Things we're too old to say, avoiding slang, jacquelyn mitchard - aarp bulletin

Things we're too old to say, avoiding slang, jacquelyn mitchard - aarp bulletin


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I'll never be too old to say I love you. I'll never be too old to say I'm sorry. I'll never be too old to ask an obnoxious jerk if he's this rude to everybody or if


he's running a special just for me. Still, I am too old to keep on saying certain things. Being part of the generation that won't grow up means that I still have many friends


(female) who announce that they're going "to the little girls' room" to "tinkle," and many friends (male) who clap their pals on the back and cry


"dude!" We may be young at heart. We may even fit into our wrestling singlet or cheerleader uniform. (No, you don't have to prove it … I believe you!) All that said, we could


at least talk the talk of gracefully grown people. What follows here is a smattering of silly syntax — slang that people of my generation should never utter. Ever. Again. _PANTIES_. Did I


ever actually say "panties"? Nobody should say panties, even toddlers. Did this infantile, diminishing, eroto-weird noun come out of my mouth? Why is it still used in catalogs ...


or outside brothels? Or inside brothels? Let's say underwear, smalls or simply point. _COOL._ I was young when I first became a parent, and when my first child was a high school senior,


I had license to use this word. It was, however, a probationary license. Now, the silence that falls on the room when I say "cool" means that it's not. _SMASHED, OVER-SERVED,


HAMMERED_. If you're embarrassed that you did it, you should be doubly embarrassed to confess it. The boasts of youth are the secrets of age. Or should be. _FREAKIN'_. When little


kids say it, their mouths cry out for soap. When we do, it cries out for restraint. Or restraints. _LOL. _It makes me want to ROFB (see key). Panties." A word 50 plus should avoid


using. Nini/Istock _I'M LIKE_ … It's not our fault that we use this all-purpose way to explain any reaction. Our kids have defenestrated our brains and replaced real language with


this easy-to-install catchphrase. Of course, we mean, "I said" or "I say" or "I looked this way." So that vulgar but somehow cute Top 40 tune should actually


go, "I see you driving round town with the girl I love, and I say, 'Forget you.' " Don't say that, either.  _CHILL OUT._ If you are forced at knife point to use this


phrase for relaxing, at least don't say that you are "chilling." Or worse, chillin', or anything with a dropped "g." If you get all worked up and have to start


chillin', please, just don't ever, ever chill-lax. _KICK IT_. If you're in your 50s or 60s, in a rock band and still being paid — even at state fairs — this is OK. Only if.


_AS IF._ Along with "Dream on" and "I'm so sure," this is another bit of bytes-generation banter, shorthand for a dismissal in the most certain terms. When we say


it, we sound as if we believe we are 20. _WHATEVER_. If, when you hear it, this single word makes you want to hurt yourself and the speaker, how do you think people feel when you say it?


_HOT_ or any derivation thereof — unless it refers to the air temperature on the 10th tee or the tingle of the habaneros.