Home Lots More Columns Get Column E-mailed 222 Best Senior Links Week's Best Jokes Pans and Praise
Today's Column Senior Travel Other Good Stuff Epic Senior Trivia Bee's Knees Nostalgia Make A Donation

THOUGHTS WHILE RECOVERING FROM SURGERY
By Frank Kaiser
A week ago, I underwent a procedure my doctor calls "prostate laser ablation." The writer in me embellishes: The Roto-Rooting of Dickie and the Twins. It reduces an enlarged prostate, something urologychannel.com claims affects more than 50 percent of men over age 60 and as many as 90 percent of men over the age of 70.

It's when you can't pee, always feel like peeing, get up a dozen times a night to pee — it's all about peeing. The operation, I'm told, will make my penis 20 again. At least that part of it.

Yes, I can pee again. I've progressed from peeing razor blades to a more soothing localized electroshock. Today? It only hurts when I laugh.

Kidding! I'll tell you guys all about it as soon as I'm up to it, so to speak. In the meantime, you can regale yourself in the details of my cataract surgery and my colonoscopy/endoscopy, complete with never-before-published insider photos.

Ain't getting' old wonderful?


My first thought while recovering: Why do we show a belligerent face to the world?

We're not belligerent people. In spite of traffic jams, gas-price manipulations, evil computers, and an economy that's dead-ended for most of us, we're nice folks. We like to do nice things for others.

So tell me, why instead of always thinking of bombing countries, don't we first consider kindness?

Hold on! Before you go pinning "Unpatriotic" on my Noam Chomsky T-shirt, consider: During the final couple days of the recent Israel-Lebanon conflict, Israel lobbed over a million cluster bombs into its northern neighbor's yards, fields and farms — small unexploded land mines that now make life dangerously difficult for Lebanese farmers and their families, killing an average of 2 – 3 daily.

A few fearless and enterprising Lebanese now charge a buck each to find and disarm these wicked killers. But as you can imagine, it's hit and miss.

What if we were to send in a few soldiers from our elite bomb squads, teach folks how to safely find and disarm these mines, then pay the price? They are our cluster bombs, after all; you and I paid for them.

What would it cost us? A few million bucks would save lives and create more good will throughout the world than all the billions we now spend on BS propaganda.

There are so many opportunities like this. When we go against our better nature, we ignore it at our peril.


I lost a dear friend this week. Buddies since mid-high school, Larry Stoddard and I shared DePauw University together, the University of Edinburgh, and even when miles apart, we shared the joys and sucker-punches of life, getting together every now and then for a fresh breath of love and brotherhood.

Just before his massive heart attack, I called Larry, telling him about a mutual friend's death. That's the news life hands us at our age.

Friends are precious. Old friends, even more so — something too deep for the heart to ponder. I've now lost seven of these treasures in these last few years. Each gave me life and refreshed my soul. (We resort to such nonsense when we can't smoke out words that reflect our true feelings.) I miss them so.


Back to my Noam Chomsky T-shirt.

A year ago, when I wrote a Suddenly Senior column headlined How Many More Must Die?, almost 2,000 American kids had been killed in the war. Today it's going on 3,000. And although polls now show most of us against the war, President Bush uses these deaths to justify continuing.

"I'm not going to allow the sacrifice of 2,527 troops who have died in Iraq to be in vain by pulling out before the job is done." Bush's words sadly echo those of Johnson and Nixon on Vietnam. According to psychologist Barry Schwartz, our president supports what social scientists call a "sunk-costs" fallacy.

You do too, he says, if you suffer all the way through an abysmal movie only because you paid 10 bucks to see it. Or if you've spent two grand on repairs to keep your old jalopy running, only to have it break down again, and you continue to throw good money after bad.

It's "persisting in an unrewarding activity." In AA, we call it "insanity."

This "sunk-costs" fallacy, this insanity is exactly what our leaders use now as justification for continuing this slaughter in our name.

Copyright © 2006 — Frank Kaiser


GET SUDDENLY SENIOR EVERY FRIDAY. SIMPLY SEND A BLANK E-MAIL TO GET-SS@SUDDENLYSENIOR.COM


COLUMNS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED

Two, no three actions you can take to help your pocketbook. While Congress has you between a rock and a sick place, this could save you both money and health.

Here's "How to Start Something - 101" against the drug manufacturers and all the other big money that pay for your representatives to vote against your vital interests in Congress. It's easy. It's fun. It's courageous.

The best plan yet to give the 10 million seniors who now must choose between food and medicine the Medicare plan they need to avoid sickness and early death. Come join us for a spirited march on Washington!

With 37 million members and a budget of $750 million, you'd think AARP would have the clout to get us an essential Medicare drug benefit. Trouble is, it never asks. Read why.





LATEST

VICTIM

OF THE

ECOLI

SPINACH

OUTBREAK






THIS WEEK'S BEST 222 SENIOR SITES

http://www.suddenlysenior.com/links.shtml
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
THE BEST OF SENIOR SEX
http://www.suddenlysenior.com/sexpage.html
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
SEE THE BEST SENIOR NOSTALGIA ANYWHERE, http://www.suddenlysenior.com/nostalgiapage.html
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
SEE THE BEST SENIOR TRIVIA ANYWHERE, http://www.suddenlysenior.com/triviapage.html


HAVE A GREAT WEEKEND, EVERYONE!

Frank Kaiser frank@suddenlysenior.com

http://www.suddenlysenior.com/

Suddenly Senior — the internationally syndicated column read by 2.3 million bright folks over 50 in 131 countries all of whom have become senior way before their time.

TOP OF PAGE



SINCE 1999, AMERICA'S MOST TRUSTED SENIOR CITIZEN WEBSITE


Seniors Having Fun
• To be a Kid Today in Florida

How Suddenly Senior began
• E-MAIL FRANK


Now read by 3.1 million in 83 newspapers from Florida’s St. Petersburg Times to the Mumbai, India News. CLICK FOR MORE INFO


ADVERTISE WITH
SUDDENLY SENIOR