Monthly Archives: November 2012

Thought for the Day 11/30/12

Sometimes when you’re in a restaurant for lunch and it’s crowded and the seating is limited, you might find yourself sharing a table with a stranger.  Assuming that you’re alone and your objective is to eat, you might leave the restaurant never having said a word to the person sitting next to you or directly across from you.  This situation is not unusual or uncommon but in reality, it is odd to think that maybe one day, say in ten years, you might be sitting next to that same person on a bus and never realize that at one time you shared a table at lunch.

(c)2012 Linda Stone Cohen All Rights Reserved

Remember that no amount of money can purchase grace, wisdom and humility.

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Just Don’t Name Your Car Betsy

I listened to a radio commercial that promoted a certain motor oil to keep your car happy.  Wow, a happy car.  Evidently a car runs better when it’s happy.  So what is wrong with the car that is stuck on the side of the road?  It has a bad attitude.  What can you do with a car that has a bad attitude?  Just send it to the garage and forget to pick it up.  There’s no Sunday drive for you, Betsy!

How many of you have named your car?  “Come on Betsy, we can make it to the gas station – don’t give up on me now girl!”  I want to know why cars are synonymous with female names instead of male names.  What’s wrong with, “Come on Phil, we can make it, don’t give up on me now!”  Or how about, “Bob, we’re almost there, don’t stall!”  Have you ever met Jaguar Joe?

Since people spend most of their life inside a car, it seems natural to endow that car with animism.   I swear that my car was filled with soul and had saved my life more than once.  For example, one time I was driving home from Pennsylvania to New Jersey.  I left Pennsylvania at 10:00 at night and while on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, the lights on the dashboard started to dim and the engine started to lose power.  I chastised myself for leaving at 10:00 at night and prayed, “Just get me home.”  Still, I felt that at any moment the car would stall.  Finally, I crossed over into New Jersey and felt a little safer.  Another hour and a half to go.  White knuckles on the steering wheel, I kept praying just to get home.  Approaching the last half hour, I got off the highway and took the back route.  At least it would be safer if I had to pull over.  There were many traffic lights on this road and I feared that if I stopped for a red light, the car would stall and not start again.  Amazingly, the traffic lights stayed green the entire route!  As I rounded the last block to my house, the engine’s power dwindled.  At least breaking down one block from my house would not have been as bad as breaking down on the Pennsylvania or New Jersey Turnpike.  My little car kept chugging along.  Five houses away, three, two and finally, right in front of my house, my car lost all power.  I unglued my hands from the steering wheel and started to cry.  It was too surreal.  The next day I had my car towed to my mechanic, who replaced the alternator.  Considering the situation, my car had a very good attitude.

That incident happened four years ago.  At 247,000 miles and with a cracked manifold, I recently sold my car to a mechanic who will fix it inexpensively and use the car for himself.  Still, it saddened me to part with my loyal car.  It’s just a conglomerate of steel, I kept telling myself.  When I handed the keys to the new owner, I told him the Pennsylvania story and then added the story about the time when oddly, something caused my foot to lift off the accelerator for a few seconds.  That few seconds saved me from being hit broadside from a car running a red light through the intersection I had been approaching.  He seemed to identify and appreciate the stories.  I am pleased with the new owner of my car and believe that my car will be happy – just don’t name it Betsy.

(c) 2012 Linda Stone Cohen All Rights Reserved

Remember that no amount of money can purchase grace, wisdom and humility.

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Thoughts for Today

I was shopping in a well-known department store the other day and noticed that ALL signs were written in English and in Spanish, except for this one:  DANGER HIGH VOLTAGE.

When you stub your toe and shout out in pain, the pain seems to intensify as you realize how many more times in your life you will inevitably stub your toe again!

Which comes first – the sticker that covers the bad spot on the tomato or the bad spot on the tomato?

(c) 2012 Linda Stone Cohen All Rights Reserved

Remember that no amount of money can purchase grace, wisdom and humility.

DAY OF RECKONING, TUESDAY 11/13/12:  HOPE EVERYONE WHO HAS BEEN WITHOUT POWER FROM HURRICANE SANDY HAS HAD IT RESTORED.

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A Natural Disaster Does Not Discriminate

When you’re cold and hungry, your only focus is to get warm and to get food.  Although a distraction would be nice, there is nothing else that will ease the pain of being cold and hungry, including the New York City Marathon that was scheduled for Sunday, November 4, 2012.  The people who are still suffering from Hurricane Sandy need to celebrate their power being restored and not celebrate someone’s athletic success.  This is not to belittle the runners but Sunday was not the time, as Mayor Michael Bloomberg and New York Road Runners officials came to realize. Even when the power is restored and people resume their normal lives, the homeless will continue to suffer from the cold and from hunger.  Shelters are available and there are many resources to aid the homeless.  Nevertheless, being cold and hungry, whether it’s temporary or permanent, hurts the same whoever you are.  A natural disaster does not discriminate. 

The photograph below was taken on 126th Street in Harlem, in 1985.  I don’t know what circumstances created this gentleman’s situation, but he graciously granted me permission to take his photograph.  That was twenty-seven years ago and I’m certain that many have since taken his place.  On Tuesday, voters will have sorted through all the rhetoric before they decide which lever to pull to select the next president of the United States of America.  Although much has been promised by President Obama and by Governor Romney, only time will tell which promises will be kept.  When you place your hand on the lever this Tuesday, will you remember the rhetoric or this image?

(c) 2012 Linda Stone Cohen All Rights Reserved

126th Street, Harlem 1985

 (c) 1985 Linda Stone Cohen/STEPOUTOFTHEBOXDOTCOM (stepoutofthebox.com).  Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited.  Excerpts and links may be used provided that full and clear credit is given to Linda Stone Cohen and STEPOUTOFTHEBOXDOTCOM (stepoutofthebox.com) with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

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