(The photo shows my mother and myself in 1943)
The wonderful thing about having a bad memory--as I do--is that I had completely forgotten that I wrote and posted this seven years ago, on the eve of turning 70. Now I'm about to turn 77 and I re-read this with wonder as I realized that all my hopes for my crone-hood-- especially becoming a grandmother--have come true! What a great birthday present!
When you turn 70, (as I do on Friday, Feb. 4) you can’t consider yourself middle-aged any more. Let’s face it, you’re wicked old.
In
1985 my mother died at 74 of cardiomyopathy and my father died at 80
not long after, but he spent his last years lost in dementia, which may
or may not have been connected to his Parkinson’s disease. I think we
all keep our parents’ ages at death in the back of our minds like a bad
omen. A male friend of mine was convinced that he’d die of heart
disease at 62, like his father, and didn’t relax about this until he
passed that milestone year.
I
used to think the best time of life was when your children are young
and all sorts of accomplishments are still possible in your future. But
now I think that, for women, crone-hood – life after sixty—is the best
time of one’s life.
If that
is, you are lucky enough to have good health. Two years ago I was
collecting classmates’ bios for the book distributed at our 50th
high school reunion in Edina, Minnesota. I realized how many classmates
had died (39 out of 331) and that many were struggling with serious
illness. Also a number of my friends have had their mobility
compromised by hip or knee problems and other ailments.
I’ve been very lucky this far, which is something that I think about every day.
When
I sit down in the morning with coffee and the newspapers, I’m
profoundly glad that I don’t have to show up an office at 8 a.m. with
five newspapers in my hand, then read them and mimeograph a news summary
for my company’s management before ten a.m. That was my first job in
Manhattan, working for Lever Brothers. Now all executives get their
daily business news instantaneously on their I-phones or Blackberries or
laptops.
I admit, I’ve become addicted to the computer, which I think is the most important innovation in my lifetime.
When
my mother died in 1985, she had never touched a computer (although my
father actually sold huge, hulking Univac computers to companies before
he retired.) When she was pregnant with me—in 1940-41-- my mother spent
the time compiling a book-sized family history of our ancestors, typing
it up laboriously with lots of carbon copies, and distributing it to her
eight siblings and eventually to her children. Think how much easier
that job would be today!
Another
computer phenomenon is the social networks, especially Facebook, which
many people consider invasive and dangerous. But it has created a
worldwide community which can share news and ideas and opinion
instantly.
Consider
this—on the first day of February, two young women who are among my
“Facebook friends” each gave birth to a daughter—one in Omaha and one in
Connecticut-- and they both announced it to the world on Facebook
before they were wheeled out of the delivery room. One even posted an
album of photos of the baby, before and after the umbilical cord was
cut.
Also,
I’ve heard from friends with relatives who are soldiers in, say,
Afghanistan, that an expectant dad in the military can watch his wife’s
entire labor and delivery live on the computer (I guess through Skype.)
This is, as Martha Stewart would say, a good thing. Of course if the dad
didn’t have to go to war, that would be an even better thing.
Sometimes I imagine explaining things like this to my mother, who would have loved the internet.
The
goal that motivates me to exercise on the stationary bike most days and
go to Pilates lessons is the hope that I’ll stay alive and mobile long
enough to be a grandmother. My friends become inarticulate when trying
to explain how grandchildren can transform your life.
It
seems to me that when women turn fifty, they’re likely to give their
husbands a big cast-of-thousands celebration and ignore their own
birthday, but when they turn 60, many of my friends celebrated themselves with the party or trip they’d always wanted.
And
when women enter crone-hood, they often channel the creative energy
they used to spend on home, children and jobs into some long-hidden
passion-- designing jewelry, writing a book, gardening, volunteering
their talents to a philanthropy. They allow themselves to do what they
always wanted, but never had time for. A friend of mine, a couple of
years older than I am, went from wife, mother and chef to law student,
then lawyer, then judge, then a state chief justice. A run-in with
cancer slowed her down and she retired. Now she’s enrolled at Tufts
University’s Cummings Veterinary School so that, aged 70-plus, she can
fulfill her childhood dream and become a veterinarian. (And she relaxes
with horseback riding and tap dancing!)
I,
too, went the “discover-your-passion-at-60” route and turned away from
journalism (although I still do it) to re-discovering art, which was my
major in college until I realized I could never earn a living at it. So
I started taking lessons at the Worcester Art Museum, exhibited in some
local shows and sold some paintings.
As
long I can get around and handle my own luggage, I intend to travel to
places I’ve never been and take lots of photographs (mostly of people)
and then turn the photos into paintings. Last month I wrote about a
night spent watching sea turtles hatching on a beach in Nicaragua and
heading into the sea. I called it a “bucket list” experience.
Next week I’m off on another one. My husband is giving me the birthday gift of a
culinary
tour in Mexico with chef Susana Trilling, traveling around the state of
Michoacan to witness the migration of the Monarch butterflies. Susana
has a cooking school in Oaxaca (called Seasons of My Heart) and I’ve
been on unforgettable tours with her, far, far off the beaten path to
many parts of the country, but this is Susana’s first Butterfly tour and
I know it’s going to be amazing
There
are a lot more trips on my bucket list and I don’t know how much time
I’ve got left to make them, but, free of the drama, responsibility,
worry and insecurity of youth, I’m entering my seventh decade with
anticipation (and hope) that this will be the best one yet.
1 comment:
This was so, so beautiful. I'm only 20 years old (my birthday was just last month in January), and I sometimes can't even imagine the amount of time, life, and experiences someone could accumulate as they get older. You're life sounds amazing and fulfilled, and you give me hope for when I someday (hopefully) come to be a "crone". Thank you so much for writing what you do.
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