The Grace of Old Age
by Richard Harvey on 04/13/18
A senior citizen was driving down the
freeway when his car phone rang. He picked it up and heard his wife's urgent
voice warning him, “Victor, I just heard on the news there’s a car going the
wrong way on 280. Please be careful!”
“Heck,” said
Victor, “It's not just one car. There’s hundreds of ‘em!”
Writing is
often one-way traffic, like filling a holey bucket, like shouting in the wind:
all putting out with no give-back, no return. Let’s change that here and now. I
want to talk to the oldies among the Spiritual Guidance audience; the over
fifties, the ones looking at the three sights of the Buddha—old age, disease
and death—squarely in the eye, up close. And I want to talk to the younger folk
who care for the oldies or have older people, family members, neighbors and so
on in their lives.
I want to ask
for your response: please send it to me at [email protected] — you see, now you know I’m serious.
With old age,
as with all the various stages of life, comes a challenge. Three possibilities
are apparent. I describe them this way:
One, I pull
back and become an observer of life’s drama and mundaneness. Passion and
intensity surround me, but it is for the previous generations, the younger ones
with hubris who have hope, desire, urgency and ambition, who still require
satisfaction, who are hungry for life. They are what the poet Rilke called “the
hot and quick”, whereas I am the cold and slow.
Two, I
retreat into a fixed stance, embellished by the appearance of age, becoming
crotchety, mean and small-minded. Inside I feel compulsively intolerant,
judgmental and critical. Mostly people do it “wrong” and I suffer from my
disappointment in them and my lack of generosity. The dynamic is primarily
inward, but I may express it outwardly. People stay away from me. Increasingly
I am not someone others want to be around, but they do so out of duty,
responsibility, family ties and…(dreaded word) pity.
Three, I
accept the grace of old age, the wisdom of life experience and the generosity
of existence, as a being who gives back and serves in teaching the young
(increasingly everybody else!) through loving acceptance, compassion and
empathy, through generosity and demonstrating the power of grace—the grace of a
life well-lived and a life that continues to flourish and unfold intelligently
with feeling, engagement and loving kindness, a life that naturally and
beautifully has led me to a deepening spiritual threshold.
So, in
summary you have the observer, the judge and the wise one.
Now, which do
you choose? What is your experience? Are there any other possibilities to
choose? Have you chosen one of them? What of the issues I haven’t mentioned
here: ethics, health, crime, physical frailty, discrimination, employment,
creativity, cultural expectation, prejudice and dependency?
Please share
generously with me; anecdotes, personal reminiscences, wisdom, humor, tales of
caring and of being cared for, glorious senility, pathos, compassion, ailments
and love. I will try over time to assemble these into an article or even a book
(asking your permission to share first, of course). I promise you I will
appreciate it and I will not feel like I’m shouting in the wind. Thank you. May
your journey through life be gracious, intelligent and wise.
Three ladies
were discussing the difficulties of old age. One said, “Sometimes I catch
myself with a jar of mayonnaise in my hand, standing in front of the
refrigerator and I can’t remember whether I need to put it away or start making
a sandwich.”
The second
lady said, “Yes, sometimes I find myself on the landing of the stairs and I
can’t remember whether I’m on my way up or on my way down.”
The third one
said, “Well, ladies, I’m glad I don't have that problem. Knock on wood,” as she
rapped her knuckles on the table, and jumping up cried, “That must be the door,
I’ll get it!”
BLOG entry #143
This article by Richard Harvey was originally published at http://www.therapyandspirituality.com/articles/ and it is part of an ongoing retrospective series of blogs. ‘The Grace of Old Age’ was first published in 2012.