By Ralph R. Reiland on 6.2.09 @ 6:06AM
The time in life when all good things must end.
SEA ISLE, N.J. -- They had a contest here last week in the
Press of Atlantic City that
asked readers in 25 words or less to submit answers to this
question: "Where do you want to spend the last years of your
life?"
The winner was Nandini Taneja, from Mays Landing, with this
reply: "Alone in a rented oceanfront apartment, praying daily for
the years I lived, choices I made, people I hurt, hearts I
broke."
For an aspiration, that seems to me to be a little too morose and
out-of-the-way, but the editors liked it because its "vision of
responsibility and atonement was especially moving."
From Ventnor, Tom Krick was the most negative and succinct about
the location of his end days: "Anywhere but New Jersey (and that
includes hell)."
More political, David Smith in Absecon was looking for an escape
route from America's swing to collectivism: "Sadly, because
this government is slowly turning this great country into the
SSA, the 'Socialist States of America,' I am looking into moving
to Australia."
Tom Murphy in Atlantic City seemed less unhappy with socialism:
"In my subsidized high-rise in Atlantic City. Looks like, though,
it may be in a doorway in Atlantic City if Social Security isn't
fixed."
Personally, my favorite was an upbeat answer from a woman in Egg
Harbor Township, Elizabeth Thomas: "On the road again like
Willie Nelson or Dierks Bentley, free and easy down the road I
go."
An even more upbeat way to go out on the road is Bruce
Springsteen's. I always thought his singing sounded like just
hollering, but on the way to his recent concert in Pittsburgh my
wife told me that he's a poet, so for the first time I listened
to the lyrics.
His wild romantic glory dreams intact , Bruce sang "Born to Run,"
just as he has at every concert since the '70s: "I wanna die with
you Wendy on the streets tonight in an everlasting kiss." How
sick!
I don't think much about the sunset years. Too often, those years
become the grim and fearful world that John Updike, who died in
January, described through his characters in his final volume of
stories, a time of standing unsteadily on the brink of old age,
increasingly separated from old friends and associates, depleted
by bad health, and preoccupied with the approaching void, the
final step where "death is real, and dark, and huge." Yikes!
Similarly, Philip Roth in his latest novel, Exit Ghost,
has his longtime alter-ego, a now-decrepit Nathan Zuckerman,
living isolated in a rustic New England retreat, incontinent and
impotent as a result of his treatments for prostate cancer.
Zuckerman had moved away from New York "to be rid of the
lingering consequences of life's mistakes," to write and to be
alone.
"I had banished my country, been myself banished from erotic
contact with women, and was lost through battle fatigue to the
world of love," Zuckerman says. "I had issued an admonition. I
was out from under my life and times. I lived, by choice, where I
could no longer be drawn down into the disappointments."
His potency gone, Zuckerman's desires remain unbroken: "And so I
set out to minimize the loss by struggling to pretend that desire
had naturally abated, until I came in contact for barely an hour
with a beautiful, privileged, intelligent, self-possessed,
languid-looking 30-year-old made enticingly vulnerable by her
fears and I experienced the bitter helplessness of a taunted old
man dying to be whole again."
Zuckerman envies the woman's husband and the man he expects to be
the woman's lover, both "armed to the teeth with time."
"The ninth and, apparently, final Zuckerman novel is a
blisteringly bad-tempered indictment of modern America filled
with the usual gripes of Roth,"
writes Alfred Hickling in a review in London's
Guardian. "But one also senses that Roth has chosen to
write the eulogy for his generation. In a supremely poignant
scene, Norman Mailer gets up to speak at George Plimpton's
memorial service, saddened to acknowledge that Plimpton's demise
'was neither humorous nor unusual. He died not in pinstripes at
Yankee Stadium but in pajamas in his sleep. He died as we all do:
as a rank amateur.'"
topics:
Mortality, Retirement, Philip Roth