This is the truth of it. I am 56 years old. My husband is nearing 60. My remaining parent will be 76 next year. There is young blood in the house, our 20-year-old son, who is grappling with what the youth of today must grapple with, disconnection, lack of joy, low expectations of this melting, fetid world. Alone, together, we live in a no-outsiders urban outpost.
I did not expect to feel so isolated at this stage in life. I’m not truly alone. We’re not alone. But our ties to each other are all we really have. They are deep, meaningful, singular, and insular. And they are all the boy has right now, this small clutch of hoary eggs thudding against one another in a brittle, aging basket.
I am ashamed of this isolation. It is an old shame. Who wants to show such congenital loneliness, inadvertently passed on to the next generation? I have friends. They are spread out, some more present in my current life than others, all from earlier days. But the boy is no longer in touch with peers and seems to believe he has nothing to offer. My husband, the more affable of our group, is also mainly without outside connection after two significant losses. Our small families have been pared down to a loose set of four with the occasional visitor.
There was a time when I wanted to be in the world. I pursued connection. Maybe it’s the emotional heft of my job, the responsibilities of my private life, or the reemergence of depression (recent bouts of controlled crying, hopeless outlook). I find it hard to make time and space to pursue new relationships or maintain old ones. Who has the energy? Who has the interest? It’s safer in this fading basket.
Someday I may pay the price. I may be the sole survivor of the marriage, the boy far away. Or the boy and I will hole up in the house until he, too, is alone. My current solution to this looming problem is to cultivate what I imagine to be a Buddhist-like sense of removal and acceptance, courting low expectations, normalizing solipsism. Many a hermit, a solitary soul, has survived this world. I can enter the flow of humanity outside my doorstep and re-enter my solitude at will (someday). It’s the boy, the young man, who worries me. Now is the time to build a life, not to hunker down with the oldsters.
Even in this relatively anonymous format, I feel uncomfortable writing about it. This no-longer child, intelligent, thoughtful, somewhat emotionally aware and sensitive, a focus of my writing in the early days (was it my depressed parenting that caused him to withdraw from the world?) – it is his life to figure out. And figure it out he will. He will. Most of me knows it.
What to do with this loneliness, my mind folded around ghosts? What to do to create meaning out of this all too human experience? I always return to creativity and perhaps confession, the lure of a writing life. Even that elusive bonbon has been sucked of its sweetness by artificial intelligence and electronic distraction, the mass of humanity in the grasp of glowing screens, pulled into a liminal space of image, shadow, and illusory escape.
Consider this my fight against hopelessness.
(“No way out but through” is from the Robert Frost poem A Servant to the Servants. “The best way out is always through” is the more commonly quoted line, but I prefer this one. The poem is a long and odd one, more appropriate to the topic of this post than I expected.)