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On Growing Old Gracefully
It is to be assumed that if man were to live
this life like a poem, he would be able to look upon the sunset of his life
as his happiest period, and instead of trying to postpone the much feared old
age, be able actually to look forward to it, and gradually build up to it as
the best and happiest period of his existence. In my efforts to compare and
contrast Eastern and Western life, I have found no differences that are absolute
except in this matter of the attitude towards age, which is sharp and clear-cut
and permits of no intermediate positions. The differences in our attitude towards
sex, toward women, and toward work, play and achievement are all relative. The
relationship between husband and wife in China is not essentially different
from that in the West, nor even the relationship between parent and child. Not
even the ideas of individual liberty and democracy and the relationship between
the people and their ruler are, after all, so different. But in the matter of
our attitude toward age, the difference is absolute, and the East and the West
take exactly opposite points of view.
This is clearest in the matter of asking about a person's age or telling one's
own. In China, the first question a person asks the other on an official call,
after asking about his name and surname is, "What is your glorious age?"
If the person replies apologetically that he is twenty-three or twenty-eight,
the other party generally comforts him by saying that he has still a glorious
future, and that one day he may become old. But if the person replies that he
is thirty-five or thirty-eight, the other party immediately exclaims with deep
respect, " Good luck!"; enthusiasm grows in proportion as the gentleman
is able to report higher and higher age, and if the person is anywhere over
fifty, the inquirer immediately drops his voice in humility and respect.
That is why all old people, if they can, should go and live in China, where
even a beggar with a white beard is treated with extra kindness. People in middle
age actually look forward to the time when they can celebrate their fifty-first
birthday, and in the case of successful merchants or officials, they would celebrate
even their forty-first birthday with great pomp and glory. But the fifty-first
birthday, or the half century mark, is an occasion of rejoicing for people of
all classes. The sixty-first is a happier and grander occasion than the fifty-first
and the seventy-first is still happier and grander, while a man able to celebrate
his eighty-first birthday is actually looked upon as one specially favored by
heaven. The wearing of a beard becomes the special prerogative of those who
have become grandparents, and a man doing so without the necessary qualifications,
either of being a grandfather or being on the other side of fifty, stands in
danger of being sneered at behind his back. The result is that young men try to pass themselves off as older than they are
by imitating the pose and dignity and point of view of the older people, and
I have known young Chinese writers graduated from the middle schools, anywhere
between twenty-one and twenty-five, writing articles in the magazines to advise
what " the young men ought and ought not to read," and discussing
the pitfalls of youth with a fatherly condescension.
This desire to grow old and in any case appear old is understandable when one
understands the premium generally placed upon old age in China. In the first
place, it is a privilege of the old people to talk, while the young must listen
and hold their tongue. " A young man is supposed to have ears and no mouth,"
as a Chinese saying goes. Men of twenty are supposed to listen when people of
thirty are talking, and these in turn are supposed to listen when men of forty
are talking. As the desire to talk and to be listened to is almost universal,
it is evident that the further along one gets in years, the better chance he
has to talk and to be listened to when he goes about in society.
It is a game of life in which no one is favored, for everyone has a chance of
becoming old in his time. Thus a father lecturing his son is obliged to stop
suddenly and change his demeanor the moment the grandmother's place. And it
is quite fair, for what right have the young to open their mouths when the old
men can say " I have crossed more bridge than you have crossed streets!"
In spite of my acquaintance with Western life and the Western attitude age,
I am still continually shocked by certain expressions for which I am totally
unprepared. Fresh illustrations of this attitude come up on every side. I have
heard an old lady remark that she has had several grandchildren, but, " It was the first one that
hurt." With the full knowledge that American
people hate to be thought of as old, one still doesn't quite expect to have
it put that way. I have made allowance for people in middle age this side of
fifty, who, I can understand, wish to leave the impression that they are still
active and vigorous, but I am not quite prepared to meet an old lady with gray
hair facetiously switching the topic of conversation to the weather when the
conversation without any fault of mine naturally drifted toward her age. One
continually forgets it when allowing an old man to enter an elevator or a car
first; the habitual expression " after age" comes up to my lips, then
I restrain myself and am at a loss for what to say in its place. One day, being
forgetful, I blurted out the usual phrase in deference to an extremely dignified
and charming old man, and the old man seated in the car turned to his wife and
remarked jokingly to her, " This young man has the cheek to think that
he is younger than myself!"
The whole thing is as senseless as can be. I can understand young and middle-aged
unmarried women refusing to tell their age, because there the premium upon youth
is entirely natural. Chinese girls, too, get a little scared when they reach
twenty-two and are not married or engaged. The years are slipping by mercilessly.
There is a feeling of fear of being left out, what the Germans call a Torschlusspanik
(gate-shut panic), the fear of being left in the park when the gates close at
night. Hence it has been said that the longest year of a woman's life is when
she is twenty-nine; she remains twenty-nine for three or four or five years.
But apart from this, the fear of letting people know one's age is nonsensical.
How can one be thought wise unless one is thought to be old? And what do the
young really know about life, about marriage, and about the true values?
Again I can understand that the whole pattern of Western life places a premium
on youth and therefore makes men and women shrink from telling their age. A
perfectly efficient and vigorous woman secretary of forty-five is, by a curious
twist of reasoning, immediately thought of as worthless when her age becomes
known. What wonder that she wants to hide her age in order to keep her job?
But then the pattern of life itself and this premium placed upon youth are nonsensical.
This sort of thing is undoubtedly brought about by business life, for I have
no doubt there must be more respect for old age in the home than in the office,
I see no way out of it until the American people begin somewhat to despise work
and efficiency and achievement. I suspect when an American father looks upon
the home and not the office as his ideal place in life, and can openly tell
people, as Chinese parents do with absolute equanimity, that now he has a good
son taking his place and is honored to be fed by him, he will be anxiously looking
forward to that happy time, and will count the years impatiently before he reaches
fifty.
It seems a linguistic misfortune that hale and hearty old men in America tell
people that they are "young," or are told that they are " young,"
when really what is meant is that they are healthy. To enjoy health in old age,
or to be "old and healthy" is the greatest of human luck, but to call
it " healthy and young" is but to detract from that glamour and impute
imperfection to what is really perfect. After all, there is nothing more beautiful
in this world than a healthy wise old man, with "ruddy cheeks and white hair," talking in a soothing voice about life as one who knows it. The
Chinese realize this, and have always pictured an old man with " ruddy
cheeks and white hair" as the symbol of ultimate earthly happiness. Many
Americans must have seen Chinese pictures of the god of Longevity, with his
high forehead, his ruddy face, his white beard - and how he smiles! The picture
is so vivid. He runs his fingers through the thin flowing beard coming down
to the breast and gently strokes it in peace and contentment, dignified because
he is surrounded with respect, self-assured because no one ever questions his
wisdom, and kind because he has seen so much of human sorrow. To persons of
great vitality, we also pay the compliment of saying that "the older they
grow, the more vigorous they are."
On the whole, I find grand old men with white beards missing in the American
picture. I know that they exist, but they are perhaps in a conspiracy to hide
themselves from me. Only once, in New Jersey, did I meet an old man with anything
like a respectable beard. Perhaps it is the safety razor that has done it, a
process as deplorable and ignorant and stupid as the deforestation of the Chinese
hills by ignorant farmers, who have deprived North China of its beautiful forests
and left the hills as bald and ugly as the American old men's chins. There is
yet a mine to be discovered in America, a mine of beauty and wisdom that is
pleasing to the eye and thrilling to the soul, when the American has opened
his eyes to it and starts a general program of reclamation and reforestation.
Gone are the grand old men of America! Gone is Uncle Sam with his goatee, for
he has taken a safety razor and shaved it off, to make himself look like a frivolous
young fool with his chin sticking out instead of being drawn in gracefully,
and a hard glint shining behind horn-rimmed spectacles. What a poor substitute
that is for the grand old figure!
I have no doubt that the fact that the old men of America still insist on being
so busy and active can be directly traced to individualism carried to a foolish
extent. It is their pride and their love of independence and their shame of
being dependent upon their children. But among the many human rights the American
people have provided for in their Constitution, they have strangely forgotten
about the right to be fed by their children, for it is a right and an obligation
growing out of service. How can anyone deny that parents who have toiled for
their children in their youth, have lost many a good night's sleep when they
are ill, have washed their diapers long before they could talk, and have spent
about a quarter of century bringing them up and fitting them for life, have
the right to be fed by them and loved and respected when they are old? Can one
not forget the individual and his pride of self in a general scheme of home
life in which men are justly taken care of by their parents and, having in turn
taken care of their children, are also justly taken care of by the latter? The
Chinese have not got the sense of individual independence because the whole
conception of life is based upon mutual help within the home; hence there is
no shame attached to circumstance of one's being served by his children in the
sunset of one's life. Rather it is considered good luck to have children who
can take care of one. One lives for nothing else in China.
In the West, the old people efface themselves and prefer to live alone in some
hotel with a restaurant on the ground floor, out of consideration for their
children and an entirely unselfish desire not to interfere in their home life.
But the old
people have a right to interfere and if interference is unpleasant, it is nevertheless
natural, for all life, particularly the domestic life, is a lesson in restraint.
Parents interfere with their children when they are young, and the logic
of non-interference is already seen in the results of the Behaviorists, who
think that all children should be taken away from their parents. If one cannot
tolerate one's own parents when they are old and comparatively helpless, parents
who have done so much for us, whom else can one tolerate in the home? One has
to learn self-restraint anyway, or even marriage will go on the rocks. And how
can the personal service and devotion and adoration of loving children ever
be replaced by the best hotel waiters?
The Chinese idea supporting this personal service to old parents is expressly
defended on the sole ground of gratitude. The debts to one's friends may be
numbered, but the debts to one's parents are beyond number. Again and again,
Chinese essays on filial piety mention the fact of washing diaper, which takes
on significance when one becomes a parent himself. In return, therefore, is
it not right that in their old age, the parents should be served with the best
food and have their favorite dishes placed before them? The duties of a son
serving his parents are pretty hard, but it is sacrilege to make a comparison
between nursing one's own parents and nursing a stranger in a hospital. For
instance, the following are some of the duties of the junior at home, as prescribed
by T'u Hsishih and incorporated in a book of moral instruction very popular
as a text in the old schools:
In the summer months, one should, while attending to his parents,
stand by their side and fan them, to drive away the heat and the flies and mosquitoes.
In winter, he should see that the bed quilts are warm enough and the stove fire
is hot enough, and see that it is just right by attending to it constantly.
He should also see if there are holes or crevices in the doors and windows, that
there may be no draft, to the end that his parents are comfortable and happy.
A child above ten should get up before his parents in the morning, and go to
their bed and ask if they have had a good night. If his parents have already
gotten up, he should first curtsy to them before inquiring after their health,
and should retire with another curtsy after the question. Before going to bed
at night, he should prepare the bed, when the parents are going to sleep, and
stand by until he sees that they have fallen off to sleep, and then pull down
the bed curtain and retire himself.
Who, therefore, wouldn't want to be an old man or an old father
or grandfather in China? This sort of thing is very much laughed at by the proletarian
writers of China as "feudalistic," but there is a charm to it which
makes any old gentleman inland cling to it and think that modern China is going
to the dogs. The important point is that every man grows old in time, if he
lives long enough, as he certainly desires to. If one forgets this foolish individualism
which seems to assume that an individual can exist in the abstract and be literally
independent, one must admit that we must so plan our pattern of life that the
golden period lies ahead in old age and not behind us in youth and innocence.
For if we take the reverse attitude, we are committed without our knowing to
a race with the merciless course of time, forever afraid of what lies ahead
of us - a race, it is hardly necessary to point out, which is quite hopeless
and in which we are eventually all defeated. No one can really stop growing
old; he can only cheat himself by not admitting that he is growing old. And
since there is no use fighting against nature, one might just as well grow old
gracefully. The symphony of life should end with a grand finale of peace and
serenity and material comfort and spiritual contentment, and not with the crash
of a broken drum or cracked cymbals.
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