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Showing posts with label aging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aging. Show all posts

Monday, April 12, 2010

Attrition

by Susan Cameron

Sharon stared out her front window at the house across the street. Its bushes were pruned, its grass was perfect, its fresh coat of paint gleamed softly in the sun, and it had a dignified For Sale sign posted on the lawn. The short iron fence surrounding the front courtyard entry was decked out in clean white paint, as were the bars across all the windows. Those bars gave its ownership away -- it was a single woman’s house. But the woman who owned it was no longer single, and her new man didn’t want to live there.

Above and behind the new roof rose the huge arc of the old satellite dish, installed in the back yard when TV satellite dishes were the latest technology. She smiled as she remembered how proud Ron had been of that NASA-sized dish, how much he’d loved his TV. Genial Ron, laughing with her ex, Jim, about nothing in particular, raising the Corona beer bottle to his lips, blurry blue Playboy bunny tattoo on his forearm, chunky gold bracelet sliding on his wrist, sipping his beer, always laughing. Years later, she and Jim had boarded the boat that took Ron’s ashes into Newport Bay. His widow Cynthia had hysterics in the arms of her bewildered family. Mascara ran off her false eyelashes as she clung to the container holding Ron’s ashes, screaming “No, I can’t let you go!” as the boat heaved at anchor and the green-faced mourners tried not to do the same. So many years Ron had been gone. Jim, too.

Now Cynthia was going. Ron’s life insurance had been substantial, and Cynthia had her own pension and social security money as well. It had been more than enough to pay for plastic surgery and antidepressants, more than enough to attract inappropriate men who weren’t the least bit fazed by her panic attacks and neediness. Sharon stared at the empty house and silently wished her ex-neighbor well in her new life.

God, what was this mood she was in?

The past kept interjecting itself into her present lately. She’d be walking down the street with her husband Aaron and say things like, “There was a weeping willow tree in the center of that lawn when I moved here, back when it belonged to David and Diana.” Or, “That house was originally Paul and Evelyn’s. I used to play Bunco with Evelyn and her friends.” Or, “My friends used to call this street Van Land. Everybody on the block owned a van when Jim and I moved in – eighteen vans in eighteen driveways.”

Robert and Sarah, Mike and Mary, old Bill on the corner, Patrick and Janey, Chuck and Melanie, the children who’d played Marco Polo in her swimming pool, grown up with kids of their own by now – all gone. Sharon didn’t understand why all the old names and faces were suddenly coming back to her. Some of these people had been her good friends for a while, and some just friendly acquaintances, but they’d all vanished over the years – moved away, divorced and gone, dead and gone. All of this was perfectly normal, of course. She’d felt worse about the removal of the beautiful old overgrown liquidambar trees that had once lined her street than she did about the inevitable attrition of her neighbors. So what was this mood, this ache, this inexplicable nostalgia, if it was even nostalgia at all?

One restless night, while Aaron slept, she quietly stepped into the front yard to look at Venus shining near the crescent moon. Her old Toyota was parked in the driveway, and she sat on the trunk and tilted her head back to drink in the beauty of the sky. When she looked down from the moon and stars at Cynthia’s empty house, it finally struck her.

Cynthia was the last original owner in the neighborhood – except Sharon herself.

She looked back up at Venus and the moon and nodded once, as if they had spoken to her. She stood up, yawned, raised her arms toward the sky and stood on her toes, stretching every muscle in her body. She winced as she took inventory: a twinge in her right hand where she’d long ago cut herself in a kitchen accident, a zing in the left thumb where arthritis had set in; a ligament twanged near her left knee, trashed in a high-impact aerobics class thirty-five years before.

Sharon sighed, looked at Cynthia’s house and turned away. Her knee clicked all the way back to her front door.

copyright 2010, Susan Cameron

Monday, November 9, 2009

The Autumn of My Life

The last week in October, during which I was on the east coast, was filled with many activities, but my favorite, even including my birthday, was my unplanned viewings of nature’s magnificent seasonal changes. Her comforting, shade giving leaves were changing from a pleasing, vibrant green to spectacular and awe inspiring pinks, reds, oranges, and yellows. I probably shouldn’t have even been allowed to drive because the shapes of the trees and the colors which were often almost translucent or florescent as the chilly fall sun sprinkled her magical light upon this changing spectacle caught my attention like nothing else has. I think I might have even made my passenger nervous from time to time or at least unsure of the age of her driver when I would blurt out with youthful exuberance regarding some tree or other.

The once leaf-filled trees were thinning out leaving bare and exciting looking branches whose various shapes and sizes reached out in multiple directions. It was like a tasteful and alivening strip tease! From one day to the next things were changing. It was very like remembering life with my baby daughter who is now almost twenty-one. When she was an infant and into her toddler years, she was often delightfully different from one day to the next; my experience with these magnificent trees was almost an emotional match as I watched things become slightly different and always more beautiful from day to day until the day I was leaving.

The day I left the east was the day I decided to take pictures, but many of my beautiful trees were now filled with brown, crinkly, and uninteresting foliage, and it hit me…

this was all just a death knoll. I had watched this beautiful, exciting season move from vibrancy to death. The leaves had gone from a beautiful extravaganza of color to dull yellows and browns. Supple, soft leaves splattered with color had become stiff and dull. Squishy, silent paths filled with newly fallen leaves had become walkways that announced one’s coming with a noisy crunching sound. And then I wondered: what judgment am I making about going from one state to the other. Perhaps, I thought, this was just a vibrational shift from one state to another.

Though it might appear that death is upon them, it is temporary. In six or seven months a new cycle will begin, and I would very much enjoy being there to watch as buds begin to appear, and the sexy, exciting branches begin to fill with a new kind of life.

And then I began to think about what this means for us as humans. I wonder why we can’t just live this way? Why is it that old age is considered an unpleasant, hated movement directly from green to crumbly brown? What about all the colorful possibilities and excitement that can exist in the middle from green to brown, supple to crunchy?

I have decided that I want my waning years to be colorful and bright. I want to shimmer and glow and be translucent and extravagant. I want to use the time I have left to explore and learn and grow and develop and sing and dance and play and have more fun than I’ve had, maybe ever. I imagine that a leaf has a wonderful time growing from bud to leaf, but then it just hangs out for the next six or so months; I would be willing to bet that the most fun it has is the change from green to vibrant and exciting colors, and it makes me wonder where the life of the leaf goes just as I wonder where the life of me will go when my body changes from red and pink and yellow and orange to the soft grey stuff that the Nautilus Society will hand back to whomever wants it when I’m done with it.

Time marches on, and rather than regret it, I intend to embrace it, and to find the joy and playfulness in it, and I invite you to enjoy this journey with me.

copyright 2009 by Nancy Grossman

Monday, June 15, 2009

On Middle Age

by Susan Cameron

It's not my turn to post, but let me stick this in here. Every year, Jane Glenn Haas of the Orange County Register runs The International Longevity Light Verse Contest, and I decided to throw in an entry this year for the first time. If you'd like to have fun with it, here are the rules:

  • The topic is aging/longevity/life after 50. Keep entries short. Homeric epics will be tossed.
  • Do not use the word "geezer."
  • Do not rhyme Viagra with Niagara.
  • Do not look in the mirror and see your mother, grandmother, or great-aunt.
You must be 50 or over to enter. Put your name, address, telephone number, email address and age on the entry. Enter as often as you like. Deadline is August 21; winning poems are published in the Orange County Register in September. Email to janeghaas@gmail.com (Verses entries only). Send snail mail to Verses, Jane Glenn Haas, the Orange County Register, P.O. Box 11626, Santa Ana, CA 92711.

Okay, so here's my entry:

ON MIDDLE AGE

We need to stop the whining and the narcissistic pining
for the bodies we had once and won't again --
the price we pay for living is the youth that we've been giving
day-by-day to tax-man Time since Time began.
Aging's not a tragedy; it's only nature's strategy,
so suck it up, 'cause life is still okay --
I'm still here and so are you; we know some day that won't be true,
so smile, old fool -- go out and seize the day!

Susan Cameron, copyright 2009


Have a good one, everybody!