My hands look like my mother’s. Veins so near the surface, I can almost see them pulsing. When I pinch the skin on the back of my hands, it stays in place as if I’d pinched wet clay on a potter’s wheel. Ready for the kiln. And skeletal, my hands are skeletal, bones fanning out to knuckles made thick by clenching and unclenching my fists for seventy seven years. Babies afraid of witches would be frightened by my hands.
I always knew I would get old but it still surprises me. My great grandmother lived to be ninety-nine. The town newspaper captured her birthday in a photo, a huge white cake ablaze with candles set on the tray of her nursing home bed. She was sitting up and smiling. She wore a pink corsage. I struggle to remember her first name. Surely, she had one. I knew her as Grandma Yule. Before the nursing home, she lived in the upstairs back bedroom of my grandmother’s house until she became ‘too much’ what with all the meals on trays and the bedpan filling and emptying. The hand carved rocking chair from that back bedroom is just feet away from me in the office where I write this. I am thinking I should polish the chair, not let it gather so much dust. I need to take better care of the things that are old.
I am a Boomer. This means that I was born between 1946 and 1964. People born in 1964 are infants to me. In 1964, I was driving my dad’s white station wagon on surreptitious trips to the shopping center to visit my best friend who worked at Winkelman’s, the fancy clothing store, and always had beautifully matching skirt and sweater sets because of the amazing employee discount. I wore off-brand sweaters bought on special at my dad’s Ben Franklin Store. Drastically marked-downed knock-off clothing was his way of beating his competitors, that and cutting the price on Aqua Net hair spray which all the cool kids plus me used all day every day after we did the morning ratting of our hair. So, if a person was born in 1964, if they were babies that year? Well, they’re not Boomers. They’re something else.
I wear the end of World War II on my face. It’s not a noble thing or a suffering thing. It’s just the air filled with memories of radio broadcasts and ration cards and letters from Burma and a grandfather dying and then lying in his casket in the downstairs bedroom and uncles coming home from overseas and all the women in aprons over dresses, the runs in their stockings like maps of foreign countries. There was no war when I was born but people still breathed its air.
I went away to college when I was eighteen, after having worked in my dad’s store since I was twelve. At first, he paid me a dollar an hour and then bumped me up to $2.50. It was money I ended up spending at the store on paperback novels, knickknacks for my bedroom, and white sneakers that wore out in three weeks. I knew how to have a job, though, and how to not complain. My dad insisted that I learn to type so I would always have a job so I did what he said and typed my way through my first summer home from college as a white-gloved Kelly girl filling in for secretaries on vacation at the State Capitol and getting hit on by a notoriously flamboyant legislator from Detroit who told me I was a ‘stone fox’ while the two of us stood in a stalled elevator. There is more to the story than that comment. He drove a Pontiac Firebird.
In my office there is a very large photograph of me when I was twenty-one. I have long red hair and not a single blemish, not a laugh line or crow’s foot. I was a stone fox if only for that moment but at least I had that moment even though, at the time, I was woven with self-doubt and regret about things that had happened already in my short past as an adult. But this essay isn’t meant to be a recounting of all the deeds and misdeeds. It’s to be a reflection on the light of aging. The only light of aging cannot be reflecting on my good looks as a young woman. What are you doing now that believes itself to be light? What is light?
On Saturday, my husband and I went to a film about a woman with Alzheimer’s Disease. This was the second Alzheimer’s event we had attended in as many weeks and the moment we walked in, we were tired and feeling victimized. I had an obligation to be there otherwise I would have preferred the slasher film across the hall. After the film, which was endless at only thirty-eight minutes and featured sustained close-ups of the ‘victim’ with her eyes closed and her mouth open, alternately moaning and yelling, the local Alzheimer’s Disease experts stood up with microphones to tell us what’s what.
You can forestall or avoid Alzheimer’s by tending to your brain health they tell us. The speakers are in their forties. Good sleep, Mediterranean diet, social engagement, oh, there was a long list. I listen to this and think they are saying these things because everyone is loath to believe that fate can be cruel and can pounce on the perfect specimen and strangle the life out of them for no reason. Instead, we tell old people it is their own damn fault if they get Alzheimer’s Disease. It is their misspent youth – the cheap wine and the cigarettes and the countless cheeseburgers and the weekends not wanting or able to get out of bed because you know Alzheimer’s doesn’t start when you think it does. Oh no, they tell us, Alzheimer’s starts decades before. In other words, many of us have been ignorant of our doom for ages. Maybe that’s the light. The ignorance.
I have taken to drinking bourbon and ginger ale. I was a rum and Coke drinker for a long time but the shots of rum kept getting bigger until I was using the Coke just to camouflage how much rum I was drinking. I am more circumspect about the bourbon although it is as beautiful a color and have replaced the tendency to pour more alcohol by adding two maraschino cherries to my drink. They are the dessert for the bourbon. The Alzheimer’s Disease experts would approve of neither the alcohol nor the cherries. They’d rather I drank tap water with the thinnest slice of lime. They think that at my age, I am ripe for deprivation. But I differ. Another spot of light.
This afternoon I wore a long denim skirt, a heavy white sweater, a hand-knit red scarf, and my knee high LL Bean boots, which I’d just rejuvenated with bear grease last night, to the new writing group I’ve started at a local senior center. I wanted to stride down the hall, skirt and scarf flowing behind me, looking like a writer, eccentric and confident. And that is what I did. I smiled at the old men working a jigsaw puzzle who looked up when I passed. I was going places, oh yes, I was going to the end of the hall to the room with the big wooden table and rolling cushioned chairs, the room where the early afternoon light shone through the blinds, painting stripes on the carpet. The light would shine that way for another hour until we were done and packing up to go.
“You bring so much energy to this,” one woman said in parting. And I decided that she’d really meant light, that I’d brought light to the group after all the years of fists clenching and unclenching, the unblemished becoming the gnarled, the incessant warnings of impending doom, the bourbon and ginger and maraschino cherries. All of it light in some way, if only in my acknowledgement and acceptance and if only for that hour.

Our cat is on steroids.
Every night my husband scoops up the cat, whose name is Herc, and holds him so he can’t scratch. I pry open Herc’s mouth to stick the pill as far down his throat as possible before he wrestles free to clamp on to my finger. Then, I hold his jaw shut until he starts licking his lips. This is supposed to be the sign that he has swallowed the pill.
He fakes. We often find the pill on the floor several feet from where we thought he swallowed it. He is cagey and nonchalant about this, never giving off a hint of his trickery. But we shouldn’t be surprised. He is on steroids, after all.
We ask the vet how long Herc can take steroids. “His whole life,” she answers. Well, how long is that? Could he take steroids for ten years? She shrugs.
I’d Google it but I don’t want to see the answer. AI is so advanced now, it would show a dozen photos of advanced steroid use in cats, offer alternatives for cat burial and sign me up for grief counseling. Vets don’t prescribe steroids for hangnails.
Oh well. For the time being, we are old people living in a cat bubble with two dogs. The cat sleeps on our bed and, in the morning, walks up to my pillow so when I open my eyes, I see his tiny mouth and his whiskers. This morning, I smelled fish on his breath, so certain as if he’d just caught a perch somewhere and devoured it whole.
I have learned over the years that love is a dangerous thing. Cats, dogs, people.
Tonight, we will give Herc the pill he spat out last night. The beat goes on.
My former neighbor, a tall spare woman named Moreau, decided that every 4th of July, we should help her hang her enormous American flag between our two houses. This was possible because our houses, very old and very tall, were separated by a driveway and a wee bit of land. So it was quite possible to hang the giant flag with ropes from her upstairs window and ours.
We did this although I don’t know why. Moreau was a fussbudget of the first order, an elementary school teacher who breathed disapproval. That our household – our kids, our dogs, us – was loud and seemingly chaotic brought out the worst in Moreau, until the 4th of July rolled around and then we were pals.
It was fine. It made her happy. And the flag got noticed. Passers-by would be startled looking up to see it waving. The flag was a favor to a neighbor. Which, if you think about it, is kind of patriotic.
Patriotism to me isn’t about showing the flag. It’s about showing up.
It is so easy to check out. There are dozens of parallel universes, so many entirely separate streams of knowledge. A person could live for years in a content-laden environment, dense and rich with images and words, and not have a clue what’s happening politically or what’s changing in the government. We have a million echo chambers, replete with all the media one could want and cozy cushions and steady drinks from a free bar. So, showing up in a meaningful way when all these opt-outs are so tempting requires a huge amount of gumption.
Showing up means tuning in to the local news, knowing who your elected officials are, meeting them in person, going to public meetings, screwing up your little courage and going to the microphone to advocate for what you think is important. Voting. Every time, every election. Being physically present, visibly present in places where decisions are made.
Not waving the flag. Being the flag.
______________________
Originally published in 2024 in the ‘Before Times’ but, to me, this is still the recipe for patriotism.

I was with a boyfriend once when he drove my VW down the block on the sidewalk. I was probably intoxicated and laughing so maybe I was abetting his lawbreaking since I assume it is against the law to operate an automobile on the sidewalk even a wee one like a bug.
My devotion to rules is legendary. I keep my seatbelt on until the plane has come to a complete stop. I always shower before getting in the pool (well, I do at one pool but not the other because I think the water is probably pretty cold at the latter since it’s a public pool and well, you know how it is with revenue shortfalls and all, hot water is the first to go). I don’t right turn on red if pedestrians are present. And I quit jaywalking cold turkey twenty years ago. Somebody got a little too close to my flowing skirt.
I could go on.
I do not want to intentionally or unintentionally break the law. The idea of getting arrested is very scary to me for a dozen reasons, not the least of which is I can’t hear if I lose my cochlear implant processors. So, the times that we are in and the public activities that are needed have made me think plenty about the possibility of getting arrested. My goal is to be brave while tending to my ever-present inner coward.
As my husband says when he drops me and my friends off for a protest, “I’ll pick you up. Just tell me which way you’ll be running.” Knowing that he is hovering a block or two away in a big black F-150 that could probably pass for an ICE vehicle is an odd comfort in this cracked-up time. So far, though, I’ve been as law-abiding as they make ’em. That might change. I guess we’ll see.
Anyway, the answer to your question is, “No, not really. Not so far.”
______________________
Photo by Eugenia Pan’kiv on Unsplash

I wake up as if a dead person
Flat on my back, arms arranged
Practicing for the future
Aqua pajamas, wrong pink top
Cat chewing imaginary food
Next to my ear
*****
The mother and daughter one table over are having tequila shots with orange slices. I watch the waitress pour the tequila from a gallon jug. I never drank tequila with my mother or anything else for that matter. She did her drinking on her own in the kitchen.
*****
When I die, I hope it is close to when I’ve gotten a haircut by the guy who makes me look like a silver pixie.
*****
The cat knows my name and the names of all the other people who live here and those who pass through, especially if they are worried or wondering about the future.
*****
I sleep as if worn bare from shoveling
It is alright to be tired from living in a heavy way

My mother had Alzheimer’s Disease for quite a while before I knew about it. This was because we had a long period of not speaking, a very long period, an epically long period. So, I know a fair amount about family estrangement. I am a gold medalist in both grudge-holding and self-orphaning.
Anyway, after ten years of not seeing or talking to my mother, I went home. My father had warned me in one of several letters preceding my return that my mom had A.D. So, I was ready but not ready. She recognized me but could only put a few words to her recognition. She knew I came back which, at the time, seemed precious enough for both of us.
Today, my husband and I went to a luncheon sponsored by the Alzheimer’s Association in honor of Black History Month. The presenter, a longtime researcher and community organizer, talked about the warning signs – if you forget a little bit, it’s normal, if you forget a lot, it’s Alzheimer’s – and it made me wonder when my dad did the final figuring. How did he convince my mom to go to the doctor about her forgetfulness? And then to take medicine and then to stop driving. Well, I know how he did the latter. He told her that in order to renew her license, she’d have to take the written test. And then spent time everyday ‘studying’ the driving manual. He had genius about some things that I never detected growing up.
On the way home from the luncheon, my husband asked me how I felt about myself. Pretty good, I said, and then wondered if we were now in the phase where we were watching each other for slip-ups. Were we becoming each other’s diagnostician?
Alzheimer’s Disease or A.D. as my dad called it is no longer the stuff of my parents. It could well be my stuff or my husband’s stuff. The game has changed. That hit me today. Alzheimer’s Disease isn’t just something that happened to my parents. My husband and I, well, now we’re swimming with the sharks.
It’s deep.
________________
Photo by David Clode on Unsplash

Just eat all the pretzels and be done with it.
All the equivocation, rationing, using the tiniest bowls – end it! The pretzels won’t stop tapping you on the shoulder every time you walk past the cupboard unless you get rid of them. All of them. All the schnibbles, all the tiniest crumbs, the salt in the bottom of the bag, especially that.
Writing is like that.
A few weeks ago, one of our dogs had a health episode. I knew while it was happening that I would have to write about it and yesterday I sat down to do just that.
It was agony. The names, the descriptions, the chronology, the keeping all the current and previous dogs straight, and, last, figuring out how to describe how I felt. So, because it was difficult and frustrating and impossible to retrieve just five or six sticks from the massive Pick-Up Sticks pile, I swept them all into the essay. In other words, I decided to just eat all the pretzels and be done with it.
From that word splat came chaos, a mess, a hard to follow tale that gave me a headache. But out of the headache or the overeating or the pile of sticks depending on your choice of metaphor eventually came a pretty coherent piece which I only know is coherent because the women in my writing group told me so. I trust them and they have never let me down.
I love writing because it is hard but also wonderful.

Heavy heartedness. That’s what I needed a break from today.
If you’re a person paying attention or, worse, a person (like me) paying too much attention, current events can create a constant sense of dread and foreboding. Remember the little sign from the Vietnam War – War is not healthy for children and other living things? Neither is this administration.
So, I think about this as an older person, how unhealthy it is to carry this outsized worry around all the time. Is my life going to be shortened because I’ve not figured out the recipe for shaking off the events of the day? I don’t know. I do know that I’m trying to be mindful of the connection between stress and health. I actually spent a whole semester on this topic in an independent reading with a beloved professor who attributed his colitis to living as a Black man in America. This isn’t that, of course. But it’s not nothin’ either.
Anyway, I went to the zoo today with my son and it was wonderful. And it wasn’t until five minutes ago that I realized that I had a couple of lovely moments of being carefree. One was when I walked into a building where three enormously tall giraffes were eating and a littler giraffe was curled up watching. And the other was when I made a video of a hippo walking toward me and then turning dramatically around to show me his beautiful and quite ample rump. And the last was when the chili fries I ordered at Gilles, the 87-year-old landmark ice cream shop on Milwaukee’s westside, turned out to be spectacular.
That’s it. That’s my answer to your question.

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