One of my favorite "older woman" bloggers is Judith Boyd who calls herself the "Style Crone" and is, like me, in her seventies. She just published a blog post called "The Orange Jacket and the Concept of Erasure". Her post and her orange jacket were inspired by an essay in the Feb. 2nd New York Times Magazine, written by Parul Sehgal , on "Erasure" in which Sehgal says: “Erasure refers to the practice of collective indifference that renders certain people and groups invisible.” Judith, the Style Crone, said: "Sehgal’s focus on older women at the end of her essay was profoundly powerful. 'There has been a blank around the lives of older women, who report feeling invisible as they age – which is, as it turn out, more fact than feeling.'” Judith concluded: "I learned that no amount of orange could change the fact that older women are not 'seen' in our culture."
Reading this inspired me to re-post an essay of mine that first appeared on "A Rolling Crone" on July 19, 2011 called "The Invisible (Old) Woman" Here it is:
A
couple of days ago, my husband and I were staying in an antique-filled
small hotel in Chania, Crete, which had, in the parlor, a wall of books
in many languages discarded by previous guests. (This is one of the
delights of staying in small hotels.)
I
picked up a paperback by Doris Lessing called “The Summer Before the
Dark”, published in 1973, and I finished it as we arrived in Athens on
Sunday night.
Briefly,
it’s the story of a 48-year-old British housewife and mother, Catherine
(or Kate) Brown, married to a doctor, who takes a summer off from
domestic life, because her husband is at a medical conference in Boston
and her three teen-aged children are traveling with friends in different
countries. She lets their house for the summer and begins working at a
job as a translator at conferences around the world. (Luckily, she’s
fluent in four languages.)
When
her well-paying work is over, Kate takes an American lover who is much
younger—in his early 20’s. They travel in Spain, he becomes very ill
from some never-specified disease, then she becomes ill and returns to
London alone, staying anonymously in a hotel.
By
the time she’s well enough to get out of bed, Kate has lost 15 pounds,
her clothes hang on her, her dyed red hair is coming out gray at the
roots and her face has aged dramatically. As she weakly walks around
London, even passing her own house, where her best friend doesn’t
recognize her, Kate realizes that, by suddenly aging from an attractive,
stylish, curvy redhead into a skeletal old hag in baggy clothes, she
has become invisible.
Several
times she plays this game: she walks past a group of men who ignore her
or goes into a restaurant where the waiters scorn her, then she goes
back to the hotel, puts on a stylish dress and ties her hair back, adds
lipstick and returns to the same places, where she is coddled and
admired.
I
admit that it’s plausible for a 48-year-old woman to transform herself
at will from an invisible hag into a noticed and admired woman, but when
you’re sixty, or seventy (as I am) you’re permanently in the
“invisible” category, unless you’re, say, Joan Collins or Jane Fonda.
I’ve
been noticing this “invisible woman” phenomenon with both amusement and
consternation over the years. Haven’t you had the experience of
walking into a coffee shop or a department store or a cocktail party
where everyone looks right through you and you start searching for a
mirror to make sure you’re actually visible?
Yesterday
we checked into the Grande Bretagne Hotel in Athens, one of the grand
old luxury hotels of the world. We arrived a bit out of breath because
there was a taxi strike and we came via subway, dragging our suitcases
up stairwells when there was no escalator.
My
husband walked in first and I was greeted on all sides: “Welcome back
Mrs. Gage!” My suitcases disappeared. Cold water was provided.
A
couple of hours later, I came down to the lobby to ask a question at
the concierge desk. There were three concierges and no other guests
waiting. The white-haired concierge was on the phone confirming
someone’s dinner reservations. The middle one was explaining to the
youngest one about the book where must be recorded all cars and busses
and pick-up times. I learned a lot about the hotel business, standing
there 18 inches in front of them, until finally one of them noticed me
and said “Oh hi! How can I help you?”
A
more fraught episode occurred Saturday in Crete at the magnificent
wedding reception of a very prominent Cretan family. Nick and I passed
through security and into the estate, up some stairs where we were
greeted by waiters with glasses of champagne and a world-class view of
the sea below. Lit by the full moon was a football-field- sized
clearing by the seaside, filled with flower-laden tables and lighted by
candles and lanterns. I stopped to admire the view, then turned toward
the swimming pool area where the family was greeting guests, but my
husband had vanished into thin air.
For
half an hour I walked around the pool area, even wandering into the
nearby yard where I thought Nick might have gone to escape the crush.
As I circled, I kept looking for a familiar face, but the only ones I
recognized were from TV and the newspapers. The predominant languages
were French and Greek, which I know (far better Greek than French), but I
couldn’t imagine plunging into one of the groups surrounding a prime
minister and blurting out in any language: “Hi, I’m the wife of Nicholas
Gage”.
At
the far end of the swimming pool, on a white banquette, was a young
woman in a long brown dress completely absorbed in her cell phone. I
decided to take the other banquette and watch the parade of Parisian
fashions pass by. Unfortunately, I had left my phone at the hotel.
Eventually
my husband re-appeared. He had gone with friends to find the lists for
our table seating. After we clambered down to the sea and found our
table, I had no trouble talking to the Greek jewelry designer on my
right and the elegant Frenchman across the table, but that first half
hour of invisibility wasn’t fun.
But
sometimes I delight in being invisible. Yesterday, I repeated a summer
ritual. I walked from Constitution Square down Hermou to a tourist shop
just below the Cathedral on Mitropouleas Street to deliver another
batch of my Greek Cat books for them to sell. Then I went to a small
restaurant called “Ithaki” where every summer I get a really good gyro
and some chilled white wine. I sit at the same table every time and
watch the owner charm the passing tourists into sitting down to eat.
I’m fascinated by the man’s ability to know each person’s language. He’s
way more skilled than the usual restaurant shills who try to lure you
in with the two or three sentences they know.
Yesterday
he charmed two pretty girls from South Africa into sitting at the table
at my left, treating them to a piece of his “famous spinach pie” as an
appetizer. Then he gathered a rollicking table of Italians and told
them which beer to order. Directly in front of me were two American
boys who had befriended two girls whose accents suggested that they came
from someplace once in the USSR. “Oh, I’ve always wanted to see
America,” I heard one of them say.
Wrapped
in my cloak of invisibility I could hear the South African girls
complaining about their parents: “If my mother ever found out!” I could
watch the American boys rather awkwardly courting the much more
sophisticated Slavic girls. I reflected that every young person should
be required to take a year off before the age of 30, to tour the world
with a backpack and sit in a taverna like this one, listening to the owner speak a medley of languages and learning about the world.
When
he brought me the (very modest) bill, I tried to tell the owner that I
come back every year because I enjoy watching him speak so many
languages so well, but he just shrugged and rushed off to greet some
Japanese tourists. I think he didn’t hear me.
2 comments:
That was so interesting to read. Thank you for sharing it! I love "people watching" and I am always amazed at the ability of some people to speak several languages. I know some people who can speak anything from five to nine languages, which puts me to shame by only being able to speak one, and just a little from my school French. Maybe it is time for me to start learning a new language. You have got me thinking!
Bravo! Such a fantastic post, Joan!
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