologists recommendation to me? "Lie thru your back teeth and tel the batsurds nothing about your health - answer no to all questions about your health coz once they have you in their computer data base there's no getting off of it - ever, so better not to ever allow yourself onto it in the first place, by volunteering any health info willingly.

Bloody good advice, now that I think about it in retrospect!

Cheers.

Bushmiller
22nd August 2013, 02:04 PM
Good post Timless, but clearly awfully, bloody, f*****g frustrating for you too.

I suppose none of ever imagine we will actually become old, even if our age does increase. Myself, I'm in denial and try to avoid probing questions about my age. I have taken to sheepishly informing curious people that I am close to sixty, but I don't know how long I can do that without the inevitable looks that say "Poor bas*ard; Must have had a hard life."

I do know that as you age the invulnerability of youth diminishes at an exponential rate. Apparently until about age twenty five the male thinks he is bullet proof, which probably goes a long way to explaining all those young men who signed up voluntarily for the two world wars.

As we age we really have to take more care as we just do not repair and heal as well as we once did. For example I built a house as I was approaching early middle age and during the course of it's construction I slipped off the roof twice. I was fairly agile at that time and there was no more damage done than a little bark removed from my arms (from the heads of the roofing screws) and a severely damaged pride. In fact I had some mates present on one of those occasions and they pointed out that if I didn't get back on the roof right sharpish and pull my weight they were going home :D .

Just recently I had to get up on the same roof again to help the electrician with relocation of the power supply. I became acutely aware of how I might not survive another slide off the roof and built a timber "hook" to keep me up on the roof. Despite being bionic, I'm not confident the titanium and ceramics would hold together the way the OE did.

Just returning to Ern's original post and the weight issue it is normal to, how shall I put this, "thicken" as we get older. One cause of this is that as we slow down we should eat less, but we don't. Poor diet and other factors compound this problem. People who know me probably think of me as slim, but I look at myself and think "holy ####" I have to do something about this.

SWMBO seems to think I'm better to cuddle nowadays. I guess it's all relative :wink: .

Regards
Paul

rsser
22nd August 2013, 03:16 PM
TT, thanks for the post. I wept and laughed at the same time.

Bleeding idiots.

FWIW I went grey early, and got offended at chemists and other shops when asked 'Senior's Card'?

Bushmiller, my roof is waiting for some work and I've never been bitten by your kind of fall but know that my reaction times and 'bounce back' aren't really good enough any more. At the same time I'll hate having to pay someone to do it when I would've if I could've :rolleyes:

jimbur
22nd August 2013, 05:56 PM
We have an electrician shaped dent in our veranda roof. We were the last job he'd did before he called it a day. No damage to him but I think he was relieved when the job was over.

Bushmiller
22nd August 2013, 07:15 PM
We have an electrician shaped dent in our veranda roof. We were the last job he'd did before he called it a day. No damage to him but I think he was relieved when the job was over.

Jim

Sounds like he went out with a bang :rolleyes:.

Regards
Paul

artme
22nd August 2013, 08:11 PM
With age comes wisdom. I wish!!!!

I fell off a roof when a little younger. I no longer attend to roof problems. Wisdom.

I ran my right hand through the table saw late last year. Lack of wisdom.

I was bitten by an angry carpet snake last year. Lack of wisdom.

I (we ) lent a trusted friend 9g 5 years ago. Now In court. Getting wiser financially.:B

I could go on but I think you get the point!

Chris Parks
22nd August 2013, 10:00 PM
Loved Ronnie Corbett's comment about getting old: when he got down to tie his shoelaces he asked himself what else he could do while he was down there.

chambezio: read up on BMI. It's an indicator dreamt up by actuaries. Not to say it's not relevant but it needs interpreting.

And the index magically changes the day you turn 65!!

AlexS
23rd August 2013, 05:23 PM
I was bitten by an angry carpet last year.Well, I've heard of carpet burns, but never carpet bites.:rolleyes:

artme
23rd August 2013, 10:20 PM
Well, I've heard of carpet burns, but never carpet bites.:rolleyes:


:B Fixt!!!!

Bushmiller
24th August 2013, 10:40 AM
I received an email this morning on Bob Hope. I thought some of his quotes might be appropriate to Ern's OP.

ON TURNING 70
'I still chase women, but only
Downhill.

ON TURNING 80
'That's the time of your life when even your birthday suit needs pressing.'

ON TURNING 90
'You know you're getting old when the candles cost more than the cake.'

ON TURNING 100
'I don't feel old. In fact, I don't feel
Anything until noon. Then it's time for my nap.'


Something to look forward to :(:).

Regards
Paul

hughie
31st August 2013, 09:36 PM
I am finding that as I get older I am getting taller, either that or the ground seems further away.
Jim

I have also noticed that there's more gravity around than when I was younger. :no: just don't understand it

Also there's some sort of conspiracy going, everybody around me is talking in whispers

jimbur
31st August 2013, 10:02 PM
I have also noticed that there's more gravity around than when I was younger. :no: just don't understand it Also there's some sort of conspiracy going, everybody around me is talking in whispers
Not only is there more gravity but it keeps moving from side to side.:C

rsser
31st August 2013, 11:38 PM
Thanks guys. Some good belly laughs here; I feel better now to quote a phrase.

hughie I'd send you up my hearing aids for a try out, if I could remember where I put them.

On the other hand selective hearing can be an advantage but to manage it convincingly you have to be on the ball.

artme
1st September 2013, 08:03 AM
Ern, that reminds of one of the "Ned and his Neddy" cartoons from the sixties.

Two blokes standing in the bar with one obviously rabitting on, the other with
a bored look on his face.

Two others a bit further along, one saying to the other"By cripes Bert's a rude old
bugger. He's been standing there listening to that bloke for hours - with his hearing aids turned off".

557
1st September 2013, 11:15 AM
Now that myself and most of my friends are in our mid 50s,I have started to notice that none of us seem to be able to get up out of a chair without going oooh eeeeh aaah.
The old bones aint what they used to be.

Bushmiller
1st September 2013, 12:48 PM
Well, I've heard of carpet burns, but never carpet bites.:rolleyes:

Just as an aside, a few years back, SWMBO and I called in at a cafe and by chance we met up with a lady friend and her mother. Subject matter got around to our carpet. SWMBO commented that the carpet was not to her liking at all. I impressed on her that it wasn't going to be changed until it was worn out.

The lady friend with a straight face, but a distinct twinkle in the eyes said, "Ooh, won't that make your knees rather sore?"

I did my impression of a beetroot as I nearly fell off the chair laughing. As I was saying it I realised the opening I had given her :- .

Regards
Paul