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Middle-aged men playing tag

David Pescovitz at 11:39 am Tue, Jan 29, 2013

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Joe Tombari and eight of his friends have been playing a game of tag that they started in the schoolyard. That was twenty-three years ago. Tombari and his buddies are in their 40s now, and the game continues. From the Wall Street Journal:
One February day in the mid-1990s, Mr. Tombari and his wife, then living in California, got a knock on the door from a friend. "Hey, Joe, you've got to check this out. You wouldn't believe what I just bought," he said, as he led the two out to his car.

What they didn't know was Sean Raftis, who was "It," had flown in from Seattle and was folded in the trunk of the Honda Accord. When the trunk was opened he leapt out and tagged Mr. Tombari, whose wife was so startled she fell backward off the curb and tore a ligament in her knee.

"I still feel bad about it," says Father Raftis, who is now a priest in Montana. "But I got Joe."

"It Takes Planning, Caution to Avoid Being 'It'"

David Pescovitz is Boing Boing's co-editor/managing partner. He's also a research director at Institute for the Future. On Instagram, he's @pesco.

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  • http://www.youtube.com/user/Freethinkersanon Christopher

    “What a choice, to keep an attendant from pawing at my pulse for the next 20 years, I have to sit out on that front porch like a vegetable.”
    -Ernest Truex, “Kick The Can” (episode of The Twilight Zone”)

    Apparently you can go home again, even if only briefly.

    • Preston Sturges

      One summer night we had nothing to do and we were bored with our usual teen hooliganism.  So we set out for a convenience store about a mile away.  Right away we started kicking a can, with the occasional hip check thrown in.  Half way there someone heard us clattering down the dark  street and said “Don’t you have anything better to do?”  and we all said “NO!!!”  So went to the convenience store, got a soda and came back kicking another can.  Someone else yelled “Don’t you have anything better to do?” and we all just laughed.

  • http://twitter.com/devans00 devans00

    Must be nice having such a carefree life.

  • Preston Sturges

    As soon as I saw the headline I said “Oh sure it’s fun until someone tears a knee ligament.”

    • PhosPhorious

       . . . and then it’s HILARIOUS!

  • http://www.facebook.com/postelwait Cameron Postelwait

    so they started playing tag shortly after this family lost contact with the outside world:

    http://boingboing.net/2013/01/29/for-40-years-this-russian-fam.html

    …and shortly before this tortoise got trapped in an attic in Brazil for 30 years:

    http://boingboing.net/2013/01/29/lost-pet-tortoise-found-in-fam.html

    seems like a theme in today’s posts.

  • Jack Daniel

    Fast forward 30 years from now. One of them has nothing but the word “It” on his tombstone. 

    • Donald Petersen

      Annnnd then we have Patient Zero for the zombie apocalypse.

    • howaboutthisdangit

      He took “it” with him.

      • Antinous / Moderator

        All the all the outs are in heaven?

  • rabidpotatochip

    I imagine one of the guys rising from the holy water like some sort of leviathan during the middle of a sermon to tag Father Raftis.  I’d go to church more often if stuff like that happened.

    • Donald Petersen

      Puts me in mind of my favorite Edward Gorey limerick:

      “The babe, with a cry brief and dismal,
      Fell into the water baptismal.
      Ere they’d gathered its plight
      It had sunk out of sight,
      For the depth of the font was abysmal.”

  • slithybrilig

     Not funny.  That is what is on my sister’s son’s tombstone.

    • Donald Petersen

      It’s not there anymore and I have no idea what happened to it, but back in the early 80s while visiting the old El Cajon Cemetery, my sister and brother and I found the oddest tombstone. This was in the section of the cemetery reserved for stillborn infants and small children, behind an oddly tasteful wrought-iron gate that read “Babyland” at the top. The gate was black comedy enough for my siblings and me, but then we happened upon a small headstone that was engraved “To Our Little Pigface.”

      We never laughed so hard in our lives, before or since. Sad as the whole place was, this was the ultimate example of “you had to be there” humor in my personal experience. Last time I went to the cemetery (in the late 90s), the headstone and the gate were nowhere to be found. I began to think I’d imagined it, until I asked my sister. Nope. She remembered it exactly the same as I did. So now I just wonder about what happened to that grave, what memorandum (if any) might have been sent to the grieving parents regarding a change in policy for headstone inscriptions, etc.

      I think about things like that.

  • wrybread

    Ahem! As someone in his 40s, I take offense to the title of this article! “Middle-aged” starts in one’s 50s at least. And when I’m in my 50′s, it will have moved to the 60s.

    • Antinous / Moderator

      Life expectancy for a man in the US is 75 years, so at 55, I left middle age five years ago.

      • Beanolini

        Are you suggesting that ‘middle age’ is the middle third of one’s life (25-50)?

        I don’t think many people would agree that a 25 year old is middle-aged. Wikipedia suggests that it’s closer to the third quarter.

        • Antinous / Moderator

          It seems to me that ‘middle age’ should mean the middle period of your life, not the first half of the last third. Horror of aging and fear of death shouldn’t cause us to lose sight of the fact that ‘middle’ has an actual meaning.

          • Beanolini

            There’s no need for the ‘middle period’ to be the same duration as the ‘old’ and ‘young’ sections, though. 

            I’d argue that it’s the period that includes the midpoint of a lifespan- so if I can expect to die somewhere between 70 and 90, middle age should be 35-45.

          • mappo

            Come back when you’re 46 and tell me that you’re OK with being called “old”.

          • Beanolini

            Come back when you’re 46 and tell me that you’re OK with being called “old”.

            I’m OK with being called “old”.

      • creesto

        with 52 smacking me in the face this summer, your comment makes me hate you.