Skip to main content

Common Sense

You are here: Home » Common Sense



Nico, Daddy and Christopher enjoying a summer/spring day

June 25, 2015

I’m in the prime of my life. I’m supposed to be smarter and wiser and improve with age. What do they say, “aging like fine wine”?

Sure, I’m still stuck in the ways that I have grown accustomed to when I was a child. My parents instilled my values like I would hard wire a stereo system in my car as a child. Those values morphed into my beliefs, which I learned from trial and error and common sense.

Common sense is really all one needs, though, isn’t it? I mean, we don’t rob banks. That’s common sense because we should know that robbing a bank will lead to jail, and jail, from what we see in the movies, is a horrible place.

I should realize eating this donut is terrible for me. For crying out loud, it’s dough made in a bowl of flour, fried in oil, and sprinkled or stuffed with artificial sweets. Common sense tells me to avoid it, but the other common sense tells me not to be an idiot. Of course, eat it. This common sense is so hard to deal with at times.

Common sense tells me not to jump off high places without a parachute. Common sense also tells me that unless the plane crashes, don’t jump out of the perfect airplane. Here, common sense breaks even. Because jumping out of a plane with a parachute is one person’s nightmare and another’s adrenaline rush.

Can common sense be learned? I hope my two sons learn common sense. But I don’t want them to understand common sense that something is hot by touching it. I like that common sense to derive from me telling them if it’s hot or if they feel the heat radiating from fire or heating element.

Sometimes, I think that now, at ages 5 and 7, they haven’t learned common sense. Jumping in a pool with your good clothes on doesn’t make sense. Jumping in a pool on a hot, humid Florida day makes perfect sense. If I was mad and jokingly said to them, “Ah, go jump in a lake,” and they actually did, I should be worried that they lacked common sense.

Using a bike helmet at their age is good common sense and outstanding practice, but as a child, I never wore a helmet, and even though now that wouldn’t make sense, it did at that time. So, the good thing is that we can learn common sense, such as using car seats and seatbelts. They save lives, and although they were not used back in the 60s and 70s, it is common sense to use them now.

It’s good to know now that I’m in the prime of my life and “aging like fine wine” that I have common sense. Common sense should be part of the 5 human senses: sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell. As my kids age, I hope they will have common sense that coincides with their age. And hopefully, they will have the common sense to care for me when I’m old and gray.


513 words



                                                        




© Copyright 2012- 2024 Captain Imperfecto, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be republished, rewritten or redistributed without permission.  Please contact if you would like to re-publish in film, television or print. 






Comments

Popular posts from this blog

"Far Away"

You are here: Home » "Far Away" May 5th, 2012 For mommy in heaven… My kids wouldn't let me sleep last night. I kept them busy all afternoon and evening, yet they were still very hyper. I picked Nico up from school at 2:00 o'clock P.M. and decided to take them for a road trip to Broward County. It's a close drive from where we live. I am just one county over to the north. I didn't feel like going home and falling into the same routine. I wanted to stimulate the boys so that they would sleep later that night. Honestly, maybe we all could get some sleep that night. It's hard to get motivated in life when you are sleep-deprived. Nico leaves class about 10 minutes earlier than the rest of the school. Since he was a premature baby, he has had a learning delay with speech. The State of Florida placed him in a program called Early Steps. It's a great program, and it allows him to catch up to the rest of his peers academically so that by the time h...

Hi Mama. Bye Mama

You are here: Home » Hi Mama. Bye Mama. June 26, 2012 Hi mama. Bye, mama. And so it goes. Up the street, hi, mama, down the street, bye, mama. The boys know where they can find mommy. It's just down the road, a path we take every day. Everywhere we go. We go with the flow. Hi mama. Bye, mama. It always starts the same, the familiar path of the road the boys have become accustomed to. It doesn't matter what we do; we will always pass right on through; regardless of how we travel, mom will always be on their left or their right. She's never too far out of sight. Hi mama. Bye, mama. The boys anticipate the car ride. They look on either side as we drive by, seeking a clear view of their mama to be seen through. They eagerly await with no other thought on their plate. They are just waiting for the moment to see their number one visually. Hi mama. Bye, mama We are getting closer now; they look at Dad, their pal. Their smiles reach from ear to ear, knowing the time is near...

Anatomy of a Loss

You are here: Home » Anatomy of a Loss July 5, 2012 When you lose someone that you love and that you depend on, it feels like everything around you has just crashed and burned. It doesn't matter what is happening in the world because yours just got charred beyond recognition. You are forced to reprogram everything about you. Who you are. What your path in life was. The goals you had planned. Everything before the death of a loved one is scraped.  Your mind wanders about aimlessness, and you just go over your mind time and time again about how you will be able to do it. Where do you go from here? You are afraid and bewildered because you are unsure what to do and who to turn to. You find that you question God and yourself and examine everything about your life.  The doubts set in about yourself, and you want to return to the day before so badly just to reassure yourself that everything ...