My name isn't "dear", "dearie" or "hon"

My name isn't "dear", "dearie" or "hon"​

Young people feel good about themselves when they show respect for the elderly. As an elderly person myself I feel it is my duty to allow them that pleasure and to award them with a “Thank you” and a smile. It is we, the elderly, who will help to create a better future world by sublimely encouraging the younger generations to respect one another. As we near the end of our lives this is the most important deed we will leave behind. ⬅️
 

If a breathtakingly beautiful young woman would call me, an old white man, 'honey' I would be pleased, smile and answer with "thank you".

Two decades ago my wife and I visited a lecture. The young woman who did it, was very beautiful and had a doctorate in comparative religious studies. I was standing beside her and my wife commented "men always stand in the way" but she answered "men don't stand in the way, they are the way". How nice! I could have hugged and kissed her. If my wife had been bolder she could have answered "you're not married yet, that's for sure" :ROFLMAO:
 
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I got called "pops" the other day. I'm 78. And I'm not that "78 years young" crap, I'm 78 years old. But I was annoyed about the "pops" thing. I don't think the guy, who called me that had any intention of insulting me. It was more of an affectionate term. Still, POPS!!!!
Maybe, I might have over reacted. Just a smidge.
Didn't Eddie Haskell, Ricky Nelson and Babs Riley call their fathers "pop"? It's nothing to get upset about.
 

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