As my regular readers know, I have been mulling over Moby-Dick after a recent re-reading. (Re-reading is highly recommended; see my blog here.) In the very beginning of Moby-Dick, Ishmael tells us that when he is starting to despair, when he feels the “November of the soul,” he goes to sea. Ishmael thinks that this is a universal solution, and the reason that all over “Manhattoes” (Manhattan) people in despair migrate to the shore, to the docks, and gaze upon the ocean: “Posted like silent sentinels all around the town, stand thousands upon thousands of mortal men fixed in ocean reveries.” The ocean does help me when I am in the doldrums. Perhaps it is the immensity and power of the ocean in relation to the paltriness of one human life. I recently had a welcome dose of the sea, but it is not readily available to us all and is only a temporary antidote.
Thoreau reminds us that “the mass of men live lives of quiet desperation,” so we know we are not alone. There are others, many others, in the clutches of despair. Old age may or may not be more liable to this condition, but it definitely provides less distraction from our own minds. In our younger days, when we had jobs, children, obligations and a hectic schedule all around, there was still despair, but perhaps little time to consider it. Now, it descends during quiet late afternoons and the wee hours of the morning. And, lately, every time we turn on the news.
The ocean helps, but so does nature in all its forms. Wendell Berry finds relief (not alleviation) from despair in wild things:
When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief.
Berry finds “grace,” but only “for a time.”
There are other ways, additional ways, that we handle despair. Niall Williams’ latest novel, Time of the Child, is about an older doctor who has lost his wife and also lost his faith. Yet Doctor Troy attends mass, in an effort to ward off despair and order his life with the comfort of a schedule, a routine:
The doctor attended Mass, but without devotion. After his wife Regina was taken by a cancer he hadn’t seen coming, he had lost the relic of faith he once had. To mask despair against God, he chose an old tactic: retain a semblance of order, and in this way meet the greatest challenge of life, which is always nothing more or less than how to get through another day.
Oh, the things that we do to “mask despair”! Is this perhaps the reason that we old people cling to habits, our houses, our ways of life? Rituals, habits, and repetitions paper over despair. In a world and a body that are failing us, they are something that is ours – built up over a lifetime.
In an earlier book, This is Happiness, Williams talks about how an old woman has braced herself against despair:
As a shield against despair, she had decided early on to live with the expectation of doom, an inspired tactic, because, by expecting it, it never fully arrived.
Again, we know pessimistic people like this, we know times when we are like this ourselves (practically every day in the political realm, I am finding). Not a pleasant way to live though, but, for some, expecting the worst is often a partial armor against despair.
So, what do we do with this despair in relation to our fellow elders: should we share it to make others know that they are not alone? I remember, as a young woman, the first time I read Virgina Woolf’s admission that life “is arduous, difficult, a perpetual struggle. It calls for gigantic courage and strength.” Someone was finally admitting to me what I thought was obvious, but I had never heard anyone articulate. Mary Oliver says, “Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.” Yes. The alternative is to buck up and, in our bravado, give others the hope that despair can be overcome. Later in Walden, Thoreau exhorts us: “We should impart our courage, and not our despair, our health and ease, and not our disease, and take care that this does not spread by contagion.” I think I’m with the ladies on this one.
And there is another reason that we should share. Our fears and worries, spoken out loud, are seldom as scary as when whispered silently through our minds. When we expose our fears to the light, they do not disappear, but they often seem to shrink – or, at least, stop growing. Also, remedies can be shared, as noted above. Go to the sea, go to the woods, find comfort in ritual or habit. And discovering that others have survived despair is the best encouragement we can find.
For anyone who came to this page by googling “despair,” and is in its clutches, please remember that you can talk to someone by texting or calling 988 for the suicide hotline. Despair is a fact of life for all of us at times, but if there is no relief, please get some help. You are not alone.
When I was young, I often used fantasy to counter despair. I find it doesn’t work so well in old age. I wrote a story in order to think about that: “Amnesia at the Airport.” Try it. Better yet, write your own story. And share it.