Archive for the ‘ageing’ Category

on turning 60, or following the yellow brick road

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

i’m drivin’ hard along the I-70. just west of kansas city. pushing 90, eyes on the rear view, lookin’ for the fuzz. the radio’s tuned into K-MAX, blaring kelly clarkson, carrie underwood, and miley
cyrus, the young estrogen tri-fecta! my foot’s heavy on pedal, and i’m dreamin’ of “oklahoma joe’s”
which has the best pork ‘n beef ribs either side of the mississippi. “joe’s” is situated in the back of this
little mom ‘n pop gas station off the highway, and i’m headin’ there before my eyes droop closed and my head hits the wheel. it’s three in the morning and i’ve been doin’ some hard drivin’. my hair’s greased back, and i’m thinkin’ roy orbison, tom petty, and kansas city here i come. KC, home of charlie “yardbird” parker, count basie, and wilbur harrison, jazz music floatin’ in the air 24/7 along 18th and vine, back in the day. back in the day….

nah, never mind.

none of that shit is true. i’m in kansas alright, but the I-70
is taking me to lawrence, the quite civilized college town, home of
the mighty jayhawks, where my friend, moose, a tenured university
professor in geography, will be celebrating his 60th
birthday on tuesday, three days hence. moose hasn’t shaved his
karl marx-like beard in three decades, and his brilliant, well chosen
ideas about ecology, farming, and home schooling haven’t
changed a lick in that amount of time either. i’ve flown in
from LA, where i’ve been living my middle age, going on 25
years now. ricky, skeeter, and chico have flown in too, from new
yawk, bethesda, and yuma, arizona, and they too, actually we four,
have already hit the big six oh. moose will be last, but we all grew
up together in the new yawk-long island suboibs of levittown back in
the day. you know the day: the post war, idyllic baby boom decade of
eisenhower and his buttoned down 50s. we sang in the “times
they are a changin’” 60s, along with bobby, joanie,
vietnam, the kennedies, pol pot, watergate, we shall overcome, sex,
drugs, and rock ‘n roll. of course, some of us sang, sexed, and
drugged differently, but that’s the interesting part….



i have a thing for kansas. it has to do with red ruby slippers, a new heart, a new
brain, and courage. you know, oz? as in, “wizard of”? how
many times did we all watch it? back in the day? i must have seen it
seven easters in a row, all in black in white: judy in black and
white, toto and auntie em in black and white, ray bolger, jack haley,
and bert lahr, all in black and white. glinda, the good witch, frank
morgan as the blowhard wizard, the munchkins, the wicked witch, and
the yellow brick road. i’ve been trying to follow it ever
since. that road. but where is it? what is it? following the yellow
brick road? what’s it mean? what’s the metaphor?
following your heart, your dream, your bliss? or walking down the
road of your parental units’ expectations? becoming their “son,
the doctah?” or becoming your own man? breaking or following
tradition? making money? becoming a “success”? in whose
terms? the world’s? your own? putting your mark on the planet
or retreating into your own private idaho, i mean, kansas? yeah, i’m
turning 60, i’m in kansas, and it’s time to evaluate,
reconnoiter, look into that all too harrowing mirror of life…

there’s three things i’ve been holding on to these last many years. when i
was young, i didn’t hold on, i looked ahead. i was led by my
ambition. i strived, i produced, i was driven. i took on the entire
world, sword and shield in hand, and i fought. i fought and i
thought… that i was invincible. i didn’t marry, didn’t
need permanence, i was foot loose and fancy free. i was an “artist”.
but now i think that maybe i was wrong. because i didn’t always
win. i fell down. i got hurt. i lost. after forty years, i got tired
of fighting. ricky, chico, and moose used to call me the “man
who never compromised”. and perhaps i was. chico always
preached “life’s a trade off, man”, but i didn’t
agree. i thought if you kept striving, kept your integrity, and never
gave up, that’s all there was to it. but now i think
differently. you see, the three things i’ve been holding onto
are home, job, and marriage. the big 3. security cards. three things
i never strove for, never wanted, didn’t believe in. why?
because it wasn’t the way; it wasn’t “be here now”,
live in the moment, like a rolling stone. it wasn’t free love,
trust the universe, fuck the man. were we wrong? we baby boomers? our
hippie, then yuppie, now bobo (bourgeois bohemian) generation? is
george will, the right wing columnist, right? were we self-indulgent,
narcissistic failures? were our blue jeans, long hair, and change the
world ideas just another youthful fad? do our kids, our mortgages,
our millions, our illusions, our illnesses, our 401ks make us just
another notch on the gun belt of life?



but see, my big 3 securities, home, job, and marriage, are far from it. secure. take a
look. my home. i don’t own one. never have. never wanted to.
i’ve always rented. seventy five bucks a month for my first one
bedroom in chicago when i was twenty two. a hundred and twenty five a
month for a three bedroom on halsted after that. then i house sat,
living on a hundred bucks a week for seven years while i danced.
moved back to new yawk, into the hotel woodward on 55th
and broadway, seventy-five bucks a week. scalped broadway tickets to
pay the rent. moved into a beautiful, hand-built loft on 23rd
and park, before guliani gentrified manhattan. sublet it illegally,
lost it in court. then LA, rent-controlled santa monica for ten
years, and now “lucretia gardens” in quickly becoming
gentrified echo park. i sublet the downstairs and the guest bedroom
to afford the pricey rent with one of the best views in the old
hollywood hills. but security? hah! the landlady can give me 60 days
notice any time she feels like it. it’s a free-standing, 3
bedroom private house. it’s not governed by rent control. the
lovely landlady, who i’ve had a decent relationship with for
over 14 years, can kick me out any time she gets the inkling to sell.
in fact, she gave me the 60 days notice a year ago, and i had to beg
to pay her $400 a month more just to stay. which is where i am at the
moment. but notice, i say “moment”…

job? i’ve been at one job for the last 22 years. at a prestigious private university
in southern california. for 17 years, i was an “adjunct”
faculty member. my contract was good for 6 months at a time. i never
knew whether or not it would be renewed, if i’d have a job the
next semester. fortunately, my students liked me, and my various
deans kept me on. i saw most of my fellow adjuncts go the way of the
world; new deans like to get rid of as much dead wood as they can,
hire their own men and women. five years ago, my third dean made me
full time. still no tenure, still no security. two years ago, i was
up for promotion. if i wasn’t promoted, i’d have no job
at all. fortunately again, my colleagues approved my promotion. i
like my job. i help form ideas in the minds of the young. i plant
seeds and watch them grow. i work only 8 months out of the year, and
my job and my art have allowed me to travel all over the globe. but
security? hah! i can still be let go on a year’s notice. if i’m
lucky, i’ll retire in 6 years. move to bali or the philippines.
open a little bed and breakfast. try to stretch my sad little 401k as
far as the oriental world will allow it. i’ll start all over
again. chicago. new york. LA. the great asiatic void. no guarantee.
no looking glass. no ruby slippers. no home. like a rolling stone…



then there’s the last of the big three, marriage. i married for the first time at
54 years old, to a young indonesian girl, less than half my age. she
didn’t speak much english and we shared few cultural references
between us. bob dylan? richard nixon? who’re they? george
washington, abe linclon, the same. we’ve been together for
seven years now, married for five, and what a long, strange road it’s
been. full of challenges that other marriages, which are, a priori,
full of challenges, never had to face. immigration. ESL classes. home
sickness. seven written tests to pass the DMV’s driver’s
test. language, language, language. age. age. age. culture. culture.
culture. wedding rings have gone flying across the room. plates and
paintings too. i don’t think many men in my position, in an
equivalent relationship, in my marriage, would have stayed. but i was
finally ready. and fully committed. i loved this girl and i wanted to
make the marriage work. she tested me in every way. she was a
twenty-five year old woman going on 16. she wanted money. things. she
wanted freedom; she learned what independence was here in america.
often at my expense. i considered separation and divorce many times
over the first five years. my friends and family told me to quit, to
get out before the damage broke me altogether. but i persisted. i
stayed. i earned this young woman’s trust. this june, we’ll
be celebrating her 30th birthday. we’ll have a truly
international group of friends joining us in our 60-day-notice house
on the hill, and we’ll be happy together. but security? hah! as
much as i’ve invested in my marriage, as much as i’ve
already gotten out of it, deep in my hippie-artist heart, i truly
know that it could dissolve, break, disappear, like quick silver, at
any given moment. sure, in kansas, marriage is supposed to be
permanent, enduring, “forever”, but looking at LA’s
unglamorous reality, and the national statistics on divorce, i know
that… things change. and that no matter how “secure”
one tries to make oneself, sometimes, life simply has other plans….


i look at ricky, skeeter, chico, and moose, all fine fellows each, collectively as
well. three have been married twice, and twice divorced. the moose
has been married just once and both his kids are out of the house,
one a resident at KU medical center, the other a first year med
student at KU’s med school. they’re both fine young
people. we went out to dim sum and oklahoma joe’s with them
both. what can it be, that three fine fellows are thrice divorced,
while just one, the moose, is still seemingly happily married and the
proud father of two medically inclined children? could it be the
water in kansas? the grain? dorothy’s “there’s no
place like home”?


touchy-feely kinds of question, me thinks. but i like the last of the three answers:
dorothy’s “there’s no place like home”. i mean, the moose married earliest of us all;
he was the one who retreated fastest from the world, to the myopia and safety of kansas.
he got a tenured college job, had kids early, bought a farm,
capitalized in real estate, and made, seemingly again, “all the
right moves”. while each of the other three had unhappy or
unsuccessful marriages and chose to move on in their lives. the moose
knew what he wanted and sealed his options tight. he built his world
up, and inward, to insulate himself and his family against the
hostilities and vagaries of life. ricky and chico were lawyers,
working for the man most of their lives. skeeter sold software to the
marketplace and became rich. he too, was dependent on external
buyers. only the moose (and myself) constructed the “world
according to me”. we retreated into our own private idahos, or
in moose’s case, kansas, and we basically marched to the beat
our own drummers. we’re the most set in our ways, me as an
“artist”, he as an “academic”, and we’re
the most opinionated and stubborn of “da boys”….


life? what does she think of all this humanistic mumbo jumbo? well, only life herself
knows, but me thinks she’s smiling at us all, knowing that no
choice is ultimately “better” than another. that each
human being makes his own choices, based on a personal alchemy of
history, genetics, practicality, and emotional need. according to ike
eisenhower and the buttoned down 50s, the moose has done “the
right thing”: held down a single job, created a monogamous
marriage, built a nest egg, and raised two winning kids. but from my
point of view, he’s a long way from oz. i wouldn’t trade
lives with him for all the corn in kansas. nor do i think, would
skeeter, ricky, or chico. moose simply doesn’t take any
chances. he’s adverse to risk, to experimentation. he likes to
plan ahead and to create a future he can count on. he knows what he
thinks, limits his intake, including the meatless diet he never
varies from, and he likes to keep things under control. ricky’s
had one job his whole life and two failed marriages, but late into
middle age, he’s first making discoveries about who he is and
what he likes: jazz, classical music, zen buddhism, and asian women.
chico is an accident happening. he knocks things down, drops and
breaks things, has done it his whole life; but you never know what’s
going to happen wid da chico man. he’s a barrel of laughs and a
pain in the ass, but he’s still alive. and skeeter, well, he’s
already retired; he can do whatever the hell he pleases. he followed
his mathematical bliss and cashed in; now he’s ready to marry
for a third time and start off on a new mentoring career. his life
and his smile are open roads….

me? i’ve settled into the comfort of routine and middle age. but… along
with my three permanent in-securities, home, job, marriage –
there’s also the very first of life’s insecure touchstones, good health. you see,
i had cancer in ’89 and i
could have cashed in all my chips, but for the lucky diagnosis of
hodgkin’s disease, which was one of the most treatable and
curable of all cancers. but what i learned very quickly from my run
in with a life-threatening illness, is that it’s a good
spiritual and practical approach to appreciate every day that you’re
alive, and to concentrate on all that you do have, as opposed
to all the things you still want or don’t have.
and with my upcoming hip replacement… i’ve come to
accept the fact that life could turn me upside down at any
unpredictable moment. and that ultimately, life’s opportunities
and surprises, and the reactions and choices i’ve made to them,
have kept teaching me and showing me that there is, in truth, no
security in life. that nothing is stable, nothing is permanent,
nothing is reliable or forever. yet somehow, i’ve come to
accept this proposition and live my life according to it. i mean,
look, i teach “improvisation” for a living. what does
that mean? it makes me learn spontaneity and impermanence anew every
day i teach. they say that one teaches what one has to learn. it’s
true. like when i travel, i don’t make an itinerary; i just go.
each day, i follow my nose, my instinct, and trust at the end of the
day, i’ll have a place to stay and enough money to pay for it.
sure, i spend a lot of travel time making decisions: where to go,
when to go, where to stay, what to see, but it’s my favorite
way to travel. in fact, it’s the only way. the way i live….



so on the night before the moose’s actual birthday, da boys all settle down in
front of the new kansas flat screen to watch one of our collective
favorites, “cool hand luke”. ricky and chico have most of
the lines down to the exact inflection of the southern prison drawl:
“shaking it here, boss”, “spendin’ the night
in the box here, boss”, and “what we have here is a
failure to communicate”. the latter makes us all howl, as
warden strother martin beats the indomitably non-conformist luke to
the ground with his impotent club of frustration. we all love luke,
the christ-like hero of the film, as played by the young and
steel-eyed paul newman. unfortunately, we’ve all forgotten how
grim the movie becomes, as luke is hunted down time and again after
each failed prison break. personally, i’m devastated by the
film and luke’s stubborn demise. when he bitterly admits to
dragline just before he’s gunned down by “the man with no
eyes”, that “i never planned a damn thing in my whole
life”, i can’t help but identify with him. luke and me.
consummate anti-heroes. ultimate outsiders. rebels without a cause.
yeah, that’s me, boss, never planned a thing that worked out in
my whole life. just grabbed that ring of opportunity and held on for
dear life….


so now i’m back in sunny california. i heard the missouri river over-flowed from
torrential rains just after we left kansas, and president dubya has
declared most of the midwest a national disaster area. good thing da
boys got out in time. all but one of us, that is. the moose is still
there, probably ‘til the end of his days. me, i’m still
makin’ plans. in six years, i’ll have been at the
prestigious university long enough. i’ll face my fears, look
myself in the mirror again, and kick myself out of my little house
and home. well, not really mine. hell, the native americans say none
of us really “own” anything anyway. yeah, i’ll kick
myself west. far west. so far west that it’ll be east. far
east. bali or the philippines. in fact, i’m taking reservations
now. if you want to spend a little time at my far out, far east,
villa manila, then just drop me a line. it’ll be like an
informal time share. you come visit ‘n stay with me on my 70th.
or 80th. if i’m still kickin’, that is….



but right now, i’m drivin’ south on california’s I-5, from san francisco to
LA. i just put my dad in an assisted living community. he’s
crawlin’ towards the end of the line, and he needs a little
“assistance”, if you know what i mean. it’s not
easy to do, but who said life was easy. she certainly didn’t. i
got the radio up loud, and i’m tearing down the highway. not
highway 61, a la bob dylan, circa 1965. no, it’s hard to catch
ol’ bob on the interchangeable bakersfield-merced-modesto-san
joaquin fm radio stations these days. instead it’s john mayer,
amy winehouse, and kanye west. three of my favorites. not to mention
jack johnson, death cab for cutie, groove armada, rx bandits, the
shins, or the big bad voodoo daddies….


but look, the hills are covered with a spring carpet of yellow mustard seed. the entire
countryside is in bloom from the recent late winter-early spring
rain. even the barren I-5 is singing. “the hills are alive”…
with wild green grasses topped with feathery coxcombs. with pink,
flowering fruit trees, oranges, lemons, peaches, budding with new
life. the cow shit still stinks around mid-drive, coalinga, but it’s
a beautiful day for the ride home. home? home is where the road takes
you. home is where the road goes. just follow that yellow brick road,
right dorothy? or in this case, just follow the wild yellow mustard
seed………



is it rollin’, boys????






terminally hip

Tuesday, May 15th, 2007

dhwide.jpg

there is a difference between “hip” and “cool”; between “being hip” and “being cool”. hip cats know it, people worried about being cool don’t. and hell, i do, fer sure. it’s like the difference between fashion and style; between following the ever-changing but buyable trend or having your own sense of personal and self-generated bada-bing. between being “spiritual” and having “soul”. between having money and being rich. hipsters pride themselves on “knowing what’s hip”. people who “try” to be cool are more often, clueless sheep. hipsters don’t care what others think; coolsters do. hipsters live on the edge, maybe slightly over the edge, a little out of control, they push the boundaries, the norms. they gravitate to artists who do the same. dylan, picasso, miles, brando. these cats were hip. single names. invented new forms. defined hip for their generations. britney, christina, travolta, cruise, one names too, but only cool for a while. in and out of fashion.

do you have to be black to be hip? poor? dispossessed? an artist? i don’t think so. but it helps, of course. not having – is motivation, drive, ambition. makes you hungry. it demands you live in the moment, no cushion; it helps you invent new forms. not that fat cat rich people can’t be creative or invent things. they can. and do. but henry ford wasn’t hip. nor nelson rockefeller. nor even jackie, bobby or john f. kennedy. ray charles, sam cooke, otis redding, john coltrane, andy warhol, jackson pollack; the cats were hip.

the opposite of hip – square, daddio. from the old beatnik days. not too far from “uncool”, but still different. “uncool” – not in fashion, not fitting in with the pack. a nerd, a geek, someone different, someone ostracized. someone judged on the way they look or behave. but more externally so. a “square”? not too different… but more philosophically so. someone who just doesn’t get it. doesn’t want to. won’t try. sex, drugs, new music, new ideas. anything new, out of the ordinary. “no, not for me.” george bush – square. proudly so, but square nonetheless. conservatives in general, fundamentalists, not hip. folks who follow the biblical and family tradition. people who won’t think for themselves, or who, when they do, end up only with what was handed down, thought before.

are you hip, babies? have i hipped you?

what the fuck, trules? who cares, you say? are you the self-appointed cyber arbiter of “hip”?

well, no. definitely not. but you see, i’m afraid i’m losing my hip. my right one, to be exact. to long term, chronic and painful osteo arthritis. to a hip replacement. to a hip replacement i’ve been avoiding for the last three or four years, even though i’ve heard it’s the most highly successful joint replacement procedure going. i mean, who wants to replace their hip? i certainly don’t. i’m hip enough, man. i’m pushing 60 and i’m still wearing black 501 levis with the button fly. i mean, i saw jazz piano genius, mccoy tyner, and african singing maestro, salif keita, both, in a single week at LA’s hippest and most edgy edifice, frank fucking gehry’s disney concert hall. i mean, i married a young beautiful indonesian princess, 30 years my junior, married for the first time at 54 to a brown skinned beauty who hardly spoke any english and who seemingly had none of my cultural or generational hip-ass references like dylan or elvis or king or brando or picasso or miles or coltrane. i mean, if that’s not hip and edgy and risky and out of fucking bounds, my main messieurs et madames, then i don’t know what the hell is?

but yeah, i gots to replace my hip. five days in the hospital, two months recovery. crutches, pain, physical therapy, rehabilitation, more pain. all to reduce the pain i gots now because i’m losing my hip. no more cartilage. seems i wore it out from seven years of forced turnout – of my hip – when  was a modern dancer, age 21- 28. now i cain’t gets me outta no car without de pain. i cain’t play me no tennis like i done played for forty years of my life. i cain’t run, i cain’t sleep, i cain’t stretch, dance, even walk in de park widout de pain. i needs me a hip – replacement.

you see, i’ze getting old. like i sez, pushing 60. and i keep rememberin’ back when i was 25 and my pops was turnin’ 55 (five years younger than i am now). it was my pops’ birthday, and he was standin’ in the long beige hallway, outside my cowboy yellow painted boyhood bedroom. he poked his still young head in and said, “i can’t believe i’m turning 55 today. it seems so old. and i still just feel like little joey trules inside.” and i remember that. ‘til this day. it was so strong. and so surprising. that my dad, my father, 30 years my senior, still felt like a child, or maybe a teenager, inside his head. and that maybe everyone felt that way as they grew older and older year after year. still felt like “little joey trules inside”. and that maybe it would be the same for me. that when i was 55 or pushing 60, that maybe it would be the same. still feel like the younger version of myself inside. not feel like all the years my fully middle-aged bodied had accrued. and i do. and it does.

and my dad is going to be 90 this year, still 30 years older than me, his first born son. amazing how he keeps ahead like that. and his body is barely chugging along, after 3 heart attacks, 2 aneurism operations, after prostate cancer, after losing his dear and only wife of 57 years to a stroke, he’s still there. i wonder if he still feels like “little joey trules inside”. honestly, i really doubt that he does. but i promise myself to ask him this year on his 90th , or on father’s day in june.

and what the hell? am i not hip anymore? do i dig john maier or kanye west? yeah, sure. but i still listen to jazz and often think rap, hip hop, and house are limited and one dimensional. do i give a damn about branjelina, the war in iraq, or the warming of the planet? (no to the first, yes to the next two.)  or does it even matter? what will i be, what will i become, with my artificial, new-fangled hip? will it get me back on the tennis courts? get me down in the hilly terraced gardens of echo park again, planting tomatoes, spinach, and zucchini in my backyard sprinkled with the ashes of my mother and hip, criminal uncle? will it afford me some old school or new school bedroom acrobatics with my young, still learning and still growing wife? and what if the operation goes badly? will i end up with a bad hip? be terminally hip? terminally un-hip?

and what finally, does it mean to be hip? to get a new hip? to have a new hip? to give up one’s old hip? one’s hipness? to grow old? to lose one’s  loved ones? to age? to die?

parta life, you say. fuck america, with its obsessive pre-occupation with youth. with it’s neurotic, unrealistic fear of death. look at mexico with its day of the dead. the dead come back for a friendly annual visit. look at indonesia with its hindu balinesian cremation ceremonies, where they believe the penultimate part of life’s journey is into the eternal afterlife. these cultures and people don’t fear death; they respect it, accept it – as part of life.

now that’s hip, eh babies?

whataya think? drop me a “comment”, eh?

(un)hiply yours,

-trules

birthday blog – on ageing and dying

Sunday, August 21st, 2005

dad.eric.90

as i “celebrate” my 58th birthday today, i’m reflecting back on the five day visit i just spent with my 88 year old dad in rossmoor, the “adult” community in walnut creek just east of the san francisco bay. i call my dad joe. that’s his name. we lost my mom in 1999; suddenly, she had a stroke on august 9th, never recovered, and we took her off life support on august 28th. she seemed to die peacefully.

since my mom’s death, my dad has been, by turn, overtly grievous, casually pursuant of other female companionship, mostly out of loneliness, and unconsciously getting closer and closer to his own death.

my dad is a gentle and generous man. he spent his entire life devoted to his wife and children. however, since retiring from the garment industry in new york in about 1980, he has indulged himself in spending time with things he enjoys: playing harmonica, swimming, and throwing ceramic pots and bowls. these things have given him a zest and enthusiasm for life, even after my mother passed away.

my father is also a perfect example of how the miracles of modern medicine have kept a human being alive past his ability to enjoy a “quality of life”. my dad has survived three heart attacks, two aneurysm operations, prostate cancer, and now he’s diagnosed with terminal congestive heart failure. he often ponders endlessly and guiltily over why my mother went so quickly and suddenly, when it was he who was always “sick”.

joe lives on a diet of about thirteen different bottles of pills. one for thinning his blood, one for controlling his heart rate, one for making him sleep, one for… you get the picture. he rarely has a good day anymore. every day he wakes up with a crushing pressure in his head, and he sits around all day waiting and hoping for this pressure to diminish itself. he’s seen a endless battery of doctors, and none of them can determine whether his headaches are from the side effects of one or several of the meds, or whether they’re simply from the heart’s inability to keep pumping. joe is past repair; no more routing or plumbing can be done.

it’s sad to see him sit around the house waiting for his headaches to come or go. he doesn’t swim, he doesn’t pot, and the air he needs to blow his sweet harmonica, whenever he has the courage to try, is no longer available to him in sufficient quantity. he has “meals on wheels” delivered to him five days a week to cut down on the shopping and cooking, and although he can still drive, it is usually to cardiac rehab or to another doctor’s appointment, rather than to the pool or to pottery or harmonica club.

my dad and the “lucky” seniors like him who can afford it, and are blessed with the privilege of health insurance, are costing this society a crippling fortune. modern medicine has made him a bionic man, keeping him alive long past the time he would have been able to live in another time or in another culture. he’s alive but not well. what price is he, and are we, paying for the luxury of life?

when is the right time to die? when will this society let go of its morbid fear of death? how can we learn to accept dying as an integral and natural part of life? other cultures do a much better job than we do. more “primitive” cultures. “third world” cultures. in mexico, the day of the dead is a day of celebration when the dearly departed souls come back for a visit. in tibet, they study the book of the dead for an entire lifetime to prepare themselves for the transition to death and beyond. in my wife’s country, indonesia, particularly in the hindu bali culture on the tiny island east of java, death is the pinnacle of the life cycle. the spectacular firebrand cremation ceremony celebrates the departure of this life to the greater life beyond.

yet here we are in the most powerful society in the history of mankind, holding onto life like desperate, fearful children. we do not want to die. we do not want to get old. we want to live forever. we want to preserve our lives as long as medically, although perhaps not humanly, possible. religion doesn’t seem to help. how could it when we have created a punishing, omnipotent god who we fear, and who tells us we might very well be going to hell? or, who tells us, if we’re “good”, we’ll be going to heaven; but for some reason, we don’t quite actually believe.

will i have the courage to take my own life when i no longer have any quality to it? or am i just a big-mouthed, 58 year old hypocrite who will want to hold on as long as possible? i hope not. i hope i will practice what i’ve preached. i’ve already spent a lifetime trying to do so. but dying….? who knows?

sure, i feel sad and depressed about the quality of my father’s life. i don’t want him to die. i’ll miss him. and i’ll have to get into the wrangle of wills, estates, and inheritance squabbles when he does. but his ill-health, his lack of quality of life, makes me have to wrestle more with the reality of death. his. my own. more with the idea of letting go.

my dad has prepared as much as possible for his departure. he has executed power of attorney, a living trust, a will revised at least five or six times, but – joe is not ready to let go. he’s not ready to die. instead, he prefers to spend the days hoping his time can be filled up, watching tv, waiting for his meals on wheels, waiting to hear from my sister, his daughter, his grand children. he hopes every day that he will recover his health and will be well again.

we all hope the same for him. but we, and the doctors, are no longer optimistic. sooner or later, joe, my father, will die. i am trying to educate and instruct myself that it’s okay. tell myself he’s lived a wonderful, rich life, full of love, with a unique and beautiful marriage, with opportunity, privilege, and again, significantly, much love. he has loved fiercely and he is loved by many.

when it’s time for him to go, i hope we all, joe included, will have the courage and grace to accept, surrender, and let go…………