I
dont place much stock
in conspiracy theories. Conjectures that the Green Berets killed Martin
Luther King, Jr., that Jesus and his disciples plotted his own death
and resurrection, that the United Nations is the instrument
of the Devil, or that the government is trying to poison us seem better
suited for novels like The Turner Diaries or The Stepford
Wives. I have a hard time buying into them.
That is, with one exception.
There is one conspiracy
that is so pervasive, so insidious, so unreported, that I cant
believe no journalist has investigated it. Its a conspiracy
worse than anything right wing Republicans or liberal Democrats could
ever could ever dream up. It impairs everyone in the world and has
been doing so for millennia. It preys on our worst fear. Today this
conspiracy sustains a multi-billion dollar industry. Its victims
are found in every strata of society and for the most part they are
clueless to what is happening to them.
Yes, its the great
YOU ARE GETTING OLD conspiracy! From the first birthday card you receive
that says Another year older?heh, heh, heh! until
they slam the lid on your coffin, you are in the clutches of its omnipresent
power. It has no shame and knows no limits. Its charge is to make
you to feel old, look old, act old and buy old at every stage of your
life.
The evil-doers began to
work on you from the moment you were bornalthough you did not
likely become aware of it until you were thirteen years old. Thats
when you received a cryptic message from your parents implying you
were no longer a child and that you must start to act like a grown-up.
At age sixteen you may have begun to suspect that something is not
quite right in the world. By age eighteen you knew for sure something
was wrong but you were still too young to care. By the time you reached
twenty-one, if you hadnt fiercely resisted, it was too late.
Your mind was now tightly under the control of the Larger Influence.
Your spirit started to grow old, my friend, and you put a toeif
not a whole footin the grave.
Like all conspiracies,
the You Are Getting Old plot is cloaked in secrecy and mystery. Its
mission is often disguised as good advice and well-intended information.
But you can fight back.
The conspirators have a covert set of rules they followand their
mission is to indoctrinate you into blindly following these rules
as well. When you follow them you start to feel oldand feeling
old is the first step on the path towards getting old. But I have
discovered the Ark of their Covenant. I have untied their Gordian
Knot. And now I am going to share their dirty secrets with you.
Here are the Ten Commandments of Aging. I have included examples of
how each of them works, but you can probably come up with others as
well.
First Commandment: Talk
Constantly about Your Health.
When greeting a friend
you havent seen for a few days, dont ask, How are
you doing? Instead, ask, How are you feeling? How
are you doing? almost always elicits a positive answer along
the lines of, Hey great, good to see you! This is not
what you want to hear. You want a response more like, Well,
my back is sort of bothering me today. That way you can be quick
on the uptake with, Tell me about it. My feet are absolutely
killing me. The point is to make the conversation all about
you and your aches and pains as quickly as possible.
There are many other times
during the day when you can complain about your health besides just
that casual encounter with a friend. Mealtimes are great for this.
Take lunch, for example. This is the perfect opportunity to tell your
colleagues about your diet, your cholesterol, your food allergies
and your body fat index. Start by ordering something from the heart-healthy
or weight-watcher column. This will usually elicit an Oh, are
you on a diet? observation and you are off and running. At happy
hour order one of those lite beers. Does the same trick.
Perhaps the most obvious
place to complain about your health is in your doctors waiting
room. But why limit it to your doctors office? Waiting time
is wasted time anywhere you encounter it, so dont try to salvage
it by reading the newspaper or a good book. Start a conversation by
mentioning to your fellow HMO inmate how everything today is hurry
up and wait. Hell quickly agree that this is very upsetting
and stressful. You are now perfectly positioned to turn the conversation
into a discussion about how stress contributes to your high blood
pressure.
You can talk about your
health while eating, while shopping (drugstores are great), while
traveling, while partying, while working out at the gym, while making
lovejust use your imagination. The opportunities are almost
limitless. The point is, never miss an opportunity to talk about your
health if you want to make sure people think of you in an older light.
Second Commandment:
Follow the Obituaries.
Not everyone dies old,
of course. But its a pretty good bet that the older you get
the closer you come to dying. Therefore, while dying is not always
associated with old age, old age is directly linked to dying. So to
get yourself into an old age frame of mind just think about dying.
The sooner in life you begin this the better. Why wait until you are
middle-aged to start thinking about the Grim Reaper?
One sure way to get yourself
into an dying frame of mind is to follow the stories of those who
have gone before you to the Great Beyond. You can do this by reading
biographies or by watching movies and plays about people of the past.
Unfortunately, that doesnt put you close to the action. Unless
youre a funeral director or a hearse driver, you need something
that will remind you on a daily basis that you too are going to kick
the bucket. Thats where the obituaries come in.
The great thing about obituaries
is that so many people die everyday. Theres never any shortage
of vicarious dying experiences. If youre not doing it already,
start reading the obituaries on a regular basis. They will spur you
to ponder the many possible ways you can die while at the same time
giving you ideas about how to dispose of your tired old body afterwards.
Third Commandment: Early
to Bed, Early to Rise.
Benjamin Franklin said
it would make you healthy, wealthy and wise. What he didnt say
is that it will also mark you as old. And as we all know, Franklin
was dying proof of his own adage. Who remembers ever seeing a picture
of a young Benjamin Franklin?
A lot of older people go
to bed early and get up early. Young people, on the other hand, go
to bed late and get up late. They know that the night is young
and that the fun doesnt even begin to start until 11PM.
The problem is, the older
you get the less sleep you need. So why would shifting your sleeping
hours from, say, 11PM - 7AM back to 9PM - 5AM make you any healthier,
wealthier or wiser? Youre still getting eight hours of sleep.
No wonder you need a nap in the afternoons. Youre getting too
much sleep.
So continue to sleep eight
hours a day, making sure that you do it earlier and earlier. That
way you can avoid going out and having fun at night and youll
be able to wake up in time to enjoy the garbage trucks picking up
your trash.
Fourth Commandment:
Let Your Body Go to Seed.
Lets face it. Over
time, gravity has its effect on the body. Everything eventually starts
to sag. Joints begin to ache from the constant pull of the earth.
You may even start to stoop or slope in one direction when you walk.
But theres no reason why you should have to wait until you hit
middle age before you can start enjoying these classic hallmarks of
the mature person.
The first gray hair or
wrinkle is your clue that the process has begun. Take a moment in
front of the mirror and celebrate the fact that you have now arrived
at that never-neverland where you are neither young nor old. Better
now to move on quickly to old than to remain in limbo. You can do
this by totally ignoring what your body is telling you.
If youve led a sedentary
life dont even think about starting an exercise program now.
You are already on the right path. Besides, with the job and the kids
and other commitments you simply dont have the time. So dont
worry about it. In no time at all you will have a pot belly and big
asssymbols of your material success in life.
Of course this also means
that you must keep eating like you did when you were in school. Now
that your metabolism has slowed down you dont want to delay
aging by giving up junk food and weekend beer binges. And if your
taste has refined over the years keep shoveling down that pate de
foie gras and the tiramisu. Youre on the fast track now and
youll see results in no time.
A final word for the guys.
What ever you do dont color your hair. In todays stressful
world we all get gray hair much earlier in life than men used to.
Is this great or what? Now we can look like stodgy old professors
by the time we are forty. But if you must color your hair, make sure
you get the kind that looks like its been poured straight out of the
shoe polish bottle. That way, those who can see through your disguise
will still write you off as old. And by the way, if you have more
skin on top than hair be sure to grow those few remaining strands
real long. You can drape them around and make nice little swirls on
the top of your heada dead give away to your true age.
Fifth Commandment: Display
Your Evidence.
The older you get the more
things you accumulate that are constant reminders that you are not
as young as you used to be. Take bi-focal glasses, for example. Theres
a 99-percent chance that when you hit forty you are going to need
some sort of help seeing things up close. What a great opportunity
for almost everyone to show the world they are getting older. Dont
even think about disguising your presbyopia with progressive glasses.
Get the old fashioned kind with the Hubble lens inserts. Better yet,
buy reading glasses so you can look over their rimsand down
at everyone.
Your home is your castle.
Its where you display most of your stuff. And what better stuff
for a home to have on display to guests (especially young ones) than
the paraphernalia of its aging residents? If you take medication be
sure to leave your pill jars in a neat row on the kitchen counter.
The bathroom is a good place to leave your dentures in a glass of
water to frighten the grandchildren. Leave your blood pressure cuff
and stethoscope hanging in the family room next to the TV. The footbath
and heating pad can usually stay on display in the bedroom. And on
the living room coffee table you can make a nice display of your AARP
and Arthritis Today magazines.
Sixth Commandment: Use
Language that Emphasizes Your Age.
Nothing gives away a persons
status in life like her speech. Remember Eliza Doolittle in My
Fair Lady? Well, not only can people tell where you are from or
how much education you have by the way you speak and write, they can
also get a pretty good handle on your inner age. Thats why its
important to avoid youngspeak.
Young people pepper their
speech with words of energy and vitality. For example, they work
out, while their grandparents merely exercise. Working
out implies pumping iron and breaking a sweat before going out on
a hot date. Exercise is something a heart attack patient takes
when he strolls around the shopping mall.
Since young people havent
suffered under the weight of gravity and lifes slings and arrows
as you have, they seldom have problems. They have issues.
In fact, they so dont have problems that youre welcome
has become no problem. Get it? If you are a parent, grandparent
or teacher Im sure you can come up with other youthful terms
to avoid. After all, you dont want to be considered sweet.
That would be way weird.
You can also call attention
to your age by speaking of your years of experience in your profession.
Since no one cares about anything you did more than five years ago,
make sure your resume (or companys brochure) points out that
you have more than twenty-five years experience in the same rut.
Seventh Commandment:
Join an Old Farts Club.
Basically, the idea here
is that you want to keep a closed mind to new ideas and to not keep
up with the latest trends in the arts and technology. You want your
brain to rust. This is impossible to do if you associate with younger
people. Young people are always on the cutting edge. So limit your
friends and acquaintances to people who are at least over 50. If you
dont know many people over 50 consider joining an old farts
club.
The biggest and best known
old farts club (in the U. S.) is the American Association of Retired
Persons (AARP). As soon as you hit forty-nine and a half you are eligible
to join and you should take advantage of this. You will have to make
further efforts after becoming a member before you can actually start
commiserating with your fellow AARPers, so sign up as early as possible
to get the ball rolling. The best thing about joining AARP is that
you will start to receive magazines and literature that constantly
remind you of what its like to get old. At forty-nine and a
half, this is a great way to start conditioning your mind into believing
that you are over the hill, your health is going to fail at any moment,
and the world is passing you by.
Once youve joined
AARP you can then associate yourself with two or three groups of old
farts in your local neighborhood. Most community centers have senior
citizens activities. Check them out. Your church probably has an adult
education or Sunday school program where youll be hard-pressed
to find anyone under fifty. Find a bingo parlor. Attend matinees of
foreign films. Take specially organized tours with the other old farts
of your community. Play the slot machines at your local casino. Hang
out at the OTB.
Of course your ultimate
old farts club goal should be to live in a retirement communitypreferably
a gated one that doesnt allow overnight visits of children.
If youre not yet ready for this step, try finding an adults
only condominium to live in for a few years first. Youll get
there eventually.
Eighth Commandment:
Go for the Senior Discounts.
Its great being old.
Look at all the things you can save money on!
There are so many discounts
to be had. Movies, zoos, amusement parks, museums, public transportationwhy
should a re-tired person like yourself have to pay the same high prices
as everyone else? After all, its not your fault that the 40-year
old standing in front of you has to pay full price. Never mind that
he and his wife are working two jobs each to keep shoes on their kids.
Its their duty to subsidize your movie ticket as well, right?
What you want to doto
keep yourself feeling old, remember?is to make a big
deal about getting your fair markdown. Everywhere you go you should
ask if they have a senior discount. Instead of just asking at the
museums and movie theatres, ask at Macys. Ask if they have a
senior discount at Tiffanys. Ask at the dentist. Ask at the
dry cleaners. Ask at the gas station. Ask the dog walker, the newspaper
boy and the Girl Scout Cookie girl. Ask the cop who gives you a parking
ticket.
And if you cant get
a senior discount at your favorite restaurant at least go for the
early bird special. Youll get a similar price cutbut at
the same time you can apply what you learned in the Seventh Commandment
because the restaurant will be packed with other old farts in a hurry
to get home and to bed early (Third Commandment).
Ninth Commandment: Talk
Down to Young People.
If youve been following
the previous eight rules you should be pretty much insulated from
the younger generation by now and you could almost skip this one.
But occasionally there will still come those annoying moments when
you must actually talk to someone under 25. To keep yourself feeling
old and superiornot to mention making yourself look ridiculousyou
must learn to talk down to them. There are two ways to do this.
The first is to lower your
elocution to what you presume is the lower comprehension level of
the person to whom you are speaking. If youve raised children
youve probably already done this. Speak in modified baby talk
to anyone under sevenas in, Does little Taylor Taylor
need to go tinkle tinkle before we get in the car? Taylor will
think you are talking about someone else because you have referred
to her in the third person. She wont understand what you are
trying to communicate but will assume from your tone of voice that
you dont respect her innate intelligence. With the eight to
twenty-one year-old set you can pretty much speak in your normal tone
of voice as long as you never ask their opinion on anything.
The other way to talk down
is to use the Great Wizard of Oz method. Constantly remind young people
just how much more knowledgeable and wiser you are. Be officious.
Pontificate. Hold court. Hold staff meetings. Pay no attention to
their rolling eyes.
Tenth Commandment: Remember
the Good Old Days.
Nothing will make you feel
old like living in the past. And nothing will make you appear older
to those around you than if you constantly talk about the good old
days. There are several ways you can perfect this skill.
Begin with the I
Remember When I Was Your Age Technique. Of course, no one really
remembers what it was like when they were someone elses age
and thats the beauty of this approach. You can make it up as
you go along. Use this technique when discussing something kids can
do today that you couldnt. For example: No one ever drove
me to school. I remember when I was your age I had to walk two miles
to get to school. Often it was snowing. My coat wasnt all that
warm. I didnt have any shoes. It was up hill both ways.
Next is the What,
Youve Never Heard of Kate Smith? Technique. Obviously
it doesnt really have to be Kate Smith. It can be Buddy Holly,
Dale Carnegie or Adlai Stevenson. It can be anyone (preferably dead)
as long as the other (younger) person has never heard of him. The
great thing about this technique is that you can combine it with the
Ninth Commandment and, once youve explained who the person was,
launch into a long pontification as well.
Then theres the Back
in My Day Technique. Use this when you are bemoaning the passing
of better times. Like, Back in my day we always got dressed
up to go to church. Or, Back in my day you could eat the
fish you caught.
Of course, if were
honest with ourselves we must admit that the good old days were not
always that great. But dont let that hold you back from expressing
your remembrance of things past. Collect memorabilia, go to high school
reunions, watch old movies, listen to Lawrence Welk, join the VFW,
join Classmates.com. Remember the Alamo. Remember the Maine. Remember
the good old days
Some people never seem to
get old no matter how long they live. Dick Clark is a good example.
The guy looked like a teenager most of his life and even now he still
looks much younger than his age. Perhaps part of it is due to his genesor
his plastic surgeon. But my guess is that theres more to it than
that. His business keeps him around young people and he stays current
with the latest trends in pop culture. Its impossible to do that
and be an old fart at the same time.
Theres a difference
between getting old and aging. When my father turned seventy I asked
him how that made him feel. He said he couldnt care less because
he didnt feel a day over fifty. That impressed me. Now in his
eighties, while he has aged, he has not gotten old. He travels extensively,
he goes on dates, he keeps in touch with his scattered children via
e-mail, and he works his fifteen acre ranch daily. Dad
didnt fall victim to the conspirators. Lets resolve that
we wont either.
©
Copyright 2003, Richard Bradley. All rights reserved.
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