In the Backyard: Relearning the Art of Aging, Dying and Making Love

In the Backyard: Relearning the Art of Aging, Dying and Making Love

by Mary Melfi

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Overview

Attempting to make sense of her life, and change her sad disposition to a happy one, the author of In the Backyard: Relearning the Art of Aging, Dying and Making Love seeks out the help of her in-house therapist/husband, Dr. George Nemeth. The accredited psychologist's answers to the big questions provide a compassionate and humorous backdrop on to how to seize the day and not give up hope when faced with the nasty realities of poor health and unrealized aspirations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781771832366
Publisher: Guernica Editions, Incorporated
Publication date: 09/01/2018
Series: MiroLand , #13
Pages: 190
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Montrealer Mary Melfi has published over a dozen books of critically acclaimed poetry, prose and plays. Her first novel, Infertility Rites, was translated into French and Italian as was her memoir, Italy Revisited. Melfi received the Giornata Internazionale Della Donna Award in 2010.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Mirrors, like monsters, come in all shapes and sizes. They sneak up on you when you least expect it and take a big bite out of your life. Monsters hide in the dark. No such luck with mirrors. You can't avoid the damn things. Nor can you avoid getting old.

Time to slay the dragon, I tell myself. I'm old enough. Fight back. Better to be predator than prey.

Growing old should come as no surprise; I have been at it for years. I should be able to turn to the mirror and greet my reflection as I would a sister. She and I go back a long way, and yet each time the two of us meet, I am taken by surprise. She is old and I am young!

Supposedly you are as young as you feel. Your body is like a pair of pants with an elastic waistband — self-adjusting. So, the older you get, the more comfortable you should feel inside your skin. To my mind that's stretching the truth.

Gaining weight, losing momentum, making New Year's Resolutions in the middle of the year, wondering who I might have been had Lady Luck favoured me and dutifully pouting, sinning, forgiving, making do, baking, returning phone calls, embracing my dear old husband and adult children, looking in on the marvellous baby blue sky and savouring a second cup of coffee in the backyard, are all part and parcel of my daily life now. Having no nine-to-five job to rush to, I can retire to the den and watch TV or daydream. I've done it all — once, twice, a hundred times. And yet I can't believe I am turning the big 50. Remembering the look on my aunt's face as she lay dying, I wonder how I can possibly court joy, chase after "Isdom" (I don't dare call it "Wisdom") and expect to succeed?

"The problem is, and get this straight, I liked being young," I tell my husband, a licensed therapist. "I liked my slim figure and golden brown hair. Back then I was optimistic and sure of myself. Grey hair, wrinkles, and self-doubts — they're all part of an elaborate hoax to cover up who I am. Really am!"

"The important thing," he says, "is to be able to joke about your age. If you can do that, count yourself lucky. Knowing how to tell a joke is more valuable than knowing how to add and subtract. (Much good math skills do when you are down in the dumps.) Jokes, tall tales, embellished truths and little white lies ('I love your tie!') go a long way in making life, and more importantly, dying bearable."

"Don't tell me I'll get used to getting old, because I won't. Don't tell me to look for the silver lining, because I have looked and have not found it. I have put on rose-coloured glasses and the world did not change colour. From grey to grey. Little white lies boost morale, inspire good feelings, but let's call a spade a spade. Aging is as unnatural as turning the other cheek when you are singled out and made fun of."

"No one expects you to like getting old. If getting old were no big deal, if the thought of dying were as appealing as drinking a cool glass of lemonade on a hot day, if mortality were a joke, would life be worth living? Make a list of things you want to do before you kick the bucket and then do them. Stay in the moment. How many clichés do you need before you get it? You got one life to live, enjoy it."

If only I could do as suggested ... if only I could live it up. If only I could sing in the rain. If only I could forget my problems. If only aging would come as second nature, I might — just might — be happy. I want direction. I want to take a course, "How to Age Gracefully, 101," pass it with flying colours and be done with it. On to the next challenge! Unfortunately, you can't teach an old dog new tricks.

My husband does not agree. Picking up his wood recorder, he insists that aging is like learning to play a musical instrument. You have to learn how to do it so that it becomes second nature. All you will get from a violin or piano is noise if you don't practice.

If I want to age well (I sure do!), I should do the required exercises. I should, I suppose, turn to the mirror as would a musician turn to Mozart and Bach. (What's there not to love?) Unfortunately, I can't do it. All the mirrors I come across either snarl or bite.

CHAPTER 2

Getting old is easy, staying young is hard work — it's a full-time occupation. I should quit while I'm ahead, or risk being told: "You're fired." No one can turn back the clock.

God must have dropped out of school (trade school!) because his most famous creation, the human body, leaves much to be desired. It doesn't stand the test of time. You can argue a craftsman would get rid of the flaws before he puts his product on the market but God (assuming there is one) is more like a top-notch artist. He doesn't care what anyone thinks. Possibly God thinks of himself as a work-in-progress. A masterpiece-in-the-making.

The problem is every time I check out the mirror I am not pleased with God's handiwork. Aging is a mistake. A recall is in order. I wish I could file a class action suit.

Built-in obsolescence has its advantages in a market economy. I shouldn't knock it. Many children are dying to be born. Still, I'm not so self-sacrificing. Every time I look down and see yet another spider vein crawling up my leg, I take God's name in vain. I break the first commandment and I am not ashamed of it.

Ideally, I should spend more time doing good works and less time looking at myself in the mirror, and then I might not only forgive God for his mistakes, but my own as well. But the fact is I'm envious of those half my age. Young women go to beauty shops; old women, to hospitals. Young women have bad hair days; old women don't have much hair to complain about. Young women pester their hairdressers to work miracles and expect them to deliver; old women demand the same from their doctors. Old women are given new hips, new hearts and, when everything else fails, a new way of thinking. (A pill does the trick!) Young women indulge in gossip; old women say nothing. They might want to say: "Why am I dying, and you're not?" but luckily their lips are sealed.

Dr. George Nemeth, my husband and (in)constant therapist, tells me: "Worrying about getting older will do you no good. It's best to go to a cemetery and put your problems in perspective."

If I had listened to his advice over the years I might have matured — gone from stage one: teenhood (young and stupid) to stage two: adulthood (old and wise). Instead, I managed to get stupider and stupider.

Is it just me? Or is it that in every child there is a sage, and in every old hag, a broken spirit? All I know for sure is that everyone, young or old, is a Merry-Wanna-Be. If I could turn to the mirror, without prejudice, as a child would turn to a candy shop, I might be in for a treat, but that's not about to happen. Often, when I turn to the mirror or the scale, I wonder: How can this be — I eat less and weigh more? Menstruation isn't a curse, menopause is. The scale: a bad news bible.

Gaining weight past fifty is like: a) travelling in a third world country and being pulled over for speeding (pay the bribe, or go to jail); b) having your air conditioner break down on the hottest day of the year; c) identifying with a nun who has been kicked out of the convent because of a certain sex toy found among her things; or d) all of the above?

My husband tells me: "When you get to be an old fart, it's easy to feel bad about yourself. You pass gas when you least expect it, and embarrass yourself. The best way to avoid being a public spectacle is to kick the bucket, and if you don't want to do that (not yet anyway!), you have to have a sense of humour. Or at least pretend to have one!"

I get it — life is an amusement park; its mirrors are deliberately distorted. I don't like what I see in them, but what of it? It's all in good fun. Only Superwoman can look young forever; the rest of us shrink vertically, and expand horizontally disproportionately.

A scale doesn't look like an axe, but it can cut you down to size. Then again, trees get bigger with age and are loved for it. I suppose it's because they don't have an axe to grind.

I should stop counting calories, and start counting my blessings, but do I do it?

The human body can be compared to a car. The older it gets, the less value it has. (Some investment!) Of course, if I were an optimist (as is my husband), I would decide not to make such an odious comparison. I would compare the human body to the sun. Unlike a car the sun won't run out of fuel anytime soon. Nor can your soul.

So why then do I turn to the mirror as I would turn towards a brick wall — walk in the opposite direction? I would rather put up with a skin disorder, rosacea, than have to cover up my neck with a scarf because the chick in question has turned into a big bird of sorts — from fowl to foul. Why is that young people get new clothes; old people, new ailments? Young people have no time; old people, too much? A trading post should be set up so the old and young could exchange goods and services. Thankfully, love and compassion can be bartered — at any age!

My body claims to be my friend, but it will betray me. Why do I look in the mirror and expect confirmation I am more than the sum of my parts? A magician would — a mirror is an important part of his act. A tool in mass deception. I miss my youth as a blind man misses his sight. My loss benefits no one.

"The trick to not getting old is to stop focusing on it," my husband tells me. "Focus on anything else but that. The more inward your gaze, the unhappier you'll be."

So instead of turning a blind eye to the world's problems, to stay young, I should fix them?

"You can try," he says. "Having a beer can make you feel good, but having a goal, that can work wonders."

"Don't try to convince me that getting old is some big adventure, because if you do, you'll be just as much a con-artist as someone who tries to sell me the fountain of youth."

"If you want to get old real fast (and why would you?), all you have to do is light up a cigarette, or get angry. Smoking clogs the arteries, so does anger. Both are habit-forming. If you want to stay young (and why wouldn't you?), show mercy."

If only I could love-and-obey The Good Doctor ...

CHAPTER 3

There are those who have the Midas touch — everything they touch turns to gold — and then there are those of us who have the Midas touch in reverse. Shit happens. (And how!) I've failed at nearly everything I tried.

The man sitting across the kitchen table from me, an accredited psychologist and husband to this ne'er-do-well, decides I have it all wrong. He tells me: "At your age each day that you are in good health, each day your arms or legs don't hurt, is an achievement. Each day your lungs don't have to make an effort to provide you with the most addictive substance in this solar system — air — is as good a reason as any to celebrate. To be here and knowing there's a date of execution, and to ignore the fact, well, it's an achievement."

I agree — kind of. Each year the Queen of England bestows the title of 'Lady' to high achievers; actors often head the list, graduating from plain old Janes to Lady Janes. But any woman who manages to get through fifty years on this crazy planet of ours should be addressed as "Lady." Too bad that's not about to happen.

My husband sees it another way. "You can wait a lifetime for your achievements to be recognized, and come up short or you can walk into your backyard, turn to your flowers as if they were your ladies-in-waiting and be assured you don't always have to be first to be happy. Coming in second is good enough. Even those who come third or fourth can expect to be served with a smile."

I hand my dear old husband a beer in payment for his sage advice. I should stop whining and count my blessings.

Yes, sir — anyone can feel like a lady of high rank. All you have to do is open the back door (the Arc of Triumph!) and go into the garden. Each flower bows and says: "Whatever you wish, my Lady."

If I can't turn to the mirror like a clown — put on a happy face, I can always make a bouquet and give it to someone who has succeeded at everything they tried their hand at. The secret to success is flattery.

I have the will to humility, the will to courage, the will to bear discomfort, and then I don't. The fact is I'm down on my luck. I have nothing to show for all my hard work. I wear my poverty like a pyramid. I am buried alive in it ... King Tut, come rescue me. But he won't come; if I need help, I should call on the living. Nine out of ten will respond to an emotional SOS. I made that statistic up, but it sounds about right.

"If I were rich I could take my mind off my problems by going on an African safari, but I'm broke," I tell my one and only.

"You don't have to go to Africa and hunt wild beasts to feel the satisfaction of the hunt. You can go to the backyard and hunt down lily beetles. They're a menace."

That's true. One lily beetle lays thousands of eggs, and the eggs mature in less than two weeks. They strip the lilies of their leaves. You can dust the lilies with insecticides, but that's bad for the environment. The best way to get rid of the beetles is to wipe them off the plant with a soapy dish cloth.

Declaring war on lily beetles is a noble enterprise. In the backyard anyone and everyone can be a warrior princess, set to rid the world of a dreaded enemy: the bad, the ugly and the not-so-good. Still, I'm not convinced beetle hunting will help me stay centred. Mother Nature throws talents in the air — the lucky ones get a handful, and the not-so-lucky get fuck-all. Some are born into the world with the ten valued toes and fingers, and some of us are born with parts missing.

Why is it that the world is in working order and I'm not? The moon and the sun go about their business and everyone is the better for it. An ocean of well-meaning VIPs control the worker bees and businesses produce the stuff of life. Surely there is some pill I can take and then everything will be as it should be — I will manage to act like a proper executive assistant, assisting my inner self and helping her gain control. For over half a century I managed to put up with the burden of being myself. I can't do it anymore.

"Why is it that everything can be fixed and I can't be?" I ask Mr. Fix-It.

"Self-pity is an easy place to arrive at," he says. "It's right at the crossroads of self-centredness. It's much better to look outwards, to admire the universe, and learn how it works. And then, if you can, find a way you can be of use. Be of service."

Personal redemption through community service — now that's a lofty goal, one worth aspiring to, but I don't see myself achieving it. Nor do I see myself taking a road trip to self-realization. There are too many road blocks.

At twelve years old you can feign ignorance and be ignored, at twenty-four you don't have to speak up to be noticed and loved — blessed youth attracts a slew of suitors. Later on, everything hurts. You are weighed down by your emotional baggage. Like potatoes, it rots. Even when it's well-hidden, you can't get rid of the stench.

"My father never accepted me; he loved everyone, except me," I tell my in-house therapist. "Here I am half a century later and I'm still unable to handle the rejection."

"Unresolved issues from childhood are like weeds. They keep popping up, no matter how often you pull them out. You have to learn to live with them. Your life has not turned out the way you had hoped, well, what of it? You have to get rid of the self-hatred, and not because it makes you miserable, au contraire, self-hatred has a feel-good quality to it. It works like a mild narcotic; it slows the pace and clouds the vision. That's why you have to make a conscious decision — no more self-hatred. Go cold turkey."

If only I could. Like sending faded flowers to yourself, self-hatred makes no sense.

Why can't I love myself? Everyone tells me I look good for my age. I go to the gym and watch my weight. Still, I don't trust mirrors. Every image I see of myself creates self-doubt; anxiety. (That thing I see can't be me!)

Why can't I love myself? I suppose at my age I shouldn't be asking the question. It's puerile.

Why can't I love myself?

When a therapist fails to get results he reverts to an old standby — he asks another therapist to take over the case. When the backyard fails to cheer you up, you are in deep trouble. (Sorry!)

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "In the Backyard"
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Copyright © 2018 Mary Melfi and Guernica Editions Inc..
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