A Perspective on Old
Age from an Old Person: Being Old
Russell R. Burton, an old person
To begin, the word OLD in the title finds very few
supporters including some of my friends.
So, I pulled out my trusty Thesaurus and looked for other words that
would be more appealing. Well, after
seeing such words as ‘aged’, ‘patriarchal’, ‘past one’s prime’, ‘infirm’, ‘enfeebled’,
‘decrepit’, ‘exhausted’, ‘impaired’, ‘broken-down’, ‘wasted’, ‘senile’, ‘having
one foot in the grave’, and ‘gone to seed’, I decided to stay with ‘old’.
I hope you noticed that I wrote my trusty Thesaurus
correctly implying that I did not click on the e-version. One of those things must lurk somewhere in the
bowels of my computer just waiting to assist me even if I don’t want it. Of
course I didn’t use it because I don’t know how and I couldn’t care less. And,
I will not ask my eight-year old granddaughter for she will pipe up and say,
“Here granddad let me show you”. How times have changed for just a few years
ago it used to be the ‘old’ person doing the teaching.
My printed Thesaurus lies on a stand next to me in my
computer room and it is used often. Oh
yes, I do know how to use the word processing capabilities of a computer but
not any of those other e-wonders that comes free of charge with ‘Microsoft Office’.
About ten years ago when I was seventy years of age, I began
a diary on growing old expecting to see or feel changes in me signally that I
was growing old. I soon gave up the idea
because each day was like the last with no changes that I could feel or see. I continued to be as physically active as I
was when I was in my thirties and forties.
So, I discarded my plan to write about this old age stuff for it was not
happening to me – just everyone but me - you know, old folks.
However, in my late seventies, I began to notice a modest
change in me that I now realize signaled my approaching old age – a feeling
that I conveniently or subconsciously ignored.
For instance, at seventy eight I developed a modest ‘drop foot’. The following year I had difficulty walking
four miles at a modest pace that I had accomplished eagerly with a chum for
many years.
And, then came eighty years of age! I woke up one morning and realized that I
didn’t feel seventy anymore so I must be what is called old! Now, I want to be clear here that I do not
plan to die today for I have visions of living and enjoying my life for several
more years. So, I plan to live my life pretty much like I have in the past but
perhaps at a bit slower pace. But, I do
feel different! I find that physical
activities that were performed routinely and without thought suddenly were not
undertaken without some thought. Routine
is not the word I use now. This all
happened so suddenly and TO ME!
Old age enjoys several maladies, too many to cover in this
short essay, but I will discuss a few of the major ones. Of course high on the list is the fear
factor. I am finding myself concerned –
no frightened – that I will fall. And, I
have taken a couple of serious tumbles recently. Fortunately, I was not hurt because of
them. But, why should I be frightened of
a fall? When I was a young boy I fell
several times a day and I didn’t get scared about them. I just picked myself up and ran off likely to
fall again the same day. And, those were
serious falls that hurt sometimes with arm scrapes and bruises. So my fears are just part of an old mind.
I use to jump into my shower, now I slowly walk in and make
sure that I can touch a wall, you know for balance. What’s coming over me? Of course, OLD AGE!
Oh boy, I just read on the Yahoo News that ‘Old People Do
Smell, But Not That Badly’. Now here is
a bad news, bad news story. Old people smell differently, you know like old
people, but not as bad as what? The story does go on to explain that old age
smells are not like body odors from not bathing. These types of young body odors are
worse than normal old body smells. I can
barely tolerate all of this good news.
I disagree substantially with this study though, for it
groups old people as all the same and that is not correct for we are
individuals and I am sure with individual smells. I will write more on ridiculousness of grouping
people in another essay.
Interestingly, as I grow older, it seems that surgeons love
to cut on me. I had my prostate removed
a few years ago because of cancer and recently I had some vascular surgery on my
right leg so I can walk my four miles again.
A few days before my scheduled surgery, my very young (much too
young to be a physician) pretty woman anesthesiologist reviewed the tests she
had required of me before they put me to sleep.
I cringed when I heard those words for I am a veterinarian and being put
to sleep can have some serious side-effects.
When she entered the room in the hospital where I was waiting
‘patiently’, she exclaimed, “You are eighty years old?” I stared at her in shock, did I look
older? My physician continued, “You
don’t look a day older than sixty!” Hey
I thought I might enjoy my surgery. She
looked into my mouth opened wide at her request and loudly voiced another
complement, “Wow, you have all of your original teeth!” Then more kudos from her when she learned
that I took only five medicine pills each day.
‘Most people your age take twenty or thirty’, she informed me to my delight.
Well that made my day and almost erased the anxiety that was
growing inside of me as I neared my day of reckoning with the surgeon. I did
recover from the cutting and got to go home from the hospital a couple of days
ahead of schedule. And, thank God for a
hospital is no place for an old person.
So, now I am home with no pain and little swelling. Of course, complete recovery from four hours
of surgery will take many more days than when I was young but the key word here
is ‘recovery’ – hey I’m still alive and I plan to enjoy my walks again. With a smile my surgeon noted, “Your leg
circulation is back to about 95% of ‘what it used to be”. Of course referring to when I was not so old.
So, I guess I am doing okay with being old. Certainly, there are those people my age who
are less fortunate than I in many ways so I should not complain but be thankful
that I am experiencing my life as well as I am.
Certainly, I can’t forget that half of the people born in
1932 are dead. Yes, half are dead. I remember
when I was a young kid one of my major goals in life was to live to see the
turn of the century. Wow, to be able to
write 2000 as the date! And why not for
when I was born life expectancy was in the high sixties. Now, it is in the high seventies for men and
eighties for woman.
As I reflect on my life in the future I suddenly realize
that it took eighty years to get here and now I have at the most twenty years
left to live. Somehow that does not seem
fair, but then I realized that this train of life cannot be stopped, in fact it
seems to be speeding up as it heads for that inevitable finish line.
Well here I am eighty years old and still alive! Like they say, I’m living on borrowed time
but who am I borrowing it from? Of course, I’m using the years of life that my
dead 1932 classmates failed to use – thank you. But, what is amazing is that my
life expectancy just keeps getting longer everyday that I stay alive. Now
according to some calculations, I’m expected to live for another eight
years! Wow, they keep moving the finish
line further out as I grow older. How
cool can that be? At this rate, I will
never die! Okay, I guess it doesn’t work that way, but one can hope.
I am reading ‘Presidents’ Club’ by Nancy Gibbs and Michael
Duffy. The authors early in the book
note that this club is exclusive for one must be a live former President of the
United States
to be a member. Hey, no matter how rich
you are you cannot join! Well, it’s
about time that those rich people got put in their place.
But, this got me thinking about the club I have just joined
and it too cannot be bought into. It is
the Old Age Club and like I just explained half of my birth-mates were
not allowed to join.
So, as I walk with less spring in my step and when I see middle-age
people looking at my slower gate I smile and call out “Take my advice, don’t ever
grow old.” They smile back nodding their head at my good advice. They fail to
understand that not to grow old one must die. It serves them right, those young
punks for staring at me.
Like Art Linkletter once said, ‘Growing old is not
for sissies’. I wish to correct his well
worn statement, “Being old is not for sissies, but the alternative is
much worse.” How lucky can I be!!!
No comments:
Post a Comment