What I Dread About Growing Older
A Plain Statement

I am afraid of getting old.
Not dying, that will come and does not scare me
as much as what arrives before it,
my body failing while I still need it,
forgetting names of people I have loved,
becoming someone I would not have chosen.
*
Already I can see it starting.
My knees complain on stairs.
I read a page and cannot tell you
what I read. Sometimes a word
I've known since childhood hides from me
and will not come when called.
*
This is not metaphor. I mean
my actual knees, my actual memory.
I mean I am watching myself decline
in small ways now that promise
larger failures later on.
*
What frightens me is not
some abstract loss of youth or vigor,
I never had much vigor anyway,
but concrete things, not driving anymore,
needing help to bathe, to dress,
asking my children questions
I have asked before, today,
an hour ago, and seeing
pity in their faces.
*
Or worse, seeing nothing
because I have forgotten who they are.
*
My father died still knowing me.
I held his shoulder while he went.
But I have watched others go differently,
confusion first, and then that blankness
where recognition used to live.
*
I do not want to be that person.
I want to die with my mind whole.
I want to know where I am,
who sits beside me, why I'm dying.
I want agency until I don't have it anymore,
and then I want it over quickly.
*
But wanting doesn't matter much.
Age comes whether you consent or not,
and brings exactly what it brings.
You do not get to choose your exit
any more than you chose how you arrived.
*
So I am afraid. Specifically afraid.
Of weakness, of forgetting, of depending
on strangers for my basic needs.
Of living past my usefulness.
Of being kept alive by medicine
when I would rather not be.
*
This fear is reasonable. It is not
morbid or excessive. It is looking
straight at what will probably occur
and saying, I don't want that.
*
But I will get it anyway,
or something equally unwelcome,
or if I'm lucky nothing,
a sudden stopping while everything
still works well enough.
*
That's all I'm hoping for now.
Not immortality. Not even
many more good years.
Just, let me keep my mind.
Let me know myself until I can't.
Then let me go.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
Tim is an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. He writes about rural life, family, and the places he grew up around. His poetry and essays have appeared in Beautiful and Brutal Things, his latest book.
Comments (3)
Love the honesty! Wonderful writing Tim!
I want the opposite. Take my mind and leave my body in tact. I want to be the pleasant kind of senile my great grandmother was with her memories imagined and strength to walk long distances still and keep up with much younger people.
Do not go gently, from my friend, RF and me!