“Moving forward” and “reaching out”
“I’m sure ***** will ‘reach out’ to tell you their clinic closed.”
(***** is my physical-therapist.)
Jargon alert!
Some time ago I told my lifeguard friend at the Canandaigua YMCA swimming-pool if she wanted me to stop talking to her, all she had to do was dye her hair green.
No tattoos either, nor facial steel.
“How about if we just talk to each other? Tell me everything! That’s more fun!”
A pretty young girl got a nose-ring. Her father surmised her a pig.
I guess I just don’t fit = wrong generation I’m told.
How can I enjoy the company of someone with acres of body-art?
One of the co-owners of my dog-kennel has acres of body-art. She’s such fun to talk to I look past that.
The other co-owner is cute for her age, which is 46 or 47.
There’s one problem: she smokes, but only a little.
“No way could I climb in the sack with someone who smokes!”
“I might hafta quit,” she says.
Some time ago I collared one of their pretty young employees. I told her “pleeze, puh-leeze, don’t start smoking.”
That’s not a moral imperative. “I’m so glad I never started. You start smoking, and you’ll gunk up your lungs, even if you quit later, which isn’t easy.”
After 76 years one reason I’m still here is I never smoked.
My cardiologist asked if I smoked. “I wouldn’t dare!” I shouted.
My brother-and-I were in an Altoona convenience store, and he complained about the price of gas.
“I bet cigarettes in Massachusetts cost a lot too,” the clerk said. (My brother lives near Boston.)
“We don’t have that problem,” my brother said. My brother never smoked either.
A lot of jargon came and went during my time on this planet. I remember video-ads shot with a trembling camera to mimic what home-video might get.
I also remember “touching base” for phonecalls. That’s still pretty current, but no baseball for this kid.
If you don’t get the jargon, you are inferior. Same with abbreviations. Why can’t one say “Internet-Service-Provider” instead of “ISP?”
That’s partly why tech-help is such a time-waster. Abbreviations and jargon need explaining.
Long ago I wrote up a resumé for myself. It was loaded with jargon. It seemed that was what mattered. Not character or attendance, but mastery of jargon. And regrettably jargon perpetuates itself.
I bet jargon helped that Italian girl land that job. Now all she has to do is show up, and display good values. I happen to be acquainted with her bosses, and I think they see past jargon.
But maybe not “moving forward.” (GAAK!)
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