Before I begin, a caveat: this essay is not just for the over-65 set. People of all ages are aging, and wistfulness can be a feature of any age. But the older you are, the more wistfulness seeps slowly into your awareness, like a subtle fragrance.
That said, I hope that the over-65s, even the over-50s, will follow along with me; I think it will be worthwhile. I write regularly about aging and have written a couple of books about the subject. I am 75, so the topic is not theoretical for me or many of my friends. In my book, Aging as a Spiritual Practice, I talk about the moment “lightning strikes,” the moment when suddenly you realize you are getting old. That certainly does happen, particularly if you are hit with a sudden illness or death in your family or in your circle of acquaintances.
But there is a gradual aspect to aging, a slowly shifting coloration, not unlike a sunset that imperceptibly shifts from light pink to a deeper red, and finally to gray dusk. Today I am calling this gradual shift “wistfulness.” Wistfulness is a subtle thing; we may not know that we are feeling it, but I think wistfulness is a defining mark, a near-universal characteristic of aging. Wistfulness is not as strong as regret. Aging people all have regrets for actions not taken, things not said, expectations unfulfilled. Wistfulness is more atmospheric than regret; it is the sense of time passing and future possibilities narrowing. It is, you might say, the flavor of aging. It is not an entirely unpleasant flavor; some aspects of it are bitter, and some are, if not pleasing, at least piquant, like a rare spice.
Wistfulness is also delicate; we can sense it best when, on the whole, things are going well in our life. If we are actually dealing with a difficulty, or a crisis, those more immediate concerns overwhelm wistfulness. Wistfulness is, at least in part, a remembrance of paths not taken, moments in your past when you could have gone left, but instead went right. Ever after, there is always an intimation—sometimes only in our dreams—of what going to the right might have been like. Along with this can arise another feeling, one of acceptance. Yes, I made that choice and I don’t regret it, I don’t look back.
When I was young I was in training to be a professional musician. My mother, who was a music teacher herself, started me on the piano when I was five, along with violin a bit later. Her dream for me was to go to France after college to train with a famous piano teacher—she had already picked out the one. I was a diligent piano student and reasonably talented. I stayed with music as my main focus all through college, until, as I was about to graduate, I had two seminal realizations. First, I realized I wasn’t good enough as a pianist to reach the top tier—which only had room for a few exceptional players—and the amount of work, of hours and hours of practice month after month, weren’t worth it to me. The second realization is that I hated to travel, and the more successful you were as a performing artist, the more you had to travel and spend your nights and days in hotel rooms in faraway places.
So I abandoned that dream and became an antiwar activist instead, and later a Buddhist priest and teacher. My mother never said anything, I don’t know if or how much she was disappointed. I suppose that was her own arena of wistfulness. But throughout my life I retained my love of music as an avocation. I have made a couple of CD albums of my own piano compositions, and I founded a five-piece ensemble that even today performs and plays my compositions. When I watch YouTube videos of great pianists performing classical repertoire, sometimes I am wistful. Sometimes I think, “Could that have been me?” “Could I have been happy doing that?” Most of the time the answer that comes back is, “No, not really.” But I am still wistful. So much of my young life was music; the taste of it has never left me.
I don’t know what evokes that kind of wistfulness in you. Each of us has our own life story. Occasionally there are second chances, particularly if you are younger. I read of many people who returned to a first love after another career unexpectedly ends. But at some point, you become old enough that those second chances also drift away and become out of reach. Then you are presented with another fork in the road. Will your wistfulness harden into regret, or will it soften into acceptance, so that you can say, “Well, this is the life that I had. It didn’t all go the way I thought or expected, but on the whole, I am satisfied, I am content.”
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