Canon Shooter
Diamond Member
- Jan 7, 2020
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I wasn't sure where to put this, so I figured this was as good a place as any.
I turn the big 6-0 tomorrow. Apparently, there's going to be a huge party, live band, family and friends from near and far, and I'm really looking forward to it. There's even a rumor going around that I'm going to get up onstage with the band for a few(I've played guitar for 45 years).
But I look back on what life's been like from when I was a kid, and things are astounding.
I was born in Queens, NY in on July 16, 1962. This was a time when we didn't lock either the car or the back door to the house. We had this odd little box with a handset and cord hanging on the wall. We could turn the dial on it seven times and talk to someone who was somewhere else.
Our black and white television got five channels: ABC (channel 7), CBS (channel 2), and NBC (channel 4) as well as local stations WOR (channel 9) and WPIX (channel 11). That was it. When Dad was watching television my brother and I were what amounted to a "remote control". We used to climb the backstop at the middle school baseball field to watch the annual fireworks show every Independence Day after going to a cookout at the neighbor's house. We had parades over in Smithtown, right down on Main Street, and the local volunteer fire department always had an annual fair with games and such behind the main firehouse on Route 111 in Hauppauge.
I was a lackluster student all the way through high school, and I even managed to get a "0" on a math test in Mr. Busiello's class. I really got into the performing arts, though, and made it into the stage band (on baritone sax) and onto the high school theater stage.
Many of the people I was best friends with back then are people I remain best friends with today.
Six months out of high school I was on my way to Orlando, Florida for Navy boot camp. Little did I know then that it would be the beginning of an entirely new life. The Navy took me all over the world; Canada, Kuwait, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Italy, Germany, Bahrain, Qatar, Australia, the Philippines, and Korea. Before I would retire I would be on a boarding team doing drug ops of the coasts of Central and South America.
Somewhere along the way I got married, had a child and then retired in 2001. I've now been retired longer than I was on active duty.
I now own two successful business and, at 60, I'm starting to flirt with the idea of retirement. I'm fortunate that I've been able to build a business around the things I love to do, and I count my blessing every single day that I have the employees I do. They're far more like family. I know that sounds cliche, but it really is how I feel. I'm fortunate that I can walk away from these businesses healthy, happy and secure.
After I lost my wife, it took me a long, long time to be open to another relationship. My wife was the love of my life. Again, though, fortuned smile upon me. I have a woman who loves me unconditionally and, not for nothin', is also smokin' hot. One thing she told me when we first got together was that she never wanted to try to replace my wife. Ruthie is so much different than my wife, but also so much the same.
Life is so much different today, and despite the technology we have intended to make our lives easier, it also seems as though life is far more complicated than in years past. We can't get away from the phone now, and we can even get our mail on our phone. We don't dress up when we fly anymore. I can remember my first airplane flight. It was 1973 and we were going to Disney World in Orlando. Mom made my brother and I wear collared shirts and shoes with heels.
Now people are wearing sweatpants and Crocs.
I'm not sure why I've written all of this, but I suppose everyone has that point in their life when they sit back, look at their life and whether or not they've done more good than bad, and this is the point in my life when I've chosen to do that.
At the end of the day, I truly believe in the good in people. I can have a nasty streak, sure, and I often let that out here on this forum. But this is an internet forum. It's not important. It ain't life.
Life is so much sweeter...
I turn the big 6-0 tomorrow. Apparently, there's going to be a huge party, live band, family and friends from near and far, and I'm really looking forward to it. There's even a rumor going around that I'm going to get up onstage with the band for a few(I've played guitar for 45 years).
But I look back on what life's been like from when I was a kid, and things are astounding.
I was born in Queens, NY in on July 16, 1962. This was a time when we didn't lock either the car or the back door to the house. We had this odd little box with a handset and cord hanging on the wall. We could turn the dial on it seven times and talk to someone who was somewhere else.
Our black and white television got five channels: ABC (channel 7), CBS (channel 2), and NBC (channel 4) as well as local stations WOR (channel 9) and WPIX (channel 11). That was it. When Dad was watching television my brother and I were what amounted to a "remote control". We used to climb the backstop at the middle school baseball field to watch the annual fireworks show every Independence Day after going to a cookout at the neighbor's house. We had parades over in Smithtown, right down on Main Street, and the local volunteer fire department always had an annual fair with games and such behind the main firehouse on Route 111 in Hauppauge.
I was a lackluster student all the way through high school, and I even managed to get a "0" on a math test in Mr. Busiello's class. I really got into the performing arts, though, and made it into the stage band (on baritone sax) and onto the high school theater stage.
Many of the people I was best friends with back then are people I remain best friends with today.
Six months out of high school I was on my way to Orlando, Florida for Navy boot camp. Little did I know then that it would be the beginning of an entirely new life. The Navy took me all over the world; Canada, Kuwait, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Italy, Germany, Bahrain, Qatar, Australia, the Philippines, and Korea. Before I would retire I would be on a boarding team doing drug ops of the coasts of Central and South America.
Somewhere along the way I got married, had a child and then retired in 2001. I've now been retired longer than I was on active duty.
I now own two successful business and, at 60, I'm starting to flirt with the idea of retirement. I'm fortunate that I've been able to build a business around the things I love to do, and I count my blessing every single day that I have the employees I do. They're far more like family. I know that sounds cliche, but it really is how I feel. I'm fortunate that I can walk away from these businesses healthy, happy and secure.
After I lost my wife, it took me a long, long time to be open to another relationship. My wife was the love of my life. Again, though, fortuned smile upon me. I have a woman who loves me unconditionally and, not for nothin', is also smokin' hot. One thing she told me when we first got together was that she never wanted to try to replace my wife. Ruthie is so much different than my wife, but also so much the same.
Life is so much different today, and despite the technology we have intended to make our lives easier, it also seems as though life is far more complicated than in years past. We can't get away from the phone now, and we can even get our mail on our phone. We don't dress up when we fly anymore. I can remember my first airplane flight. It was 1973 and we were going to Disney World in Orlando. Mom made my brother and I wear collared shirts and shoes with heels.
Now people are wearing sweatpants and Crocs.
I'm not sure why I've written all of this, but I suppose everyone has that point in their life when they sit back, look at their life and whether or not they've done more good than bad, and this is the point in my life when I've chosen to do that.
At the end of the day, I truly believe in the good in people. I can have a nasty streak, sure, and I often let that out here on this forum. But this is an internet forum. It's not important. It ain't life.
Life is so much sweeter...