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From YouTube: San Bruno Cable's Senior Moments "Work After Retirement"
Description
San Bruno Cable's Senior Moments "Work After Retirement"
A
A
B
Sally
novel
I
am
92
years
old
and
I
am
a
practicing.
Pharmacists
I
have
been
a
pharmacist
since
nineteen
thirty
three
I
got
into
pharmacy
through
my
cousin,
who
was
a
pharmacist
and
at
that
time
I
wasn't
sure
what
I
wanted
to
do
and
my
dad
insisted
I
go
ahead
and
and
have
some
kind
of
profession
well.
Actually,
I,
I,
love,
sports
and
I
wanted
to
be
a
professional
baseball
player
and.
B
There
was
somewhat
of
an
opportunity
of
trying
to
be
physician,
because
at
that
time
you
could
have
gone
to
school
and
college
and
and
spent
maybe
about
five
years
and
to
become
a
physician.
Well,
I
was
too
young
to
to
full
of
life,
want
to
have
fun
with
myself
and
buddies
of
mine,
so
I
thought
I'd
I'll,
take
the
short
road
and
become
a
pharmacist,
because
that
was
only
three
years
so
and
I
certainly
don't
regret.
It.
B
What
I
do
is
the
farmers
is
like
anybody
else's
you're
on
the
computer
you're,
your
doctor
may
called
in
a
prescription
for
patient
and
you
can
actually
jot
it
down,
and
then
you
get
to
computer
write
it
up
and,
and
you
hand
it
off
to
your
pharmacy
technician.
The
technician
then
fills
the
prescription
and
we
in
turn
double
check
to
be
sure
that
the
medication
is
proper,
going
to
the
right
patient
and
then
it's
either
delivered.
C
B
Call
for
every
week
that
seems
to
be
a
new
drug
and,
and
we
have
to
be
on
top
of
it
and
as
a
pharmacist,
all
pharmacists
have
to
take
two
years
of
continuing
education
to
keep
up
with
all
the
new
drugs
that
are
on
the
market
on
Thursday
and
Friday
when
I
go
to
the
pharmacy
I'm
time
I'm
through
I,
1030,
11
o'clock
and
I
come
home
spend
a
little
time
with
my
wife.
She
knows.
B
I,
love,
play
bridge
and,
and
the
game
starts
at
twelve
o'clock
at
the
at
the
busier
bridge
club,
with
some
we're
about
ten
minutes
away
from
here
and
so
I
go
there
and
we,
the
game,
starts
at
twelve
thirty
1250.
Now
and
and
if
anybody
knows
duplicitous
you,
if
you
you
play,
you
have
your,
you,
have
a
partner
and
you're
playing
against
if
you're
playing
against
the
fields
which
are
actually
doing
and
I.
D
B
Want
have
to
go
into
the
whole
thing
by
hits
me,
but
it's
an
ego
trip
and
it's
fun,
it's
a
Spartan,
and
this
is
score
at
the
end.
There's
the
winner
there's
a
second
place,
it's
placed
on
the
board
and
you
love
to
see
your
name
on
the
board.
If
you
want
to
come
in
second
and
it's
not
for
money,
it
costs
you
money,
each
game,
Russia,
nine
dollars
or
those
that
so
so
that's
about
it,
but
but
it's
so
much
fun.
B
B
It
was
my
pharmacy
at
one
time
and
I
owned
the
pharmacy
until
nineteen
eighty-two
the
person.
That's
that
I
stole
the
two
worked
with
me
for
many
years
in
1982.
Thought
was
time
for
me
to
get
out
of
being
an
owner
sort
of
happy
tire
and
thinking
I
was
going
to
retire,
but
I'm
still
with
him
and
been
ever
since
I,
like
my
job
I,
like
the
people
around
me,
they're,
very
fun,
we'll
just
like
one
big
family
and
how
the
greatest
boss,
one
could
ever
have
I,
can't
think
of
myself.
B
Unruhe,
tiring,
you
know,
I,
don't
know
why.
But
they'll
have
I've.
You
know
if,
if
I'm
still
capable
I'll
probably
spend
a
few
hours
there
at
the
pharmacy
I
mean
because
I
love
the
work.
I
do
you
know
and
it
eddication
busy
I
can't
be
playing
bridge
all
day
long
and
we
can't
be
traveling
all
the
time
so
and
I
don't
I.
Just
don't
want
to
be
sitting
around
the
house
being
bored
to
tears,
and
so
so
I
still
see
myself
still
working
to
some
degree.
A
C
D
E
My
patty
did
you
find
all
your
files.
Finally,
who
knew
be
this
much
work
or
Richard
and
I
decided
to
retire?
Well,
what
are
you
gonna
do
first
or
heading
down
to
brooklyn
heights
and
starting
on
that
social
security
paperwork?
Why
would
you
do
that?
What
do
you
mean?
Well,
it's
so
much
easier
just
to
log
on
to
socialsecurity.gov
and
file
online.
Well,
what?
If
I
I
need?
You
know
how
much
money
I'll
be
getting
online
all
right?
What
if
our
address
changes
online?
F
There
is
no
time
like
the
present
to
make
a
personal
life
saving
contribution
to
your
community.
The
American
Red
Cross
is
in
dire
need
of
blood
donors.
You,
your
family,
coworkers,
our
neighbors,
to
respond
to
major
calamity
and
the
deeply
personal
and
quiet
disasters
requiring
the
gift
of
blood
for
more
information
and
to
schedule
your
donation
appointment.
Call
the
American,
Red,
Cross
blood
services
or
visit
their
website,
be
a
local
hero,
be
a
blood
donor.
A
G
I'm
Phil
sunshine
I'm,
a
emeritus
professor
of
pediatrics,
at
Stanford,
University
School
of
Medicine
I,
consider
myself
emeritus
and
that
has
certain
advantages.
I
get
a
free
parking
sticker
and
I
have
access
to
a
lot
of
the
University
benefits
that
are
much
less
expensive
for
of
Merit
I
than
they
are
for
full-time
faculty.
I,
don't
consider
myself
retired.
I
consider
myself
is
working
three-quarter
time,
I
actually
work
about
90%
time,
but
I
get
paid
for
three
quarters.
Well,
I
really
enjoy
the
work
I
enjoy
the
people.
G
G
My
job
is
very
different
now
than
when
I
was
working
in
the
nursery
intensive
care
nursery
full
time.
When
I
was
in
intensive
care
nursery,
we
would
have
up
to
40
patients
at
any
one
time.
There
will
be
two
teams
and
we'd
be
taking
care
of
critically
ill
inputs
either
they
were
born
too
early
or
they
had
various
types
of
critical
illness
that
required
intensive
care.
There
was
a
lot
of
teaching
at
that
time
because
there
were
medical
students,
interns
and
residents
and
postdoctoral
fellows.
G
So
while
we
were
taking
care
of
the
patients,
we
were
also
educating
these
young
doctors
in
the
area
of
intensive
care
for
infants
and
now
in
the
intermediate
intensive
care
nursery
where
I
work.
There
are
no
medical
students,
no
residents,
no
fellows.
So
it's
all
educating
the
parents
and
the
nursing
staff
with
whom
we
work.
G
G
In
this
practice
we
would
there
were
two
of
us
and
we
would
be
on
service
each
26
weeks
a
year
now,
where
I
work,
it's
called
the
intermediate
intensive
care
nursery
and
there
is
no
night
call
there
and
the
day
is
much
shorter,
with
usually
about
eight
to
four,
sometimes
eight
to
five
and
we
work
about
ten
weekends
a
year.
So
it's
much
different
than
much
easier
than
when
I
first
started.
When
I
first
started
taking
care
of
patients,
the
intensive
care
nursery
mortality
rate
was
over
fifty
percent.
G
G
Not
only
are
the
babies
surviving
but
they're
surviving
relatively
intact,
we're
not
doing
so
well
with
babies
who
were
born
24
weeks
or
below,
but
if
they're
born
25
weeks
and
greater
the
survival
rate
goes
up.
The
babies
who
survive
without
difficulties
goes
up
and
its
really
made
a
significant
change
in
an
outcome.
G
Also
when
I
first
started,
our
interaction
with
parents
was
such
that
the
parents
were
not
allowed
to
come
into
the
nursery
because
of
regulations
at
that
time,
keeping
people
out
of
the
intensive
care
environment
and
it
wasn't
until
approximately
19,
I
would
say,
65
or
66
when
we
start
allowing
parents
to
come
in
and
become
caretakers
for
their
baby,
that
our
whole
nursery
change
from
being
sort
of
a
sterile
environment.
The
one
where
it's
now
family,
oriented
I,
think
the
baby's
well-being
has
improved
significantly.
G
First
of
all,
from
the
Paris
point
of
view,
they
get
through
take
care
of
their
babies,
a
lot
of
ways
while
they're
still
very,
very
young,
and
they
realize,
as
time
goes
on
when
they're
the
nursery.
They
often
can
provide
much
better
care
than
the
nursing
staff
can
or
the
physicians
can
and
they
get
to
know
their
babies
and,
of
course,
the
babies
relate
very
well
to
them.
I
can
tell
you
that
I've
been
very
fortunate,
because
the
field
of
neonatal
medicine
has
just
exploded
during
my
lifetime.
G
G
Treatment
of
a
major
disease
called
hyaline
membrane
disease
that
was
responsible
for
the
death
of
President
Kennedy's
child
in
1963,
and
since
that
time
very
few
babies
actually
died
a
pile
of
membrane
disease
and
have
been
so
many
other
things
that
have
come
in
be
able
to
provide
adequate
nutrition
for
these
babies
being
able
to
take
care
of
babies
who
have
had
central
nervous
system
damage.
There
have
been
an
explosion
in
imaging
techniques
that
had
never
been
considered
before
this
time.
G
Well,
I
have
hobbies
I
like
to
ride
my
bike,
I
like
to
play
tennis
I
like
to
do
crossword
puzzles
and
now
I've
gotten
addicted
to
Sudoku
and
I
do
spend
time
with
my
grandchildren
I'm,
not
sure
if
I
retire,
I'd
spend
more
time
with
them.
We're
fortunate
in
that
all
six
of
our
grandchildren
live
very
close
to
us.
Two
of
them
live
right
across
the
street
to
live
down
about
three
quarters
of
a
mile
and
to
live
in
San
Jose.
So
if
I
retired
I'm
not
sure
I
would
spend
any
more
time
with
them.
G
When
I
was
working
full
time,
we
were
doing
some
very
interesting
research
and
I
would
be
invited
all
over
the
world
to
give
talks
about
the
type
of
work
I
was
doing
so
my
wife
and
I
would
travel.
We
traveled
to
Israel,
we
traveled
to
the
to
Australia
New
Zealand
South
Africa,
Europe
Canada,
so
we
least
would
have
one
or
two
wonderful
trips
a
year.
My
wife
feels
that
she's
traveled
enough
now
she
doesn't
have
to
see
anything
else
and
she's
very
happy
just
to
stay
home.
G
G
We've
been
so
lucky,
I
mean
I
grew
up
in
an
exploding.
New
sub
specialty
in
pediatrics
I
would
and
have
continued
to
work
with.
Unbelievably
gifted
people,
I've
been
lucky
to
have
five
healthy
children
and
six
healthy
grandchildren
and
except
for
a
few
problems
here
and
there
I've
had
a
very
successful
marriage
and
my
wife
still
puts
up
with
me.
G
My
intentions
for
the
future
would
be
to
continue
to
work
as
I
am
working
now.
As
long
as
my
health
is
ok
and
I.
Think
that's
going
to
be
the
determining
factor.
How
healthy
I
am
like
a
no
longer
do
the
things
that
I
want
to
do
or
can
do
and
I
think
I
would
stop
so
my
agreement
with
the
person
who's,
my
immediate
superior,
the
division
chief
that
as
long
as
I
continue
to
do
an
excellent
job.
He'll.
Keep
me
on
good
is
not
good
enough.
A
H
The
job
was
exciting
because
it
we
had
new
technology
and
what
they
called
stack.
Cars
they'd
never
been
used
in
transportation
before
a
lot
of
research
went
into
their
ability
to
handle
cargo
without
breaking
damaging
cargo
negotiating
contracts
with
Steamship
Lines
took
me
to
Tokyo
to
Seoul
to
New
York
Taiwan,
and
it
was
exciting
meeting
different
people
also.
It
was
challenging
because
we
were
in
competition
with
other
Steamship
Lines
I
retired,
when
I
was
laid
off.
The
railroad
business
went
through
massive
mergers
buyouts
downsizing.
H
Several
years
before,
I
retired
from
the
railroad
industry,
I
decided
I
wanted
to
go
back
and
obtain
a
second
masters.
This
time
in
history,
the
first
Masters
was
in
transportation.
I
took
one
class
a
semester
at
San,
Francisco
State
in
history
and
I
just
took
the
classes
because
I
like
history,
there
was
no
motive.
There
was
no
goal
other
than
getting
a
degree.
What
impresses
me
is
I,
go
back
and
look
at
history
is
how,
on
occasion,
people
rise
above
themselves
to
do
things.
H
Don't
know
entity
carved
on
Mount
Rushmore,
and
we
forget
that
they're
real
live
people,
they
had
their
faults
and
when
you
closely
examine
what
they
did
they're
more
than
what
we
commonly
think
of
them,
they're
less
because
they're
human,
but
they're
more
because
they
rose
above
what
they
very
easily
could
have
accomplished.
In
times
of
great
stress,
I
retired
in
2003
and
afterward
began
to
increase
the
number
of
units
taken
at
San
Francisco
State
I
did
some
volunteer
work
at
our
church.
Keeping
the
books
and
I
began
to
research.
H
Doing
some
articles
on
baseball
players
interested
in
baseball
I
like
to
write,
so
all
three
of
those
things
kept
me
busy
and
each
one
is
very
enjoyable
in
their
own
unique
way.
Currently,
I
am
teaching
part-time
at
Skyline
junior
college
I
teach
history,
I
teach
classes
where
there
are
shortages
of
professors
for
one
reason
or
other
illness
schedule
conflicts,
and
such
I
am
the
utility
player
who
comes
off
the
bench
when
I
enjoy
teaching
for
a
number
of
reasons.
It
keeps
my
mind.
H
Fresh
I
also
come
in
contact
with
students
who
I
normally
wouldn't
come
in
contact
with
that
keeps
me
fresh.
They
challenge
me
with
all
sorts
of
questions
and,
at
the
same
time,
in
preparing
for
the
class
I
am
constantly
finding
out
new
things
about
history.
That
I
wasn't
aware
of
it.
One
of
the
things
I
found
that
when
I
started
to
teach
it
was
a
whole
different
set
of
challenges.
H
As
a
teacher,
I
I
never
took
any
classes
in
teaching,
all
I
done
was
take
history
classes.
How
do
you
grade
papers?
How
about
classroom
decorum
discipline
and
all
these
things
that
you
don't
think
about,
and
it
it
keeps
you
on
your
toes,
you
keeps
you
on
edge
and
I.
Think
I
think
we
all
need
to
be
kept
on
edge
to
some
degree,
not
grinding
into
the
ground
pressure
and
now,
after
three
or
four
years,
if
I
don't
know
how
that
DVD
works,
I
just
say:
hey.
H
A
Greg
confessed
that
his
only
regret
is
that
he
didn't
pursue
a
career
in
history.
Earlier
people
dream
about
what
they
will
do
one
day,
and
yet
statistics
show
that
many
people
died
within
six
months
of
retirement.
Well,
did
they
die
of
boredom
or
maybe
they
feel
they
are
no
longer
contributing
to
society
or
to
the
welfare
of
their
family?