Old Friends Again
By hudsonmoon
- 2453 reads
I was fifteen in 1969, and one of my favorite albums was, and still is, Simon and Garfunkel’s Bookends. There was a track on side one — a track that some of my friends skipped over, but one that I always listened to: Track 5. Voices of Old People.
Art Garfunkel had taken a tape recorder into the United Home for Aged Hebrews in New Rochelle, New York, and to the California Home for the Aged at Reseda. He recorded old people venting their frustrations about aging. One segment in particular always stuck in my brain. It was Man number 2 in the recording. He says: . . . and I can’t get up the mucus for the last, eh, two, three months. . . oh, yes, and I maintain, I maintain strongly, to this minute, I don’t think it’s an ordinary cold.
As a teenager it made me laugh and cringe at the same time. Any time I‘d gotten sick I would imitate the voice and chant the line: I can’t get up the mucus! It always made me laugh.
Now that I’m sixty-six, empathy has replaced my youthful idiocy. Because now it’s me who can’t get up the mucus.
I’ve only recently gotten over a two-week slow dance with bronchitis, but the mucus lingers like a repugnant acquaintance who won’t let go of your ear at a party. And I now treat my Mucinex liquid like a treasured bottle of fine Irish whisky. If I don’t have it with me on the train I daydream about that moment when I can get home and hit the bottle once more. Smacking my lips and coughing up a loogie or two. I live for moments like that.
Recently, on my way to the toilet at the supermarket, I found myself eyeing the adult diapers section as I did my pee-dance down aisle six. Turns out I’m a lousy dancer. My pee has a mind of its own. I can’t even run tap water at the kitchen sink without my bladder going over the maximum-load line. Then it’s a race to the bathroom to determine whether or not I’ll be changing my pants. “Did you just pee in your pants?" my wife will say as I try to pass her on the stairs. I will lie and tell her that the kitchen sink has a lot of kick-back, and how I’ll have to do something about that one day. But she knows. She. . . knows.
Other than that I’m a just a run-of-the-mill falling apart one day at a time sort of guy. I’m just not ready for you to help me cross the street yet. So don’t go yelling in my ear to ask if I need a hand with my packages. And don’t wonder who I’m talking to when you see me walking down the street by myself. You know damn well who I’m talking to. I’m talking to me, of course. Who else is going to listen to what I have to say?
How terribly strange to be sixty-six. Four years shy of the park bench. Which I’ll be sharing quietly, of course. I can’t wait.
Photo courtesy of Wiki Commons:
Two_oldtimers_playing_chess_on_a_Central_Park_bench_in_New_York_City,_05-1946_-_NARA_-_541889.jpg
- Log in to post comments
Comments
"When I'm Sixty Four" springs
"When I'm Sixty Four" springs to mind! You describe gradual aging very well. I remember that track. I also thought you might be about to mention the coronavirus as well!
- Log in to post comments
This cheered me up no end -
This cheered me up no end - not just me wandering along the street muttering to themselves then! It does creep up on us. During one recent and routine encounter with a doctor, she asked solicitously if I was still 'managing independently'. I contemplated making her jaw independent of her face but decided to be dignified and just look haughty.
Another marvellous read.
- Log in to post comments
I am still wiping the
I am still wiping the laughing tears from my eyes...Oh my goodness...this was the best read and just what I needed…it made me laugh out loud - obviously why the tears were ejected. I too hate the signs of aging and related all too well with your dilemmas...fie on this aging business but your writing is so humorous it made aging funny and commiserate-able if that’s a word. Your story telling voice is unique and honest and draws the reader in and the images you evoke are sides splitting. Thanks for the laughter today, I really enjoyed it.
- Log in to post comments
Yes it was. Although I made
Yes it was. Although I made the decision many years ago not to get older. Or to do it all at once, very far in the future.
- Log in to post comments
Hi Richard,
Hi Richard,
I'm the same age as you and know exactly how you feel, though I have'nt got around to wandering down the street talking to myself quite yet, I just keep my head down and keep walking.
I like how you can turn what might be a traumatic situation into something funny, when it comes to loosing control of your peeing.
At least we're now finally at that age where we have the choice to leave the rat race, sit back, chill and listen to maybe some Simon and Garfunkle.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
hey rich, I get it, old age
hey rich, I get it, old age is more contagious than the corona virus. I'm sure I've got all the symptoms you descirbe, but I'm too young to be old and to old to be young. Help!
- Log in to post comments
yeh, reading about Trump,
yeh, reading about Trump, going offscript. Since he doesn't believe in it, it can't exist. His staggering incompetence has never been in doubt, but as the face of rabid racism up until now he's been invulnerable. emm, now, I wonder? If Fox News turns on him, he's toast.
Over here we've got some panic buying. And I was saying the only sensible thing to do when panic buying starts is to panic buy. I've 700 tins of Kennomeat and I don't have a dog. Maybe I can trade them for some handwash?
- Log in to post comments