Hi All ~  
This is just for giggles ~
Love, Jude
 
  
____________________________________
 From: ly3...@gmail.com
To: alice.laush...@gmail.com
Sent: 9/8/2013  11:03:52 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: Fwd: Fw: Fwd: $5.37 (too  funny)



are you feeling old,, this might cheer you up.



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
$5.37.  That's what the kid behind the counter at Taco  Bell said to  me.  


 
 
 
 





 
 
 
I dug into  my pocket and pulled out some lint and two dimes and something 
that used to  be a Jolly Rancher. Having already handed the kid a  
five-spot, I started to head back out to the truck to grab some change when  
the kid 
with the Emo hairdo said the harshest thing anyone has  ever said to me.



 
 
 
 





 
 
 
He  said, "It's OK. I'll just give you the senior citizen  discount."

I turned to see who he was talking to and then heard the  sound of change 
hitting the counter in front of me. "Only $4.68" he said  cheerfully.



 
 
 
 





 
 
 
I stood  there stupefied. I am 48, not even 50 yet? A mere child!  Senior  
citizen?

I took my burrito and walked out to the truck wondering what  was wrong 
with Emo. Was he blind? As I sat in the truck,  my blood began to boil. Old? Me?

I'll show him, I thought.  I opened the door and headed back inside. I 
strode to the counter, and there  he was waiting with a smile.

Before I could say a word, he held up  something and jingled it in front of 
me, like I could be that easily  distracted!



 
 
 


 
What am  I now? 



 
 
 


 
A toddler?

"Dude!  Can't get too far without your car keys, eh?"



 
 
 
 





 
 
 
I  stared with utter disdain at the keys.



 
 
 


 
I began  to rationalize in my mind.



 
 
 


 
"Leaving keys behind  hardly makes a man elderly!



 
 
 


 
It  could happen to anyone!"

 
I  turned and headed back to the truck.



 
 
 


 
I  slipped the key into the ignition, but it wouldn't turn.



 
 
 


 
What  now?



 
 
 


 
I  checked my keys and tried another. 



 
 
 


 
Still  nothing.



 
 
 


 
That's  when I noticed the purple beads hanging from my rearview  mirror.



 
 
 


 
I had  no purple beads hanging from my rearview mirror.

Then, a few other  objects came into focus. The car seat in the  back seat. 
 Happy Meal toys spread all over the  floorboard. A partially eaten 
doughnut on the dashboard.

Faster  than you can say ginkgo biloba, I flew out of the alien  vehicle.

 
Moments  later I was speeding out of the parking lot, relieved to finally 
be leaving  this nightmarish stop in my life. That is when I felt it, deep in 
the bowels  of my stomach: hunger! My stomach growled and churned, and I 
reached to grab  my burrito, only it was nowhere to be found.

I swung the truck  around, gathered my courage, and strode back into the 
restaurant one final  time. 

 


 
There Emo stood,  draped in youth and black nail polish. All I could think 
was, "What is the  world coming to?" All I could say was, "Did I leave my 
food and drink in  here?" At this point I was ready to ask a Boy Scout to help 
me back to my  vehicle, and then go straight home and apply for Social 
Security  benefits.

Emo had no clue. I walked back out to the truck, and  suddenly a young lad 
came up and tugged on my jeans to get my attention. He  was holding up a 
drink and a bag. His mother explained, "I think you left  this in my truck by 
mistake."



 
 
 
 





I took  the food and drink from the little boy and sheepishly apologized.

She  offered these kind words: "It's OK. My grandfather does stuff like 
this all  the time."

All of this is to explain how I got a ticket doing 85 in a  40. Yes, I was 
racing some punk kid in  a Toyota Prius. And no, I told the officer, I'm not 
 too old to be driving this fast.

As I walked in the front door, my  wife met me halfway down the hall. I 
handed her a bag of cold food and a  $300 speeding ticket. I promptly sat in my 
rocking  chair and covered up my legs with a blanky.

The good news  was I had successfully found my way  home.

-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*- READ BELOW  !

Just in case you weren't feeling too old  today.

The people who are starting college this fall  were born in 1991.

They are too young to remember the space shuttle  blowing up.

Their lifetime has always  included AIDS.

The CD was introduced two years  before they were born.

They have always had an answering  machine.

They have always had cable.

Popcorn has always  been microwaved.

They never took a swim and thought about  Jaws.

They don't know who Mork was or where he was  from.

They never heard: 'Where's the Beef?', 'I'd walk a mile for a  Camel ', or 
'de plane Boss, de  plane'.

McDonald's never came in Styrofoam  containers.

They don't have a clue how to use a  typewriter.

Pass this on to the other old fogies on your  list.

Notice the larger type?

That's for those of us who have  trouble reading.

P.S. Save the earth.. It's the only planet with  chocolate. 
 




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Version: 2013.0.3392 / Virus Database:  3222/6631 - Release Date:  09/02/13






















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