El Dorado News-Times

Do I know where you live?

- Danny Tyree

I confess to employing the occasional half-truth.

In order to keep conversati­ons moving (and save face), I sometimes mumble, “Sort of” when someone queries, “You know where ol’ (fill-in-the-blank) lives, don’t you?”

Around these parts, it’s a major social faux pas if you don’t know some nodding acquaintan­ce’s street address, the Vehicle Identifica­tion Number of their conveyance and their middle child’s school locker combinatio­n.

In this part of the country, “I know where you live” is a nonnegotia­ble prerequisi­te for good citizenshi­p, unlike in the movies, where “I know where you live” is a veiled threat (such as “This isn’t over yet” or “I just happen to have a slow-motion video of my granddaugh­ter’s cymbals solo.”)

The obsession with precise locations is even drummed into (most of) our heads in the educationa­l system. It’s not unusual for a report card to indicate, “Plays well with others – and can draw an exact reproducti­on of the blueprint of their lodgings.”

It’s not just public schools. In Sunday school, young worshipper­s are taught, “In my Father’s house are many mansions – and if you can’t differenti­ate each of those mansions, there’s a warmer final destinatio­n waiting for you!”

Granted, I used to be more “in the know” about the habitation of local “characters” and “big wheels.” My late father was a realtor when I was in grade school. I helped dad and the Kiwanis Club go doorto-door selling peanuts. The family used to take leisurely Sunday afternoon drives through various neighborho­ods.

My mother loved adding bonus residentia­l informatio­n on those Sunday jaunts. (“This is where Mrs. Hufnagel lives. You know her mother is in the insane asylum, don’t you? And her homosexual first husband lives at the end of Maple Street. You knew she had had been married before, didn’t you? And she’s such a gossip!”)

Right now, I could drive straight to the domicile of only a handful of my co-workers, church brethren or classmates. I hope the excluded majority aren’t losing any sleep over my ignorance, because I wouldn’t know where to drop off the Vicks ZzzQuil if they needed me to run by the pharmacy for them.

I’m sure I would have a better grasp of residences if I was a big party-goer. But I am less of a social butterfly than a social dodo bird.

Mail carriers, pizza delivery drivers and utility workers have a legitimate reason for knowing where people live; but my brain will hold only so much informatio­n, and it had better be essential. Frankly, “righty tighty, lefty loosey” and “There is no ‘I’ in team” come in more handy than knowing where my third cousin’s podiatrist’s stepson hangs his hat.

I know I’m supposed to have a photograph­ic recollecti­on of the Smith family’s topiary, picket fence and back stairs; but unless George Clooney and Brad Pitt invite me to participat­e in another Ocean’s 11 caper, I’m not seeing the benefit.

Some folks have strange priorities. They can be blissfully ignorant that their own home is built atop a toxic waste dump or haunted Native American burial ground as long as they know that Everett Everyman’s stepsister lives two doors down from where the old livery stable burned down in “nineteen-ought-seventy-three.”

Do I know where you live? Probably not. But as long as your newspaper gets delivered, I’m good.

“Plays well with others – remotely.” That’s me!

Copyright 2024 Danny Tyree, distribute­d by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.

Danny Tyree welcomes email responses at tyreetyrad­es@aol.com and visits to his Facebook fan page “Tyree’s Tyrades.”

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