5.1.2kXII
I’ve
regressed in a fairly important skill. I don’t remember the regression’s
catalyst, or its duration to now, but I know now that it’s real: I got
me a real problem with shoelaces.
It must have been
kindergarten, or maybe even earlier, that my peers and I were forced,
cajoled and ridiculed into learning how to tie shoelaces. I remember
there was a little song or poem or rhyme about a rabbit running around a
doghouse and ducking into a sewerpipe: Symbolic of the loops and knots
and such. I remember there were two twin girls that could tie each
other’s shoes but not their own. I didn’t have any trouble tying shoes.
Didn’t need a corny rhyme or anything. It was a simple, repeatable
process and it was within my young person’s capacity. That don’t explain
why I’ve developed such a problem lately.
My problem lies in the
untying part of the process. Tying is fine and has been but I make a
mess out of untying. I end up tying the laces into little itty-bitty
knots. Tight knots. Often, I’m balancing on one leg while trying to
untie. I might get one shoe off clean, but the other I grab the wrong
end that’s found its way through a loop, pull and render a knot. Then I
lose balance and fall on head.
It doesn’t help that I routinely
change my shoes at least three times a day: On with the bike shoes, off
with the bike shoes. On with the regular shoes, off. On with the bike
shoes again, off. Regular, off. I will turf one of the untyings fairly
bad, but I will royally screw another one and end up falling over.
Two
things going for me: The geeks at University of Bisbee just published
Shoe Lace Untying Made Easy. Talk about timing! The other thing: My
slippers are slip on!
Tonight - Iron & Gold. (short walk from 24th Street BART)
bye-ee!
whrr ... clik!
Thursday, May 03, 2012
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