*** On The Aches And Pains Of Aging -With The North Quincy Class Of
1964, And All Other AARP-Worthy Brethren In Mind
A YouTube
film clip of Dylan Thomas reading his famous poem, Do Not Go Gentle Into
That Good Night.
"Do not go gentle..
...into that good night." First
line of Dylan Thomas' poem of the same name.
DO NOT GO GENTLE INTO THAT GOOD
NIGHT- Dylan Thomas
Do not go gentle into that good
night,
Old age should burn and rave at
close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the
light.
Though wise men at their end know
dark is right,
Because their words had forked no
lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good
night.
Good men, the last wave by, crying
how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced
in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the
light.
Wild men who caught and sang the sun
in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it
on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good
night.
Grave men, near death, who see with
blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors
and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the
light.
And you, my father, there on the sad
height,
Curse, bless me now with your fierce
tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good
night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the
light.
Al Johnson here. Now some of you
know, know full well, that back in North Quincy days I could, well, you know
“stretch” the truth. Stretch it pretty far when I was in a fix, or one of my
corner boys like my right-hand man Bill Cadger up at our old "up the
Downs" haunt, Balducci’s Pizza Parlor or Doc’s Drugstore down Billings
Road , needed some outlandish excuse to get right. And fellow women classmates
and some other women non-classmates as well know I would outright lie, lie like
the devil in church or out, to get, well, “close” to you. Hope you forgive me
about the lying, not about the trying to get close to you part. But that is all
water of over the dam or under the bridge, take your choice. Today I am a new
man, a truth-teller, or trying to be, except of course when I am practicing my
profession as a lawyer. Then the truth might just be as elusive as it was when
I was making up excuses for my corner boys or, if you were a woman, trying to
“feel” you up. But enough of that as I am not here to speak of my repentance or
about me at all, as hard as that might be to believe, but of the hard fact of
age, yah, that creeping up thing that just kind of snuck up on us. So I am here
to say just one thing- “won’t you take my word from me” like the old blues
singer, Rabbit Brown, used to sing when he had the miseries. Listen up.
I am, once again, on my high horse
today like I used to be when I had the bee in my bonnet on some subject in the
old days. I have heard enough, in fact more than enough, whining from fellow
AARP-worthies that I have been in contact with lately and others of my
contemporaries from the "Generation of '68” about the aches and pains of
becoming “ a certain age.” If I hear one more story about a knee, hip, heart,
or, maybe, brain replacement or other transformative surgery I will go
screaming into that good night. The same goes for descriptions of the
CVS-worthy litany of the contents of an average graying medicine cabinet. Or
the high cost of meds.
If I am not mistaken, and from what
that old gossipy Cadger has told me, many of you fully imbibed in all the
excesses of our generation from crazed-out drug overkill to wacky sexual
exploits that need not be mentioned in detail here (although I would not mind
hearing of a few exploits strictly in confidence, attorney-client type confidence,
of course), and everything else in between. Admit it. So come on now, after a
lifetime of booze, dope, and wild times what did you expect? For those of us
who have not lived right, lo these many years, the chickens have come home to
roost. But I have a cure. Make that THE cure.
No I am not, at this late date,
selling the virtues of the Bible, the Torah, the Koran or
any of a thousand and one religious cures we are daily bombarded with. You
knew, or at least I hope you knew, I wasn't going to go that route. That
question, in any case, is each individual's prerogative and I have no need to
interfere there. Nor am I going to go on and on about the wonders of
liposuction, botox, chin lifts, buttocks tuckers, stomach flatteners and the
like. Damn, have we come to that? And I certainly do not want to inflame the
air with talk of existentialism or some other secular philosophies that tell
you to accept your fate with your head down. You knew that, as well. No, I am
here to give the "glad tidings," unadorned. Simply put- two
words-graham crackers. No, do not reach for the reading glasses, your eyes do
not deceive you- graham crackers is what I said.
Hear me out on this. I am no
"snake oil" salesman, nor do I have stock in Nabisco (moreover their
products are not "true" graham). So, please do not start jabbering to
me about how faddish that diet was- in about 1830. I know that it has been
around a while. And please do not start carping about how wasn't this healthful
substance "magic elixir," or some such, that Ralph Waldo Emerson and
his transcendentalist protégés praised to high heaven back in Brook Farm days.
Well, I frankly admit, as with any such movement, some of those guys went over
the top, especially that wacky Bronson Alcott. Irresponsible zealots are always
with us. Please, please do not throw out the baby with the bath water.
Doctor Graham simply insisted that
what our dietary intake consisted of was important and that a generous amount
of graham flour in the system was good for us. Moreover, in order to avoid some
of the mistakes of the earlier movement, in the age of the Internet we can now Google
to find an almost infinite variety of uses and helpful recipes. Admit it, right
now your head is swirling thinking about how nice it would be to have a few
crackers and a nice cold glass of milk (fat-free or 1%, of course). Admit also
you loved those graham crumb-crusted pies your grandmother used to make. The
old chocolate pudding-filled ones were my favorite. Lime was a close second.
Enough said.
Here is the closer, as they say. If
people have been mistaking you for your father's brother or mother's sister
lately then this is your salvation. So scurry down to your local Whole Foods or
other natural food store and begin to fight your way back to health. Let me
finish with this personal testimonial. I used to regularly be compared in
appearance to George Bush, Sr. Now I am being asked whether Brad Pitts is my
twin brother. Or is it Robert Redford? .....Oh well, that too is part of the
aging process. Like I say-“won’t you take my word from me.” Get to it.
******
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