An E-Ticket Ride I have a heart. This may come as a surprise to my ex, the judge, and several other people, but I have seen it, and I have heard it. I went to the cardiologist today. Doc said he wanted to see how my heart performs under stress. I told him that he should have run the test when I was married. The test, he said, normally runs for up to a half hour, long enough to get you under a bit of physical stress. It took seven minutes for me. During the test, I had an opportunity to see my heart in action, and to hear it. It didn't sound very good, but I don't know what a good heart sounds like, so it might have been fine. This is just one more of those things we have to do when we get old. Like the pooper-camera thing (I have that scheduled for a few weeks from now). Things start breaking down, and it happens rapidly, each thing breaking after another, like falling dominoes. But, to be honest, I'm okay with it. In my genetic family (I was adopted, so I have two families), life expectancy is remarkably low. I'll be lucky to make it out of my 50s. Now, some of you may be saying, "Oh hell, he ain't old!" Well, if you measure solely by number of years, then I'm not that old. But if you measure by percentage of life expectancy, then I'm in the geezer territory. It's the hand I was dealt, and I'm okay with that. But I've been asked about my lifestyle, about why I didn't do more to extend my life expectancy, perhaps by a year or two. I had my share of vices and I've lived a very interesting and mostly enjoyable life. But why live the way I did, knowing it wouldn't help extend my life? Here's my answer. It'll take me a bit to get to it, so hang in there. When I was a kid, we lived near Disneyland. We'd go to the park fairly often and buy the standard book of ride tickets. Back then, you see, you got a book of tickets for the rides. Some rides were "A" ticket rides (mostly the ones for small kids), Some were "B" and "C" and "D" rides. The best rides were the "E" ticket rides (for you young ones out there, this is where the colloquial phrase "E-ticket ride" comes from). These ticket books always had more of the A tickets, and just a few of the E tickets. The better the ride, the higher the ticket, the fewer you got. Now, some people would use their tickets as they got them. Most of us would try to trade them off. Maybe your younger sister didn't want to ride the E rides, so you could trade four As for one E. Sweet deal. There was one drawback of riding just the E rides. You got fewer rides. This meant that you spent less time on rides, but you got the better rides. Okay, here's the analogy part. In life, we kinda have the same deal going on. You can choose to live your life on the E ticket rides, but you're probably not gonna be around as long as those who ride the A ticket rides. There are drawbacks and benefits to each one. I've ridden a lot of E ticket rides in life. Some good, some real damn scary. But I had a good run. Would I like to hang around longer? Absolutely. I'm hoping I still have a few more ride tickets, whether they're As or Es or something in between. But, if it comes down to the park closing in ten minutes, please make your way toward the exit, I'm okay with that, too. Now, if I can only remember where I parked...