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Trewisms:
Hard-earned observations
reflect life's lessons
by Delbert
Trew |
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I've
always admired and respected the words of wisdom passed down by my
elders. My life has been easier when I adhered to their advice.
Now I want to pass down some of my hard-earned observations of life
accumulated during my years on earth to date. These "Trewisms," as
I call them, will never be chiseled in stone, but I hope you enjoy
their content.
If, upon entering a bathroom, you are disappointed at not finding
a Monkey War Catalog to read while waiting, you might receive a birthday
card from the president soon.
Never take a sleeping pill and a laxative at the same time.
When you are an old man, an old woman doesn't look half bad, and vice
versa.
If you meet and shake hands with a man whose hands smell like bacon
grease, you can bet he is milking a cow with sore teats.
If you still think "Whoa" when stepping on a brake pedal, you probably
know how to grease a wagon wheel and harness a horse.
If you can instantly distinguish "stinging nettle" from other broadleaf
weeds, you know what "squatting in the woods" means.
If you know what cow-kickers, hog ringers, and monkey wrenches are,
you know how to cuss.
If you passionately hate grass burrs, goat heads, and splinters, you
went barefoot until half grown.
If you know about the "spark" on a car, the "impulse" on a magneto,
or have ever owned a mule, your X-rays will show an old break or two.
If orange juice still tastes like Castor Oil, you buy Vicks in the
economy size, and you know how to make a mustard plaster or mix a
"hot toddy," you probably don't see a doctor often.
If you have ever slept in a featherbed, under five home-made quilts
with a hot brick at your feet, you don't complain much about cold
weather.
If you ran a trap line on the way to school and brought in the milk
cows on the way home from school, you never had any problem holding
down a job in later years.
If you think all men are created equal, you've never been afoot when
a man on a good horse came riding by.
If you judge horseflesh by "one white foot - eye him, two white feet
- try him, three white feet - buy him, four white feet and a white
nose - feed him to the crows," you've owned some good horses.
If you have ever placed carrots or mineral oil in pinto beans, or
rubbed two ends of a cucumber together to prevent gas, you don't buy
many anti-acid pills.
You may be a little slow if you have ever forgotten to curry your
horse's back, been snipe hunting twice, or ate yellow snow.
© Delbert Trew
"It's All Trew"
- December 12, 2005
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