Monday, October 31, 2011

A Dream

Last night I dreamt of my father. We were expecting him for dinner, but he was late. Just as we decided not to wait for him any longer, I saw him laboriously climbing the stairs to our apartment. “Dad,” I called out to him, “use the elevator!” I guided him down the stairs to the floor below and entered the elevator with him. Inside was an upholstered bench in the Directoire style, a pleasing addition until I noticed that the upholstery was worn and in parts torn.

My father died 34 years ago at the age of 77. I’m now three years older than he was at the time of his death, but of course in dreams as well as in conscious thought he's always older than I. In the first years after his death, when I dreamt of him, it was always with a sense of enormous relief and joy: he wasn’t dead after all! But for at least the past twenty years, there’s been no heightened emotion when he appears in my dreams, for there he has never died; he still exists in all the ordinariness of everyday life.

I don’t belong to a culture that believes that the dream of a dead parent provides a message from the other world. If I did, I might have written “my father came to me in a dream.” He didn’t come to me. I dreamt of him. He had no message. Indeed, he said nothing at all. He was, of course, like the elevator bench, a projection of my perception of myself – old and wearing out. What did the Directoire style represent? It was popular during the French post-revolutionary period of the 1790’s. It suggests, perhaps, the revolution implied by a son becoming older than his father.

After I die, after my siblings die, who will dream of our father? It’s unlikely that our children will dream of him. Instead, they will dream of us.



2010-2011 Anchises-An Old Man's Journal All Rights Reserved

Friday, October 28, 2011

Flying by Flapping My Arms

The other morning, my wife, who generally looks at the obituary section before she turns to the rest of the Times, read to me from the eight paid notices for Fred Stein, who died at the age of 84. A retired partner in Neuberger Berman, an asset management firm, he began his career by handwriting price quotes on the stock exchange chalk board. He became rich, but what struck my wife and me were the comments of his friends on the occasion of his 80th birthday. “If anyone who knows Fred were in trouble and could make just one call for help, he would call Fred.” Another said, “the day was always better if one got to spend a part of it with Fred.”

My 80th birthday is scheduled to arrive in only a few weeks, so it will be too late to earn encomia like those. Fortunately, no party is planned, so no one will have to dissemble. It’s probably already too late to earn such praise for my tombstone. Never mind, long ago I had determined what would be written on my tombstone, were I to have one:

He Lectured in Hebrew

What’s so remarkable about that? It’s remarkable because I had a vocabulary of only a few thousand words. I lectured in what might be called basic Hebrew, but my students, whose English was far better than my Hebrew, preferred fractured Hebrew to beautiful English.

I was forty when we arrived in Jerusalem, expecting to remain for only two years. Still, I needed enough Hebrew for transactions with the grocer, the dry cleaner, the florist, and so forth, so I enrolled in an intensive Hebrew language course. After six weeks, I dropped out so that I could concentrate on my work. After a few months, though, it became clear that my Hebrew was inadequate for even the modest demands placed upon it, so I enrolled in a part-time course. After two years, we decided to prolong our stay, by which time I had been appointed a lecturer at the university, which required that lecturers use Hebrew after they had been in the country for three years. So the summer before I was to begin lecturing in Hebrew I took an intensive summer course.

Even so, I was unprepared to lecture in Hebrew. So for the first semester of lecturing in Hebrew, I would write, for each lecture, an outline in English (I couldn’t read Hebrew fast enough to write it in Hebrew) and then I would rehearse the lecture with a teacher, who corrected me as I went along. Over the appropriate places on the English outline I would write in ink the needed Hebrew term or phrase.

It’s not clear who was more tortured by my first lectures in Hebrew, the students or the lecturer. Sweat would roll down my cheeks as I went along. I felt as if I were trying to fly by flapping my arms, working very hard but not getting off the ground. Every now and then suppressed laughter would ripple around the hall, but I never stopped the lecture to find out what solecism I had committed – it would have taken too much time.

I could prepare my lectures in Hebrew but I couldn’t prepare the students’ questions or comments, which were often – and in the beginning almost always – incomprehensible. I would ask for a paraphrase, and when I didn’t understand that, I would ask for a slow, easy Hebrew paraphrase, and when that didn’t clear up the mystery, an exasperated student would call out an English translation.

One thing I learned by lecturing in Hebrew. What seemed to me to be a reasonable notion when expressed in elevated English, sometimes proved to be nonsense when reduced to simple, uncomplicated language. This was a valuable lesson, one that I wish more social scientists would learn.

Lecturing in Hebrew was one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do, and it’s a shame that all that effort produced such meager results. Still, I managed to do it, and it seems to me that “He Lectured in Hebrew” wouldn’t be such a bad epitaph, although I must admit I was not entirely serious when I proposed it. “Beloved father, grandfather, uncle, and friend,” the beginning of the first obituary notice for Fred Stein, would be even better, if “husband” and “brother” were added to that list.


2010-2011 Anchises-An Old Man's Journal All Rights Reserved


Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Epigenetics

My wife is a sociable woman. Usually among the last persons to leave any gathering, she likes to talk to as many people as she can. So when she told me last Friday that we’d be going home directly after the services that evening, I was pleased. The job of unpacking the 99 cartons that had arrived from Jerusalem earlier in the week (a job still largely unfinished) had left us both tired. We needed to maximize our rest.

At last Shabbat evening’s service, as I reported in my Monday's post, our rabbi introduced a new convert to the congregation. “Oh, I must congratulate Karen,” said my wife, as we left the chapel. So after the blessing over wine and bread, my wife talked in turn to Karen and to each of her three children. And as usual, we were among the last to leave the building.

But one should see the possibility of a good outcome from any event that on its face seems unfavorable. There was indeed a good outcome of our leaving later than I had hoped, for I had a chance to talk to Karen's 85-year-old father, who had come with his wife and another daughter all the way from the state of Washington to attend his daughter’s presentation to the congregation.

White haired, blue-eyed, and rosy cheeked, he is the apotheosis of a beautiful old man. He walks with a cane but he is more active than I am. Twenty years ago, he retired from a senior administrative position in one of the national research institutes and then started a new career as a university lecturer. Among the courses he teaches is a graduate course in epigenetics. This is a relatively new field, so perhaps I can be excused for not having heard of it before. But I pushed the right button when I asked him about it, for he is passionately engaged in this field, and he was glad to give me a brief tutorial.

Our DNA is wrapped around a protein called histone, both of which are covered with tags. These tags constitute a second layer of structure, the epigenome, that shuts down some genes and activates others throughout the individual’s life. Whereas our DNA is fixed, our epigenome is flexible, reacting to outside influences, such as diet and stress. Epigenetics, then, is the study of the reactions that switch parts of the genome on and off and the factors that influence these reactions.

Karen’s father seemed most excited about epigenetic inheritance. The embryo’s epigenome is not built entirely from scratch because a small minority of epigenetic tags are passed down from generation to generation. This is an unexpected finding, because until recently it had been thought that the DNA that passes from parent to child is the sole agent of inheritance. So if, for example, starvation causes changes in a person’s epigenome, some of these changes, which regulate the expression of given genes, may be passed on to succeeding generations. The parent’s experiences can influence the expression of genes in the child.

I learned this while each of us was, so to speak, standing on one leg. I would have learned more from him had our conversation not been interrupted by his grandchildren, who were eager to get the old man home. It was good to learn something new. It was even better, indeed inspiring, to see an 85-year-old man so enthusiastic about his work.

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Keren-Aliza

At Shabbat services on Friday, our rabbi introduced to the congregation a new convert. A middle-aged mother of three, she was raised as a Protestant and was a member of an old-line Protestant congregation nearby, but she had long felt hungry for a spiritual home more satisfying to her. After much thought and study on her own, she e-mailed our rabbi, who, after many conversations with her, agreed to accept her for the process of conversion. This she recently completed. The name she was given at birth is Karen. On Shabbat, our rabbi announced her Hebrew name, Keren-Aliza, loosely translated as cornucopia of happiness, appropriate for this smiling woman who had always seemed to me to be so joyful at our Friday evening services.

Judaism is not a proselytizing religion, yet over the years thousands of non-Jews have become Jews, taking upon themselves the yoke of the religion’s obligations and constraints. My family for example, must have had ancestors who originated outside Palestine, as can be seen in childhood pictures of my tow-headed mother and her twin, and in the red hair of my cousin and sister before their heads became gray. Several members of our congregation are converts, which I would not have known had they not told me. Some of these conversions were motivated by marriage to a Jewish spouse, but others, like Keren-Aliza’s, were made independently. Her husband and children, though supporting her conversion, remain Gentiles.

Conversion to Judaism is a radical step. Keren-Aliza not only accepted the ritual requirements of our religion, but she also joined herself to our people. She is now as fully Jewish as anyone born a Jew, equally present metaphorically at Mount Sinai when Moses came down from the mountain.

I asked Keren-Aliza’s 85-year-old father, who attended the last Friday’s services, how he felt about his daughter’s conversion. Raised as a Unitarian and continuing to attend a Unitarian congregation, he told me that everyone must find his or her own way in such matters. He seemed pleased that his daughter had found her way even if it was not his way. Good for him and good for her.


Friday, October 21, 2011

Report Card

My tenth grade report card from Newton High School surfaced just now. Each of my teachers- Mr. Heintzelman (English), Miss Jewett (Latin), Miss Burdon (French), Mr. Ferguson (Social Studies), and Miss Brackett (Math) wrote out my grades on a crisp 4” x 6” blue card. It would be pleasant to report that I earned all A’s but in fact I received B’s in French and Math.

Miss Brackett, my math teacher, was a wiry woman with red hair. She was always clear and patient, and if I didn’t get an A it wasn’t her fault. I remember sitting half-panicked during some of her lessons, since I’ve never had much aptitude for math. She would have been at least as surprised as I was to find me teaching statistics to graduate students.

Miss Burdon, my French teacher, kept me after school one day because I had not only failed to bring a mirror to class to help me round my lips in an approved fashion when pronouncing a certain dipthong, but I had pretended to look in a mirror while rounding my lips. When she looked down at my desk and found no mirror inside my book, she cried out "you deceived me!" But then she never liked me.

I recall Miss Jewett, my second year Latin teacher, as a small, elderly woman (no doubt she was 30 years younger than I am today) who loved Latin and gave her students a love of the language too. It was a pleasure to study in her class. I went on for a third year (Cicero) with her. Had I continued for a fourth year, I could have read Virgil, but I thought it more “practical” to continue with French instead. Indeed, I did learn French well enough, after studying it in college, to get along in France during the summer of my 20th year, but when I learned Hebrew, my French departed without even saying goodbye. I might have done better to read Virgil. Do high school students study Latin these days?

I remember Mr. Ferguson, my social studies teacher, as bored by the curriculum; but I’m not sure - it might have been another teacher - so I won’t accuse him of being flat and uninspiring. I vaguely remember his wearing suits to class, but this may be an invented memory. We teachers work so hard and what do our students remember about what we try to teach them or about us? I don’t remember a thing from that social studies course, not even the topics, and I remember almost nothing about him. But no doubt some of my students can say the same about my courses and about me.

Mr. Heintzelman, my English teacher, was a recent graduate of Amherst, a tall, dashing, energetic, athletic young man. If anyone can claim the credit of teaching me to write, it was he. Of all my teachers, he made the strongest impression on me and was the one I liked the most. Alas, he died a few years later, leaving behind his wife and two young children.

Why have I kept my tenth grade report card and not my eleventh and twelfth grade cards? I suspect that the eleventh and twelfth grade reports were even less distinguished. But why have I kept the card at all? It may in fact become a victim of the purge I’m contemplating, but not now, or at least not yet.

2010-2011 Anchises: an Old Man’s Journal All Rights Reserved

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

A Table and the Trait of Gratitude

Almost 80 years ago, rich cousins gave my wife’s parents, as a wedding present, an antique walnut drop-leaf table. Polishing for the past 175 years or so has given it a deep, glossy patina. When its leaves are raised, it’s about the size of an oval card table. It’s one of our most beloved possessions.

It stood in the front hall of our Jerusalem apartment for 32 years. On it we placed an antique American soup tureen. The pair would not have been out of place in an American home during the first quarter of the 19th century, although the enormous painting that hung on the wall against which our table stood, a copy of a 16th century Ethiopian portrait of the Archangel Gabriel, would have been wildly out of place. The table, in addition to being pleasant to look at, was useful, inasmuch as its single drawer served as a repository for miscellaneous items, including a pretty letter opener, tickets to upcoming events, duplicate keys, and the keys of a few neighbors who feared locking themselves out of their apartments.

The table, which had moved from New York to San Diego to Jerusalem, then returned to New York, not to our apartment but to a warehouse in the Bronx, where it hibernated for the last three years. Two days ago, it made yet another move, from the warehouse to our apartment, where it arrived with 98 other cartons – mainly books and files but also paintings, ornaments, four chests of drawers, three chairs, a desk, a hanging sideboard, and two tables.

Of the eleven pieces of furniture, two arrived broken. One leg of a small antique walnut chair broke in the middle. The chair is one of a pair, which I had pictured flanking the antique table in our living room. But the table itself was one of the casualties, with one of its legs detached from its base.

This week and the next, our mussar group is considering the trait of gratitude. Let me count the blessings associated with this shipment. I’m thankful for the arrival for all 99 cartons of the transport and thankful that not more of our possessions were damaged. I’m also thankful that the damage can be repaired and that, in the case of the table, the crack will be hard to see.

When concentrating on the trait of gratitude, we’re advised to see the possibility of a good outcome arising from what at the moment seems bad luck, as when you miss a train that, before it reaches its destination, loses its power and heat and sits for six hours while its passengers freeze and its toilets overflow. Offhand it’s not easy to see what good can come from our detached table leg unless it’s to encourage us to part with some of our possessions. We don’t really need any of the goods that we sent from Jerusalem, including that table. It would have been much harder to say goodbye to them three years ago than it would be now, after we’ve lived perfectly well without them all this time.

In the number of homes we’ve occupied since we married - ten or so - we’ve been a bit like nomads, but unlike nomads we haven’t been traveling light. While our possessions give us pleasure, they are also an encumbrance and a burden. In the case of the broken table and chair, for example, we will have to find a reliable furniture repairer and of course we will have to pay a considerable fee for the work. With respect to all the newly transported possessions, we will have to find places to put them, diminishing our storage space and adding to the cost of insurance and the work of cleaning. Why do we need so many books, for instance, when we live only one block away from the main branch of the Brooklyn Public Library and when so much information is freely available on the internet?

But the books, the furniture, and the paintings that we sent from Jerusalem are totems of our history and in some cases exemplars of beauty. Love, whether of persons or objects, has a price. We will repair the broken table and chair, but perhaps doing so will help us decide if the price of loving objects, whether for their beauty or for their reminders of our history, has become too high. This evaluation, whether we decide on "deaccession" or retention, may be the good that results from the breakage.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Qohelet and Dessert

On Sukkot, which began last week, it’s customary to read Qohelet (Ecclesiastes). At first glance, the custom is strange, inasmuch as we’re commanded to be happy during this festival, yet few literary works offer so bleak a view of human existence. Qohelet repeatedly stresses the futility of human endeavor and the fickleness of fate. Several times the author tells us it is better never to have been born. The fate of man and beast, king and vassal, wise man and fool is the same – death. “The dead know nothing and they no longer have recompense, for their memory is forgotten. Their love and their hatred as well, their jealousy, too, are already lost, and they no longer have any share forever in all that is done under the sun” (9:5-6). The only reasonable course, the author tells us, is to enjoy what there is to be enjoyed, while one still has a chance to do so – good food and wine, pleasure in one’s work, and the companionship of a person one loves. “There is nothing better for man under the sun than to eat and to drink and to make merry,” (8:15) for these gifts of God are provisional, liable to be removed at any time. (Translations by Robert Alter, The Wisdom Books: Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes. New York: W.W.Norton,2010.)

We're commanded to dwell in booths during Sukkot. These are flimsy, temporary structures, roofed with leafy branches which permit you to see the sky through their cover. You are exposed to the elements. Religiously observant Jews eat in them and sometimes sleep in them too, a reminder of our 40-year wandering in the desert, with its temporary, impermanent dwellings, before entering the Promised Land. Perhaps we read Qohelet during Sukkot as another reminder of our vulnerability during that wandering, since Qohelet stresses the fickleness of fate and thus the provisional quality of the good things in our lives.

But perhaps we read Qohelet now, because, after all, we're commanded to be happy during this period, and Qohelet admonishes us over and over again to enjoy ourselves while it's still possible to do so.

A few days before Sukkot began, my wife and I met four friends for dinner at a Park Slope restaurant noted for its good food and wine. The food and service were exemplary. I can’t judge the wine, for I no longer drink alcohol, but one of our party pronounced the Tuscan wine she had ordered as “lovely.” I won’t go so far as to describe our dinner party as “merry,” although we laughed a great deal, but it was convivial, intimate, and stimulating – not surprising in view of the other participants, two psychoanalysts, one clinical psychologist, and one political scientist, all distinguished in their fields and all gifted conversationalists. When it was time to consider dessert, our waiter described the restaurant’s four offerings. It’s common among persons our age to share a single dessert. But that night, the clinical psychologist told the waiter to bring all four. To this astonishing departure from the norm, no one made any objection, and when the desserts arrived, we made short work of them.

Despite the fragility of our health and the knowledge that death can no longer be so far away (let us hope those rich desserts haven't hastened it), we enjoyed an evening of good food, good wine, and the lively conversation of friends. It doesn't get much better than that. The author of Qohelet would have approved.


2010-2011 Anchises-An Old Man's Journal All Rights Reserved


Friday, October 14, 2011

Yom Kippur

Yom Kippur began at sundown last Friday and ended 25 hours later. For the first time in memory, I not only fasted but also attended all the religious services, attending the opening service Friday night and spending all the next day at our synagogue, Beth Elohim, in Park Slope. As a result, at the conclusion of services on Saturday, when God is said to lock the book in which he has written the names of those who will live for the next year, I felt spiritually cleansed.

It was a strange reaction for an atheist, but then religious experience is scarcely rational. Our newly minted cantor, Josh Breitzer, has a clear, sweet, tenor voice that he used to serve the prayer rather than to show off his virtuosity. The congregation sang almost the whole service. The beauty of the melodies reinforced the sense of the text, particularly those portions that require acknowledgement of our sins of commission and omission during the past year. These sins include those committed by the communities to which we belong, for we are partly responsible for them. As each sin was announced, we beat our right hand against our left chest, an act that increased the solemn drama of the occasion, which was enhanced by the grandeur of the main sanctuary, opened for the first time in two years.

At the conclusion of the service, our rabbi, Andy Bachman, told us that even then our thoughts were turning to secular concerns. And of course he was right. Just as I know, after visiting my dental hygienist, that the fresh feeling in my mouth won't last for more than a few hours, when I eat again, I knew that not much time would elapse before the exigencies of everyday life, in collusion with my own weakness, would lead me to act in way discordant with my ethical ideals. Still, the practice of Mussar, taught by Gary Shaffer, a fellow member of our congregation, a practice which encourages us to be conscious of our behavior, to be more fully present to what we’re doing and thinking, may help reduce the number of misdeeds I have to consider on the next Yom Kippur.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Professor Ehsan Yarshater

“The encylopedia of erotica” caught my ear recently as I half listened to an NPR program. “What a good idea,” I thought and then idly imagined a kind of Varieties of Sexual Experience in several volumes by an unbuttoned William James. Reality soon intervened, however, when it became clear that the encyclopedia was devoted not to erotica but to Iranica. (http://www.npr.org/2011/09/26/140807176/37-years-and-halfway-through-encyclopaedia-iranica) It aims to present, in English, a definitive and comprehensive view of Iranian history, language, and culture over several thousand years in the Middle East, Central Asia, and India.

More interesting to me than the encyclopedia was its founder and editor, Professor Ehsan Yarshater, the director of Columbia University’s Center for Iranian Studies. He began work on the encyclopedia 38 years ago. Now, with about 6,500 entries by almost 1,500 contributors, it’s only half completed. One of the reasons for the work’s slow progress is its painstaking checking of each entry and Professor Yarshater’s insistence on securing “the best person in the entire world” to write about a given topic. Also, many of the articles require original research. They are not simply summaries of existing knowledge. Professor Yarshater wants to complete this great work but he realizes that he won’t be able to do so within his own lifetime. He has chosen his successors. He is 91.

No stranger to large works, he edited a 40-volume translation of the tenth-century Persian historian al Jibari’s Annals; he’s the founding editor of a series on Persian history and language. And he edited a 20-volume collection of Persian literature. “That was when I realized I was suffering from a kind of disease,” he told the Times in a recent interview. “If something is to be done, I have a feeling that I should start doing it.” (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/13/books/ehsan-yarshaters-encyclopedia-of-iranian-history.html) Even now, he regularly works 12-hour days. He no longer takes a nap after lunch because there is so much work to be done.

Perhaps my hearing erotica for Iranica wasn’t so far off the mark, inasmuch as Professor Yarshater’s devotion to Iranian language, literature, and history has been and continues to be a passionate labor of love. He’s fortunate in being able to maintain his passion, in continuing to be profoundly engaged in his work, so deep into old age. Few of us are similarly blessed. When passion of that sort flags, there’s no help to be found from Viagra.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Adorable!

The other day, my wife and I met our children and grandchildren for dinner at a midtown restaurant, where we had reserved a table for ten. I had dressed up for the occasion, wearing gray flannel trousers, a pink buttoned-down shirt with a darker pink bow tie, and a dark gray tweed sports coat, in whose breast pocket I had tucked a red silk square. I looked pretty good, I thought, as I approached the maitre d’ and gave him my name. He smiled, adjusted my bow tie, and then said “adorable!”

I like to wear bow ties but I find it hard to keep them straight. This is not an unalloyed disadvantage, however, inasmuch as women like to come up unasked and adjust them for me, an attention I enjoy. But for a strange man to do so is another matter, particularly when accompanied by the pronouncement “adorable!” No doubt he meant well, but I didn’t know whether to feel insulted or amused. Somewhat stunned, I murmured “thank you,” and as we were ushered to our table, I decided that after all it was pretty funny. The maitre d’ didn’t see a stately emeritus professor and family patriarch. He saw someone with the status of a six-year-old. I suppose I should have been grateful that he hadn't chucked me under the chin.

Earlier that day, on our way to the restaurant, we boarded a crowded subway car, where a man offered me his seat. I thanked him but declined his offer, telling him that we were getting off at the next stop. His gesture, reflecting respect for age, was pleasing, whereas the maitre d’s behavior, reflecting condescension, was not.

Perhaps it’s just as well that my amour propre suffers a little puncture now and then. It’s a healthy reminder that not everyone sees me as I like to see myself.




2010-2011 Anchises-an Old Man’s Journal All Rights Reserved

Friday, October 7, 2011

Walter Hautzig and Chopin's Ballade in G Minor

Last Sunday my wife and I enjoyed the privilege of attending, at Steinway Hall, a concert given by our friend, Walter Hautzig. With this concert he was celebrating his 90th birthday. He has been a Steinway artist for almost 70 years, a tenure exceeded only by that of Arthur Rubinstein. Our friend may beat this record yet.

In recognition of his extraordinary career, the president of the Steinway Company presented him with an engraved walking stick, only the second ever given by this venerable company. (The first was given to Henry Steinway, also on the occasion of his 90th birthday.) Walter Hautzig walks without the aid of a stick, but he is, after all, ninety years old, an age at which one appears to be more spirit than flesh. Nonetheless, his hands and fingers have retained their strength, and his musical intelligence remains unimpaired. He continues to have few peers.

The concert in itself was of course a treat but it was also notable for the love and affection with which the audience showered the artist. Standing ovations, the first given when he walked into the hall and approached the piano, were the rule. Students, friends, and fans from Japan, the Philippines, and Europe - indeed from all over the world - came to the concert to honor him. Among the distinguished personages at the concert was his friend the King of Tonga, who had flown in from his island kingdom especially for this occasion.

Before playing the last piece on the program, Chopin’s Ballade in G minor, Op. 23, Walter Hautzig told the audience that when he was 16 years old, he was scheduled to play it in a student recital at the Conservatory in Vienna. But then the Nazis marched in and, with so much now changed, the concert never took place. His mother and sister were arrested. He was arrested. It wasn’t clear from his story how long they were detained, but five weeks later, he summoned the courage to return to the Conservatory. He found soldiers encamped there, their rifles on the pianos.

Depressed, he went home. Then he sat down at the piano and began to play the Ballade. As he played it he thought to himself, “whatever happens, they can’t take this away from me.” May he play it until he’s 120.


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Wednesday, October 5, 2011

A Maturing Wine

Recently our daughter and son-in-law celebrated the sixteenth anniversary of their marriage, which made me think back to our own sixteenth anniversary. That was in 1979, when we were living in New York during my first sabbatical from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. At the time, I thought of myself as long married, but now that we’ve been married for 48 years, I look at that time as just the beginning of our marriage.

I’m happy to say that I’m easier to get along with now, less compulsive, less driven, less judgmental, and more willing to entertain the notion that my wife’s ways of doing things are not necessarily worse or less efficient than mine. Just as I’m not the same person that I was in my twenties, as I wrote in a recent post, I’m not the same person that I was on that first sabbatical, when I was 48. At least, that's the way it feels.

Is, then, the continuity of our identity an illusion, fostered in part by our memories, or is there some unchanging basic core that differentiates us from others? A recent article in the Times (September 20, 2011, p.D3) (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/20/health/20amnesia.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=Lonni%20Sue%20Johnson&st=cse suggests that there is a basic core. Four years ago, Lonni Sue Johnson, an artist and illustrator, fell ill with viral encephalitis, which severely damaged parts of her brain. She remembered little of her life before her illness. “At the beginning of Ms. Johnson’s recovery,” reported the Times, “She had to relearn to how to walk, talk and eat… She did not recognize purple, black and orange, and could not put pen to paper.” But she now paints again, although her art is simpler than it was before. The article quotes Michael McCloskey, a professor of cognitive science at Johns Hopkins, who has studied her case. “Here you’ve lost an awful lot of what makes you who you are – what’s left for art? But you see in her art that she’s very much the same person. She is not an empty shell. There is something about your identity that’s distinct from memory.” Although her art is now more childlike than it was before her illness, it has retained its uniqueness, according to Barbara Landau, another Hopkins professor involved in the research. “You can recognize it’s Lonni Sue. Her personality is preserved.”

That identity is distinct from memory makes intuitive sense inasmuch as memory is unreliable. It changes over time, as will be seen if you watch a film for the second time after an interval of 50 years. You will find only a partial overlap between what you remembered and what actually transpired in the film. Some of what you remembered may in fact have never occurred at all.

So if we possess an essential core independent of memory, how can I explain the changes that I’ve witnessed in myself over the years? One factor is age. In the twilight of my life, with a not breathtakingly long life expectancy, many matters that assumed great importance in the past now seem trivial. Since very little now upsets me beyond the welfare of my family and my friends, I find myself more serene than ever before. Also, I’m no longer striving to succeed in my profession or indeed in any other field, another reason I’m more relaxed now than I once was. One more factor is experience of life. Greater experience helps me respond to challenges in a more measured and, I hope, more sensible fashion than once was possible for me.

So if some of my behaviors have changed since my twenties and forties, if some of the less attractive features of my personality have been muted, the essence of the person I was has not changed. I'm not a new creature, a butterfly that was once a caterpillar. A better metaphor might be a wine that’s matured, except that I hope to keep developing. The wine may not be grand cru or even premier cru, but nonetheless I hope that the vintage was decent enough to allow for continued improvement with age. When the bottle is finally uncorked and the wine poured out, I hope that those who sip it will think it good.



2010-2011 Anchises-an Old Man's Journal All Rights Reserved


Monday, October 3, 2011

Moving

Tomorrow we’re scheduled to move out of our temporary quarters, which we’ve occupied since February, and move back to our renovated apartment. This will involve moving back into our apartment the furniture and other goods that we put into storage as well as the few pieces of our furniture, books, and clothes that we’ve been using here in our temporary quarters. We have only one day to organize the latter, since our children and grandchildren, who came from Los Angeles to visit us, returned home only yesterday. Once in the renovated apartment, we'll be confronted with numerous cartons to unpack, and we’ll have to learn how to use our new spaces.

It was, I think, Johnson, sensible and down to earth, who wrote that all change is hard, even from bad to better, and as usual he was right. The oncoming change has made me anxious. But when I try to identify the source of my anxiety, I come up with nothing, clutching only thin air. What’s to worry about? That the renovations won’t be completed in time, so that, for example, the filter for the dryer won’t have been installed? The renovations are currently at a stage that we could live in the apartment as is, and as for the dryer, we can run it without a filter for a day or two. That I might make a mistake in calculating what we owe the contractor? My wife and the architect will help me there and besides, how big a mistake could I possibly make? That the new mattress, blinds, or television or the telephone technician or the cable installation won’t arrive on time? So what? We can manage without them for a short time anyway. That our houseguests, who are expected a week after our move, will find our apartment a bit chaotic? They are old friends and won’t mind. If they wanted deluxe accommodations, they wouldn’t be staying with us. No, there is no reasonable cause for anxiety.

And then I ask myself how such a small matter as moving into a renovated apartment can bother me when many people would be pleased to have that problem. When I read in a column by Nicholas Kristof that the half-starved refugees fleeing from Somalia are routinely robbed and raped on their way to Kenya, I have to ask myself how in the world I can worry about such a trivial matter as moving, especially under such favorable conditions. The Somalis’ anxiety has a basis in a horrid reality. I know I’m fortunate in my problems.

My anxiety, I’ve concluded, is based on the knowledge that this move will, in all likelihood, be my last one. Any move after that will be, as my father used to say, feet first. Well, I won’t have to pack and unpack ever again. That part’s good. But it’s the finality implied by this move that’s making me anxious. It reminds me that the end of life, which once seemed so indefinitely far away, now seems to be around the corner. So if the time is short, that’s all the more reason to enjoy what there is to be enjoyed and to stop worrying about a move from one apartment to another.



2010-2011 Anchises-an Old Man's Journal All Rights Reserved