I subscribe to an idea
central to all your better religions — that the only way to live is gratefully.
No matter how little you have, you can revel in having even that, or,
alternatively, bemoan what you lack, and the former strategy is obviously that
which makes one happier. I’ve been trying to keep this in mind lately, even
though my lifelong tormentor, depression, has returned after apparently losing
track of me when I relocated to England from Los Angeles last autumn. But then
I blow it by thinking how very good I’m going to realize I had it back in the
spring of 2016, before my diagnosis.
Though only a few
months younger than David Bowie – and older than the comparably departed Susan
Purcell, the Elizabeth Taylor lookalike junior high school classmate who
inspired some of my most spirited self-abuse sessions when I was a teenager — I
seem not yet to have the disease that will eventually kill me. But I find
myself waiting for the other shoe to drop.
At an age to which a lot of people I’ve known didn’t live, I wonder
if everything is the beginning of the
end. I wake up with a scratchy throat and think, “So, esophogeal cancer, is it?” I suffer a sharp upper-abdominal cramp while viewing television
with Mrs. Mendelsohn, and think, “Oh, great: a fatal heart attack!” I have gone
from being a person able to revel in generally excellent health (everything but
my joints is just fine, thanks) to one who expects his good health to be
rescinded at any moment.
As such, I can’t seem
to maintain gratefulness for long. At the moment, it’s difficult for me to
think about anything other than what I no longer have, and am unlikely ever to
have again. Dr. Petrigliano said that re-replacing my right shoulder (as he did
a year ago last Saturday) was going to make it very much less painful, but
neglected to mention that I was going to become unpleasantly asymmetrical, with
one normal shoulder (the unreplaced one), and one one in which you can clearly
see the inserted…appliance in sharp relief. Nor did I expect to suffer a case
of bicep tendonitis nearly as painful as my disintegrated shoulder. Thank
Heaven for the arthritis in my left hand, which is often so painful as to make
me forget about the tendonitis!
I think sometimes
about taking advantage of the fact that quite viable used cars are
astonishingly cheap in this country, only to remember that I’m going blind
(ladies and gentlemen, please welcome cataracts and keratoconus), and probably
won’t be allowed to drive for very many more years. I hear doors a-closin’
all around me.
Most nights, waiting
to fall asleep, I think about how I likely won’t be living for many more years.
On one hand, that irks me hugely, as I don’t feel I’ve even begun to realize my
potential as a writer or musician. But that’s sort of a relief in an awful way.
I hear and read people saying, “Well, I’m getting old, but it’s better than the
alternative,” and think to myself, “How can you be so sure?” I lie awake pondering
if it’ll be better to die in the next couple of years in pain, or to become one
of those who slumps forever in front of a rest home television drooling all
over himself and hoping it will occur to someone to change his diaper.
Last week I visited
the Facebook page of an old high school classmate. In school, she was pretty,
but less pretty than nice — down-to-earth and approachable, two qualities
someone as shy as I cherished hugely. By the time of our five-year class
reunion, though, she’d blossomed into a traffic-stopper. If she and the model Cheryl
Tiegs, whom she resembled, had entered a party from opposite ends of a room, no
one would have known that Cheryl Tiegs had arrived at the party. And now she’s
a 10-year-old’s gray-haired, lavishly crowsfooted, lumpy grandmother.
There too go I, with
terrifying rapidity. A person doesn’t reach my age without having gone
something like 20 years of not recognizing his own reflection in shop windows, and
one only keeps getting uglier. My cheeks are caving in. Sometimes the light
streaming into the bathroom at a particular angle makes me literally gasp in
horror at the profusion of unsightly creases my once-pretty punim has become. I go to the gym daily,
and there pedal the exercycle like a man possessed for half an hour, so I’m not ovoid, like other men
my age, but I feel that if I’m less compulsive, my DNA will catch me, and make
me so. I brought on the bicep tendonitis by working out too hard following my
shoulder replacement. God clearly doesn’t want me to regain my pretty biceps and pecs
any more than she wants me to have a lovely smooth forehead.
It’s all terrifying,
and I expect it to become only moreso.
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