Response to Prompt #62
Celebrating the UN-Deniable Third Act
by Helen Sadler
Last spring I was having a hard time focusing on
reading, so I found myself looking for the easiest possible text to keep my
habit in play. I came across a book I had never fully read, one by a Florida
college professor and mystery writer James W. Hall. It was recommended by Dr.
Joe Wisdom when I was taking his Florida Writers class at FGCU. It’s called Hot
Damn! Alligators in the Casino, Nude Women in the Grass, How Seashells Changed
the Course of History, and Other Dispatches from Paradise and contains
about 40 bite-sized essays. I recently saw in one of my journals
this book was given to me as a gift from Jim on my birthday in 2003, but it
appears I had only read a handful of the essays.
This was the perfect book to help me get back my
reading mojo. The essays had the right amount of depth, but were short and
sweet, like a little square of chocolate. I consumed a lot of them and then
stopped when I was able to get back into longer literature.
On Sunday I saw the book sitting there and
discovered I only had nine more essays to go, so vowed I would just get them
done. And that is when everything changed.
Have you ever read something that was so
profound, so perfect for the moment you were in you cannot believe it is
happening? You get done and sit there quietly whispering Wow Wow Wow? It
was one of those moments when I got to page 196 and completed reading the essay
“Anniversary.” The subject was the anniversary of the death of Hall’s
father, whom he wrote about earlier in the collection. This was not the
anniversary of the death of my father -- that wasn’t what struck me. It was the
content.
Hall posits that we have three acts in life. Act
One is being the young person on the threshold to adventure. Act Two contains
all the struggles. Act Three is resolution. (Yes, you may recognize this cycle,
as it is sometimes called the Hero’s Journey or Initiation.) It wasn’t that
this was anything new to me. It was that for the first time I allowed myself to
acknowledge just where I am standing.
Now it is Act Three. The
time for resolutions. Tying up all the loose ends. The final third of this
drama is the time when the wisdom collected on the journey so far must begin to
pay off. If peace can be achieved, this is the last stretch of time to find it.
If there is to be joy or understanding or enlightenment, they must come very
soon. (195-6)
This caused me to think about my three acts,
which are different from Hall’s:
Act One -- when I got divorced at 25 and finally started living my life
with purpose, pursued a new dream of being a business owner, began working with
young people, and spent two years raising a troubled teenager.
Act Two -- Moving to Florida, getting three college degrees, becoming a
teacher
Act Three -- present time, even though it looks like I’m still just being a
teacher. Which was the baffling part.
Yes, Act Three was confusing. I’m still a
teacher...right? My plan all along has been to keep going, keep doing the work
I love. Yes, it seems a bit in jeopardy right now, but I was unwilling to make
a move in my thinking.
In my puzzlement, I thought about my recent
mudlarking journey, the one that now seems almost prophetic. There were things
I rediscovered that I had not necessarily forgotten, but it was nice to find
them and nail down their exactness. It has to do with my tendency to always see
my life metaphorically as a book or an act of literature.
Case in point:
March 16, 1988. I was frustrated with my job as a sales and service rep for
Zee Medical because it lacked creativity. One morning I woke up and felt like I
was “a blank page” on which I could write anything. A big part of that was to
find a more creative way of working. A couple months later I was on my
way to California to train for the direct mail marketing franchise I had
purchased. My creative work began.
December 22, 1997. I was falling into depression and restlessness. I
considered my age (42) had something to do with it. I went to the library and
found a book called Listening to Midlife by Mark Gerzon. In the first
chapter he described exactly how I was feeling. He said the anecdote was to see
this time in life as entering Chapter Two, and the job now was to go back to
what I loved as a teenager and see how I could develop that love in this second
half of life. On that very day I discovered my long buried dream of being a
teacher.
August 2, 2020. “Anniversary” pointed out clearly to me where I am right now. It
helped explain why now it has seemed easy for me to clear out journals, folders
from my college classes, and mountains of National Writing Project stuff I’ve
never used. It’s aided me in releasing the unnecessary that I’ve let hang
around too long.
But it was even more than that.
Hall’s essay focused on what he had learned from
his father, and how this led him to understanding he was in Act Three. And that
made me think about my dad in his 60s.
In my journal, I discovered my parents came to
visit one weekend in the early 90s, and explained that my dad’s company
(General Color) had decided to move him to a different position which meant
quite a cut in pay. To Jim and me this was ageism, and we were furious. But my
dad continued on, even bypassing his retirement age of 65 and kept working (to
my mom’s dismay.) I used to think my dad didn’t have a role model for retiring,
and that is why he wouldn’t make the move. He ended up dying at 68, working
right up to the last few weeks of his life, and his pension set my mom up for a
comfortable life as an elder.
But after reading “Anniversary,” I suddenly saw
everything differently. My dad drew meaning from his work as a ceramic engineer
-- a very specialized career -- and his side life as a musician. I now see what
he was doing. He was living the life that meant something to him, and he knew
that is what he must do.
I still recall the many young people from the
plant that came to the funeral home, many with high praise for my dad. I
remember one guy in particular, probably in his mid-20s, in jeans and a gray
t-shirt with cut off sleeves, standing in front of my dad’s casket for the
longest time, just staring with the saddest look on his face. To my knowledge,
he didn’t talk to any of us, except perhaps my mom. I wanted so badly to ask
him what my dad meant to him, because it was so obvious it was something. I
didn’t have the nerve to disrupt whatever was going on in his head. I probably
started talking to another guest, and by then he had disappeared. I have always
felt that was one of the greatest missed opportunities in my life.
But what this told me was that my dad was having
an influence on those around him, one I’m sure he felt fulfilling and wasn’t
willing to give up.
When I think of my adult life, it breaks down
like this:
20s -- the first half a royal mess, making unwise decisions because I
didn’t know who I was, then awakening and starting to live as myself.
30s -- a time to prove myself during the first half, then entering
into more spiritual studies later.
40s -- the beginning of a freeing feeling, no longer thinking I had
to prove anything, went to college, moved to Florida
50s -- surprisingly wonderful. Still feeling like there was a lot of
life to live, a lot of time to accomplish great things, fully in my element as
I had my profession going strong
60s -- outlook more positive than ever. Feeling better physically than
I have my entire life. (evidence in journals, constant remarks about headaches
and stomachs, respiratory infections, etc.) Truly my authentic self,
still being creative, still wanting my profession to never end.
But then...the big changes of 2020. And turning
65, the age we are conditioned to think of as “retirement.” I’m supposed to
want to end my previous life, and do...what? I don’t know.
I was pretty much ignoring this, until a couple
things forced the issue. First, this damn pandemic and the vulnerability of my
age and the facts of school buildings. I went from ignoring the idea of danger
to understanding how real it was. Second, people who assume I can just “retire”
because I'm 65-years-old.
Uh, no.
And it isn’t just the money aspect.
Finally I can say, I get you, Dad.
And all of this may have just bypassed me,
except then they pushed back the school year. My sister said, “Well, now you
don’t have to work on your birthday.” I had gotten so used to working on my
birthday, I hadn’t even realized I would have that day until Margie said it. In
that space I started thinking of celebrating the day in a small way with Jim.
We plan on getting out and doing something together since we have done nothing
much beyond haircuts and Costco since January.
The triple gifts of time and space and
“Anniversary” brought me to acknowledgment of Act Three. James Hall ends his
essay in this way:
The curtain has gone up.
One third of the play is left, a final chance to transform ourselves into
individuals worthy of the parents we lost. (196)
I have not changed my mind about teaching until
I can’t teach anymore. What has changed is my understanding of my purpose. I
think of those young men in Minerva, Ohio celebrating my dad and what a kind
and knowledgeable soul he was. It made me realize I have just so much time left
to make my life fully worthy of my dad and all he meant to everyone who knew
him.
The most wonderful part about all of this is
that all the fear I have had for months about the upcoming school year is
completely gone. I now know, and am 100 percent sure, that whatever happens it
will provide me with what I need to complete my life in a way worthy of my
upbringing. As my journal project showed me, I have not always made the best
decisions, and I often operated from a place of fear.
But not anymore.
When Natalie posted this prompt, she referred to
the film Alice in Wonderland. As if “Anniversary” wasn’t enough on
Sunday to move me to fearlessness, I read this on Monday morning:
Just fall, like Alice, down
the rabbit hole. And don’t worry about falling down; it’s also topless,
sideless, and centerless. Fear not. Centuries of saints and bodhisattvas who’ve
gone before have shouted loud and clear. Jump right in, the water’s fine (161)
*(The Zen Commandments: Ten Suggestions for a
Life of Inner Freedom (2001) by Dean Sluyter.)