Time Marches On
or
It Sure Beats the Alternative
It’s hell, they say, when you get old.
Your toenails all are caked with mold,
Or maybe other kinds of fungus.
It’s hard to breathe with ancient lungus.
All bloodshot are your rheumy eyes,
All weak and stringy are your thighs.
Your pancreas is stiff and sore,
And buttocks droop towards the floor.
With exercise, your muscles ache,
It feels like all your bones will break.
You day by day get soft and flabby,
Your disposition loutish, crabby.
Digestion, once a simple task,
Becomes a chore (and please, don’t ask.)
Shoulder joints all get bursitis.
Your bladder wakes you up at nightis.
Your backbone gives you many pains.
Increasingly sieve-like grow your brains,
Until you cannot keep in mind
that “this is your elbow, that’s your behind”:
Getting old, it is not kind.
I think: “It sure beats being dead.”
5 comments:
Aint' it the truth. Enjoyed the poem.
You got THAT right!
First time reader,, and you got it right!! Any day on THIS side of the grass is a good one!!!
Like this birthday poem .Noticed your comment in Jon's blog about an oil field gate. Found that interesting since we're having an oil boom down here in south Texas.
Thanks. Something this crippled up geek can do on good days. Not so sure SWMBO will be able to do it. We will see.
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