Freddie Van At 73
Slouching to Senility in the Age of Rage
"An era can be said to have ended when its illusions are exhausted."
Arthur Miller
"Man is conceived in sin and born into
corruption," declared Willie Stark in RobertPennWarren's All
The King's Men,
"...he passeth from the stink of the didie to
the stench of the shroud. There is always something out there that will get
you." Although he was referring to political corruption, old Willie
was on to something quite profound. Indeed, there is always something -
sinister, lurking, waiting to upset the precarious balance of our perfect
lives. From the very instant of our expulsion from the birth canal, we are
given our personal “use by" expiration date - unknown to us - that will
follow us from the womb to the tomb. That expiration date may be many decades
away - or tomorrow. Perhaps the malady is in you at this very moment, a simple
backache suddenly diagnosed by your family Doc as some malignant monstrosity
that punches your expiration ticket before you can even get your parking
validated - or worse, will signal your painfully slow descent that
initiates your ignominious final decline. Or, perhaps some external event in
the random cosmic crapshoot of life; an insurance salesman, with whom you have
no known affiliation, speeding distractedly to his weekly sexual
assignation with his secretary at a motel room - worried that his wife
has become aware of his dalliance and weighing his options - wondering what the
ultimate cost will be...just before he T-bones you at an intersection, bringing
you instantly to room temperature.
I was never a rear-view mirror guy, (unabashedly believing
the most unappreciated word in the English lexicon is next
)
- personal reflection was not in my wheelhouse - and these fleeting thoughts of
mortality seldom struck a chord of dread within me when my years on the planet
numbered, say...30 or 40. Not even being aged 50 gave me any significant pause;
indeed, those years were a fabulously crazy halcyon period of purposeless
conspicuous consumption that reached the heady hedonistic heights of first rate
piggery - old enough to know better but still young enough not to give a shit.
It was a spectacularly irrational race to the bottom when I managed to turn my
myriad drinking problems into fabulous drinking opportunities
and
my life's mantra at the time was "...nothing succeeds like excess."
By 60, however, these years were beginning to feel more than simple mileposts
along my journey and, facing the serious business end of one's mortal
existence, were no longer far off ephemeral way stations.
But finally, having reached the septuagenarian stage of my life's program, I find myself given to an uncharacteristically retrospective view of the whole mess - and what it was all about. And that reflective process would be less tasking if it were possible to recognize the country in which I currently dwell. Being a stranger in a land that one has inhabited for one's entire life has a surreal, discomfiting feel to it - an unsettling, off balance unfamiliar dissidence. Somehow, while I was growing old, the nation had engendered a subculture of vindictive violence, victim hood and entitlement that finds half the country distrusting our time-honored national institutions and the other half attempting to destroy them. As this New America mindlessly rips down the existing societal structure in this suicidal search for equity , we are left to ponder exactly who will even be left to take refuge in the remaining rubble.
To many of us this New America has become a foreign country on virtually every social and political level, the myriad pathological symptoms easily recognizable: Monuments of traditional heroes (the very people who founded the country) are thrown into the scrap pile while congressional legislation and city streets are named for commemorated career criminals. Who needs Thomas Jefferson or George Washington when you you've got All American heroes like George Floyd and Daunte Wright. Move over MLK, Rosa Parks and Medger Evers, the New America, wallowing in its modernity, has a new class of "Hero."
Fantastically, we are told that men are "birth
people" - can have babies, indeed, can breast feed (by what bizarre
biological process this could occur is never precisely explained) while sexual
groomers, posing as teachers and educators encourage minor children to consent
to grotesque body mutilation under the auspices of "gender
affirmation."
In classic Orwellian fashion, '60's and 70's Neocons of both parties, still hanging around government sewers - who have yet to see a war they didn't love - are ensuring that the country maintains involvement in constant and never ending foreign conflicts, blood lust in nameless shithole countries around the globe that has produced military leadership so weakened by social equity policies and woke-ism that it managed to lose a 20 year war in Afghanistan to a pack of itinerant goat herders. We are asked to provide unlimited funding for an unlimited time frame to protect "the sovereign integrity of the Ukraine border," one of the most corrupt nations in Eastern Europe while the "integrity" of our own southern border has been unrelentingly and flagrantly violated for the last three years by literally millions of illegal immigrants, inviting a Trojan Horse into our very backyard. And, inexplicably, with a curiously unresponsive silence from a cognitively incontinent President who, like some witless bystander, placidly watched our cultural decline into idiocy - until he was unceremoniously kicked to the curb by his own Party like some hollowed out, punch-drunk boxer. "Sorry Joe, we're going for the price on Kamala, it's not your night kid" - thereby giving the American electorate a choice between two presidential candidates who have elevated the free-wheeling, inarticulate, vapid word salad to an art form.
But wait... that's just where defining down our cultural and societal deviancy begins. Apparently we Americans, a nation once known as "The Arsenal of Democracy" - doers of great things, builder of interstate highways, armaments, automobiles and rocket ships are no longer capable of keeping trains on the tracks, on-time airline scheduling...or even managing to keep airplane wheels and hatches from falling off in mid-flight. We watch on the nightly news the shocking proliferation of a national Jew-hating antisemitism movement reminiscent of 1930's Germany that ignores the horrors of Hamas while accusing the Israelis of genocidal occupation of Gaza - when, in fact, the only territory the Jews ever occupied was Miami Beach. Can't wait to see the Post Modern Progressive celebrity game show version of Kristallnacht in prime time cable TV - " Who Wants To Be A Nazi?" or perhaps "Jew Or No Jew?" interspersed by those ridiculously cheesy commercials encouraging the adoption of Polar Bears (really...Polar Bears?) or ubiquitous drug ads depicting pre-diabetic female fatties, a chorus line - a virtual cavalcade of camel toes - waddling around singing (badly) about "...a little pill with a big story to tell" to fix something called their A1-C.
We all see these things. We know - we feel it viscerally -
that this new cultural shift does not seem to be merely the age-old
generational disconnect, the natural antipathy of elders to their impudent
progeny, but a Sea Change in our culture. Given that the road ahead is so much
shorter than the road behind, perhaps it is no small wonder that those of us,
in our dotage, would gravitate to a seemingly simpler, more familiar time and
place while coming to the late realization, regretfully, that oftentimes we did
not recognize the value of a moment until it became a memory.
Nostalgia. The Webster's New World Dictionary defines it as; "a return; a longing for something far away or long ago," a definition that barely captures the true essence of the sentiment. In Greek, the word alludes to a melancholy memory and is defined loosely as "...the pain from an old wound." The Portuguese term "saudade" is an interesting word, defined as; "an emotional state of foreboding or profound longing for a beloved - yet absent - something or someone; a love that remains." It is a delicate word that evokes the fear that one may never encounter the object of their longing again and captures the emotion of a love so powerful - so fiercely intense - only hate could truly understand it.
Yes, life is different now, sometimes incomprehensibly so. We grasp for familiar signposts to make sense of the chaos, to find some familiar touchstones that are relatable. I am part of that vaunted Boomer generation of men, born in the middle of the last century who came of age at the dawn of TV and mass media manipulation. We were the Darling Generation, admired, adored - the apotheosis of the Cambrian baby explosion of the post-war era. Deified, catered to and exploited by ad agencies, service providers and product manufacturers for virtually our entire existence...and soon to be the most despised generation as we suck up our social security checks and demand (from what primal yearning?) our Medicare while the nation circles the financial drain. No longer Cock of the Walk, Boomers will be vilified and blamed, rightly or wrongly, by younger, more progressive generations as a thoroughly selfish, self-indulgent, self-absorbed epoch - the guys that raided the frat party, drank all the beer, ate all the food, left a mess and flipped the bird to the remaining revelers.
While the idea of death was always a muted part of our lifelong conversation, it has now entered the lexicon in a more frequent and intimate manner - an old comrade, forgotten in the fog of living, come to visit. We attend more funerals than weddings, see many old friends of 55 plus years who struggle with a variety of serious health issues and ultimately succumb. I feel fortunate to have dodged any serious problems. My vitals are good and, so far, I'm not on any meds. Despite several back and rotator cuff surgeries I am in semi-fine fettle, still digging life while pugnaciously fighting a rear-guard action, making Old Age battle for every inch I concede. I still love the sound and feel of a solidly struck golf shot that moves from the club face to your hands and vibrates through your entire body - deceives you into thinking, perhaps one can live forever. I still thrill to the rumble of diesels under my feet while standing on the bridge of a sturdy vessel as it slices through a sea so blue it makes the sky jealous. I work out regularly, still climb stairs two at a time, knowing full well that a day will come when I can no longer perform even that meaningless display of bravado. A charitable explanation for my late stage-of-life health condition would be a lifelong dedication to physical fitness - which would be a colossal canard. Far from treating my body as a Temple, for years it was my own personal pool hall. Beyond good genes, the ubiquitous Progressive refrain of "Social Inequity" has convinced me that the real secret, my personal talisman of longevity, is simply my unearned White Privilege - which, they tell me, is like a Super Power.
It seems I am visited by these reflectively mystic musings more often these days as I sit quietly on my patio facing the lake of my youth. Closing my eyes I listen to the gentle sound of the water on the break wall, the balmy breeze of late Summer soft against my cheek. A lifetime of memories float by me, as weightless as moonbeams. After all the years, all the roads taken and abandoned, all the money, all the exhilarating successes, all the humiliating failures, all the jetsam and flotsam of living - all of it - I am chagrined to find that I have, finally, ended up right where I started.
I open my eyes.
I am alive.
Freddie Van
A Child of God









