Friday, July 19, 2013

OLD

I like the word. Old. I like it far better than “senior citizen”, which sounds polite but reeks of condescension. I could embrace “geezer” or “codger”, except that those words (along with “old fart”) seem a better fit for men.  Crone is too archetypal for every day use. Elder sounds a little stiff and sometimes it implies a comparison, unless we were to drop the “er” and revive the lovely archaic word “eld.” Meanwhile I’m just going with old, a plain word which states the truth.

It’s official now. I’m sixty five, collecting social security, and last year I ended my job working with families in the home-health field, a job which I had mostly loved for twenty three years. I left six months after the agency switched to electronic records. I simply couldn’t endure another computer training.

I suppose it’s natural that since joining the ranks of the eld, I’ve become more sensitive to  ageism. But I’m a little embarrassed to say it wasn’t until last month that I was moved to write my first letter to an editor on the subject. I was prompted by a cartoon in a local paper which normally takes pains to be politically sensitive. They would never publish anything which could be construed as homophobic, sexist, or racist. But there it was: a cartoon depicting the Vermont Citizen Legislature, a panel of six people seated at a table, three of whom were identified by little plaques that read “Retiree.” All three were nodding off or with their heads down on the table, little zzzz’s floating above their white or balding heads.
           
Recently I happened to watch an old video of Jerry Seinfeld on Broadway, filmed when he was forty-four. “I had to go to Florida,” he begins. “I didn’t like it,” he says with a bit of a sneer. “Everybody is old.” The joke is that Jerry is driving his car along the Florida highways and when he looks at the other cars there’s no one behind the wheel. All those invisible, shriveled up little geezers and crones. Creepy.
            
I realize we baby boomers can’t expect a lot of sympathy on this one. We, who once said “Don’t trust anyone over fifty” will forever have to chew on those words while we eat crow. But the pervasiveness of ageism in our culture is worth looking at. So Jerry Seinfeld, now that you’re nearly sixty, would you still tell that joke? And can you tell us what you’re scared of? I suspect if you are someone who makes your living by keeping your finger on the cultural pulse of America you would find a lot to make you nervous. 

Anne Damrosch is a published poet and writer living in Vermont.