‘Lived experience’: Is it right for you?

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Tyrades by Danny Tyree

“I’ve looked at life from MY side now…”

I can imagine Joni Mitchell singing those modified lyrics every time I encounter one of today’s most grating phrases.

The phrase: “my lived experience.”

Every time some blowhard wants to identify as an expert and shut down all dissent, they appeal to their years (or months or weeks or that one time at the truck stop when the soap dispensers were almost empty) of “lived experience.”

You know the drill. (“Shut up and listen. Maybe you’ll be entitled to an opinion when you’ve shown up for your final exam in your underwear. Thank goodness I was able to flap my arms and fly away…oh, wait…that’s my dreamed experience. Well, I’m adding this embarrassing incident to my tale of constant sorrow…”)

All well and good, but it occurs to me that lived experience should involve at least a smidgen of introspection and thinking outside the box. (“I thought outside the box one time and it gave me an ice cream headache. End of story.”)

Seriously, a five-year-old child’s lived experience might be that his parents hate him, because they make him eat his vegetables and adhere to a regular bedtime. Oops. (“And my almost-died experience happened when I ran away from home to join the circus…”)

Brevity is the soul of wit, as Shakespeare’s Polonius observed in “Hamlet.” Brevity is also the soul of leaving out all the pesky, incriminating details of how you got into a mess in the first place, I’ve learned.

Some of the “lived experience” people are entirely too modest about their talent for blending a smoothie made of equal parts objective fact and self-serving perception. (“There was an obvious vibe that the manager wanted to humiliate me, even if he was three floors below in a lead-lined vault.”)

They assert themselves confidently, but always with a healthy dose of humility. (“Now, I’m not saying I’m the hero of my story…but when the landlord hassled me about six months’ back rent, I wielded my trusty sword Excalibur and…”)

To their credit, they are always empathetic to the ignorance of their listeners. “You don’t know what it’s like to be me,” is the cheerful warble. Maybe I’m just a curmudgeon, but I have to bite my tongue when listening to them, so I don’t blurt out, “Hey, you’re not me, so how do you know what I know and don’t know?”

And maybe the rest of us are being too judgmental when we accuse the aggrieved person of playing the victim card. (“I am not playing the victim card! It was bad. No one would help me. Not Colonel Mustard, not Prof. Plum, not Mrs. Peacock…”)

I can understand these folks being miffed by unsolicited advice. “Nobody knows what’s better for me than me” is the mantra.

“I’m not saying the world owes me a living – just another roll of duct tape to cover this irregularly shaped mole that popped up during the second Obama inauguration…”

Still, let’s all display some self-awareness and find a new phrase to beat to death.

I’ve looked at my column from both sides now – as the author and from the perspective of the reader who gets to line the garbage can with it.

And I’m jealous. Wait – are those Brussels sprouts? Never mind. I’m happy to be me and happy to be tracking down the Ringling Brothers…

Copyright 2025 Danny Tyree, distributed by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.

Danny Tyree welcomes email responses at [email protected] and visits to his Facebook fan page “Tyree’s Tyrades.”

Controversial author Harlan Ellison once described the work of Danny Tyree as "wonkily extrapolative" and said Tyree's mind "works like a demented cuckoo clock."

Ellison was speaking primarily of Tyree’s 1983-2000 stint on the "Dan T’s Inferno" column for “Comics Buyer’s Guide” hobby magazine, but the description would also fit his weekly "Tyree’s Tyrades" column for mainstream newspapers.

Inspired by Dave Barry, Al "Li'l Abner" Capp, Lewis Grizzard, David Letterman, and "Saturday Night Live," "Tyree's Tyrades" has been taking a humorous look at politics and popular culture since 1998.

Tyree has written on topics as varied as Rent-A-Friend.com, the Lincoln bicentennial, "Woodstock At 40," worm ranching, the Vatican conference on extraterrestrials, violent video games, synthetic meat, the decline of soap operas, robotic soldiers, the nation's first marijuana café, Sen. Joe Wilson’s "You lie!" outburst at President Obama, Internet addiction, "Is marriage obsolete?," electronic cigarettes, 8-minute sermons, early puberty, the Civil War sesquicentennial, Arizona's immigration law, the 50th anniversary of the Andy Griffith Show, armed teachers, "Are women smarter than men?," Archie Andrews' proposal to Veronica, 2012 and the Mayan calendar, ACLU school lawsuits, cutbacks at ABC News, and the 30th anniversary of the death of John Lennon.

Tyree generated a particular buzz on the Internet with his column spoofing real-life Christian nudist camps.

Most of the editors carrying "Tyree’s Tyrades" keep it firmly in place on the opinion page, but the column is very versatile. It can also anchor the lifestyles section or float throughout the paper.

Nancy Brewer, assistant editor of the "Lawrence County (TN) Advocate" says she "really appreciates" what Tyree contributes to the paper. Tyree has appeared in Tennesee newspapers continuously since 1998.

Tyree is a lifelong small-town southerner. He graduated from Middle Tennessee State University in 1982 with a bachelor's degree in Mass Communications. In addition to writing the weekly "Tyree’s Tyrades," he writes freelance articles for MegaBucks Marketing of Elkhart, Indiana.

Tyree wears many hats (but still falls back on that lame comb-over). He is a warehousing and communications specialist for his hometown farmers cooperative, a church deacon, a comic book collector, a husband (wife Melissa is a college biology teacher), and a late-in-life father. (Six-year-old son Gideon frequently pops up in the columns.)

Bringing the formerly self-syndicated "Tyree's Tyrades" to Cagle Cartoons is part of Tyree's mid-life crisis master plan. Look for things to get even crazier if you use his columns.