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Our Families - Our Lives. Write-Link Project
Laura C.
Creative Writing Bio
In comparing young people to the elderly generation, quite a few stereotypes come to mind. True or not, they generally color the way people of a certain age are judged. Adolescents are gregarious, social creatures about town, while seniors are lonely hermits, who stow away in dusty houses with crews of cats. The youth laugh and play while the elderly frown. Teens are as focused on the future, on moving out and moving on, as old people are on the times long past, acting as constant nostalgia acts. As popular as these seemingly all-encompassing stereotypes are, there are those that refuse to prescribe to them. Doris, a member of the Ypsilanti Senior Citizen Center, is one of those people.
She describes herself as independent and having her own life, which is easy to believe when speaking with her. She was willing to give information about her past and would answer all questions, but it was obvious that the past is not something that interests her. Instead, she prefers to talk about her current life, one that is full of activity. Doris is an active member of her church and participates in Friends of the Library and shut-ins, as well taking care of her mother and playing with her two grandchildren. She tells of a friend of hers who simply hides behind her social husband and never does anything. A life like that would never appeal to someone like Doris.
Her favorite topic of conversation is the Senior Center, and all it has done for her and her mother, who also attends. She happily chatters about the activities and things there are to do at the center, which at first seems almost boring. The point of the interview is to discuss her past and childhood, and all she can think to say is how much she loves the bingo? But soon it becomes apparent that she is showing a key side of herself in this conversation. In her mind, the past is done with. She has "done everything I wanted to do" and since moved on from that, and is now living for the moment.
That is not to say the past has had no bearing on her life. In fact, it's easy to make connections between the life she had, and herself today. To start at the beginning, Doris was born in Mississippi, on a farm. She lived approximately 700 miles away from her aunts and uncles, and grew up with both grandmothers dead. This left her immediate family, including her four siblings, with nothing but the countryside and the neighbor's children to occupy their time. Around the age of 8, her family moved to the comparatively crowded town of Ypsilanti. She attended and graduated from Roosevelt High School in the 1950s.
Doris describes life back then to be much simpler than it is now. A half a century ago, kids had more innocence, more naivety, and had a better sense of manners and courtesy. She was heavily involved in her church youth group, so of course her own peers weren't involved in much nefarious activity. But even teenagers as a whole were better behaved. Her description of their nights is an exact copy of the rosy sketches of the fifties seen in movies and books. Get-togethers back then usually involved nothing more serious than popcorn and Kool-aid, playing board games on someone's back porch. Hayrides and roller-skating with the church boys they all dated constituted a good night out. As far as rebellion goes, even sneaking one beer out of their parents' refrigerators was considered a big deal. She told a story about a Halloween party she attended in 9th grade, where boys where boys were passing out cigarettes. She tried one but, remembering her lack of allowance, realized she couldn't support a habit anyway. From there, she made the decision to not smoke. Doris and her friends didn't do much by way of bad things, and that was fine by them.
As soon as she graduated high school, Doris went straight into the workforce, which she says at the time was blossoming. Jobs were available everywhere in the late '50s, with teacher unions just starting up and the automobile companies growing by the minute. Doris landed a job at a telephone company, one which she would keep for the next thirty or so years. Most girls at the time were getting married right out of high school, but she decided to go the other direction, not being exactly sure what she wanted to do with her life. Being able to have her own career and make her own money gave Doris the independent and proactive spirit she carries with her today.
This strong sense of self came in handy when she had to raise her only son as a single mother, after a divorce which she declined to comment on. For about nine years the two of them lived alone, and Doris decided early on that she would not let him be a lonely, in addition to only, child. She always forced him outside and played with him. Her tomboy side came into effect at these times, and she was not afraid to get dirty herself when playing around with her son. She firmly believed that "boys should be boys". Her second husband, who lived under a domineering mother until he was thirty, was jealous of his stepson. Because of her husband's childhood, Doris knew she would allow her son to grow up and move on with his life, and that his freedom was necessary to his happiness.
The clean and simple living Doris was familiar with was soon challenged when her son began to grow up and get older. She knew very little about drugs herself, so when her son experimented with marijuana in high school, she admitted to struggling with it. How could she deal with something she barely understood? He also rebelled in a slightly less serious manner by growing his hair long. In the fifties, boys were expected to have short, neatly kept styles, so his shaggy locks drove her crazy. Being 35 now and having two kids of his own, Doris says he now appreciates and understands her traditional way of living more.
Although she is one for living in the moment and not looking towards the past, Doris does lament certain things about modern society. To her, some aspects of the fifties seem unfortunately lost. In addition to teenagers and children being more respectable back then, the idea of being a woman was entirely different. Women were expected to wear hats and skirts in public at all times, especially at church. They cooked at home often, before the advent of drive-through and fast food restaurants. When women ceased that, they simultaneously lost a certain sense of femininity. Though it's doubtful that Doris believes women should be slaves to their home and kids, she does miss the idea of womanhood attached to those things. Women should be proper, feminine, and have doors opened and chairs pulled out for them. She finds no shame in being that stereotype of a woman.
Another thing she misses is the sense of community. Though she is obviously an independent lady, the one thing Doris adores above all else is building connections with the people around her. Comparing growing up in rural isolation to being surrounded by friends at the Senior Center, Doris clearly prefers the latter. It's easy to see from the enthusiasm with which she speaks of her current lifestyle. She feels like families and neighborhoods used to be tighter-knit. Nowadays, nobody is invited over for dinner; no kids are allowed to roam around the neighborhood after dark - all because nobody trusts each other anymore. The loss of those seemingly old-fashioned ideals like community and trust are ruining society as a whole, which saddens her.
After seeing and speaking with Doris, one would hardly classify her as a senior citizen. She is active, social, and has an infectious laugh. She doesn't love everything about modern society, but she is definitely embracing with more enthusiasm than most seniors around. If more people like her were in town, it's doubtful that the idea of the elderly as most know it would perpetuate. If there ever was a one for breaking that stereotype, it's Doris.
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