Sunday, July 21, 2013

Revisiting Harold and Maude

I've watched this quirky movie, my all-time favorite, half a dozen times since it was released in 1971. I saw the film again recently, and my, my, my, how times have changed. My times, that is. Actress Ruth Gordon was 75 when she starred as its eccentric life-affirming and hilarious heroine. For the film's purposes, she turned 80 as the story evolved.

When I first saw the film—and my pretty little unlined face ached from laughing—I was 27.  I don't remember the other times I saw it, but I'm certain that I still regarded 80 as a distant impossible-to-reach and hideous age. The difference between earlier viewings and seeing the film now? I identify with Maude! And 80? Considering how times jets past, that "impossible age" is just around the bend.

Maude used to look "old" to me. She was a fabulous person trapped in wrinkles and sags. I loved her spirit and verve, her outrageous antics and her gentle but over-the-top handling of the suicide-staging teen played by Bud Cort.

In my twenties, Maude was wonderful but old. End of story. I could not relate. Upon my most recent viewing, I admired Maude's youthfulness, although I did note that someone supposedly on the cusp of 80 with nary a gray hair is using hair dye, a perfectly acceptable tool to chisel a few years off her appearance. (Hair Dye, the Fall Garden, and the Cruel March of Time) Overall, though, it was, and is, unsettling to face the fact that at 68, I am cruising the last third of my life, fast approaching the age that Ruth Gordon was when she was so wondrous in Harold and Maude.

Longevity runs in my family. My father died at 93 and my mom is nearly 98. She's still doing relatively well, by the way, and I would not be surprised if she reaches 100+. Her heart, lungs, blood work, blood pressure, thyroid, etc. etc. are nearly perfect. She has but one mild (and generic) prescription drug. However, she's almost blind, essentially deaf, can't walk, and needs assistance with the "activities of daily living." Her mind is good (mild dementia only). She is sweet and funny and I love her, but I am not sure I want to go there.

Maude was POSITIVE she didn't want to go there. She knew she was going to die before she got too  decrepit—on her 80th birthday to be exact. She knew because she'd been saving the pills and calculating the time it would take for the pills to ease her into forever.  Since she knew when and how she was going to go, she didn't worry about it, and every moment was a joy. She was in control. She didn't give a damn about what people thought or what was legal or illegal or why anyone should try to stop her from liberating a city tree and relocating it to the forest whilst careening down the middle of the highway in a stolen truck. Maude embraced life so thoroughly it was breathtaking. And also inspirational.

I know better than anyone that I need to get over mourning my lost youth and and my disappeared middle age and proceed with the rest of my life. But here's something nobody ever tells you about getting older: age does not necessarily impart wisdom, nor does it bestow acceptance of the inevitable.

I've discovered, at all the milestones, that I have to figure out again how to be OK, or even happy, with the person that aging has delivered to my mirror. Every birthday presents a new challenge about "how should I live" more than "how should I look." Because there comes a time when, without spending thousands on having "work" done, everything is going to sag. I have friends who are "spending the thousands," or contemplating doing so. I'm not going there, either. One thing I have figured out is that physical decline and "beauty down the tubes" is inevitable and a nip here and tuck there isn't going to matter the least in the end.

I'm figuring out now how to think about being almost 70, which is "terribly strange" as Simon and Garfunkel observed in their wonderful song, Old Friends.  That song brought tears in my twenties and it still does. How bittersweet that I've become reconnected with a dear friend from that period of my life, the person I imagined I'd be sitting on the park bench with in my old age. Marcy's turning 70 this year. Unbelievable. (It would be difficult to find a person with more vitality than Marcy Tilton. She's a top-selling Vogue pattern designer, entrepreneur, and "everyday creative." Check her out.) She also tears up on Old Friends, by the way.

Am I stockpiling sedatives? No. Not yet. And even if I did, 80 is too young. I now have friends who are 80, or almost 80. They're not even close to doing "a Maude." I guess I should take a lesson from my mother, LaVone. Even though she can hardy see or hear, can't walk and so on, she still takes pleasure in life. Somehow.
My mom greeting her new great granddaughter, Hadley Rose.
She was seriously delighted by the baby.
When she was my age, a mere 68, my mom was still active in church, walked the neighborhood with friends, played bridge, did all sorts of intricate crafts, cooked up a storm, read books and magazines daily, traveled with my father, and was always making something or doing something for family. Had she known that she would live another 30+ years and be so diminished, I wonder what she would have said or done or thought.

I'm wondering the same about myself.
Mom with some of her family in June, 2013.

Note: If you've never seen Harold and Maude, you must. No matter your age. Here's some info from Wikipedia. 

The film was critically and commercially unsuccessful on original release, but subsequently received critical and commercial success. The film is ranked number 45 on the American Film Institute's list of 100 Funniest Movies of all Time, and was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress in 1997 for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3] The Criterion Collection released a special edition version of the film on Blu-ray and DVD on June 12, 2012.[4]
The movie ultimately developed a cult following[5] and in 1983 began making a profit.[1]

12 comments:

  1. A thought provoking post, to say the least!
    Harold and Maude is one of my all-time favorites, too. In fact, I was just thinking about finding a copy to watch again last week.
    I agree that we're really getting up there but I always think we've got another 10 good years, at least, and while I agree that time does seem to fly by, 10 years ago seems to be in the very distant past.
    I was still working and thinking 62 and retirement would NEVER come. Now I've been retired for 6 years and it seems like the most wonderful adventure!
    I hate the physical crap that comes with aging but even that seems manageable if I would just work on it. (And I'm going to start working on it.....really soon)! You seem to have that part taken care of nicely!
    Yes, the 30s and 40s were great, as far as how we looked and felt but we were still working! Now we get up when we wake up (no damn alarm) and we do what we want to do rather than what the job dictates and we report to ourselves rather than our bosses! We have time to indulge our passions, take classes, travel if we feel like it, enjoy our friends with no bedtimes lurking, etc. I feel like I'm so lucky.
    As far as the pill stash...we were just talking about that yesterday at the Sunday get-together! I still think it's a good idea and like to think of it as insurance against the indignities of old, old age. However, it seems like the very elderly change their minds about that, too, so we'll see!
    So...let's just continue on, enjoying our wonderful lives, and we'll deal with all this aging business when it becomes a problem!
    XXOO

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    1. Oh, Susan, yes, we are fortunate to be retired and have enough money to enjoy life and fend off, as best we can, the ravages of age. We'll lose, though. We'll check back on this topic in 10 years!

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    2. Well, Susan, you put it all quite well. The little signs that attempt to slow us down or try to make us rethink what is possible can still be ignored. At least that's how I view it at the moment. And, yes, no longer under the thumb--hard or soft--of employers is a joy to be cherished.
      Jerry

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    3. I love Susan's attitude, too. "Let's deal with all this aging business when it becomes a problem!"
      I was self-employed for the last nearly 3 decades of my working life, and I'm not quite out from under my own thumb. Although now I don't work for money! Just for fun, and feel so fortunate to have the time and the will. I also love the creative life that Susan has made for herself. I can almost feel her flourishing from 1,000 miles away!

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  2. I remember, so clearly, seeing Harold and Maude. I'd gone to the drive-in (remember those?) in Newport with my boyfriend and another couple. I don't think I even knew what movie we were going to see and, as it unfolded, I was nothing short of enthralled by it. I was instantly in love with the Maude character and laughing uproariously. The odd part was that my boyfriend and the woman of the other couple didn't seem to 'get' the movie at all, while Dick Wisner and I were nearly hysterical with glee. I knew a rather famous symphony conductor who planned to end it all at the age of 70. He's 86 now. There's no way to know how we'll feel about extreme age until we get there, I guess. I advocate the idea of taking control of our decision to say 'Enough. Time to go.' I don't have anyone to take care of me when-and-if I become infirm, incapable, ill, etc. so the idea of losing that control sets up a chilling panic in my heart. I'm approaching the age at which my brother died which is probably the reason that my mortality has been at the forefront of my musings lately more than usual. Lovely and thought-provoking piece, Mary. I enjoyed reading your thoughts, too, Susan.

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    1. I agree we won't really know how we'll deal with extreme old age until we get there. Now it seems so close, considering how quickly the past 10 years have disappeared. I love it that you have rediscovered music and are immersed and blissed out! I love it. Music is something to hold on to. I don't sing or play an instrument, but I love music and dancing and hope I always do.I can really lose myself in moving to music. Losing myself is a good thing!

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  3. I spent a day with memory care patients a few years back, and one of them gave me a lesson that changed my life forever. My grandmother "lived" with advanced alzheimers for seven years, and that worried at the back of my mind. How could I live, if I couldn't do anything useful?

    On that day, not only did the former concert violinist give me a music lesson, and prove to me that I can in fact carry a tune, she proved to me that even if I don't know it, I will always have something to share. (She didn't know me fifteen minutes later, and was delighted to meet me all over again.) Someone else also wisely pointed out that in their needing of care, they give those that work with them a profession and a daily experience of life that suits their needs.

    I do panic when I realize that my life is at least half over, and I still haven't done what I intended in my twenties, much less my forties. I have to talk myself through the whole loss of youthful beauty thing, and figure out how to be at least ok with it, even though I think I should be all wise and witty about it. Mostly, though, I try to live as juicy as possible, so that if I linger at the end (rather than falling asleep in my birthday cake at my 100th) I won't have too many things to regret.

    Thanks for sharing your beautiful life with us, Mary! I've always intended to watch this movie, which everyone I know has seen. Thanks for reminding me about it.

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    1. Dawn-Marie, you of the juicy life! Only in your fifties?! Awww. Such a colt! About regret. I'm trying to think of what I wish I would have done, and what I can do between now and "then" to control the damage. Thanks for your comment. And for always having something to share on your blog and elsewhere. It's challenging to be "wise and witty" about issues that are so deep and potentially hurtful.
      Be sure to watch Harold and Maude. Let me know what you think!

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  4. From Sister Monette: Being a year older than Ruth Gordon when she made the movie and four years short of Maude's year of final decision, this movie resonates with me even more than you. More so after reading an incredible article in Sunday's New York Times Magazine that adds a new dimension to the life or death questions we've been batting around for some years now. It's called "A Right to Die The Will to Live" by Robin Marantz Henig who does a fantastic job of detailing the complexity of the issues involved for a couple in their 60s whose lives change suddenly and forever when he becomes a quadriplegic following a biking accident. It made me consider some things I hadn't really given much, if any, thought to before. It also reminded me of my friend Marilyn who died of ALS and once famously said "Put a vial of strycchnine on your mantel, and when you can't remember what it is, take it." Not only did she not do that, she fought as hard as she could to live as long as she could even given her horrid state of being.
    Anyway, the article is very long, but worth a trip to the library or printing it out if you don't want to read it on your computer. I recommend you do it asap and encourage everyone you know who's thoughtful about these questions to read it, too.
    On a cheerier note, you no doubt remember the Westgate Theater two blocks from my old house in Minneapolis where you saw the movie the first time and we had the theater to ourselves (not the only time we've had this experience) because it had already been showing there for nearly year. The Westgate is long gone, but the projector operator from that time held a screening of the remastered copy last year at one of the two remaining vintage theaters in the metro area. It was to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the end (or maybe the beginning) of the run at the Westgate. It showed to a packed house and this time instead of shrieks of laughter from the two of us, the whole raucous crowd roared as one so many times I missed many of the lines. I nevertheless enjoyed it immensely and hadn't seen it since the time with you which was my second time. By the way, I think the guy said that the run at the Westgate was the longest in the U.S., and that it was two years.

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  5. Dear sister! I had forgotten that we saw Harold and Maude together way back when. I'm glad you got to see it again at the 40th anniversary of the Westgate run. I watched it with Jade, Chris' girlfriend, after we discovered that we share it as "favorite movie of all time." I did not mention as we watched together that I've slipped into the "Maude" mode. I was so amazed at my reaction.

    We've discussed this issue so many times, and the state of our mother always comes up. How can she be OK mentally at the same time she can't hear, see, walk, etc. etc. Being with her almost daily and seeing how she accepts without complaint her life "as is" I can only wonder and also admire her spirit.

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  6. I have a friend that has probably seen H&M 30-40 times. LOL
    I've only seen it 3-4. Loved it.

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