Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Old Age Day by Day September 27, 2011

Well, I went to the dermatologist bright and early to learn the treatment on my nose over the summer somehow did not work.  So she took a biopsy and I probably have to see a specialist.  It's my third skin cancer.  Hopefully, it will respond to whatever the next treatment is.  My skin is such a wreck.  I do not like this part of old age.  At all.  All the crumbling and frequent scares and possibilities.  I have the skin of a redheaded Scotswoman.  Thanks, Dad. 

I'm especially nervous because a neighbor died only a couple of months ago from skin cancer, and he was told it was fine, and yet it came back with a vengance.  This surprise - the pulling the rug out from under us - is tough to get used to.  Expect the unexpected.  Yet you can't.  All I can do is stabilize my center, which for me is what a great life I have, and how lucky I've been so far, and that I'm connected to the rest of humanity.    As we get older, we're in stormy seas, and the boat had better be flat bottomed and buoyant, to ride through the waves.  We're all sailing to the same place, but we can enjoy the ride. 

Monday, September 26, 2011

Old Age Day by Day September 26, 2011

The newspaper has announced that last week's warm weather was the one week of summer we're getting.  Now fall has arrived, and yet, and yet, I could have sworn we had fall from June to September.  Oh, well, the least of my worries, I guess.  My husband and I had two warm days at the cabin, and lugged the canoe up with a minimum of hernial action and washed every sheet and towel in the place, plus the floors.  We didn't put the shutters on and drain the pipes yet, because my husband swears he's going up again in the next two weeks.  I've heard that one before.  When we can't sit out on the deck anymore, it's more difficult to get up there.  That's when I begin to dream of beaches and umbrella drinks and warm nights.

We have two days at home, then we're driving up to see friends for a couple of days, then back to see our second opera, which got a horrendous review in both papers.  They called Renee Fleming "lazy" if that gives you an idea.  Oh, dear.  Well, she's lovely to look at, no matter what.  I guess this is not Donizetti's best music.  I'm too uncultured to be too fazed, I'm sure.

Today I'm getting tennis shoes and mailing shoes to my daughter who left them at the cabin and shopping for a baby gift.  And adjusting my brain to cool weather and possible rain.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Old Age Day by Day September 23, 2011

I almost had a heart attack this morning at breakfast when my husband told me I had a rash on my chest and face.  I looked in the mirror and sure enough.  Bright red.  I said we'd better not go up to the cabin as we planned and I needed to see my doctor.  I'd had a flu shot and pneumonia shot, and wondered if that could be the cause.  I was so disappointed and frightened.  Then he touched it, and it rubbed off!  Somehow, I'd gotten V8 juice splattered on myself.  I don't remember spilling anything, or some dramatic movement of the bottle or glasses, but I'd managed to splash myself somehow.  I rubbed it off with a dish towel, and when I later went upstairs I discovered my skin in those places looked yellow, like I had jauntice.  I got a little jolt of fear, then scrubbed with soap and water and the yellow came off on the washcloth.  I guess there is a lot of beta caratine in V8.

I'm sure nothing the rest of the day will be quite as exciting.  At least I hope not.  So we are going to the cabin to winterize it and do mountains of laundry left undone from the family reunion.  But it will be beautiful, and we can sit on the deck and watch birds and stare at the lake.  Now if only the canoe is still on it's anchor on the lake and we can get the sucker up our hill.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Old Age Day by Day September 22, 2011

This is our older son's and his wife's anniversary.  Ten years.  We had our older two kids get married within three months of each other, one in New York, the other here.  What an amazing time it was!  A lot of joy, reunion, exhaustion and then, ten days before the second wedding, 9/11.  We had two kids living in New York, and the older two's half brother was flying in to New York from Dublin and his plan was turned around.  All the family got here in time, being brave and determined, but we were all also in shock.  The world had changed in one quick snap.

But often it happens that way.  One day you are worrying if they have the shoe you want in your size and the next you're in a hospital.  I tell people I don't like surprises, but I should be expecting them.  Not anticipating or dreading, but prepared for the fact of change.  The one constant is change.

Today looks ordinary.  I want to buy slippers, go to the grocery store, and check the sale at the luggage place.  But I'm also on the lookout for the extraordinary, tiny moment or big.  Yesterday I was driving to my voice lesson and decided to take a slightly different route, and the street was blocked off.  In the paper this morning I saw someone had been killed, as well as people injured, and I missed being in the reign of bullets by about ten minutes.  I was late to the lesson, and rattled as a result.  I'd moved into the path of death, and I slid away safely.  But lives were lost or ruined right there, right then.  It's a complicated world.  There is evil.  Darkness stalks us.  I'm looking for the overheard laughter, the child waddling down the street holding her mother's finger, the roses climbing the gate.  But what I'll find is anyone's guess.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Old Age Day by Day September 21, 2011

I just found out a friend's daughter had a baby daughter.  Such a joyful event.  September is such an emotionally full month for me.  My husband's and my birthdays, our older son's wedding anniversary, the month in which my parents were married, the birthday of my husband's grandmother who raised him, and our nephew's birthday.  But it is also the month of 9/11, of two dear friend's deaths, of my father's and my husband's mother's death.  It's almost too full, unbearable.  But we aren't given a choice, and we live with what we carry with us, at least most of us do.  As they say, no one ever promised us a rose garden.  There are rose gardens, for sure, and cemeteries, and rough roads and smooth paths.  The longer I live, the more I live with loss, ironically.  Mixed feelings are de rigeur at this stage.

Today I have two delightful activities:  spending time walking with a friend and a voice lesson.  And it's another beautiful day, one of those late summer gifts that we a prone to experiencing in this month.  I intend to enjoy it.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Old Age Day by Day September 20, 2011

I'm settling in with my Spanish program, and it feels good to not let last years classes goes to waste.  I like visuals, so the computer is helpful, and I also think the sound is triggering memories of Spain and Mexico, which enrich the experience.  I love the sound of Spanish.  Yes, I can't wrap my tongue around some of it, and have to give up and move on to the next exercise, but I'm no perfectionist, so I'm okay with that.  I notice my chorus will be singing a Spanish song this time again, and it's from "The Mission", a film I love, so the connection between to of my activities holds strong.

In the opera I saw Sunday, the star has his soldiers singing and then, at the end, has the people in the South Tower singing as they descend the stairs.  I find this interesting - singing to keep one's courage up and to feel banded together.  It's a lovely touch.  How much singing benefits us, and yet, so many of us give it up after childhood.  Our attachment to our churches, our national anthem, our meditation chants, so many aspects of our lives are deepened by singing. 

Monday, September 19, 2011

Old Age Day by Day September 19, 2011

Now we're talkin summer!  This is good.  I've walked the dogs, the sun is bright, the day warm.  Yesterday we went to the city to see an opera, and it was summery!  I really was touched by "Heart of a Soldier".  The story is amazing - I'd read the book years before - and it is told beautifully, with powerful sets and lovely voices and some real acting.  I believe the entire audience was in tears by the end.  It's about bravery and what might be behind it, and how it is a kind of grace that saves our world.  A few days before, a young man had been presented with the Medal of Honor, and this opera provided insight into that kind of soldier.  The kind that leaves no one behind, and never gives up. 

Then I went home and sat outside and read my Michael Moore book, "Here Comes Trouble".  It's very funny, but provides insight into another kind of hero.  I feel positively inspired!

Now if I could just pronounce "mujer" on my Rosetta Stone lessons.  I tried it so many times yesterday, but I'm doing something wrong.  I can get by without trilling my "r"s, but somehow my "j" is an offense to the computer program.  Oh, dear.  How will I actually speak with another person, especially a mujer.  I guess I can only speak to hombres or ninos or ninas.  I've got those down pat.