Love, loss, living onโthatโs the inevitable pattern of life. But itโs the accrued effects of all of this resilient shuffling along our shared mortal coil that inspired anthologists Upham and Gravenson to solicit musings on the subject from 32 women across the globe.
These essays, poems, and interviews are offered by a red-letter assortment of novelists, actors, editors, poets, and journalists ranging in age from 50 to over 100. Acclaimed novelist and Woodstock resident Gail Godwin is a contributor; so are gynecologist Christiane Northrup, journalist Jenny Allen, and actor Jane Alexander, and theyโre all digging deep to dialogue about the part of a womanโs life journey that comes after mate seeking, child rearing, and often, career. Six are Hudson Valley residents, and, in fact, the seeds of this anthology were sown in a womenโs writers group in Rhinebeck.
Some writers dish advice: Take care of your teeth because itโs not fun to outlive them; give up anxiety; poke some fun at yourself. Others circle around the challenges facing a phase of life devoid of the easy privileges of youth.
โWhen weโre young we tend to think that old people were born that way. That itโs somehow a choice,โ writes playwright Tina Howe. โThen suddenly we hit sixty-five, seventy-three, or eighty-two and wonder whatโs going on. That isnโt us in there! Itโs someone else! Construction workers suddenly donโt whistle at us anymore and waiters call us โMaโamโ instead of โLegsโ or โSweet Thing.โโ
Youthful beauty can be a free pass on the make-something-of-your-life ride, but only for a while, says journalist Vivian Gornick. โFor a woman, existential terror is the aging face. When a woman looks in the mirror and sees herself smooth and young, she thinks, โIโm not accountable. I donโt yet have to explain or justify my existence. It doesnโt matter yet that Iโm not taking responsibility for my life. I still have tomorrow.โ When she looks in the mirror and sees herself lined and hollow-cheeked, she thinks, โTomorrow is here. Now Iโm accountable. Now I must do it. Can I? More important, will I?โโ
Anthologist Upham, a former concert pianist sidelined by injury, was originally attracted to the subject of female aging through the lens of loss, but this is not the bookโs ultimate focus, nor the final destination of many contributors. Ultimately, triumph is the hub hereโover other people, self, illness, bereavement, and diminishment.
In fact, says Woodstock memoirist Abigail Thomas, itโs the unexpected gains of getting older that sheโs found most surprising, and the potential insertion of old comforts, such as male companionship, that can be most discomforting. โIt has taken me the better part of sixty years to enjoy the inside of my own head, and I do that best when Iโm by myself,โ she writes. โ I am smug. I am probably insufferable. And then the telephone rings.โ
Aging, says Vivian Gornick, can either be seen as a downer or a source of stimulation, and she prefers the latter path. โThat way, loss is transformed into wisdom and life continues to provide adventure.โ Writes Upham in the foreword, โLiving on, never mind living well, is often lifeโs reward. One of the great gifts of experience, however, is the ability to chooseโnot our circumstances, but how we interpret them.โ

This article appears in August 2010.








