The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Graduation 2025
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide
The Newsleaders
No Result
View All Result

July 4 TriCap Kennedy Community School Mechanical Energy Systems Woodcrest of Country Manor
Home Opinion Column

Passwords, passwords, down with passwords!

Dennis Dalman by Dennis Dalman
May 17, 2024
in Column, Opinion, Print Editions, Print Sartell - St. Stephen, Print St. Joseph
0
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Many years ago, I happened to watch part of an episode of the “Beavis and Butthead” cartoon series.

“Numbers suck!” said Butthead. “I’m, like, angry at numbers.”

Beavis shot back with this: “Yeah, there’s like too many of ‘em ‘n’ stuff!”

I burst out laughing because I could identify with their numbers frustration. I’m lousy at math. In grade school, I’d grit my teeth and sweat as I clutched my pencil trying to figure out workbook math problems. There would be little piles of eraser crumbs on my desk top and on the floor. I have math dyslexia, technically termed “discalculus,” as my banker informed me a few years ago.

I wish Beavis and Butthead would do an update – not on numbers but on PASSWORDS.

“Passwords suck!” Butthead would say. “I’m, like, angry at passwords.”

Beavis would shoot back with this: “Yeah, there’s like too many of ‘em ‘n’ stuff.”

I couldn’t remember a password if my life depended on it. Well, I do remember a few of them – the ones I have to use every day. But the rest? The other hundreds of them? Just one big migraine blur.

My office desktop is a virtual blizzard of passwords, the ones I use most often. Little slips of paper are taped here, there, everywhere. Honky3Tonky, 27Grumpy$, 45Cooper&*^ and on and on as they multiply like rabbits.

When I’m asked to think up a new password, my mind goes blank as I get a mini panic attack. In frantic desperation, I glance over at my bookshelves seeking an author’s name: Dickens, Stendhal, Joyce, Orwell, Hemingway, Faulkner, Nabokov . . . I choose an author’s name, then gussy it up with numbers and a constellation of symbols: 78Nabokov%&#.

Then I scribble down each new password and TRY to remember to put it on my passwords list – page after page of typed and hand-scrawled passwords, passwords, passwords. Aargh!

When I go online to order something (recently Sam’s Club, for instance), I couldn’t find my password among the roiling sea of passwords on my long lists or taped all over my computer desk. The Sam’s Club site said, “Forgot your password?” Well, duh. What a dumb question. Why doesn’t every website have an option that states, “Forgot your password AGAIN?”

My bank makes me think up a new password every few months. OK, for security. I understand. But still, what a pain in the neck.

One of my nieces, a financial director in a Twin Cities hospital, told me she uses ONE password for everything. She admits that might be risky, but like me she is sick and tired of thinking up new ones. I just might follow her lead, risky or not, because I’ve had it up to here with pesky passwords.

So many times I vowed I would start having all my passwords tattooed all over my body so I wouldn’t lose or forget them. But every time I vowed that, my thoughts came to a screeching halt: Nope, not enough skin on my body. I could get fat – I mean even fatter – and there still wouldn’t be enough skin.

Just the other night I had a nightmare. I was surrounded and then attacked by swarms of passwords, like nasty stinging wasps. I woke up in a sweat.

Years ago, I interviewed the novelist LaVyrle Spencer for a news-feature story. She was so intelligent. I told her she must have been a top student in school.

“Well, I was good at all the subjects,” she said, pausing. “All except math.”

“You too?!” I practically shouted.

“Dennis, I could be perfectly happy living in a world without numbers.”

“You and me both!” I assured her.

I wish I could interview LaVyrle Spencer again. I’d be sure to ask her about passwords, and I’d bet a dime to a doughnut, she’d say this: “Dennis, I could be perfectly happy living in a world without passwords.”

Previous Post

Sartell schools are not ‘grooming’ students

Next Post

Student protesters must re-evaluate opinions, actions

Dennis Dalman

Dennis Dalman

Dalman was born and raised in South St. Cloud, graduated from St. Cloud Tech High School, then graduated from St. Cloud State University with a degree in English (emphasis on American and British literature) and mass communications (emphasis on print journalism). He studied in London, England for a year (1980-81) where he concentrated on British literature, political science, the history of Great Britain and wrote a book-length study of the British writer V.S. Naipaul. Dalman has been a reporter and weekly columnist for more than 30 years and worked for 16 of those years for the Alexandria Echo Press.

Next Post

Student protesters must re-evaluate opinions, actions

Please login to join discussion

Murphy Granite St. Joseph Catholic School Sal's Bar Scherer Trucking Sentry Bank Serenity Place on 7th

Century Link WACOSA (2) NIB (Tania & Chris) St. Cloud Ortho

Search

No Result
View All Result

Categories

Recent Posts

  • SummerFest floats range from royalty to karate
  • Candy crush companions
  • Memorial dedication set for Jacob Wetterling
  • Concert, parade, fireworks set for July 3-4
  • Revitalized tourist group to be formed

City Links

Sartell
St. Joseph
St. Stephen

School District Links

Sartell-St. Stephen school district
St. Cloud school district

Chamber Links

Sartell Chamber
St. Joseph Chamber

Community

Calendar

Citizen Spotlight

Criers

People

Notices

Funerals/Visitions

Obituary

Police Blotter

Public Notices

Support Groups

About Us

Contact Us

News Tips

Submissions

Advertise With Us

Print Advertising

Digital Advertising

2024 Promotions

Local Advertising Rates

National Advertising Rates

© 2025 Newleaders

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sartell – St. Stephen
    • St. Joseph
    • 2024 Elections
    • Police Blotter
    • Most Wanted
  • Opinion
    • Column
    • Editorial
    • Letter to the Editor
  • Community
    • Graduation 2025
    • Calendar
    • Criers
    • People
    • Public Notices
    • Sports & Activities Schedules
  • Obituaries
    • Obituary
    • Funerals/Visitations
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Submissions
  • Archives
    • Sartell-St. Stephen Archive
    • St. Joseph Archive
  • Advertise With Us
    • Print Advertising
    • Digital Advertising
    • Promotions
    • Pay My Invoice
  • Resource Guides
    • 2024 St. Joseph Annual Resource Guide
    • 2025 Sartell Spring Resource Guide
    • 2024 Sartell Fall Resource Guide

© 2025 Newleaders