Foggy Old Age

Written
1996

 All too soon you'll learn what

     it means to get old.

Because old creaky, sneaky age will find you.

Like the summer fog

      it crept over your toes,

      wraps around your knees,

     rusts your elbows,

     kinks your neck,

      muffs my ears

      and blinkers your eyes.

And then on no date certain it covers you

      like a soupy blanket. 

Where are the lithe,limber limbs of your youth?

Joints that just yesterday

      were models of mechanical perfection

      this morning needed to be oiled and rubbed

      with pain and warmth

      to start a day of minimal movement.

The smart alec memory that stored put down trivia

        now has vast empty space.

"What's his name?" has become the inventory number

       for much once there.

The grey that rose from the tip of your beard

      to the top of your head color codes you

      for the lookers.

Harmless old fellow is a caption

      you neither sought nor now accept,

     except when you fall asleep in a sexy movie 

     or listen to a former student talk of grandchildren. 

Me? I don't really feel too old.

It is a matter of viewpoint.

Take my pappy.

Older by a generation

      and looking younger every day,

      he frowns disapproval at me

      when I even think old.

He works sweaty hard as a model for me.

He goes and I sit.

He is angry about politics and politicians.

I comfort myself

      in well founded and restful cynicism.

He views my golden years through platinum glasses.

His humor is still sharp and its

      gentle nudge smiles away my infirmities.

When I complain,

      he asks me to pass the spuds.

After all it is a father's job to keep

       the youngsters in their place -

       older than most, younger than some.

He determinedly chases my fog back to sea.

So while you age my father won't let me play.

 

 

Notes
Published in Trinidad Colorado, My Home Town" 1996 for the 50th reunion of the Trinidad , Colorado class of 1946