The New Old?

Sara Davidson

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December, 3, 2019

Medium, a popular website, asked me to write about “How to Talk to an Old Person.”  At first  I thought it was about talking to people older than I — people in their eighties or nineties. Then it landed with a thud: the old person — that’s me.

But I don’t feel old. I feel like I’m 50. When I was 40, I felt like I was 28. You always feel younger inside than your chronological age, but both ages are moving upward, in tandem.

The “I” — the interior being that you identify as you—is ageless. The body—that’s another matter.

You know you’re old the first time someone stands to give you his or her seat — on the subway, on a bus, in a crowded waiting room. I was shocked when it happened. I don’t look frail, do I? I don’t even have gray hair. I still like sex, drugs, and rock and roll. But there’s no rationalizing now. The world sees me as old.

Boomers are the great mass of people now becoming seniors, and I wonder, will we transform being old?  To advise millennials how to talk to us, I told them about, well, us.

Demographers classify boomers as people born between 1946 and 1964, but there are two different cohorts. The first, the “leading-edge boomers,” were born between 1946 and 1955 — those who came of age during the Vietnam War. This year, they range in age from 65 to 73. But even this cohort is not homogenous. It includes Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, Democrats and Republicans, environmental activists and climate-change deniers, people who are physically impaired and those who’re still running and skiing. Some are boring, and some are so brilliant that you’d feel lucky to spend time with them.

I’ve been writing about this cohort for 40 years, starting with the book Loose Change: Three Women of the Sixties. The way I define them is: people of various ages who were infected by the ideals of the ’60s. They believed, and did not take this ironically, that we could make love, not war. They had a passion for improving the world and a self-transforming agenda. They can get emotional when they hear “Sergeant Pepper” or see a film clip of Bobby Kennedy saying, “Some men see things as they are and ask, ‘Why?’ I dream things that never were and ask, ‘Why not?’”

We’ve reinvented each phase of life as we moved through it. In 1966, Time chose as its “Man of the Year” not a man, but, for the first time in its history, a generation: “The man — and woman — of 25 and under.”

We were IT, the center of a cultural revolution, and we urged each other, “Don’t trust anyone over 30.”

Then we turned 30. That was a tough birthday, but we had our own popular TV show, Thirtysomething, which dramatized our attempts to launch a meaningful career and couple up with the right person. We were cutting hair, shaving beards, and buying bras again. Those who dropped out to live on communes had to drop back in or become relics.
Our forties and fifties were about raising kids, and we were determined to do it better than our parents had. We rewrote all the rules, starting with allowing fathers in the delivery room. We analyzed and stewed over every choice, got second opinions and read books, and came to every doctor’s appointment and parent conference with lists of questions. We wanted our kids to have every tool for success, so we scheduled them with

playdates and classes in music, dance, Chinese or French, soccer, gymnastics, and karate. My son had his orange belt when he was five.

In our sixties, we ran smack into the empty nest. Those words don’t begin to describe the void, the gaping maw we were facing. I called it “the Narrows.” My children — who had occupied my first thoughts on waking and my last before sleep — were off in college. I’d been aged out of writing for TV, which had been my main source of income for 25 years, and the man I’d hoped to spend the rest of my days with rode off with no discussion. For the first time in my life, I had no kids at home, no work, and no partner. My calendar was empty. Yet our life span had increased, due to medical advances and better health habits. At 60, we still felt vigorous and wanted to contribute. So I wrote Leap:
What Will We Do With the Rest of Our Lives?

These days, as we move into our seventies, many of our close friends and heroes are struggling with illness, and some are dying. I’m sick of hearing that Bette Davis quote: “Old age ain’t no place for sissies.” Duh. As the body wears down, we have “issues” with hips, knees, shoulders, backs, and hearts, not to mention wrinkles and saggy faces. And memory? Forget it. On a recent day, I couldn’t remember where the “control” button was on my keyboard.

But I’m happy to report that many of us are less worried and stressed, provided we’ve prepared financially for this time.

We’re past the age where we have to prove anything to anyone, and we’re tasting moments of what has become the holy grail — equanimity. Some of us have been meditating, doing yoga, and having various kinds of therapy for decades. We’ve learned that we can’t get rid of parts of ourselves that we don’t like, but we can do better. We can accept them, allow them to just be there, with love.

Many of us are going on the road. We have the time, and we’ve found that landing in a foreign country fires all your senses, waking you from the slumber of the familiar. We can be spotted in the most remote parts of the globe — clumps of seniors wearing protective hats, sunglasses, and athletic shoes and clutching bottles of water.

Some of us are moving to another state to be close to our grandkids. Just as nothing prepares you for having a child, nothing prepares you for the rapture of becoming a grandparent. I’d been irritated when friends waxed on about it, but when I held my first grandchild, four days old, against my chest and felt his tiny heart beating softly against mine, I was overcome by the communion. His wee new light was coming into the world just as my own light was slowly fading. Through him, I was connected to the future, and through me, he was linked to the past. It was… poignant. I had no words, just gratitude.

After I told them a bit about us, I said I was eager to hear about millennials: what it’s like to come of age now, your relationships, your mating habits, your work/life balance. Can you explain to us about tattoos? Can you help us keep up with technology? We try hard, but we’re not native to it, as you are. When my daughter was six, she found my old electric typewriter at the back of a closet. “Do you know what that is?” I asked. She nodded. “A computer.”

Then I gave them some tips that might help them talk to the new old.

1. First: Can they hear you? Speak loudly and find a quiet place, which may mean meeting for an (ugh) early-bird dinner.

2. Can they see you? Have they had their cataracts fixed? Pick a location with good lighting.

3. Find common ground — music, spirituality, politics. Most boomers believe that in our youth, we had the best music produced in the past hundred years. Your thoughts? At a Crosby, Stills, and Nash concert a few years ago, I sat next to a row of twentysomethings who sang along to every song. “How do you guys know the words?” I asked. “These songs were hits before you were born.” They answered in unison: “Parents.”

4. Find something to laugh about. A good laugh, at our age, is almost as good as an orgasm. Almost.

5. Get stoned with us, with your drug of choice. We were the first generation to widely “consume cannabis,” as we say in Colorado, where I now live. It will make things more fascinating.

6. When we say we’re ready to go, it’s just first call. You can order another cup of coffee while we suit up.

7. Have fun. As long as you’re spending time with one of us, make it your business to enjoy it. Whenever Janis Joplin was about to go onstage, to calm her nerves, she would say to herself, “Have a good time, Janis.”

And so shall we.

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  • Bill Manahan says:

    You are a thoughtful thinker and a wonderful writer, Sara. I really enjoyed your blog/article. And I am just short of age 80, so what you described really resonated!

  • Dan Syme says:

    Brilliant and moving☀️

  • Tracy Johnston says:

    Your tips are the best, Sara. But what about our desire to tell young people what was better about the world and our lives back in the day? Should we just shut up?

  • Norma Levy says:

    I loved this piece. Always so nice to see you in my inbox. You’ve still got it! Loose Change forever!

  • This is great Sara!
    Funny, nostalgic, energetic — just like us (I hope).
    Thanks for writing it.

  • Mimi Mindel says:

    Hi Sara
    Loved you thoughts on aging! A I turn 80 in May I have thought a lot about it. I feel as long I’m healthy it’s all ok…I love living in Larkspur in a tiny cottage next to all my children and grandchildren. One of them is a junior at UC Boulder! I will let you know when I visit.
    Hope all is well with you and that one of these days we will catch up. In the meantime, keep on writing.
    Sending love, love, love, mimi

    • I agree, as long as we’re healthy…. but most of us will have to accept some health challenge or limitation. Reb Zalman, whom I wrote about in “The December Project,” said that whether you’re happy or miserable when aging is determined by on how you respond to change. Lots of love back to you.

  • Hal Feiger says:

    As an aging boomer , I try to live by this motto.
    “Either today is the first day of the rest of your life
    or it’s the last day of your life, which makes today and every day
    a special day to be cherished”
    In fact at the end of many days I ask myself if this is the last
    one , was it a good one?”

  • Hank Scheinberg says:

    Sara, this is great. You really captured every period.

    One thing, for sure, your writing skills have not diminished one bit.

    My best wishes to you always

  • Drbarbra rubin says:

    You said it!!

  • Rebecca says:

    Sara, you were born before 1945. You are not technically a Baby Boomer. This is what bothers me about naming and stereotyping a demographic. You obviously identify as a Boomer. I was born in 1962 and I definitely do not. (You were close to graduating from college when I was born.) When I was a child I was not a Baby Boomer. I learned about them in 6th-grade social studies. Our teacher explicitly told us we were not Baby Boomers. She called us the Baby Bust Generation. This may not have been true, but I didn’t learn that I was classified as a Boomer until I was older than 30. I know this is an inconsequential peeve. But it does underscore your point that we cannot pigeonhole a person based on her or his birth year.

  • Suzanne Tate says:

    Just started “Loose Change.” Hooked already!

    Your comment today is spot on. I’m a pre-boomer, born in 1942, but went through all
    the social changes that came along. I can totally relate. I find some of the younger
    generations are tending to negate me due to
    my age. But the majority seem to want to hear all
    about the huge changes that we lived through…
    the hippies, the drugs, the freedom to dress as we liked,
    speak what we thought, love how we wanted. And yes, “Those were
    the days, my friend. We thought they’d never end…”.

    I love your work. I’m happy to ensconce myself in “Loose Change,” and
    relive some of my best years, pathos and all. And I
    have a feeling it will be one of those books that
    I will read more slowly at the end…just because I
    won’t WANT it to end.

    Thanks for it all, Sara.
    Suzanne

    • Thanks, Suzanne, for your kind words. I also was born before 1946, and have always identified with the boomer cohort. I think the demographers are wrong in their arbitrary assignation of dates. The most important leaders and artists of our generation were born before 1946: The Beatles, The Stones, Bob Dylan, Tom Hayden, Abbie Hoffman, Joni Mitchell, Joan Baez, the Chicago Seven, the first draft resisters, the first freedom riders, the founders of the Black Power movement and Black Panthers, the founders of the Women’s Liberation Movement, the first hippies. All were born in the early ’40s. That’s why I identify boomers as those of various ages who identified with the ideals of the Sixties Generation and lived differently from previous generations. So, if you feel you are, YOU ARE a boomer. Much gratitude for your thoughts. Sara

    • Rebecca says:

      I read “Loose Change” the spring I turned 16 in 1978. I have reread it every five years or so since. It gave me valuable insights into the challenges and lives of women born just before me and continues to provide wisdom and comfort. Sara has been something akin to a big sister to me (unbeknownst to her, of course).

  • Marc Raphael says:

    Just a thought. When I ask a group of students what associations they have with the word OLD I hear mostly negative words. But when I ask about ELDERS it turns positive. So I stopped using OLD! For the best thoughts on all this I have read in years try ELDERHOOD by Louise Aronson

  • God, I LOVED this blog. It’s so true, even though, born as I was in 1939, I come from a generation back. In fact, I just turned 80 on Nov. 6th, six months and one day after Judy Collins did. And she’s still performing 120 times a year! Unlike Linda Ronstadt, she was blessed to keep her voice. Send in the clowns! Sara, I think you’re my favorite current writer. Plus you’re such a mensch! Sending love and blessings. Keep on keeping on.

    Love,

    Ren

  • Bonnie says:

    Loved this post. I’m 73 and could really identify with it. I also loved Loose Change and have read it many times. You really have a handle on the lives we have lived.

  • Robin Perley says:

    I remember reading your columns in The Daily Cal and know I read Loose Change along the way. Thank you, Sara, for your article! So perfect. Such sweet memories. As for now, I just turned 70 last week, but in my head I’m 40 (having realized recently that I probably no longer felt like 35). Hey – I could be in that group travel pic! Thanks again; I will be forwarding your essay to my friends and family – Boomers and Below!

  • Debra says:

    I was born in ‘62 at the tail end of the Boom. Read my Mom’s copy of Loose Change when I was 14 and watched the miniseries, too. I’ve read it at least 5 times since. I thought college would be like your story but didn’t have a real protest experience until the 2017 Women’s March and two others since (although I have been to gay pride parades).

    I heard Paul McCartney’s voice at 4 years old, before I understood what a Beatle was. In fact, II heard all of the solo Beatles before eventually becoming a big fan of the group in ‘76 when I was 13. Now I watch them on YouTube and tell people that if there was a YouTube when I was a teenager, I would have never gotten any sleep at night.

    I always wanted to be a REAL Baby Boomer — at Woodstock rather than 2nd grade. In the stands at Shea Stadium and not drinking a baby bottle. But discovering the 60s music in the 70s and the 50s (oh no, my parents’ music!) in the 80s wasn’t so bad. And now I can rediscover everything, including you and Loose Change, on my tablet.

    I’m glad I’ve lived long enough to see all of these changes!

    • Thanks for your comments, Debra. That’s why I think the usual definition of boomers is inaccurate. Born in ’62, you didn’t feel part of the same experience that those born in the 40s and 50s did. So glad you enjoy the music and stories.

  • Gail Storey says:

    I love this blog post, Sara! To me, aging is the most exciting time of my life thus far! It’s full of surprises, and even the ones I wouldn’t have asked for turn out to be enormous gifts and blessings. The vicissitudes of my aging body are portals to a vast space of awareness. As the body lets go in increments, an inner knowing explodes with wisdom and heart. I had no idea! I’ve been wondering why time feels as if it’s speeding increasingly faster, and just today it occurred to me it’s because as we grow older we grow faster, at a prodigious rate.

  • Great piece Sarah!

    I just turned 65 (how did THAT happen?), and this past July, my husband and I made our last move… to Grants Pass, Oregon. It’s just about the size of San Luis Obispo (the place we had lived in for about 20 years), which makes this town easily navigated for me, and much, much cheaper. It was our main reason for moving, and it about killed me, but I’m finding a tribe (the once I most identify with is the Council of Elders) and a new way of living… called RETIREMENT, which feels very weird.

    Also, my daughter is 22 and has been on her own for three years. That’s weird, too, because she was my LIFE for so many years.

    Thanks to Social Security and the fact that my 70-year-old husband is still working in San Luis Obispo (he’s a teacher and his work is his passion, so, this is his choice, but he is retiring after this school year and coming up once a month for long weekends), we are fine financially. There was a time I didn’t see that ever happening, but being able to sell my house in California and make a nice profit from it, and putting down a big downpayment on the-nicest-house-I’ve-ever-lived in here means a super low mortgage. I pinch myself every morning when I get up because of our great house. But… I also feel guilty because no young family could afford my California house; it was sold to a developer. I’m still trying to deal with that.

    Also, I can feel myself slowing down. I can’t imagine an eight-hour workday now. And the other day, I forgot that there were a few zeros in my iPhone password and struggled with that for a few minutes. Good to know that you’ve forgotten the CONTROL key on your computer; that makes me feel better!

    Also, my FACE is changing. Does that sound weird, too? I can see the beginnings of the old lady look, which is disconcerting, to say the least! But I’m not ready for the alternative, not by a long shot. I have to much left to do.

    So, here I am, navigating the narrows from Oregon! 🙂 All best, Hilary

  • Joey Bortnick says:

    Sara,
    Thank you for writing this. And I do get emotional listening to Sergeant Pepper. I miss listening to the radio, waiting in line at the record store to get the latest rock record and learning the new dances. I miss the days when we enjoyed a sense of fun in fashion while maintaining a keen awareness of what was k in the world. I miss the feeling of shared responsibility for making positive changes. There certainly was a strong sense of unity. So much happened, devastating tragedies as well as mind-blowing gatherings, concerts, protests, sit ins, demonstrations, and all of it driven by the music. And you were a reporter!!!
    As a teacher, I get to teach my students about the 1960s as well as the history of rock n roll. I think about the 60’s a lot and how that particular decade shaped us. Though I was a child, I was very much in the know due to my older siblings and hip parents. There was electricity in the air and the feeling that we belonged to something huge and important and magical. And we cared; we got up and made things happen. We had social skills and strong communities. Before computers life was real. To talk to seniors today I think one just needs to ask them about the 60’s and then sit back and listen. No texting. Real face to face conversations are becoming a lost art. Try it with a senior.

  • Laura Geller says:

    It is exactly for all the reasons you describe in this blog that my late husband Richard Siegel (who coedited the Jewish Catalog in the early 70’s) and I wrote “Getting Good at Getting Older”, which was just published in October. The audience of the original Jewish Catalog, was the generation that transformed society in the 60’s and 70’s; now we are in our 60’s and 70’s and we are still challenging assumptions – now about growing older, by living longer, being more active that our parents and grandparent and simply doing things differently. The original Jewish Catalog was a tool kit; Getting Good at Getting Older is a new tool kit offering the resources and the skills we need to navigate the years between maturity and frail old age. Your readers who are interested can go to my website rabbilaurageller.com to find out more about the book.

  • Kay Strum says:

    Turned 70 this year and this really hit home.
    Mike and I were in Budapest and Prague last year after your trip and so really enjoyed your blog about your visit to your ancestors home.

  • Richard W. says:

    How wonderfully true and poignant – my 28 year old mind (and 78 year old body) agree with nostalgia and begrudging acceptance. Thanks for the insight.

  • Paul S Wax says:

    Very well written and considerate piece of work! What troubles me is this so called “OK Boomer” phrase -which is used by some younger folks to dismiss or mock attitudes stereotypically attributed to the baby boomer generation. Our “Baby Boomer” generation gave this world an awareness of freedom of speech, ecology, equality of races and sexes, put 12 men on the moon – which was a culmination and utilization of all the technology mankind has ever known, developed and laid the foundation of our computer based society (which the younger generation uses for almost everything in their lives), took Rock n’ Roll to the next step which became the foundation of the music today, just to name a few things. I think we should say “OK Gen X’s and Y’s – you owe us!”

    • Margaret Pevec says:

      Thanks for articulating what I think about a great deal. I’m proud of us Baby Boomers. We ushered in all the things you mentioned and more. Natural childbirth comes to mind, and now as we face our deaths, learning to be present and to plan for that inevitability. The Great Generation definitely cued us up for the big changes we brought into being. Maybe the question to Gen Xs and Ys is “what are you bringing to the party?

      • Paul S Wax says:

        Thanks, Margaret, for your kind words regarding my posting – That’s a good question to ask the Gen X’s and Y’s – what will they bring to the party? I hope we will leave them with some good ideas that they could embellish upon – once they pick their heads up from staring at their smart phones! LOL!!

        Wishing you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

        PW

  • Margaret Pevec says:

    Your comments about grandchildren brought tears to my eyes. In my normal consciousness I don’t “grok” the unbelievable blessing of my living legacy.

  • Barbara Westfall says:

    I loved this! Wow what a journey and it’s not over yet!! XOXO Barb Westfall

  • Misty says:

    Loved Loose Change… although you’re a bit older than me you still keep your fingers crossed on the pulse beat of many generations.
    Thank you!

  • lynn segal says:

    I don’t think it is necessary to remark on the use of recreational drugs on the subject of agism. I don’t support that at any age.

  • Peter Childs says:

    Very nice, Sara. Last year, when at age 80 I crashed my motorcycle (with nine broken ribs, shoulder blade in six pieces, and a bruised lung; all fine now) a biker buddy gave me one of the best pieces of advice I’ve ever heard (from the Desiderata): “Take kindly the counsel of the years, yielding gracefully the things of youth.” No more bikes, but plenty of other delights to look forward to!

  • Alan Ross says:

    Life’s busyness kept me from reading this sooner, but you hit another nerve spot-on, Sara. Wonderful points made about the chasms that develop between generations, and here with us all still in our late 40s! 😉

    So nice to ingest such a thoughtful piece. Thank you for your great writing.

  • Like you, Sara, I’ve remained blissfully unaware of my age. That is, until last month when I bought a new car, being attracted to its driver assistive technology. My suggestion to you and your readers: DON’T DO IT!! Now I’m feeling old! It’s a quick way to “age out” of driving. I find it comparable to flying a Boeing 737. A 737 MAX.

    The time to take away my own keys is rapidly approaching. Time to transition to Uber/Lyft. Just as soon as I can figure out my new smart-ass phone.

  • Barb Warner says:

    In 1969 I had just returned to the U.S. from spending 3 years in Turkey as a Peace Corps Volunteer. I was working for the federal government in San Francisco and going to protest marches on weekends. Was it going to be an anti war march or a civil rights march this weekend? Many of us were refusing to pay the tax on our phone service as that money was being used to fund the war. The ante was raised when the phone company began seizing protester’s cars and selling them. I did give in but not before writing my check on a baby’s diaper, decorating it with daisies and taking it to the tax office. (Several weeks later I received it back in the mail with an official bank cancel stamp on the back.} There was a lightness in all of that. Perhaps it was because I was in my twenties and it felt like the dawning of the Age of Aquarius: the possibility of the creation of peace or earth and good will towards men.

    So here I am 50 years later. Life seems much more complicated now. The sentiment on this poster at the Women’s March of January 2017 in Denver elicits both a little smile from me and also sadness. I have to believe that I have made a difference in the life of some fellow human beings. Maybe it was just embracing a Turkish child who was crying or spending a Saturday afternoon being one of thousands of people marching in protest to the Vietnam War in San Francisco in 1969.

    Currently, I am facilitating a Wisdom Circle here in Denver. My goal is to help my peers harvest the wisdom, courage and knowledge that they have gained through the years. We owe it to ourselves, our families and our communities to take ownership of that wisdom and share it. I do feel sad that my Turkish kids (and their kids) are living with a dictator as head of their country and that war is still a go-to solution for most Americans to end global conflict. It does bring me comfort, however, to know that growing spiritually is now my main focus at this time in my life and that I have many teachers and resources helping in the facilitation of that growth. Maybe I feel happier and more directed than ever to know that being happy is my main task now.

    Dear Sara, I live in Denver and enjoyed reading your blog sent 12/5/19. Keep Your Fork-Dessert Is On The Way: Savoring the Second Half of Life is a book that I wrote several years ago. Life continues and gives us cause to continue enjoying learning and creating.

  • Ken McMahon says:

    I found this among my messages recently and, as a “boomer”, born 1946, I decided to comment upon it.

    “I still like sex, drugs, and rock and roll.”

    This seems to be, as with so much of this article, an assertion of what purports to be an expression representing the attitudes and views of an entire generation. As such, it is an exercise in the fallacy of autobiographical induction, viz., “this is the case for me, therefore it must be the case for everyone else as well.” Quite apart from the obvious fact that 76 million people are non-identical, it reduces these observations to those of the lowest common denominator, still presupposing that so many people have anything in common. While she does recognize that there are Democrats and Republicans, environmentalists and climate change deniers in the mix, the bulk of the article reverts to the assumption of generational commonality.

    Even the term “boomers” equates those born in 1946 with those born in 1964: an indication of a statistical bump or boom, but having no other validity. Ask yourself what someone born in ’46 has in common with a child born the year he started college? What experiences have they shared, what events have they witnessed together, what history do they jointly remember? None. Not to mention that Sara wasn’t even born during that interval. Still, she did participate in, or at least observe, many of the representative events of that period.

    As to the quotation above: Yes, of course most of us enjoy sex—but for me, sex without intimacy—the hallmark of “free love”—has always been empty and unsatisfying. Hence, merely classifying sex as just another recreational activity along with music and drugs is trivializing. While I admit this is my attitude, unlike Sara I do not proclaim this as some sort of generational mantra.

    As to drugs: No interest. I wanted to be like Mr. Spock (to take a well know fictional character), not Cheech and Chong.

    Rock and roll? I always preferred Baroque and Classical music. While I do enjoy this or that song, for me much of popular music is to classical what best-sellers and romance novels are to Dostoyevsky and James Joyce.

    • Tracy Hudson says:

      “They can get emotional when they hear ‘Sergeant Pepper’.”
      Really? Not exactly Beethoven.

      “They believed that we could make love, not war.”
      Not all of us believed that human nature was immune to the genetic load of 200,000 plus years
      “‘Don’t trust anyone over 30’.”
      I recall reading this, but never heard anyone actually say it—it was just too stupid.

      “And memory? Forget it. On a recent day, I couldn’t remember where the ‘control’ button was on my keyboard.”
      Use marijuana, then complain about your memory?

      “Can they hear you? Speak loudly and find a quiet place, which may mean meeting for an early-bird dinner.”
      Why the assumption we are hard-of-hearing? Maybe all those rock concerts?
      Why an ‘early bird’ dinner? I never could understand why some people, as they age, revert to childish bedtimes schedules.

      “Find something to laugh about. A good laugh is almost as good as an orgasm. Almost.”
      Sex-as-recreational-activity again. Pathetic.
      Most of the people in your books are rudderless, without-a-compass type, chasing after shaggy gurus one minute, taking ups glass-blowing the next, joining the latest fad after that, etc.

      “Get stoned with us. It will make things more fascinating.”
      How will this make your conversation “more fascinating”?—“Yeah man; far out man….” A veritable Goethe.

      I was tired of these cliches back in the 60s, and find it disappointing to see that little has changed in that regard.

  • Suzanne Peters Payne says:

    Mentorship is the best way to give back to the life that has been good to you. It has worked for centuries in older civilizations. If one person believes in you and encourages you,you can accomplish anything.
    There are so many that need just that one that says ,”jump through those hoops,one after another, keep your eye on your goal,it will be worth it in the end.”
    Thank you,Sara for all the wonderful stories including your own.
    Suzanne (a former Boulder resident of 40 yrs. now basking in the warmth of Scottsdale,Arizona and turning 80 very soon)