What I Love and What I Hateâat 78
Why is everyone high on kale? I can't stand the stuff. The texture is crinkly, and the taste is bitter. If I see kale soup on another menu, I'll puke. Whatever happened to spinach? It's delicious, nutritious and look what it did for Popeye.
I love submarine movies...all of them, from Run Silent, Run Deep to Das Boot (including the director's cut which runs over three hours), to Cary Grant in Operation Petticoat. Don't have a clue why. After visiting the Intrepid, I know I wouldn't want to spend the night in one.
I spend huge amounts of money on designer clothes online at Neiman Marcus (Needless Markup), then when it's time to finalize the sale, I cancel it. . . .
Figuring out Medicare
Being able to enroll in Medicare is one of the major benefits of getting older, right after qualifying for the five-percent-off senior discount at the supermarket.
Like many of us, I thought enrolling in Medicare would be easy. I figured Iâd have to prove I was 65 by remembering who won Super Bowl III (the New York Jets) and who was the Beatlesâ drummer before Ringo Starr (Pete Best), but then Iâd automatically be covered because ⌠well, that was the American way.
Well, not exactly. Just like the American way, with its tolls every few miles, dangerous curves up ahead, and lack of a single clean rest stop, Medicare frequently has co-pays every few visits, dangerous deductibles up ahead and also not a single clean rest stop. . . .
Paul Newman in the Locker Room: Growing Up in Beverly Hills
In the mid-1950s I had a summer job working evenings at a Foster's Freeze at the then-minimum wage of $1 an hour. I had attended grammar school in Beverly Hills and was going to Beverly Hills High School.
Although Beverly Hills was and is well known for its celebrities and fabulous homes, I lived in a part with modest single-family homes and nondescript apartment buildings. The celebrities and the wealthy lived north of Santa Monica Boulevard and the really big names and wealthy lived north of Sunset Boulevard.
I lived south where Beverly Hills almost ends. There were four grammar schoolsâtwo in the wealthier areas and two in the middle-class type areasâbut all students went to Beverly Hills High School, which was like a private school.
That summer a club I believe called the Executive Men's Club of Beverly Hills was offering an incredibly reduced price (like $10 a month) for teenagers who lived in Beverly Hills. . . .
Poppinâ Pills
There are now six pills in the morning and four pills at night. There are pills to help me sleep and pills for high blood pressure, pills for anxiety, pills for heart failure, pills for coronary artery disease and pills to lower cholesterol. On the weekend, I set out my pill case and carefully place each of the ten pills in their allotted slots.
It takes me about ten or 12 minutes and I hate every minute of it.
I had always prided myself on how few pills I took, given my age. Iâd see other people, people my age more or less, sit down to meals and go through the ritual and I felt, foolishly, morally superior. . . .
(Photo by Myriam Zilles on Unsplash)
A Short Video: âLeavesâ
by Mitchell Stephens
on Leaves and their fate
(Pondering,
not for the first
or last time,
aging.)
Click here to watch video.
Waddaya Think?
What movie would you wantâalong with an iPad and electricity âon a desert island?
click here, and answer or see answers in the comments.
Correction: Sondheimâs âSend in the Clownsâ Has a Major Flaw
You know the song. You probably like the song. Most do. I did.
In fact, in an article on Judy Collins for this website, I called âSend in the Clowns,â written by Stephen Sondheim, âa song that makes it hard to imagine that there could be a better song.â
But I have listened to it some more. I have thought about it some more.
And I want to apologize. I was wrong.
It is indeed possible to imagine numerous better songs than âSend in the Clownsâ because there is an awful line in an important place in âSend in the Clownsâ. . . .
(See the comments for an account of Sondheimâs own position on this song and the play it is from.)
Being An Early Person Married to a Late Person
Weâre supposed to leave at 6.
I am ready at a quarter to 6, sitting on the couch, waiting, waiting. My wife is almost ready, she says. Itâs 5:50. And then sheâs just about ready, at 5:58. At 6, sheâll be just a minute.
Then itâs 6:03 and then she needs to find her sunglasses and then itâs just about 6:05. We finally leave the house at 6:09, but whoâs counting?
I am, of course.. . . .
My generationâs Drug Experimentation
My grandchildren think I am a really cool person because they think my generation was a really cool generation.
Indeed, we were rebellious, outrageous and colorful. Our music still plays all the time everywhere, and the grandkids know the words. They have heard the stories about us heralding in the civil rights movement, womenâs liberation, the Disability Rights Act, etc. They hear us tell stories about how we fought to end the unjust Vietnam war that was killing our classmates.
We marched, demonstrated, defied, rebelled and enjoyed being nude. It was all about freedom to be and do whatever we wanted.
And part of what we wanted was to do drugs. . . .
Good News (for Real!) on Aging Minds
What am I writing about? Oh yeah: That tendency we formerly middle-aged people have to . . . draw a blank, to forget, you know, a lot. Not only the name of that neighbor we bumped into outside but why we decided to go outside in the first place. Or, to put it more kindly, that annoying habit that names in particular but facts in general have of slipping from our aging minds.
Iâm writing, too, about that tendency many of us who reach ripe or over-ripe ages have to suspect that such recollection-fails might be indicative of incipient neurocognitive disorder: the dreaded dementia.
But hereâs a surprise: Iâve stumbled upon, of all things, some good news . . . .
Queer Resiliency
Fifty-one years ago, I attended my first gay pride festival in Manhattanâs Washington Square Park. Bette Midler sang âYou Got to Have Friends.â We sure needed them. At that time, queer people had no legal protections. We could not be out as teachers, could be evicted, and were often physically attacked late at night with no police protection. Same-sex sexual activity was only legalized in 1980 in New York.
Those of us gathered that day danced on the shoulders of activists a generation before, including Harry Hay of the Mattchine Society and Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon of Daughters of Bilitis who organized in the 1950s to counter police entrapment, McCarthyism, and the American Psychiatric Association labeling us sociopathicâŚ.
Rehab: Yes, Yes, Yes
There are three men and one woman on treadmills, a woman and two men on ellipticals, one man on a stationary bike, a woman on a rowing machine and two women and two men on something called a ânu-step,â which, I am later told, is sort of a seated elliptical.
From my treadmill in the left side of the cardiac rehab class, I observe them all carefully, or as carefully as I can without falling off the treadmill during my jog. Who looks in better shape than I am? Who seems to be recovering more quickly from their heart attack?
At the hospital, when I was told Iâd been referred for cardiac rehab, I jumped at the chance. Well, as much as I could jump following an attack that had almost killed me. . . .
A Video: âThe End of Going Outâ
There was a time
ânot that long agoâ
when doing something
required leaving
your home.
Click here to see this âidea videoâ by Mitchell Stephens
Living a philosophical life
On the bedroom wall, across from the chair I use for taking off and putting on my socks and shoes, Iâve hung an ink-paint reproduction of Caspar David Friedrichâs The Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog.
I first saw the famous work about 50 years ago, hanging over the fireplace mantel of a new friend, Ken, one of the most remarkable people I have known. He died two weeks ago, after experiencing sustained physical pain during the end of a singular life of existential suffering, intense sentiments, exalted thoughts and peak experiences.
Ken frequently spoke of âmy great teachersâ: Nietzsche, Jung, Beethoven, Wittgenstein and Nikos KazantzakisâŚ.
Whitman and Thoreau and the Hippies (via AI)
Câmon man, âI sing the body electricâ? Like far fucking out. I mean everything was electric, right?
And those leaves of grass? Whitman was smoking the good stuff for sure. Then there was that guy Thoreau out in the woods protesting the war.
Which is all by way of saying when Mitch posed his question about the origins of hippie thought, Thoreau and Whitman came to mind. When he suggested I write a few paragraphs on the subject I jumped at the chance to ⌠outsource it to ChatGPT. (Hey Iâm not doing this for credit, just getting the info out there.) âŚ.
Click for the introduction to this series: âThe Roots of the Hippie Idea.â
Stillpoint
Stillpoint
A Visual Poem
Rumination On Living With Chronic Pain
Click here for this video by John R. Killacky
Protests, yesterday and today
Iâve been trying to figure it out: Are these campus protests like our campus protests? How are they similar? How are they different?
And does any of that matter?
In the late â60s and early â70s, some of us gathered on quads and lawns and library steps and demanded an end to an unjust war. I was one of them. (A few years later, some of us gathered on quads and lawns and library steps and demanded concrete movement toward racial justice.)
We chanted âHey, hey, LBJ, how many kids did you kill today?â and painted signs and erected barricades and marched and held teach-ins and wanted our colleges to stop collaborating with a government that napalmed a far-away nation? . . . .
Judy Collins at 85
Judy Collins turns 85 today, May 1st.
I saw her in concert ten days before this birthday at Symphony Space in Manhattan, just blocks from where she has long lived on the Upper West Side. And her guitar playing, piano playing, her singing were allâas before, as expectedâlovely.
That voice was and remains extraordinary, as luminous, as unmuddied, as comfortable at high elevations, as any in folk or rock music. Judy Collins wrote some good songs, but she discovered and sang, always wonderfully, some of the most important songs of the second half of the twentieth century. She is a woman of impressive talent but also extraordinary tasteâŚ.
An Old Person Considers Whether Biden Is Too Old
Joe Biden would be 86-and-two-months old when his second term endsâif he is reelected in November and Trump doesnât stage a more successful insurrection. Donald Trump himselfâa comparative youngsterâwould be a presumably still-corpulent 82 at the end of a second term.
These sure sound more like nursing-home ages than productive-member-of-the-workforce ages. And, you would think, it would be useful to have someone with their wits about them in the big job.
Indeed, I had recently begun to think that I myself, at the age of 74, ought not to be presidentâdue to some annoying short-term memory issuesâŚ.
Attached to Old Tech
Question: How many Boomers does it take to change a light bulb? Answer: Four. (One to change the bulb, and three to talk about how good the old one was.)
Young people often marvel at the path weâve travelled.
They could not conceive, for instance, of party lines. I grew up in a Chicago suburb, about three blocks from the Chicago city limits. This was the 1950s. We had a telephone, of course, but it was on a shared âparty lineâ with a family down the street.
Which meant that if we wanted to make a call, weâd pick up the receiver and either get a dial tone or hear the conversation that our neighbor was having with someoneâŚ..