You Get Old

Fri, Aug 14, 2009

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You Get Old
When I'm 68: The author, in his home office in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, June 9. Photo credit: John Loomis

For any man who has led a vibrant, robust life, the ­realities of aging can be humbling. But as the author has discovered, coming to terms with that is one of life’s great empowerments.

By Pat Jordan

You get old, life gets small. Not meager, pinched, just small. You don’t buy groceries for a week anymore — two hours in the Publix, drenched with purpose, a grocery list that unrolls like the Dead Sea scrolls.

You get old, you shop every day, your list written on the inside cover of a matchbook. Two pork chops, a can of La Sueur peas, four corns (two for tomorrow), two rolls of toilet paper.

You never buy mangoes, avocados, grapefruits, or key limes. You just go into your backyard and pick them off your tree. When you were young, your Uncle Ben retired to Sarasota and immediately sent you oranges from his tree. You thought, How sad. Now that you’re old, you send mangoes, avocados, grapefruits, and key limes to your friends. You enclose a note, very serious, explaining that key limes are not ripe when they’re green. “You must wait until they turn yellow!” you write. You get old, you become an expert on fruit.

You get old, people don’t notice you. You sit at a bar, sipping your Jim Beam Black, neat now, no water, no ice, when a pretty woman in her 40s sits next to you. You smile at her, say hi. She looks at you and through you around the bar.

You get old, young guys don’t get pissed off anymore that you’re lifting heavier weight than they are on the preacher-curl bench. Now they say, “You sure that weight isn’t too heavy for you, sir?” They used to call you Mack. When you were younger you would have said, “Mind your own goddamned business!” Now you say, “Thanks, guy, I think I can handle it.”

You get old, you lose your anger. It takes too much energy to be angry when you’re old. You have more important things to do with your waning energy, so you hoard it like a dwindling resource.

You get old, it’s not always about you. You no longer wait for an opening in a conversation to talk about yourself, your dreams, your accomplishments. It becomes second nature to draw other people into talking about their lives. You’re no longer the life of the party, making people laugh. You no longer have that neurotic compulsion to be known. Why should you? You get old, you know yourself.

You get old, you need less. Less food, less booze, less sex, less sleep. One Jim Beam Black after dinner, savored, so that it lasts until you fall asleep.

You get old, you wake at 4 am as if to catch every moment of your fading days. You struggle out of bed, let the dogs out, make coffee, light a cigar, then go out the front door for your newspapers. You sit on the front steps, sipping your coffee, smoking your cigar in the darkness until Jean Pierre, the Haitian paper deliverer, as black as a purple plum, pulls up in his Toyota. He sees you and gets out of the car. “Sorry, cher, da be late today,” he says, handing you the papers. “No problem, Jean Pierre.”

You get old, you eat dinner at 4 pm, with your wife. You talk about the day, then save half of each of your pork chops, wrapped in Saran wrap, for tomorrow’s dinner. Your refrigerator is stocked with leftovers. Susie wants to throw them out in a day or two, but you stop her, turn the wilting asparagus, the sautéed mushrooms, a few grape tomatoes into a lovely frittata for dinner. You get old, you hate to waste things.

You get old, you see your wife in her tight T-shirt with the words ‘It’s Not Pretty Being Easy’ scripted across her breasts, and you get an idea. But it’s only three o’clock in the afternoon, so you file it away for future reference. When you were young, you’d put that idea into action anytime, anyplace. Now you talk about it with her, make plans for sex. She puts on her silk negligee before she gets in bed. Then you both begin watching Ballykissangel, getting so caught up in it (will Father Peter leave the priesthood and marry Assumpta?) that the next thing you know you’re waking up at 4 am.

You get old, your dogs get old too. It never dawned on you, when you got them, all six, one year after another, that they’d all get old, one year after another, and then die. Now they’re between 10 and 16 years old. Their lives are bounded by food and sleep and all the pills they take, which are lined up on the kitchen counter with yours. Glucosamine and chondroitin for their arthritic joints. Carprofen for their dislocated knees. You see them limping and press their knees back into place. They glance back at you with gratitude. You give them phenobarbital to forestall their epileptic seizures. Ciproflaxacin for their rheumy coughs and sneezes. They wake in the morning with you and begin to wheeze, sneeze, cough, like old men, like you. They have their good days and bad days, like you. You just try to keep them alive for a few more months, then a few months after that. And when they begin to die before your eyes, you feed them water and baby food through a big plastic syringe at first, and then fluids subcutaneously with a needle before that final visit to the vet.

You get old, you set goals for yourself that seem meaningless to others. Not to you. They are proof that you’re not that old. Your wife asks you to “call the man” to break up the old sidewalk in the backyard so she can plant liriope. You tell her you’ll do it yourself. She says, “Don’t be foolish.” You get the sledgehammer and begin whacking at the sidewalk in the summer heat like Cool Hand Luke. Then you wheelbarrow the broken pieces of concrete out to the front swale for the garbageman. Two days later, you can’t get out of bed.

You get old, your strength and stamina go. You mow the lawn, then lie down. Your wife comes home with ten 40-pound bags of mulch. You carry them into the backyard, then lie down. You get old, you can’t do everything in one day — wash the car, mow the lawn, shop for groceries, go to the gym, get a haircut. So you plan out your day like Eisenhower planning D-day. Two things, maybe three, one day, then two more the next.

You get old, you become abstemious. You never buy clothes for yourself anymore. You wear your faded Hawaiian shirts until they’re so threadbare they’re like filmy curtains. You trim little threads with a scissors. One day your wife throws one out. You moan, “But that was my favorite shirt!” She says, “Hoarding is a sign of old age.” You sulk like a child the rest of the day.

You get old, you get your hair cut at Supercuts, $12 for seniors, and then let it grow for two months until it’s curling over your ears and you look like a French diplomat. You were young, you went to a fancy salon, where the pretty blonde massaged your shoulders while cutting your hair, for $65 and a $20 tip. You get old, your wife says, “You’re not going out like that!” You say, “What?” You are wearing a ripped and paint-splattered University of Miami Hurricanes T-shirt, baggy shorts, and flip-flops. You haven’t trimmed your beard in days. You look like Jeremiah Johnson, if he lived in South Florida.

You used to wear $200 Tommy Bahama island shirts and $2,000 ostrich-skin cowboy boots when you went out. Your wife wore spandex minidresses and six-inch pumps. You looked like a successful drug smuggler with a high-priced hooker. You get old, you sell your cowboy boots to a thrift shop for $50 and buy the dogs new collars. You get old, your looks go. You don’t care.

You were handsome once, like a Greek god, with curly black locks and luxuriant chest hair. You still are, in your mind’s eye, even if your hair is so white you look like a ghost in photographs. You look at that photograph of an old man, and say out loud, “Jeez, I look like an old man!” Your friends call back, “You are an old man.” A young friend of your wife’s, maybe 35, picks up a photograph of you when you were 38 off the fireplace mantel. “Wow,” she says. “You were hot once.” You resist the urge to tell her, “I still am.”

You get old, small things give you pleasure that were once an annoyance. Throwing out the garbage, you meet a neighbor walking his dog. You pet his dog, pass the time. The mailman stops at your mailbox. He talks to you about his Brazilian girlfriend, then hands you the mail. Bills, a check, and — eureka! — four movies from Netflix.

You get old, you realize order is freedom. You do your job more professionally, no longer on the fly. You get a magazine assignment — go down 1,500 feet into a coal mine in Virginia, climb a mountain in Haiti — and you prepare for it. You do heavier squats the days before you leave. You fly out the night before your interview so that you will have time to settle yourself, prepare. You get old, you check into a no-tell motel close to the thruway ramp so you have easy access to anyplace you have to go. When you were young you stayed at the best hotels, with pissing Cupid fountains in the lobby and businesswomen on the make in the bar. The first thing you did after you checked in was change your clothes and hit the bar with your barroom smile. Now you go to Denny’s for a snack. Then you go back to the hotel and put your clothes in the dresser drawers and lay out all your notes on the desk so you can review them the next morning before your interview.

You get old, you realize your job these past 40 years was God’s gift. When you were young, you thought you were God’s gift.

You get old, you forget things, not because your mind is going, but because your memory box is filled. A name comes up and you find yourself mentally flipping through all those thousands of slides, trying to place the name with a face or an event. You forget trivial things — where you put the car keys, your glasses — because your mind is filled with more important things. Is the gate in the backyard secured so the dogs won’t get out into the street and get hit by a car? You never forget that.

You get old, you scream at your wife. Not in anger, but because your hearing’s going. “What?” you scream. She looks exasperated. She says loudly, “I said….” You now see the world in a faint haze, like it’s covered with a gauzy film. “Pollen,” you say. Your wife says, “You need stronger glasses.” You refuse to admit that. So you call the Comcast TV repairman once a week. He arrives, a young black kid. “The picture’s blurry,” you say. “And the sound, I have to jack it way up to hear.” He fiddles with the remote, then says, “The picture’s fine. The sound, too. Maybe you need glasses.” You stop calling the Comcast repairman.

You get old, you sell your 1989 Taurus SHO with the five-speed, short-throw shifter, the Recaro racing seats, lowered suspension, rear spoiler, 19-inch mag wheels. You buy a Lincoln LS8, with leather, a wood-trimmed dash, automatic.

You get old, you read the obits. You call out to your wife, “Jeez, Isaac Hayes died! He was an old man, I guess.” Your wife calls back, “About the same age as you.”

You get old, your friends are old too. Old ladies, mostly. Why not? You’re an old man. Betsy, 59, Ina, 65, Julia, 76, Helen, 78. You drive Helen to work when her ride is late. You drive Betsy to the airport at 7 am for a flight to visit her sister. Later, your friend John, 58, knocks on your door. He’s going to visit friends in Wisconsin. Will you feed his cats while he’s gone? Sure, why not?

You get old, your dreams constrict. You no longer expect fame and fortune, your face on the cover of Time. You no longer expect to write the Great American Novel, 859 pages. Your writing gets small. Fewer words. But cleaner, you hope. More nuance, less obvious. Subtle, you like to think. Like your life. Small essays about getting old. They please you just as much as if you wrote War and Peace.

You get old, you cry more. Not over your lost dreams, your sins, your old age, your impending death. You cry for others. You cry when Assumpta dies too young, at 30, in Ballykissangel. You cry at the sight of our soldiers in camouflage walking through airports on their way to Iraq. You cry at the sight of abused dogs and cats staring at you from the pages of newspapers. You cry when Betsy tells you she has inoperable cancer and she’ll never see 60.

You cry for everyone but yourself because you have lived a wonderful life, and you wish that every person, every pet, could live such a life too. When you were young, you cried only for yourself.

—-

This article originally appeared in the September 2009 issue of Men’s Journal.



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This post was written by:

Pat Jordan - who has written 2 posts on Men’s Journal.


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30 Comments For This Post

  1. Anon Says:

    This piece is amazing. Ripped it out of the mag today after I read it.

    [Reply]

    Anonym Reply:

    Agreed. I wanted to rip it out of the mag, but I couldn’t. It wasn’t mine. :(

    [Reply]

  2. mark Says:

    Genius. Superb.

    [Reply]

  3. half way there Says:

    the paragraph about our aging dogs makes me weep.

    [Reply]

  4. Nancy Says:

    Well done Pat Jordan. I’ve never actually finished War & Peace, but I did read your article, and it moved me to tears. Here’s to a life well lived, and many wonderful years of insightful writing, and simple joys ahead.

    [Reply]

  5. Mel Ryane Says:

    I’m weeping…for the writing, for the images and for the realization.

    This is astonishingly beautiful work.

    [Reply]

  6. Linda Bergman Says:

    My God, what a wonderful piece! Filled with humor and heart. Thank you Pat!

    [Reply]

  7. Matt Says:

    Phenomenal, Pat.

    [Reply]

  8. Paul Says:

    Once in a while you have the pleasure of reading something this well crafted. Amazing piece with great insight. Makes you glad you woke up this morning.

    [Reply]

    JJ Reply:

    I agree 100 percent.

    [Reply]

  9. Steve Says:

    One of the people who influenced me most in my life was a 78 yrs old WWII vet. I even named my firstborn after him. I am now 45, knew him for 15 years, he has since passed away about 6 years ago. I still think of the many stories he told me and just plainly his outlook on life. The man NEVER complained about a thing! Made everyone around him feel so special. I think there is a reason some of us are allowed old age…to leave positive thoughts in those we eventually leave behind and by doing so we live forever!

    [Reply]

  10. Kevin Says:

    Amigo - I saw my father for the first time in 25 years this last weekend - I am emailing him this article - it is truly one of the best I have read - my father is a writer - he will appreciate your talent.

    [Reply]

  11. Beth Says:

    Made me chuckle! Since 70 is the new 50, so you’re not really that old!

    [Reply]

  12. Lee Vervoort Says:

    I’ll be 39 in a week and a half. I’m realizing a lot of what this man says.

    [Reply]

    jesse b Reply:

    turned 39 in aug; i’m already mostly the same as the author, myself.
    is that sad or a good thing? hmm..

    [Reply]

  13. sure Says:

    I’m still young enough i started this and thought “this is the kind of self indulgent trite maudlin stuff I can’t stand” but then could…not…stop...reading it, and have decided it’s just a lovely piece after all and that maybe mood pieces aren’t the end of the world after all, as long as they’re this honest–hats off mr. Pat, and congrats on an enviable life

    [Reply]

  14. Carmine Giordano Says:

    Exquisite writing. Poetic and moving because it is all too true.

    What was that water that welled up in my eyes?

    [Reply]

  15. JJ Says:

    This is awesome reminding me of Grand Tourino. You have to have a fattitude of gratitude each day you are alive.

    Thanks for this.

    [Reply]

  16. Joerg Krueger Says:

    I’m 67 work a minimum of 40 hr per week and dance Salsa,Timba and Reggeton at least twice per week.This is My retirement!

    [Reply]

  17. Maureen Says:

    I love Pat Jordan’s writing. But he sounds depressed. He has so much more to live!

    [Reply]

  18. cnfr Says:

    tl;dr

    feeling sorry for oneself is an indulgence.

    [Reply]

    htkatt Reply:

    cnfr, you must be a kid. Only a kid would mistake this for feeling sorry for one’s self. Pat is just savoring life. Hope you live long enough to savor it yourself.

    [Reply]

  19. Susan Says:

    Great writing. Thanks so much for it. Gotta go. I think I have something in my eye.

    [Reply]

  20. Chuck Says:

    Bravo Pat.

    [Reply]

  21. Walter Says:

    Yes, I recognize this very well. I’m 72…

    [Reply]

  22. Bruce Wallerstein Says:

    Pat: This piece was sent to me by a friend in Florida. It is a beautifully written article. I am 66 and retired in the Dominican Republic. Living with an incredible 35 year old attorney who keeps me running. I have been a physician for 40 years and worked with the elderly for many of those years. You have so beautifully put into words so many of my thoughts as an older man as well as a doctor, it was a painful pleasure to read your work. I am sure you are a delightful man with whom to speak. Keep up your writing, it is intelligently well done, thoughtful and personal. Thanks, Bruce Wallerstein.

    [Reply]

    steve bell Reply:

    Bruce:
    I refuse to get old. I try to get smarter.
    If you are from Mattapan, contact me.
    Steve Bell

    [Reply]

  23. R Blethen Says:

    Great essay Pat, thanks, I think that I will go on living, live each day as if it were your last.

    [Reply]

  24. Dean J Says:

    Not to be a jerk, but avoid moving to older communities in Florida, and you avoid a lot of this.

    [Reply]

    jim Reply:

    avoid a lot of WHAT? the celebration of a life well lived?

    you should be so lucky.

    [Reply]

  25. Robert Zelonis Says:

    I’ve sent a link to this article to all my relatives and friends who are over fifty years old. We all exchange many personal views and ideas about aging as well as humorous bits found on the Internet most of which simply make fun of the aging process; these latter insulting articles become stale very quickly. But, I found Pat Jordan’s viewpoint very true-to-life in a general way, and the humor that he injects, intentionally or not, I find tasteful and truthful.

    [Reply]

  26. anti_supernaturalist Says:

    Forty year old women are invisible…
    If you want a sex life outside marriage, you can find it.
    As for the rest… it’s acceptance at its worst.

    anti_supernaturalist

    [Reply]

  27. Lori B Says:

    Thanks so much for this lovely article. I love the part about the dogs getting older too, so true. I’m sitting here in blizzard and happy I just dug a path out for the dogs to do their business - not charging out in it for a day of skiing as I once would have done. So I do understand…but it’s nice here by the fire with my dogs:)

    [Reply]

  28. Elizabeth Says:

    Dear Pat,

    My 63-year-old sweetheart was laughing so hard at his ortho’s office that he (sweetheart) claims he HAD to steal the mag to bring it home to me. So glad he did. There is nothing we can add to the previous comments except one more accolade and thanks for a profoundly tender-hearted article. We, too, loved the part about the aging dogs. Thank you from Palm Beach Gardens.

    [Reply]

  29. Harley Says:

    Pathetic, just pathetic. No, I am not young, I’m old. Difference is, I know how to grow old and think young–Pat Jordan does not.

    [Reply]

  30. Michael Carter Says:

    At age 61, every word of this rings true, and I’m grateful for how eloquent it is. Who would have guessed that the old age I feared as a young man would be welcome when it arrived?

    [Reply]

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