Pearls Before Swine by Stephan Pastis for April 26, 2020

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    BE THIS GUY  about 4 years ago

    You did good, Pig.

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    Notaspy  about 4 years ago

    I don’t get this one

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    DennisinSeattle Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Sweet!

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    Cheapskate0  about 4 years ago

    Painful, bittersweet memories.

    With an added twist of the knife: C19 has been most cruel in places like this.

    May I recommend “Voices of Old People,” Simon and Garfunkel, Bookends album.

    It’ll rip your heart out, too.

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    Sherlock Watson  about 4 years ago

    Wasn’t this an episode of The Twilight Zone?

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    Cheapskate0  about 4 years ago

    May I also suggest “Hello in There” by John Prine.

    John passed away two weeks ago. C19.

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    B UTTONS  about 4 years ago

    Some day (perhaps not for Rat) you’ll grow old and will have a story to tell to the younger generations.

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    Bilan  about 4 years ago

    Hope the baseball player didn’t end up spending his major league sitting on the bench like John Kinsella.

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    Concretionist  about 4 years ago

    … And some of them do still remember the glory days. If there were any. Thanks Pig (and Pastis).

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    boydpercy Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Great strip!

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    TampaFanatic1  about 4 years ago

    Nowadays no one can visit anyone at the assisted living and retirement centers due to this ****ing virus…….. It is sad that we can only talk to our elderly parents and relatives via phone until things get better…..

    Never saw Mantle play for the Yankees but I do remember as a real young kid watching Mays at 42 play his final season with the Mets in ‘73 and I did follow the Braves as a kid growing up in Tampa (ATL baseball used to be on radio and WTOG TV44 in Tampa before the days of cable TV and TBS) so I did see Aaron hit the home run that beat Ruth’s record in ‘74. My sister works as a nurse for the VA here in Tampa (first Bay Pines VA and now James Haley VA) and she works as a geriatric nurse so she tells me that almost of the veteran’s she works with have wonderful stories about their lives, kind of like a living history just like Tom Brokaw covered with his amazing Greatest generation books. They are good reading, especially in these times…..
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    Walrus Gumbo Premium Member about 4 years ago

    I live in a retirement community. I’m one of the younger ones. I can still drive. But what I’m seeing is sad. We are in lockdown. We are told to shelter in place. Activities have been halted. The dining hall is closed, no more socializing. Meals are brought to our rooms. Many of the residents have sold their homes, many have lost their spouses, the majority no longer drive. The thing many looked forward to were visits from their children and grandchildren and because of COVID-19 currently that’s not allowed. There’s a no visitors policy in effect for our protection. We are fortunate that we have not had any sickness or deaths at our facility. The staff has been wonderful and doing everything they can. But I fear this continued isolation will take its toll in depression. Depression in old age is dangerous. The mind and body begins to shut down when it believes there’s no reason to continue.

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    Nachikethass  about 4 years ago

    Thank you Stephan, for the reality check. We will be old too, some of us quicker than the others…

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    hawgowar  about 4 years ago

    Except now all the nursing homes are closed to visitors unless the patient is dying.

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    wolfebruce8  about 4 years ago

    that’s so sad

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    JasonBall  about 4 years ago

    Beautiful. Well done, sir.

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    blunebottle  about 4 years ago

    I really dig this one. Now, if only I could get my grandkids to listen to me…

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    rshive  about 4 years ago

    Wonderful strip. No they weren’t always old.

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    tzid  about 4 years ago

    They’re not old now.

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    Troglodyte  about 4 years ago

    “Free Four” by Pink Floyd captured the sentiment well.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FPSb5QjgjAc

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    Breadboard  about 4 years ago

    You get knowledge when you listen … Croc Power !

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    dlkrueger33  about 4 years ago

    I didn’t guess where this was headed until the last panel. Thank you, Stephan… I love this poignant strip today.

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    VictoryRider  about 4 years ago

    When I was young (mid to late teens), there was an older man that I would go visit. We would just sit on his porch and talk. His wife would bring us out homemade lemonade. This man had an eighth grade education, but was one of the wisest people that I knew. He could also make you laugh until you cried (I still relate some of the stories). He ended up being the man that married my wife and I.

    He was a great person with a great soul. I still miss him, and it’s been many years since he died.

    It also taught me the impact that we can have on our young people… if (hopefully) they are around to listen.

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    SusanSunshine Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Back in the early 1980’s I had an elderly friend…

    I talked with her about the past, but she also had a great appetite for the future, and for learning new things, which I admired “at her age.”

    I guess she was a bit younger than I am in 2020… only it’s strange, cos I’m certainly not “elderly” now.

    Right?

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    wrd2255  about 4 years ago

    Very touching. Sadly, so many are now at risk.

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    Droptma Styx  about 4 years ago

    As you get older, and your parents, and then even siblings, end up in places like this, seeing people for who they were rather than who they’ve become is essential.

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    snacko  about 4 years ago

    Wow – Stephan, this is very powerful. Thank you.

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    Mr. Organization  about 4 years ago

    It took me a few moments to get this, because I was trying to work out the gigantic pun I was sure would appear in the last panel.

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    Bill64STL  about 4 years ago

    Here I was trying to figure out how the names and professions were going to turn into some kind of pun… Then I get to the next to the last slide and it hits me. Beautiful job, Stephan!

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    The Fly Hunter  about 4 years ago

    What a great tribute to the elderly! Many of whom are struggling mightily in many ways to survive right now. Good job, Pastis!

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    awcoffman  about 4 years ago

    I keep growing older, but I refuse to grow up. And I have come to hate the word “elderly”.

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    Zebrastripes  about 4 years ago

    If people would take the time to converse with elderly people they would find they came from the greatest generation…you know! The Generation that built this country up, after WWI and WWII! Have they got stories to tell, living through the worst of times and the best of times! Historical memories Imbedded in their being!

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    The Old Wolf  about 4 years ago

    They don’t like links and such in this forum, but do a search for “Reflections of the Past” by Tom Hussey. It’s a very poignant look at what Pig has discovered.

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    saltylife16  about 4 years ago

    Today, Pig is #1

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    jel354  about 4 years ago

    I like how Pastis does not always use a special occasion or current events to have these heart-tugging installments.

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    ron_lacey Premium Member about 4 years ago

    I was waiting for the bad pun, but this was a nice twist.

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    DCBakerEsq  about 4 years ago

    Dear God, please don’t dump me in a home. Seriously.

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    Ellis97  about 4 years ago

    And that’s gonna be us someday, Pig.

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    bilbrlsn  about 4 years ago

    Stick em in a home with minimum wage caretakers and forget em. Good for the economy.

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    Call me Ishmael  about 4 years ago

    “The older I get, the better I was !” (SO true !)

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    johnmartin1671  about 4 years ago

    I drive seniors around to various places. This is absolutely true. Meet some really interesting folks with remarkable stories. I get it Stephan.

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    MAGA Premium Member about 4 years ago

    You didn’t do a pun??? Actually this hit home after reading it the second time. Good job Steph!

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    Lee26 Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Best Pearls strip I’ve read in years. And that is saying a lot. Thank you Mr Pastis!

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    asmbeers  about 4 years ago

    Nice. A very good way of making the point.

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    rlzack  about 4 years ago

    I always enjoy Stephan’s comics. But this is one of the sweetest strips I have ever read.

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    Rocky Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Outstanding, sir.

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    whjonesiii Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Having just lost my mom, who was 95, this was so poignant. People always look at our older citizens as if they were always old. Most forget that they were young and vibrant at an earlier time in their lives with many great accomplishments. Thank you for today’s strip.

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    Lara Fabans Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Brought a tear to my jaded eye. Well written.

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    BigHornDave Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Beautiful

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    gmu328  about 4 years ago

    A nice touch today, Pastis. Thank you.

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    CalLadyQED  about 4 years ago

    LOL

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    Plods with ...™  about 4 years ago

    No we weren’t.

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    Nobody_Important  about 4 years ago

    Very nice!!

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    tripwire45  about 4 years ago

    My Mom turned 88 last week. The retirement home she lives in won’t let me visit her and her friends because of COVID 19. Bleep you, virus.

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    chris_o42  about 4 years ago

    This is the sweetest thing I’ve seen in a while. Love you little Pig

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    Solaricious Premium Member about 4 years ago

    A very, very sweet Pearls.

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    smorbie the great and beautiful  about 4 years ago

    What a sweet comic. Thank you, Pastis, for the reminder.

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    WCraft Premium Member about 4 years ago

    He was pretty kind on his drawings of them..

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    Eric S   about 4 years ago

    I don’t get it

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    knight1192a  about 4 years ago

    Good for you, Pig!

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    johnschutt  about 4 years ago

    THAT may be the most beautiful comic that I’ve ever read.

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    Treehggr87 Premium Member about 4 years ago

    I <3 seniors xoxo

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    zeexenon  about 4 years ago

    I just admire mixed species relationships.

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    Bookworm  about 4 years ago

    I was raised in the deep South. My grandfather taught me how to bait a hook and fish for bass, bream, and the occasional catfish. A great-uncle took me to my first (semi-) professional baseball game and bought me a hot dog, a pennant, and a Coke (served in a bottle with a paper straw). An aunt always had a new book for me when I was taken to visit her. Everybody I knew had a Granny, or a Mee-Maw, or a Gramps, or a Paw-paw, who Grannied, Mee-Mawed, Gramped, or Paw-pawed all us kids, from fresh hot sugar cookies straight out of the oven to peppermint sticks kept in a mason jar in a work shed. Some were loving and doting, others were gruff and maybe a bit distant. But they had seen and lived through things I could only imagine or read about in the history books.

    I am older now than my great-uncle was when he died. I have outlived parents, grand-parents, uncles, aunts, cousins, other family members, many friends, and my life-partner of over 45 years. So I volunteered in a local senior center and nursing home, since I’m still healthy and can still get around. Of course, I can’t do that now except by phone or video-conferencing. What’s odd is that I’m almost sure I miss them more than they miss me.

    So thanks, Pig, for reminding me.

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    laurasohn11  about 4 years ago

    This is a sweet one

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    Miss Buttinsky Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Hey, you readers out there with someone in a nursing home! Send mail, cartoons, pictures, and call as often as possible. Snail mail is still being delivered. Good luck!

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    PietBess  about 4 years ago

    Thank you.

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    WF11  about 4 years ago

    Wow, I don’t think I’ve ever had a comic bring tears to my eyes before! My grandparents have been gone for 50 years, and my parents for 20+. When I think of all the things they lived through, and what they saw… damn, I wish I could talk to them now (for example, my grandfathers and their brothers and friends were mostly WWI veterans). Heck, I think about and miss my Dad’s father almost every day! I’m in my late 60’s now with my own grandchildren, and I sincerely hope to be as good an influence and memory for my grandchildren as my grandparents were for me.

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    Michael McKown Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Second from the last panel, far left, that’s Grace Slick.

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    enchantedtk  about 4 years ago

    That was sweet.

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    Seed_drill  about 4 years ago

    We haven’t been allowed to visit my 97 year old grandmother since the middle of March.

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    FredWaiss  about 4 years ago

    Three of my four grandparents died before I was born. My maternal grandmother wasn’t a great story teller, but she’d answer questions. Until about five years ago all of our grandchildren (with our kids, of course), lived over 1,000 miles away. Now two grandkids are about a 5-hr. drive away. So I miss out on the GP thing from both directions.

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    clg59  about 4 years ago

    Mr Pastis that strip was one of your best ever.

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    Shades O’Grady  about 4 years ago

    Everyone has a life and a story to go with it. Take some time to find out who your neighbor is, you’ll be amazed

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    brianbattuello Premium Member about 4 years ago

    Wonderful. I was waiting for the pun and got blindsided. Well done!

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    Warhaft  about 4 years ago

    Nicely done.

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    Lupin III  about 4 years ago

    Long after they were gone, my mother made an album of family history. Seeing my grandmother in her 20’s posing as a flapper in front of a Model T blew my mind. My grandfather was both a drummer and a boxer, and there as a letter he had written to someone as he was searching for his father, who had run out on the family when he was a small boy. Their lives were far more interesting than I ever realized, and sort of wish I’d been willing to ask them more while they were still alive.

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    Steve Dutch  about 4 years ago

    Respectful and kind-hearted. Are you feeling all right, Stephan?

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    455634  about 4 years ago

    After purposely catching COVID 19 pig decides to delete some elders

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    Sisyphos  about 4 years ago

    Sadly, I am one of those Old Farts who reminisces about Days Gone By….

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    Swirls Before Pine  about 4 years ago

    For all the awful puns, sometimes Pastis posts a real gem of a strip.

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    ulbrr2002  about 4 years ago

    Some people said they don’t get it…the bitter/sweet thing is…I do.

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    washatkc Premium Member about 4 years ago

    This is why I hate people

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    DorrieKatzBerkowitz  almost 4 years ago

    Stephen Pastis, I love you. Besides making me smile, laugh, and sometimes groan, you touch my heart. Long life to you!

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