The Loser

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Lifestyle

At times I feel like a loser.   But I am getting better.

 

I bought a new pair of reading glasses about six months ago that I carry with me to the office every day and then back home.  I am surprised that I have not lost them yet, though they once fell out of my pocket in Grand Central and someone kindly picked them up and tapped me on the shoulder.  I also once left them at my daughter’s apartment and going home felt my pockets and were certain they were lost.  “I knew I would lose them,” I muttered to myself on the train home, slapping myself on the forehead.  She called later and said they were safely resting in the baby stroller.

 

Since I got my cool Ray Ban sunglasses four years ago I have not yet lost them.  That is a miracle.  I have lost or sat on many sun glasses.  Maybe because these are Ray Bans I am a little more careful with them.   Or maybe because I am a big boy now I am more responsible with my things.

 

A box with my high school and college reports and papers seems to be missing.  That is a mystery.  It is easy to misplace a nice pen or glasses, but how does a box disappear?  The only explanation can be that it was thrown out by mistake.  That makes me sad.   I have had that box for thirty five years.  I try to console myself by saying that it was just a box of stuff.  But I liked that stuff, so I am still sad.

 

I am constantly losing papers.  I implement a system in my office for making sure I save things, and just as important that I know where they are.  The problem with paper is it all looks the same and it is easy to misfile or unwittingly throw it away.  Since most everything is on the computer these days, I can usually reprint it.  But I am pretty much cursing almost daily when something seems to be missing and I could have sworn that I just had it somewhere.

 

The key to finding things is to look first in the place you would look last.  Lost usually means misplaced, or even left somewhere, like umbrellas.  Unless you are talking about the cover to the box of the plastic  Frankenstein model autographed by Boris Karloff (in my presence I might add) that somehow disappeared between my childhood and the time I went to college.  Wonder how much that would have fetched on eBay.  And what ever happened those nice cufflinks with my initials on them?

 

Comments

Mitch Tobol

I've lost so many pairs of sunglasses I can't even remember how many.
Gideon Schein

I've got a good one. About three years ago I could not find my cellphone. We looked everywhere for it. And I mean everywhere. so, sadly after two days I broke down and got a replacement (I always carry insurance, because know myself well. We came home and for some reason had to open the dishwasher, which had been broken for years. And there it was?!!! Moral of the story really look in places you least expect to find things

Submitted by Linda_Newman on Sun, 05/05/2013 - 02:08

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Linda Newman

People in the insurance business can find any piece of paper and most other things. My father could pull a piece of paper he needed out of a large stack and i have inherited that trait.
Rona Gura

I was the same way with my reading glasses and sun glasses. It wasn't until I bought an expensive pair of each that I stopped losing them. Although, my cool sunglasses-which I have proudly now had for 5 years-are Maui Jims.

Submitted by Janet_Adler on Sun, 05/05/2013 - 04:07

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Janet Adler

Don't you find that things you find are always in the last place you look? Btw, my ray bans are from the 70's but I havr lost so many others I don't even want to think about them all. Now that I mention it I will probably lose them....oh well..

Submitted by TheodoreLanzaro on Sun, 05/05/2013 - 10:36

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Theodore Lanzaro

I really dislike losing things and as I get older, I find that I misplace things more often. I have never had a pair of sunglasses for more than one season and most last less than a month. I have long since stopped buying any pair that costs more than $20.

The key to not losing office paperwork is a good scanner and document filing and naming system. Since my office is paperless from a storage standpoint, I can always find my clients documents using the windows search feature if they don't make it to the client's file on my server.
Corey Bearak

I got a great system for glasses since my prescription pretty much remains the same after three years. I keep the paid I take out with me on the main floor; I also use it when I read in the dinning room or on the deck; I keep the 2nd youngest pair in my office. The third youngest in the bedroom - use it rarely -- it is also a bifocal variety that was geared to newspaper reading and large type size on my then primary not virtually ignored Dell desktop. My second ever pair a bit weaker than my current subscription resides in my car as a just in case. Two pair of reading glasses I keep near personal and professional filing cabinets on opposite ends of my office/"mancave" -- how's this for TMI.
As a general rule, my filing system works and has worked real well; my e-files mirror my paper system. I try to keep papers I need out but just as kept as new emails can get "pushed back" so can papers -- but I try.

Submitted by Erik_Scheibe on Tue, 05/07/2013 - 00:01

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Erik Scheibe

I subscribe to the sunglass theory as well and thus do all my sunglass shopping at 7-11. Baseball fields, parties...you name it. This blog will be part of the inspiration for my blog this week.

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