JOKE OF THE DAY: An elderly couple, Bert and Edna, are sitting on the porch swing one quiet Sunday evening. They’ve been married for 55 years. The sun is setting, the birds are chirping, and they’re both sipping lukewarm tea, watching squirrels fight over a Cheeto in the yard. Out of the blue, Edna sighs and says, “Bert, let’s talk about our bucket lists.” Bert raises an eyebrow. “Bucket lists? Edna, I’m 87. My list is down to ‘wake up tomorrow and remember where I put my pants.’” Edna chuckles. “No, I’m serious. Before we go, we should each do something we’ve always wanted to do but never had the chance.” Bert thinks for a moment. “Alright, fine. I’ve always wanted to go skydiving.” Edna’s eyes widen. “Skydiving?! Bert, the last time you bent down to tie your shoe, you passed out for three minutes.” Bert shrugs. “Well, if I die mid-air, just let me land in the neighbor’s garden. I’ve always wanted to haunt him.” They laugh, and Edna nods. “Okay, okay. You go skydiving. I’ll do mine too.” Bert squints. “And what’s yours?” Edna suddenly gets this mischievous sparkle in her eye — the same one she had back in 1965 when she “accidentally” dropped Bert’s bowling trophy out the car window during an argument. “I’ve always wanted to confess something to you, Bert.” Bert gulps. “Confess what?” Edna leans closer and whispers, “You know how your favorite recliner always mysteriously leaned to the left for 20 years?” Bert nods. “Yeah, blamed the dog. Poor thing limped for weeks.” Edna smiles. “Well, it was me. I jammed a spatula in the bottom after you spilled grape soda on my new curtains in ’89.” Bert gasps. “You monster!” Edna giggles. “And remember that time the remote kept changing the channel to the Hallmark channel, no matter what button you pressed?” Bert blinks. “You said it was haunted!” Edna smirks. “Nope. I glued a penny inside the battery compartment to short-circuit it. You never missed a single Christmas romance movie for five straight years.” Bert’s mouth drops open. “Why would you do that?!” Edna sips her tea, serene. “Because payback, dear, is best served with mistletoe and slow-motion snowball fights.” After a long pause, Bert leans back in the swing and says, “You know what, Edna? I’ve got a confession too.”

She nodded slowly. “Do you remember your favorite photo from that trip — the one where you said your hair looked amazing?”

Bert nodded, smiling. “Still got it framed on my dresser.”

Edna bit her lip, trying not to laugh. “Bert… that wasn’t your hair.”

He blinked. “Come again?”

“I accidentally glued your hairpiece on backward that morning. The wind just did the rest. That ‘amazing’ hair? It was facing east while you were facing west.”

Bert’s eyes went wide. “You mean to tell me that for thirty years, I’ve been bragging about a photo where my hair’s trying to escape my head?!”

Edna burst out laughing so hard she nearly spilled her tea.

Love, Laughter, and a Little Revenge
They sat there, laughing until their sides hurt. When the laughter finally faded, Edna wiped her eyes and said softly, “You know, Bert… maybe our bucket list is just this — sitting here, confessing all our little secrets before we’re too old to remember them.”

Bert nodded, smiling gently. “Maybe you’re right. Though I’ll still need to skydive… just so I can say I’ve done something more exciting than watching Hallmark movies against my will.”

Edna chuckled. “Fine. You jump out of a plane, and I’ll finally replace your stolen gnomes. Deal?”

“Deal,” Bert said, extending his hand.

They shook on it, their wrinkled fingers intertwining, the porch swing creaking beneath them — two souls who had survived love, laughter, and fifty-five years of ridiculous confessions.