Agings Wisdom » Jim Waun http://rifey-04.ru My thoughts on life and a bit more Thu, 21 Aug 2014 00:14:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.9.2 An octogenarian drops out http://rifey-04.ru/an-octogenarian-drops-out/ http://rifey-04.ru/an-octogenarian-drops-out/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2014 00:14:42 +0000 http://rifey-04.ru/?p=1070 Like a 60s flower child, I'm spreading kindness and loving everything as best I can.]]>

I’ve stopped getting upset over daily accounts of wars and catastrophes, shootings, corporate shenanigans, Congressional follies, and the Legislature’s wrangling. Using a 60’s term, “I’m beat down to my socks.”

I missed the 60’s wave of dropouts inspired by the writings of poet Allen Ginsberg, novelist Jack Kerouac and others. Beatniks protested the oppression of minorities, McCarthyism’s witch hunts, the Viet Nam War, and Victorian sexual mores.

They also protested the post WWII rush to consumption. Peace brought a welcome end to the rationing of sugar, gasoline, meat and butter, and shortages of other consumer items like bananas.

New cars, radios and televisions and other gadgets gradually became available again. I remember kids and adults lining up to gawk at Fords and Chevys being unloaded from trucks in Richmond. They couldn’t be built fast enough to satisfy demand.

Keeping up with the Joneses became a craze. In 1952 real-estate developer Wm. Levitt added a new dimension to the fever when he broke ground on Levittown, a city of 50,000 built on farm land outside Philadelphia. Fifteen other cities lay within twenty miles.

All homes had a yard, were moderately priced with low down payments, and came in six different models with catchy names. The city had its own schools and strip mall shopping centers. For efficiency, Levitt pioneered assembly-line production and fabrication methods. Reportedly, a new home was finished at the rate of every sixteen minutes.

By 1962, Pete Seeger popularized the social conformist, consumerism-lampooning 1962 song, “Little Boxes.” The singy-songy lyrics go: “Little boxes, on the hillside, made of ticky tacky … all the same … and the people … in the boxes, put in boxes like doctor and lawyer … and their children, going to university, to be put in boxes, made of ticky tacky …”

I was in the learning-to-be-doctor box at the time and remember seeing photos of Levittown’s treeless sameness and wondering what was going on. Half-a-century later, I understand it was the beginning of radical social transformation.

Mr. Levitt started what became suburban-sprawl, with explosions of strip malls and tract housing built on virgin land. The central shopping areas of nearly every small town and city were affected and often decimated. Main roads to towns became jumbles of big-box and other stores and fast food and chain restaurants. Today there is little distinguishing one place from another.

In some places, sprawl engulfed entire areas, creating run-on exurbs. Just under four million people live in Metropolitan Detroit’s approximately 100 cities, towns and hamlets. Malls and housing developments, sprinkled with some single homes, ramble over 1900 square miles of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties.

You have to watch for signs to know which city, town or township you’re in. A majority of people live in one town, shop and/or work in another, go to school in yet another, and play elsewhere. As a hint to how this reshaped the culture, few who live, work, study, or shop in Roseville know its importance in Macomb County’s history.

Sprawl, with networks of freeways built since the 1950s, produced geographic homogenation that transformed society. Paradoxically, people in exurbs and large city-suburban complexes live closer together, form alliances of shared values and interests, but are actually more spiritually separated from one another.

In other words, there is a dearth of a sense of larger community. We’ve become balkanized, divided into weary factions. Paralyzed Congress can’t find a way of dealing with waves of children coming to our borders. Republicans are determined to defeat the only serious, if lamely limited, attempt to reform our shamefully inefficient and dangerous health care system. And the Michigan Legislature is unable to do anything to even repair our disgraceful bridges, roads and highways – let alone prepare a 21st Century transportation system.

Today, our pledge of one nation, with liberty and justice for all, under a system of laws that establish justice, ensure tranquility and promote the general welfare, seems like a pipe dream. But it’s my pipe dream and I’m sticking to it.

So I dropped out of the negativity. I’m doing my best to engender a sense of community by loving everything as best I can and spreading kindness – like a 60s flower child.

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Of orchids and dandelions http://rifey-04.ru/of-orchids-and-dandelions/ http://rifey-04.ru/of-orchids-and-dandelions/#comments Wed, 13 Aug 2014 21:07:33 +0000 http://rifey-04.ru/?p=1064 Life is one darned challenge after another. Few things seem to turn out exactly as planned. Our coping with adversity roughly resembles either orchids or dandelions.]]>

Life is one darned challenge after another. Few things seem to turn out exactly as planned. Our coping with adversity roughly resembles either orchids or dandelions.

Orchids, valued as symbols of delicate beauty and luxurious fragrance, are a diverse and widespread family of flowering plants. Like Spanish moss hanging on southern trees, they’re epiphytes who are able to get nutrients from air.

Walking across the Haleakala Crater moonscape on Maui, I came across a most beautiful orchid clinging to a vent gently wafting puffs of nutritious steam from the earth’s core.

But away from their natural environment, potted ornamental orchids are vulnerable to wet soil, direct sunlight, and hot and cold drafts. They’re best treated like household pets.

Dandelions, on the other hand, naturally grow almost everywhere and need only soil, a little moisture and sunlight to thrive. They’re edible and add nitrogen and minerals to the soil. Their bright flowers attract pollinating insects. And kids of all ages enjoy blowing their delicate balls of seeds into the wind.

But in the universe of green-carpeted lawns, they’re considered a perpetual nuisance to be removed. Internet advice for ridding this yellow wild flower includes regularly bathing them with poison, smothering them, using grazing animals like chickens to eat them, and hand digging to remove individual plants. With digging, unless the roots are completely removed the plant will regenerate itself.

Dandelions are models of biological resilience.

The goal of childhood and adolescence is developing resilience, learning how to bounce back from adversity and failure, to live reasonably contentedly as adults. It’s a process of self-immunization, gradually building up stores of inner strength, confidence and courage from making choices and adapting to changing and novel circumstances.

Successfully growing up requires a safe environment, parental guidance, and sufficient freedom to personally explore and learn about life. The trick for parents is keeping their own good intentions in check. Their guilt, anxiety over possible dire circumstances, or needs for feeling loved can complicate matters.

“Helicopter parents” hover over their children, overprotecting and over controlling their activities and placing extravagant expectations on their futures. These parents’ goals seem to include providing childhoods free from boredom, pain and failure while producing perfect adults.

Away from a parental-protection bubble, their children are essentially defenseless when confronted with life’s challenges in this capricious world. As adults they’re more likely to become anxiety ridden, depressed and drug or alcohol dependent. In a way they resemble hybrid orchid-pets unable to thrive in the face of modest environmental changes.

But despite dysfunctional childhoods, and having lived dangerously and chaotically as adults, their situations aren’t hopeless. Researchers at the Center for Resilience Research at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, discovered that survivors of even the most maladjusted adulthoods have the capacity to develop flexibility and begin making healthy accommodations to life.

The rehabilitation process involves tapping into roots, nearly forgotten remnant feelings of worthiness and unconditional love from someone who believed in them. Once regeneration is underway, like the incompletely extracted dandelion plant making its way back to sunshine, they garner necessary courage, strength and determination to thrive beyond what had seemed possible.

A key to contentment is bouncing back from adversity like a dandelion.

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Who am I this time? http://rifey-04.ru/who-am-i-this-time/ http://rifey-04.ru/who-am-i-this-time/#comments Mon, 14 Jul 2014 20:54:24 +0000 http://rifey-04.ru/?p=1054 Since fully retiring a year ago I’ve been transforming […]]]>

Since fully retiring a year ago I’ve been transforming myself. Again.

I’ve had to reinvent myself lots of times. The first was when I left the safety of home to enter school, with its variable authority figures, and needed to learn to socialize with others. Leaving a tiny high school and going to college far from home was challenging. Graduating, I had to learn the professional role of pharmacist. And finishing medical school, I had to make myself into a doctor. After a full career in medicine, I did another do-over back into pharmacy for another ten years.

My previous personal changes began abruptly, the day I entered a new domain. During my career I felt like Harry Nash, from Kurt Vonnegut’s short story: Who Am I This Time. Harry is an extremely shy clerk in a small town hardware store who prefers working in the stock room to meeting the public.

He regularly steals the show in the local amateur theater’s productions. On stage, Harry completely becomes the person whose role he’s playing. After the final curtain falls he bolts out the stage door and retreats to the safety of the store’s back room.

With no further significant professional roles to play, I’ve spent the past year letting the dust settle from living in the public square of health-care commerce. From now on, my personal development will be the discovering and unfolding of me.

For now I’m refining and expanding the interest in writing I’ve been nurturing for over a decade. Almost from the beginning, an English-writing professor has been helping me hone the craft. I have a regular newspaper column and accumulated a list of a couple of dozen people I e-mail articles to. I’ve also written magazine articles and done professional health-related writing.

In the past I’ve disciplined myself to articles with 600 words. Sometimes it’s been challenging juggling a semi-retired personal life, work schedules and publication deadlines. Occasionally, I’ve selected or limited the scope of my topics based on time pressures and my self-imposed word limit.

From now on, I’m going to write however many words I need to get my point across, hopefully without boring readers or leaving them wondering what I meant to say.

And I’m expanding my writing interests to the web-based realm of thoughts and ideas. For some time, Karin Haggard, a daughter-in-law who is an artist and graphic designer has been after me to set up a website/blog to make my writing available to a wider audience.

About six months ago I decided to give it a try. I call the blog A Diary of Aging. The website is rifey-04.ru. Readers can sign up to receive free postings/articles and leave comments.

I’m curious to see if strangers find what I have to say interesting and helpful.

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The value of insomnia http://rifey-04.ru/the-value-of-insomnia/ http://rifey-04.ru/the-value-of-insomnia/#comments Mon, 09 Jun 2014 19:19:30 +0000 http://rifey-04.ru/?p=996 This is not about crisis-related insomnia, like I exper […]]]>

This is not about crisis-related insomnia, like I experienced following a divorce, when I spent over a year wringing my hands and sleeping less than four hours a night.

Every new day seemed like the last. As afternoon shadows lengthened, a pall began descending over me and I started dreading another sleepless night. I was broken down and disconnected from myself, preoccupied with suffering, and barely able to engage in daily activities.

With therapy, I eventually came to understand that my problem went beyond being sleepless following the death of a relationship. I needed to wake up to how disastrously I’d been neglecting my spiritual life – my spiritual being.

With a strong sense of social responsibility, I’d assumed a role of human doer, relentlessly working to make a better society. I was recently reminded of that as I paused to watch ants scurrying and from their ant-hill nest along a sidewalk crack. I’d been like an ant, doing my part for the community.

But human beings are more than ants. I relearned, remembered, that we’re composites of doing and being creatures. Healthy, satisfying human lives require nurturing both physical and spiritual parts. By the time therapy ended I’d begun putting life’s pieces back together, sleeping better, and doing a variety of things to care for my spiritual self – my soul. I would stare at birds at our feeders, listen to classical music and daydream, and sometimes wander aimlessly on a street. Just being.

The valuable insomnia I’m talking about is the kind that occasionally catches me by surprise nowadays. It’s the kind where I go to bed tired and don’t go to sleep. Or I sleep soundly for awhile, then awaken and stay awake.

If there’s nothing on my mind, I lie quietly, resting until sleep naturally comes.  Once or twice a year I decide I wasn’t tired after all, get up, and read. Sometimes an unresolved problem pops into my mind. When that happens I take time to thoroughly examine it. Once – without going over and over the same thoughts.

Now and then that’s enough. I discover a different way of looking at things and decide that what I thought was a dilemma really isn’t. But if the issue isn’t settled, I decide that’s the best I can do for the moment, resolve to revisit it during the daytime, and put it out of my mind.

An uncluttered mind luxuriates in the silence of darkness. It allows experiences to drift in and out, like miniscule waves lapping against the shore. It permits novel ideas and random thoughts, feelings and fantasies to emerge from the ever-awake soul.

And it enjoys natural background sounds like rain or distant thunder, chirping frogs, hooting owls, yipping coyotes and unidentifiable nighttime critters making sounds as they go about the business of living their lives. I’m comforted by the sounds of approaching and departing trains.

Occasional episodes of insomnia provide me with opportunities for performing routine maintenance on life’s problems while nourishing the soul. They’re ‘icing for the cake.’

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Uncovering the mystery http://rifey-04.ru/uncovering-the-mystery/ http://rifey-04.ru/uncovering-the-mystery/#comments Thu, 29 May 2014 17:25:53 +0000 http://rifey-04.ru/?p=989 The magic of growing up in a small, farm town.]]>

When we get together for our annual reunion, my brothers and I regularly reflect on how growing up in Richmond, Michigan, almost mystically prepared us for adulthood. For a long time, I’ve wondered when, where and how that happened.

There was nothing bewitching about our simple, strife-free and nurturing home in the flat over Dad’s downtown barber shop.

And Richmond has no natural beauty. No waterway. No exploitable resources. It’s unusual in that nearly everybody lives on or within a stone’s throw of Main Street. It evolved as four settlements, established less than a century before I was born, gradually merged into one. The settlements developed along a trail running two miles north from the Gratiot Military Pike, connecting forts in Detroit and present day Port Huron.

Today the City of Richmond has three sections, half-a-mile apart, and three business districts: Muttonville, at the junction of Main Street (M19) and Gratiot; Lenox, where the Detroit-Port Huron rail line crosses Main; and Richmond, the northern-most part, near the earliest settlement.

Hoping to discover the source of our mystique and whether it’s still there, I arranged to spend a day with an old friend, Dale Quick, a lifelong Richmond resident and second generation volunteer fireman who’s married to a Richmond girl.

Driving into town, things looked as they did in 1951. After lunch in a restaurant I remember, we drove around town.

The town’s size is no larger than in my day, but it has more than three times as many residents: 5,000. The gap between Muttonville and Lenox is filled with businesses. Two farms adjacent to Main, one on either end of town, have been turned into housing tracts and apartments, with immature trees and few sidewalks. Main Street, the only practical way into and through town and between the shopping areas, has three traffic lights to manage the sometimes bumper-to-bumper traffic.

During our conversation, Dale told me that the town has become a bedroom community. He rings the Salvation Army kettle bell at Christmastime and sees fewer than a dozen people he knows.

The self-contained, small farm community we grew up in exists only in our treasured memories. There’s nothing obviously mystical there now.

Growing up, I was often bored. We didn’t have a yard. Only one other kid lived downtown. There was no pool, summer sports or recreation programs. A one-week Vacation Bible School was our only available activity.

With little else to do, I used to hang around the barber shop, where I learned the art of listening and talking with adults. And from jobs shoveling snow, stocking shelves in the Kroger store two doors away, stuffing jelly donuts in the bakery, peddling papers, delivering milk, and mail at Christmastime, I knew everyone in Lenox.

With 175 in the high school, there were lots of opportunities for exploring activities: three sports, band, vocal music, drama, and the school newspaper and year book. I did them all and came to believe that I could do anything I wanted. All I had to do was try something to see if I liked it.

I didn’t know the meaning of failure. If I didn’t like or couldn’t do something, I’d move on and try something else.

And society was very different then. There was a strong sense of community and shared destiny after recovering from the Depression and surviving WWII. It seemed like we were on the way to making America’s dreams come true.

It’s the alchemy of family, time and place that endowed us with our traits of curiosity, self-confidence and optimism.

Leaving town I stopped at the cemetery, on the site of the original settler’s land grant, and wandered among the headstones with familiar names. Pausing at my parent’s, I thanked them for moving to a small town before having children.

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Studying curiosities http://rifey-04.ru/studying-curiosities/ http://rifey-04.ru/studying-curiosities/#comments Tue, 13 May 2014 19:26:29 +0000 http://rifey-04.ru/?p=981 Since retiring, I have time to learn about curiosities embedded in everyday life. ]]>

Since I fully retired, I’ve been taking more time to learn about curiosities embedded in everyday life.
On a recent trip I noticed a semi among the string of trucks with the words, DIESEL EXHAUST FLUID, blazoned across its shiny tank. From Google I discovered that the Fluid is a purified urea solution in deionized water. It’s injected into diesel exhaust systems, in a process called selective catalytic reduction, to remove nitrogen oxides – harmful air pollutants.

Later, after a long day of sight-seeing and driving, we pulled off the interstate at the Ft. Payne, Alabama exit. With its usual assortment of chain motels and restaurants, the place resembled everywhere USA. But what about the “Fort” Payne, I wondered?

Driving through town on our way to Lookout Mountain and the Little River Canyon National Park the next day, it resembled a host of other places that lost their manufacturing base and population. But among the empty store fronts I noticed a Trail of Tears Museum. Open occasionally.

I learned that The Trail of Tears was an ethnic cleansing project following the Indian Removal Act of 1830. Forty-six thousand Native Americans were forcibly removed from their homelands in North Carolina, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and Florida and sent to Indian Territory – present day Oklahoma. Around a quarter died of disease, exposure and starvation on the trek.

Fort Payne, named for Captain John Payne, was one of thirty-one stockades, concentration camps, constructed in the Deep South to store Indians awaiting the big walk. Only a chimney remains today.

One way to look at the Trail of Tears is as a clearing away of one group of people with different colored skins and culture to make way for the development of a new, white culture based on enslaved dark-skinned Africans. It’s probable that some of the today’s suspicion and tension between the races follows from those times.

I was reminded of an experience I had visiting with Shawn, an Army Ranger, in Chicago’s Union Station. Our train was indefinitely delayed due to winter weather conditions. Military personnel, the elderly and families with small children were allowed to wait in a separate, more spacious but drafty and poorly heated area.

Shawn was an enigmatic, imposing figure with a facial tic. He was of medium height and obviously a body builder with bulging chest, shoulder and arm muscles. Except for his hands and face, every inch of his body is covered with tattoos. He periodically paced back and forth and alternated between wearing a sweatshirt and only a tee shirt. We barely kept warm with winter jackets.

I felt like I had to meet him, thank him for his work and see if we could strike up a conversation. We visited several times over six hours. He was friendly, soft spoken, and always called me “Sir.”

I learned he was 32 years old, a full blooded Indian and on his way to visit family on Walpole Island, a Canadian First Nation (Indian) reservation in the St. Clair River. He left Walpole as a teen to live with his mother in Michigan, dropped out of school, and joined the army. He’s been injured and wounded four times in Afghanistan and has shrapnel in his leg.

His tattoos are his autobiography. Each has a particular significance. The largest, a Masonic Lodge emblem, stands for his core values: Belief in God, brotherly love and charity/helping others in need. He said that some people glance, then shy away from him. He described being with a group where a server wasn’t able to make eye contact with him.

He trains younger soldiers now and is disgusted at their lack of respect. He’s leaving the Army when his tour is up and wants to work in law enforcement.

With what I learn about curiosities, I hope to understand my life better. But I don’t expect it to make sense of it.

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Grandpa and the gang do Disney http://rifey-04.ru/grandpa-and-the-gang-do-disney/ http://rifey-04.ru/grandpa-and-the-gang-do-disney/#comments Tue, 06 May 2014 20:42:09 +0000 http://rifey-04.ru/?p=964 The ‘gang’ began developing at Christmastime, when we o […]]]>

The ‘gang’ began developing at Christmastime, when we offered to subsidize a trip to Disney for our youngest grandchildren and their parents during Spring Break. It grew after we invited the Florida branch of the family to think about joining in.  The size varied from 7 to 14.

I’d enjoyed our trip to Disney a decade ago with another set of kids and grandkids, and wondered what it would be like this time. I was curious to see how I would handle five ten-hour days of almost constant activity, standing and walking up to seven miles a day. How would my age interfere?

Disney has a new, wireless wrist band system that improves efficiency of every aspect of the experience. For instance, up to three fast passes, appointments for rides and shows, can be made per day. In order to do and see what you want, and minimize waiting times, days can and must be carefully planned. My wife and daughter-in-law spent hours doing that. The planning worked out really well for all of us.

During the week, there were plenty of priceless moments of sharing the sheer joy of being alive with grandkids. One was when we were playing in the pool at our hotel-resort. I was throwing four-year-old Grant into the water for what seemed like the eleventy-ninth time – forward, backward and summersaults over and over again – he grinned, gave me a hug and told me I was the best grandpa.

On the last day I had a couple of hours to myself before the gang-lunch to aimlessly wander around, mingle in the crowd, and watch and listen to the nearly constant array of Disney street entertainers. I discovered that Disney is as much for the elderly as it is for the young.

I found how my age affected me the very first morning, on a clam-shell ride to view simulated wonders under the sea. The shell repeatedly rotated a quarter turn back and forth to view exhibits. When it came time to climb onto a belt moving the same speed as the ride, I lost my balance and went careening into a wall. Besides the terror of not knowing how or where I was going to end up, I skinned several knuckles on my left hand.

Several months ago I’d experienced a couple of weeks of vertigo and, while I no longer feel dizzy, I found that my brain’s circulation hasn’t fully recovered. I also hadn’t heeded my cardinal rule of carefully standing up and planning position changes to protect myself from stumbling. In the excitement of the moment, I’d reverted to automatic behavior, expecting my body to naturally adjust. It didn’t.

I went on several similar rides later and, when the time came to dismount, I’d make a plan. I’d stand carefully, step off with the right foot and use the left hand for support, then move the left foot out with right hand support, looking ahead in case I began losing my balance. Each time, my wife handed me my backpack once I was safely up and walking.

After the goodbyes, as the kids and grandkids were returning to two feet of snow and almost daily flurries in Michigan, we headed for a condo on the Gulf. Watching the surf, with a cold beer in my hand, my mellowness turned to fatigue. I had planned on reading and listening to the surf late into the night, but fell asleep around nine.

During the week, I thought I’d handled the long, busy days quite well. But after it was over I realized age had taken more out of me than I’d thought.

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