Monthly Archive for May, 2009

Page 5 of 11

Attention Boomers: Don’t Fall Down and Break an Ear


May is Don’t Break a Hip Month.

It’s also “Things Get Eary When You’re a Boomer” Month.

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I use Energizer batteries in my hearing aid (when I wear them.) They sent me some propaganda that came from study they did on how not hearing affects adult kids.

No surprises here, unless you have a hearing loss and won’t admit it.

The survey found that nearly half of adult children surveyed (45 percent) said a parent’s hearing loss has had an effect on the relationship they have with that parent.

Here’s what they found:

  1. Hearing loss hinders relationships. Nearly half of adult children surveyed (45 percent) said a parent’s hearing loss has had an effect on the relationship they have with that parent. One in three (36 percent) said their parent misses important details about their lives; while nearly one in ten (9 percent) said they don’t communicate or share information with their parent as much as they would like to because hearing loss gets in the way.
  2. Putting appearance before family? Although 72 percent of boomers said their hearing loss has affected the relationship they have with their adult children, only 11 percent choose to wear a hearing aid. Reasons for NOT wearing a hearing aid? One in three boomers said they don’t like the way hearing aids look or feel and they believe the device will make them look or feel older than they really are.
  3. Do as I say, not as I do. More than 80 percent of boomers said it was extremely or very important for their adult child to have their hearing checked; however less than half (42 percent) of boomers surveyed had their own hearing screened within the past two years.
  4. Dad, can you hear me now? More than four out of ten adult children (44 percent) said their parent needs a hearing aid.
  5. You’ve got to see it to believe it. When it comes to having a visual impairment, nearly all of the boomers polled (99 percent) said they wear glasses/contacts all the time or for specific tasks; whereas only 11 percent wear a hearing aid to correct their hearing impairment.

Here’s what I’ve found:

#1. True. Except I’m never around them, and when we are, we just tolerate each other’s quirks and health problems until they (or we) go home. And friends never would ever bring up something so personal.

#2. If you can afford the really tiny hearing aids, people really don’t know you are wearing them until they look closely.

#3. Yeah, Boomers are famous for thinking more about others than they do themselves. But younger boomers have been exposed (and are exposed to more dangerous sound levels over a longer period of time — hello iPod!)

#4. In my case, since my hearing lose is from Tinnitus there really isn’t any gain from wearing hearing aids. It was just a shot that by increasing desirable sounds, the undesirable sound may seem less intrusive.

#5. It’s like snoring. Boomers can’t hear themselves snore so they don’t admit it.  AND — this is a biggie, it’s a helluva lot more expensive to wear hearing aids than it is eyeglasses. I can buy a fairly fashionable pair of frames for $150.  The hearing aids I wear set me back six grand. That was a huge waste.  Comparing eyeglasses to hearing aids is like comparing crutches to a Hoveround.

So there it is. Get your hearing checked. You never know what’s being said behind your back.

Review: Star Trek

If you’ve been walking the Earth anytime since 1967, you probably have more than just a passing familiarity with Star Trek, the TeeVee show that spawned an entertainment cosmos, a galaxy of pop-culture icons and a solar system’s worth of spin-off merchandise.

Eleven movies have crashed the big screens. This one is called Star Trek, it about the crew of the starship U.S.S. Enterprise and its mission to “boldly go where no man has gone before.”

We meet the punk versions of commander-to-be James T. Kirk (a risk-taking, smooth-talking ladies’ man), the half-human, half-Vulcan Spock (wrestling with both sides of his conflicted personality), sexy space linguist Uhura, no-nonsense ship doc “Bones” McCoy, engineer “Scotty” Scott, navigator Chekov, helm officer Sulu and the other fresh-faced Star Fleet Academy grads.

The baddie is named Nero

I liked the players, especially Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto (best known as the villain Syler from TV’s “Heroes”) as Kirk and Spock. Both acted like they had never seen a Star Trek which brought new angles and personality traits.

I loved that Leonard Nimoy, the original Spock, is in the movie and has an important role in story continuity of Star Trek past, present and future.

Winona Rider has one line? Fire your agent Winona.

Star Trek” fans will love this flick, which salutes the rich history of the franchise while avoiding any hint of hokey, by-the-book starch. But it non-Trekkies, night like it too because it’s all action, with some humor and irreverence tossed in.

Mary Louise Parker and Her Big Nipples in Bathtub

The wonderful world of wackos is all a buzz with the fact that Boomer Mary Louise Parker said

“I knew it was going to be on the Internet: ‘Mary-Louise shows off her big nipples.‘ I wish I hadn’t done that. I was goaded into it”.

Forty five years old, and Mary Louise Parker is still succumbing to pressure to show off her big nipples. Kinda like seventh grade again.

Of course, Mary Louise Parker and her big nipples are on the internet.

Mary Louise Parker told More magazine that she was requested to give a bath-tub scene and she didn’t want to do show off her big nipples, but agreed to do it anyways and is now upset with whatever happened.

I guess even a big star with lots of film credits, like Mary Louise Parker still has those insecurities… like her big nipples.

Me too. I mean the big nipples part.

Pix here.

All Cars Must get 42 MPG by 2016 *cough*


Bulls**t.

Obama to Issue National Auto Emissions Standard: All Cars Must Get 42 MPG by 2016

The Ripe President (no longer The Fresh President because it’s been more than 100 days) has proclaimed that all cars made in the US must get 42 miles per gallon by 2016. Since the 2010 cars are pretty much toast – already engineered and designed, and probably 2011 are also, this gives bankrupt car makers about three years to design an engine that is 30 percent more efficient than engines in use today.

Obama to Issue National Auto Emissions Standard: All Cars Must Get 42 MPG by 2016

That’s an across the board 42 miles per gallon from every car maker.

Hmmmm, car makers are owned by the gummit. Gummit says “42 mpg by 2016 or we want our money back.”  What are the car makers going to say? No? Of course they agreed.

What’s the penalty if they don’t make the deadline?

Obama to Issue National Auto Emissions Standard: All Cars Must Get 42 MPG by 2016

Get ready for more massive subsidies to make electric cars more attractive. That’s about the only way that car makers can make this deadline. They will have to make more David Letterman endorsed (not) Chevy Volts and add more subsidy to make them even close to being affordable in order to rely less on gas powered cars.

Geeky Animated GIF Monday

I’m a Mac… and I’m a PC you butt hole!

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