Change is good, right? It shakes things up, gets the
creative juices flowing, and stimulates new thinking. We get into routines,
habits, and ruts, and limit ourselves without even realizing it. Last week, in
an outlandishly daring move, I bought a different brand of dark chocolate. I
love my usual brand, but why not try something new? My new chocolate made me
fall in love with dark chocolate all over again. I didn’t think chocolate could
get any better, but it did. My choice to make a change took me to a good place.
I support change, but the changes we encounter involuntarily as we age can often
take us to challenging and difficult places. Our best line of defense is humor.
If nothing else, the aging process is chock full of
surprises. Young people really can’t comprehend the experience of waking up in
the morning to discover that your knee won’t bend even though it bent just fine
when you went to bed last night. Is there a curse on your mattress that made it
suck all the flexibility out of that knee overnight, or what? Maybe it’s a
sleep-number mattress setting you didn’t notice: #202
Knee Gives Out. Why did that knee get so lucky and not the other one? Or
waking up to discover that you can’t see out of one eye. You sit up in bed and think
“that’s interesting.” You feel to make sure the eye is still there, to make
sure that the devil mattress didn’t suck out the whole eye. Because you never
know. Old age is fraught with magical realism.
One day we are innocently chugging along, oblivious to the
changes occurring inside our bodies as our parts wear out, and the next day we
pass out on the treadmill during a stress test ordered by the cardiologist with
the result that we are informed that we need a pacemaker. So then we ask
ourselves, when did my body forget how to regulate my heart beat? Other questions
arise. When did I lose the ability to fall sleep? Why do I hear crickets in my
ear? How could I possibly have left my elbow at a restaurant? Is my new
obsession with Marx Brothers films a side effect of my blood pressure meds? Did
my dishwasher suddenly start leaking after I had that periodontal deep
cleaning, or is that my imagination? Do I still have an imagination? I might
have left my imagination at the restaurant with my elbow.
The people I know who have lived the longest say that the
hardest thing about getting old is that their peers die off. If you live long
enough, you wind up being the last one standing, and all the people with whom
you go back and back and back are gone. That’s why it’s important to keep
making new friends who are younger people. Those of us with children and
grandchildren are fortunate to have built-in access to people with whom we can
populate our lives who are more likely to outlive us. The greatest challenge is
remembering the names of these new young friends. I hear that a phone app is in
development that will allow you to point your phone at a person and it will
establish face recognition and tell you the person’s name. This app would also
be very helpful in assisting old people with figuring out if they actually know
someone or not to begin with. Maybe they could invent an app that would let you
know if you would like to know a
person or not. You could then point your phone at someone and it would say
helpful things like “yup, she makes the best strawberry jam and gives it to
people at Christmas, you want to know her” or “nope, you don’t know this guy
and you don’t want to know him, he collects Civil War cannons.”
They say that with old age comes wisdom, and that as you
age, people show you more respect and listen to you more. But I imagine that
you lose credibility when you can’t remember the person’s name to give them advice,
especially if the person is your nephew whom you’ve known since his birth. I
think that change keeps us on our toes so that we improve cognitive function
and have a better chance of remembering names. So by switching to a new brand
of chocolate, I keep myself on my toes and increase my capacity to remember
where I parked my car, who this man is who sleeps in my bed with me, or why I
put an avocado in the mailbox.
As we age, the world becomes a more mysterious and
astonishing place. Increasingly, events defy explanation and objects escape understanding.
I am amazed by those old folks who have steered clear of using computers (I
know a few who don’t have a computer), fearful that if they turn on a computer
it will steal their soul and blow up their house. At the same time, I can’t
imagine what new-fangled next level of technology will evolve and baffle me if
I live to be very, very old. It’s true that I don’t have a smart phone, which
is perhaps the equivalent of my elderly friends who don’t own computers. Some
of us still pay monthly bills by mail. I even have a friend who drives to the
electrical company office to hand in monthly payment to save on the cost of a
stamp. I read an article last week about the fact that in the near future
checks will become obsolete and everything will be paid electronically. Won’t
that leave people more vulnerable to identity theft? I’m not so worried for
myself, since my identity is pretty worn out so I doubt anyone would want it,
but what about young people with fresh identities? I would be tempted to steal
an identity with good knees.
The elders I admire the most are the ones who keep laughing.
Having the people we love, and have shared our lives with, die off is not
funny. So we take some time for grief and then, as my father says, “enough of
that.” Otherwise, we might as well follow them to the other side right now. But
we are still here to enjoy life’s more magical and brilliant moments, and to
have a laugh at the absurdity and the humor in all of it. Trying to stay
positive. That’s my mantra. I want a phone app that tells me a person’s name
and then whether or not they have a good sense of humor. I want a funny-seeking
phone app. I could also use an app that tells me if there’s organic dark
chocolate in the vicinity and, if so, where it’s at.
[One of the old folks in my life who keeps me laughing the most is my husband Ron and today is his birthday. Happy birthday, my love. So happy to still have you with me on this side of the great divide.]
This is the new chocolate I tried and fell in love with this week.
2 comments:
I love that Bagdad Cafe' topped your list of films. It too is a dearly inspiring work for me. As for the aging body that my youthful brain is dragging around... akkkkkk. Who knew at 20, 30, 40, or even all though my fifties, that abruptly in my 60s a knee, shoulder or in the middle of gardening that a body part would shutter, grown and freeze like a worn out washing machine. There are more good than challenging days though, and all I can say is, keep moving, strengthening muscle groups, practicing yoga and patience. Oh and do get a massage from time to time. Thank you for your blog.
Devora, I have not watched Bagdhad Cafe in many years. Time to watch it again. Thanks for reminding me! I'm not a yoga person, but I work out at the gym 3 days a week so that's kind of my yoga. I have an appointment to get a massage on Friday. This year for the first time I hired a young man to prune the tops of my four large fruit trees. I just didn't trust myself that high up in the air anymore. Definitely more good than challenging days. Thanks for reading!
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