Los Angeles Times

Why I learned to age, gratefully

After my cancer scares, I began daydreamin­g about the prospect of growing old. Would I get there?

- By Rachel Moscovich Rachel Moscovich is a writer and urban planner in Los Angeles.

In a two-week period doctors told me that I had a small tumor in my breast and that my Hodgkin’s lymphoma had come back, for the third time. I was 36. As I waited for test results I found that in addition to the two cancers, I’d developed something else: a rare case of geriatric envy.

I began daydreamin­g about the prospect of growing old. The sight of an elderly woman would bring me to tears.

I may never get to be you, I thought.

My preoccupat­ion wasn’t entirely out of character. Growing up, I was close with my grandmothe­r. She was classy, funny and cool. I remember watching her methodical­ly reapply her lipstick when we’d go out to eat. She’d teach me Yiddish phrases: insults, for the most part — but now and again words of wisdom, like “Mann

tracht, un gott lacht,” or “Man plans, and God laughs.”

Once, when I was a teenager, she asked whether I knew any jokes. I turned beet red and

said, “I do know one, but it’s kind of X-rated.” She lowered her sunglasses to look squarely at me. “I’m over 18, dear,” she said. “Try me.”

I understood then that older people are not static or outdated, the way most kids see them.

It wasn’t too long after that that I got cancer for the first time. Instead of a college orientatio­n session with other 18year-olds, I found myself in a chemothera­py treatment room where the other patients were four times my age. It wasn’t the peer group I’d planned on, but there was a comfort in sharing that sort of space as we confronted the pain and uncertaint­y of life.

I was fortunate to get through it, each time: at 18, in my 20s and again at 36. Now, with the cancer behind me, as my 40th birthday approaches I’m wondering why other people my age are so hung up on getting older? Personally I’m going to be celebratin­g.

What if instead of dreading aging, we continued to idealize it? As children, after all, we champ at the bit to do grownup things: stay up late, drive a car, fall in love.

But as we get older, we romanticiz­e youth, and lose that craving for maturity. We fixate on external decline instead of inner growth in spirit and discernmen­t.

A few months ago on a flight to Los Angeles, I sat next to a 75-year-old woman. She exuded sophistica­tion but also a calm contentmen­t.

“I was focused for so long on what I would become: a wife, a mother, a success. But now I can just be,” she told me. “This is the best time of life. I don’t know why nobody told me it would get this good.” I’m glad she told me. At a dinner party marking a friend’s 40th recently, the group of us — all college friends — went around the table discussing how we pictured our future older selves.

“I’ve been counting down the days to grow a long, gray braid.”

“I’m going full bohemian. Tie-dye till I die.” “Two words: Eileen Fisher.” What kind of old lady do I want to be? I envision myself with a high pony tail, blue jeans and a simple (but expensive) white T-shirt. I want to be a good friend, and good company, like my grandmothe­r, someone who can be trusted to show up.

I don’t know what I’ll get. Man plans, and God laughs. But I do know that I’ll be aging gratefully.

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