It appears we’ve all been misquoting the old saying ‘manners maketh man’. Among folk of a certain age it is clear the rule only applies to ‘young’ man.
I often hear people ranting about how rude youngsters are these days, but by far the rudest people I come across have long since been eligible for their bus pass. I reckon they have reached an agreement that once you’ve completed your hard life of work and politeness and retired, you can do whatever you like.
I’ve just come back from a bustling village where everyone was nipping in to grab something before dashing off to do whatever else it is that keeps us all so busy in the run up to Christmas.
I was standing a respectful distance back from the till, behind an old gent paying for his ball of fat for the bird table, when an equally elderly lady walked around me and put her goods down on the counter.
I assumed they were together. But cash handed over, change issued, he doffed his cap to the 12-year-old on the till and left.
Without old-batting an eyelid, the woman (notice, I’ve stopped calling her a lady) fiddled around in her purse, pulled 47 carrier bags out of her wheelalong trolley, spread them out on the counter before finding the one that was the right size for these particular purchases and spent the next twenty minutes organising them all in the correct fashion within the trolley.
‘I wonder, should I wear my invisibility cloak to fight crime or for more evil purpose?’ I asked the checkout girl, as I grew old waiting my turn.
She shrugged apologetically. The old shopper didn’t flinch.
It’s not the first time by a long chalk.
Last Christmas I was taking a week’s worth of empties to the bottle bank like a good eco-minded citizen when I was attacked by a little old fella in an anorak and a trilby.
It was party season and the ‘green bottle’ holes were stuffed full. I was trying in vain to squeeze mine in, when he waltzed up and proceeded to put all of his glass – brown, green, Horlicks and blue Curacao - in the same hole.
‘Er, excuse me,’ I said politely, ‘I think you’re supposed to separate them. That’s why the holes are colour coded.’
‘All ends up in the same place,’ he said, carrying on chucking them all down the ‘clear’ chute.
‘I don’t think they do,’ I tried again. ‘Otherwise why would they make us split them this way?’ (Actually, I think he was right as we have just been told we’re now allowed to toss all our glass in the recycling bin at home along with the pizza boxes, beer cans and milk cartons, but that’s a puzzle for a different day).
‘It’s people like you,’ he said, ‘who clog up all these bottle banks anyway. They are here for domestic use only.’
When I pointed out that mine was just as domestic as his, he retorted, ‘Well then you drink too much,’ and stormed off leaving his empty boxes on the floor with my jaw.
I first met an elderly neighbour of mine, (who I hope will forgive me for this as we’re now firm friends) when she walked her dog around the back of my house on a private pathway. My children and some of their friends were there with our dog, who barked his head off at the intruders. The first I knew of it was when the five-year-old girls ran into the kitchen, wide-eyed, to report, ‘There’s an old lady in the field who’s just told us to control our bloody dog or bugger off.’ I marched out guns blazing and told her that she was in the wrong and should mind her language around my small children. ‘I’m 83 years old,’ she replied, as though that made it ok.
Recently I was sat in my parked car waiting for a friend when a sturdy old chap strode up to his car, put the key in smartly without any fumbling, jumped in and turned on the ignition. This was no frail-boned, last-legs kind of a chap. He then reversed into my car.
I wound the window down and waited a moment, planning to be charming about the whole thing and say it wasn’t a problem. (I drive an old banger and to be fair I can never tell if anyone has hit me or not). But he simply kept going forwards and backwards trying to budge his way out of his space. I’m certain he hadn’t the faintest idea I was even there.
The third time he bashed into me I got out and went and tapped on his window. He wound it down crossly and said, ‘What?'
I told him I had been in the car behind and that so far he’d hit me three times. ‘Then you are parked too close,’ he declared, before nosing his way out and driving away before I could point out that I'd arrived before him.
In a way I find all this comforting. I am nice and kind to people at all times. I would have let the old lady go in front of me in the queue if she’d asked. I walk my elderly neighbour’s dog for her when the weather is bad so she won’t slip.
But it’s nice to know that in about twenty odd years I will be able, as the poem says, to wear purple and fart in public. I’ll never have to wait in a queue again and if people irritate me I’ll swear at them.
It’s something to look forward to.


