June 25, 2008

seeing circles

The poem below by Billy Collins (one of Jim Culleny's daily poetry emails) makes me sad and angry and wistful and hungry.

I'm not hungry for sweets. I surely eat enough of those.

Rather it's a soul-deep hunger for the solitude to watch circles become salt, to reach for and conjure the words that make magic of metaphor.

And so I am angry that with each passing year I have had to move farther and farther from that place where destiny can be designed. And I am sad because those years can never be recovered. And I am wistful, finally, because that is what comes of and with age and the utter exhaustion of being someone else's keeper.

Design
Billy Collins

I pour a coating of salt on the table
and make a circle in it with my finger.
This is the cycle of life
I say to no one.
This is the wheel of fortune,
the arctic circle.
This is the ring of Kerry
and the white rose of Tralee
I say to the ghosts of my family,
the dead fathers,
the aunt who drowned,
my unborn brothers and sisters,
my unborn children.
This is the sun with its glittering spokes
and the bitter moon.
This is the absolute circle of geometry
I say to the crack in the wall,
to the birds who cross the window.
This is the wheel I just invented
to roll through the rest of my life
I say
touching my finger to my tongue.

Categories: bitchingcreativitygetting olderpoetry
Posted at 05:51 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

June 14, 2008

I had the last word

Who doesn't like having the last word, and this time it was mine at the end of Ronni Bennett's great essay on elderboggers, Put It In Writing, published today in the Wall Street Journal. You can't get to the essay online, so Ronnie had to send it in an email to those of us she mentioned in case we don't subscribe to the newspaper, which I don't.

Interestingly enough, the Journal began the printed version of Ronni's essay with a quote from my quote. So, here I am, the alpha and the omega.

On Ronni's blog, Time Goes By, she mentions the essay and shows the great graphic that the newspaper included.

Ronni will be having occasional articles on aging and retirement for the Wall Street Journal from now on. Congratulations, Ronni.

And thanks for giving me the last word.

I blog to connect with the world outside myself
that I'm trying to make sense of.
I blog to keep up my spirit;
to stir the spirit of others;
to stir my blood, my brain and my beliefs.

ADDENDUM: I discovered that you can read the whole great article by going here and then clicking on the story title, "Put it in Writing."

Categories: bloggingculturegetting oldervanity
Posted at 01:25 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

May 18, 2008

nostalgia runs rampant

I'm caught up in a wash of nostalgia these days, with friends I haven't been in contact for a long while emailing photos with messages saying "Were we ever that young?"

And so this poem, one of Jim Culleny's dailies, reminds me of just how young I once was and how much has happened since.

In Memory of Radio
Amiri Baraka

Who has ever stopped to think of the divinity of Lamont Cranston?
(Only jack Kerouac, that I know of: & me.
The rest of you probably had on WCBS and Kate Smith,
Or something equally unattractive.)

What can I say?
It is better to have loved and lost
Than to put linoleum in your living rooms?

Am I a sage or something?
Mandrake's hypnotic gesture of the week?
(Remember, I do not have the healing powers of Oral Roberts...
I cannot, like F. J. Sheen, tell you how to get saved & rich!
I cannot even order you to the gaschamber satori like Hitler or Goddy Knight)

& love is an evil word.
Turn it backwards/see, see what I mean?
An evol word. & besides
who understands it?
I certainly wouldn't like to go out on that kind of limb.

Saturday mornings we listened to the Red Lantern & his undersea folk.
At 11, Let's Pretend
& we did
& I, the poet, still do. Thank God!

What was it he used to say (after the transformation when he was safe
& invisible & the unbelievers couldn't throw stones?) "Heh, heh, heh.
Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows."

O, yes he does
O, yes he does
An evil word it is,
This Love.



Categories: getting oldernostalgiapoetry
Posted at 11:25 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

April 08, 2008

he can't go home again

Myrln fidgets in the hospital bed in the emergency room, where they have him hooked up to various machines that beep and chime and whir.

"I just wanted a few more days. I needed a few more days. I needed time to think...." He looks at me with eyes angry and sad at the same time. He is back in the hospital after only two days at home from a week-long stay for tests and such. I have been with him for the past 36 hours, including this morning when we had to call a Rescue Ambulance because he couldn't breathe, even with an oxygen tank.

We have been divorced now for twice as many years as we were married. But time had healed our wounds and we had developed a friendly relationship.

"I will be eternally grateful," he wheezes, "for all you are doing for me now."

My eyes fill with tears. "No problem," I say.

"I have to tell you something," he says. "Even through it all, there was always a little love left."

"Yes," I say. "Me too."

And I'm crying and we are holding hands the way we once did long before I begged him to stop smoking.

Tonight he is temporarily hooked up to a respirator. b!X arrived from Oregon, and his sister and family from Massachusetts. He has not yet been awake for b!X and him to have a little time together. I hope he wakes, for both their sakes.

Meanwhile, I am back on the mountain with my mother, but I suspect will be be leaving again in a day or so.

They will take him off the respirator. He will either breathe or not. Either way, he won't be going home again.

Myrln, who once blogged here on Mondays, is my former spouse, the father of my children. He has inoperable lung cancer, which has spread to just about every vital organ.

Categories: death and dyingfamilygetting olderguest bloggerhealthnostalgiastrange world
Posted at 09:07 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

March 22, 2008

in good company

Deborah Harry (that's Debbie Harry of Blondie), now 62 years old, proudly sports a swath of gray hair.

And, according to Ronni at Time Goes By, a bunch of gray-haireds who are my kind of people are rocking Northampton Massachusetts:

YouTube has the movie trailer and a whole lot more music video clips. These will get you up and moving, and reminded that you’re never too old to rock ‘n’ roll.

Just watch them offer their rendition of Donna Summer's "I Will Survive."

Categories: creativitygetting older
Posted at 12:07 AM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

March 21, 2008

is that the way it was done?

Is that the way it was done before nursing homes and hospices, before miracle drugs and transplants, when old folks died slowly at home, their sons and daughters and grandchildren and cousins all taking turns taking care? The frail old ones, dying only from the final stresses of age and gravity, moved slowly and silently, sleeping through most of those last months, last weeks, last days. Relatives came and went, stayed and shared, while the old ones slept and dreamed and waited, and that was the way it was finally done.

But there are only two of us here to keep watch, to take care. Each day she is more tired, asks to sleep more and more often. Awake, she sits sad and silent, eating slowly in front of the television that she can barely hear anyway. I sometimes still hold her and dance with her late at night, when she's afraid and won't sleep. Sometimes I sleep with her to make her feel safe. Sometimes, no matter what we do, she's up and down all night, wants to eat, wants to go home. "Please, please," she mutters, unable to tell me what exactly would please her.

Someone cracked my rear passenger side bumper, and I have to go and get an estimate so that I can get it fixed. But then what. My brother would have to get my mother in his car and come with me to drop off (and then pick up) my car from the body shop. It is hard to believe that we know no one around here who can help with that chore so that we wouldn't have to put my mother through that. I don't even think that there are taxis in this little town. At least I've never seen any. I think I'd better start checking that out.

This is not the way it's supposed to be done -- without friends, without extended family, without a support system. But this is the way my brother insists, and I am too tired to argue any more.

I'd better check the phone book for taxi services.

And I'm still purging and packing and planning. While I cook, and feed, and clean, and sit, and hold, and hope.

ADDENDUM:
Whaddya know. There IS a taxi service right in town! Family or friends would be better, but I'll settle for a taxi when it comes to getting my car fixed.

Categories: bitchingcaregivingfamilygetting oldernostalgia
Posted at 12:06 AM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

March 14, 2008

going gray

Soon after every birthday, I take a photo of myself. My 68th birthday was last Tuesday, and here I am, way past the time when I would normally touch up my hair color. I've begun to go gray:

68.jpg

I took this photo with a new webcam that I just hooked up so that I can video conference with my grandson, who will soon get, from me, one of those indestructible XO laptops that are no longer available for private purchase. It comes equipped with a webcam. In order to buy one for him, I had to buy one for a child in a 3rd world country.

I went to visit my kindergartener grandson and family last Sunday, and I'm sure that, as a result, I have a few more gray hairs. By the time I left on Tuesday, both my daughter and grandson were seriously sick with sinus infections and the construction of a second floor had begun on their home. After I left, the workers had accidentally put two sizable holes in their first floor ceiling, letting the cold in and further endangering their health. You can read about the fiasco on my daughter's blog.

I wish I could have stayed to help out. My son-in-law has his hands full. He even had to take time off from work because my daughter now has laryngitis and can't talk at all. Just imagine how that works out with a chatty 5-year old.

Ah, if only there were such a thing as a Star Trek Transporter.

Categories: familygetting oldershoppingvanity
Posted at 01:13 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

March 13, 2008

Hillary be damned

I think that Hillary Clinton would be damned by public opinion no matter how she ran her campaign. If she had Barack's eloquence, charm, and public persona, she would have been damned for being to theatrical, too smooth, not tough enough etc. etc. Oh yes, she's made too many mistakes in her campaign, but I don't think that's the reason there's so much animosity toward her.

Many American's love the idea of good vs. evil, the bad vs. the good, and they've been handed a perfect opportunity to set up a METAPHORICAL (not racial) black vs. white battle. No grays here (except creeping in on Hillary's battered head.)

And, despite all of the backlash against Ferraro, I believe that if a white male with Barack's change agenda AND LACK OF EXPERIENCE were running, he wouldn't have made it this far.

Oh, wait a minute. A white male with Barack's change agenda AND CONSIDERABLE EXPERIENCE was running and didn't make it.

Perhaps what it all just means is the time is right for someone like Barack -- a moving, persuasive orator, a symbol of radical change from the status quo (symbolized by his bi-racial ethnicity), someone from a new generation who appeals to the new generation. If he could be canonized by us liberals, he would be called Saint Barack, patron saint of idealists.

So often, timing is everything. And, as we saw on Ellen, Barack's got the timing down pat.

And late middle-aged, thick waisted, experienced, tough broad Hillary be damned.

But not by me.

Categories: culturefeminismgetting olderpolitics
Posted at 12:20 PM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

March 07, 2008

signs

When she flutters her hands in front of her nose, I know that she needs a Kleenex (well, we use Puffs because they're softer on her nose). When she taps her teeth, I know that she wants her flosser. When she reaches out with her right hand and opens and closes her fist, I know that she wants her cane.

She doesn't always use her self-devised sign language, but she's tending to do it more often -- especially when she's tired. And she seems to be tired more and more. The signs are often there. The words are often not.

On a sunny day last week, when I got into my car to go to the drug store, I flipped down the visor mirror to check for any stray chin hairs that my Tweeze might have missed. No chin hair -- but what's that??? Long white hairs in my eyebrows??? Now there's a sign. Definitely a sign.

I'm not sleeping well, my reflux is acting up, and that contact dermatitis I get on my elbow every once in a while is itching like crazy. I can't ignore the signs.

Signs that I need a break. I need a couple of days away from here. And so I'm going to my daughter's from Sunday to Tuesday. It's my birthday present to myself.

In two years I'll be 70. It just doesn't seem real to me.

Maybe it will seem real when my natural hair color finally grows in. Then I will see the most obvious of all signs -- the gray signs of being where I am in life.

Each year, on my birthday, I take a photo of myself. Each year, the signs are more obvious -- the drooping jaw, the sagging chin. There won't be much of the gray hair visible when I take this year's photo. But next year, there will be no denying that sign of this life fading to pale.

If I were able to live my life at the age I am today in the way I would prefer, I wouldn't be obsessing so much on my age and what I am losing with each day that passes.

But here I am, watching for signs and missing those times when the only sign I looked for was the one that said "dancing until 2 a.m."

Categories: bitchingcaregivinggetting oldervanity
Posted at 10:26 AM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)

January 27, 2008

sound familiar?

Got the following in an email. Hormones combined with stresses were always a disaster for me. I no longer have the hormones, but I sure do have the stress. And I do remember those old PMS and menopausal hormone horrors..

Q: How many women going through MENOPAUSE does it take to change a light bulb?

Woman's Answer:

One!

ONLY ONE!!!! And do you know WHY? Because no one else in this house knows HOW to change a light bulb! They don't even know that the bulb is BURNED OUT!! They would sit in the dark for THREE DAYS before they figured it out.

And, once they figured it out, they wouldn't be able to find the #&%!* light bulbs despite the fact that they've been in the SAME CABINET for the past 17 YEARS! But if they did, by some miracle of God, actually find them, 2 DAYS LATER, the chair they dragged to stand on to change the STUPID light bulb would STILL BE IN THE SAME SPOT!!!!! AND UNDERNEATH IT WOULD BE THE WRAPPER THE FREAKING LIGHT BULBS CAME IN!!! BECAUSE NO ONE EVER PICKS UP OR CARRIES OUT THE GARBAGE!!!! IT'S A WONDER WE HAVEN'T ALL SUFFOCATED FROM
THE PILES OF GARBAGE THAT ARE A FOOT DEEP THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE HOUSE!! IT WOULD TAKE AN ARMY TO CLEAN THIS PLACE!

AND DON'T EVEN GET ME STARTED ON WHO CHANGES THE TOILET PAPER ROLL !!

I'm sorry. What was the question?

Categories: getting olderha ha
Posted at 12:21 AM | Permalink | TrackBacks (0)