Quote:
Originally Posted by barryem
First, I don't have lazy days, per se. I'm as lazy as I can find ways to be. Lazy is my goal and has been for some time. I worked hard (harder than most) for decades so I earned the right to be lazy.
Now, if listening to a book is lazy the same thing applies. The person who is being lazy did learn to read, no small task. They've also earned the right to be lazy.
Judging someone for being lazy is also fine. I get teased about it a lot. The fact is that when someone in my retirement home needs help carrying out the garbage or carrying in their groceries, I'm the one they call. My guess is that if they needed someone to listen to their audiobook they'd also call me.
As for being a dirty old man, nope. I'm 77. Any dirty old man attributes I have now are only in my mind. And what a mind I have!
Of course in the past I was the world's greatest lover.
Barry
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The lazy people are essential to the progress of the human race. It was a lazy person that invented the bucket because they were tired of going to the river every time they wanted a drink. The person that learned to ride a horse because he did not want to walk every where was lazy. Henry Ford was probably the laziest person in history.
Apache