Geriatric Passion

“My seventies were interesting and fairly serene, but my eighties are passionate.”

                                                                                                            —Florida Scott Maxwell

Yes, but not like some geriatric stud

who’s still able each night to rock and roll;

Instead, imagine some gnarled tree in bud,

A blazing fire reduced to one red coal.

Three barred owls in a tree, a rainbow,

My sleeping wife, a grandchild’s happy voice,

A doo-op tune, dark chocolate, will now

Bring forth ejaculations of clear joy.

But then I have these night sweats full of fear.

Each day brings new regret for my old wrongs.

I rage for reasons that remain unclear

and weep at maudlin films and country songs.

The plot gets more intense the more I age

As life’s last chapter moves towards life’s last page.

´◊

4 thoughts on “Geriatric Passion

  1. Oh my, I relate so strongly to this, Rick! Turn 80 in 5 months. I’ve never made much of the “0” birthdays, or even 65. But 80 feels absolutely fraught with a freight of fear (how’s that for alliteration?). Probably doesn’t help that my father died at 81 of heart failure/attack; his father, mother, and brother all died of heart disease as well; and I just got a pacemaker implanted which has complicated my physical state in less than positive ways. So aware of the things that really matter to me, as you are.

    Blessings,

    Karen

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Brilliant. I am 80 and I get it.

    Although I am somewhat robotic with a nightly CPAP, hernia meshes x 2, lens implants, crowns and a bridge on my teeth, inserts in my shoes, digital, AI hearing aids on my ears and glasses on my face that tint with sunlight. Any questions?

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Perfect description of old age!! I’m 88 and dealing with the beginnings of Alzheimer’s. But as I look backward, I do see that I have lived Micah’s description of what God wants of us: to do justice, to love mercy, and now I am being challenged to walk humbly with my God. But in between, I now see how often I failed even those I loved the most simply because they were very different from me. But sometimes, we did learn from each other through those differences. One thing I know now for sure: do not judge, lest you be judged. We live in an unfinished universe on a planet filled with unfinished people. Evolution proceeds too slowly to be perceived at the time. And setbacks are needed to make things bad enough for enough people to accept change.

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