Lessons Learned: A
Life in Under 2000 Words
by Pam Munter
If I were
to be mugged, the newspaper reports would call me “elderly,” but most days I
don’t feel like that. In some ways, I’m just getting started, even though I
know the days “dwindle down to a precious few.” The upside is the sense of
perspective over the course of a lifespan, the patterns, the growth and the
trends. The goal has been to inhabit a life well-lived with lessons learned
along the way. Here are a few of them.
The First Decade (0-9)
1943-1952
I was a
much-anticipated baby, the first to be born after several miscarriages, but I
think my parents were afraid of me and didn’t know what to do next. It was the
1940s, a rule-bound era struggling through a war and its aftermath. My parents
relied on outside forces for guidance, ceding to the escalating pressures to
conform, and sought to regulate my life in stereotypical ways. The result was
that I often felt I was falling short of their expectations. They weren’t happy
when I questioned norms so I began to decipher critical episodes for compliance.
I joined the Brownies, became a Girl Scout, got good grades, made my bed and
ate my vegetables. My parents didn’t know about the times I was sent to the principal’s
office for goading other kids or talking back to the teacher. By ten I had
learned how to be a covert subversive, losing myself in books and fantasy. To
add to the rebellion, I started a girls’ baseball team, a revolutionary act in
the early 1950s, predictably ridiculed by the adults around me. I learned that
trust must be earned and not conferred by heredity alone. And that girls are
not equal.
The Second Decade
(11-20)
1953-1962
At the same
time that my father was critical and retreating (likely due to his many
affairs, I would later discover), I was battling regularly with my mother who used
shame as her primary M.O. I spent more time in my bedroom or away from home –
on my bike, in the movies or in the library after school. By adolescence, I had
figured out that the most predictable way around adult judgments was through achievement.
I took drama classes in junior high, wrote a musical revue in high school with
a boy I was crazy about, played in the band and orchestra and started writing
movie reviews for the school newspaper. Still the rebel, I decided my career
goal was to run a movie studio, even though women remained menial sex objects
in nearly every venue, especially that one. I was cajoled into going to college
by a newspaper column written by a neighbor, even though I saw no value in
doing so.
The Third Decade (21-29)
1963-1972
By the end of adolescence, I had discovered
I could be creative and think at the same time. In fits and starts, I graduated
from college with three majors and earned two master’s degrees. It was the
1960s, a time of social and political turbulence. My inner turmoil had
externalized into full-blown feminism and active advocacy for civil rights.
After a series of false-start careers, I followed my instincts (which I had
learned to trust by now) and taught political science at a university. But my
curiosity and introspective nature provoked a switch to psychology, eventually
earning a Ph.D. Just before I graduated, my father died suddenly of
atherosclerosis while in the company of my mother’s best friend. I fell in love
with another iconoclast and decided to marry, hoping for a happier pairing. I
was concerned that my window for a coupling opportunity was running out, not
only because of my age but because – as my mother put it – “with all those
degrees, you’re pricing yourself out of the market.”
The Fourth Decade
(30-39)
1973-1982
My happy
ending was not to be. The marriage was a turbulent one from the start. He turned
out to be a thief, a narcotics user and a philanderer with an amoral set of
values. Once again, I learned that trust must be earned not assumed, and was
not necessarily part of a romantic package. I gave birth to a son and had emergency
surgery for a benign uterine tumor during the fourth month, rendering further
pregnancies too risky. The husband and I divorced after nine years of struggle
and volatility, reminding me of the importance of honest communication on a
daily basis. It was an ending but also a beginning, as most life eras are.
Early in the decade, I had been
hired to teach in the psychology department in a state I had never visited. At
the same time, I opened a private practice. It was a frantic decade of risk and
achievement, which by now I knew were important components of my identity, a
time of existential merit badge collecting. In addition to the two full-time
jobs, I was singing in jazz clubs at night. I had decided to live my life
full-out. Within a year of the marriage ending, I met and fell in love with a
woman, which was surprisingly easy. She, my son and I formed a family unit with
a minimum of upheaval, other than the predictable but horrific judgments from
my mother. She and I subsequently ham-handedly glued our relationship back
together but it would never be the same. Friends had become my family.
The Fifth Decade (40-49)
1983-1992
By 40, I
had quit my tenured job at the university to devote full-time to the practice,
which my partner and I shared. I learned I didn’t want to work under anyone and
honored my independent nature. We worked long hours, enjoying what seemed a
joyful, uncomplicated relationship. At home, I studied about financial
investments so we could retire in another ten years, another step toward
self-reliance. I loved being a shrink, though it was often stressful due to its
very nature. It was hard to find time to do much else but the high level of
satisfaction made it eminently fulfilling. We found the time to play in a
softball league for a couple of years, fulfilling a childhood fantasy. And I
continued to sing in clubs, giving it up only when I recognized I wasn’t good
enough to do it professionally. It was a major disappointment. With some
astonishment, I learned how invested I had been in this bubbling passion called
show business.
The Sixth Decade
(50-59)
1993-2002
By this
decade, the managed care movement had devoured the entire health care system,
limiting my treatment decisions and the freedom with which I consulted with my
clients. There was more bureaucracy, excessive amounts of paperwork, and fewer
allocated sessions before the busywork would start all over again. It felt not
only oppressive but unethical; I wasn’t able to provide the level of care
required. With significant ambivalence, I left behind my safe and prestigious professional
identity to fulfill that siren song – the nagging pervasive fantasy in my life.
I started producing and hosting a TV show as part of my role as president of
the local arts association, found an agent and acted in independent films and
commercials, resumed jazz singing and performed in cabaret clubs throughout the
country. I felt truly alive, almost vibrational, living as a creative person
every day. Recording a CD tribute to my childhood idol, Doris Day, at Capitol
Records was a peak, transcendent experience. The travel for gigs required me to
be away from home for a month or more at a clip. I had to learn to juggle my
roles and commitments. When my partner started to experience obvious cognitive
problems, once again I terminated the performing career. This coincided with
the conclusion I had reached once before: that I wasn’t as good as I needed to
be to satisfy my own expectations. The decision to walk away left me with a
huge void and a major depression that would hang on for the next few years.
Living life all out had its costs.
The Seventh Decade
(60-69)
2003-2012
After a
couple of fogged-out years, I opted for a geographical cure, a move to another
state. Within two years, feeling more myself, I had returned to music. By now,
I could hear the ticking of the mortality clock. Fulfilling another childhood
dream, I taught myself to play the cornet, founded a Dixieland band and sang
with two other bands. During this decade, I returned to nonfiction writing,
researching and publishing dozens of long essays about less-familiar movie
stars from the Golden Age of Film. These creative activities gradually extricated
me from the depression, even if they didn’t replicate the joy of the previous
decade. Re-energized, I became active with the ACLU, serving as its local
president. I had been so immersed in all these recovery efforts that I failed
to focus on my partner’s further personal deterioration, noticing only our
increased disengagement. After her secretive drug and alcohol use was
uncovered, she was admitted to the Betty Ford Center. Within a month of her discharge,
she was drinking and using again. Under the influence of drugs and alcohol, she
crashed her new car into a palm tree a few blocks from home and was rushed to
the hospital. The car wasn’t the only thing wrecked; I knew I could not live
like this any longer; my trust had been fractured. I helped her move to an assisted
living facility where she could be in a structured and protected setting. I
found myself alone for the first time in decades. In shock and devastation, I
stopped all involvement and retreated into the familiar psychological cocoon,
leading a structured, controlled, subdued life under the radar. In the months
prior to the car crash, my beloved son had been falsely accused of (and plea
bargained to) a felony and served time in jail. My support, my predictability,
my sense of reality had evaporated. I had to relearn how to be resilient and
stand on my own.
The Eighth Decade
(70-76)
2013-2020
When I saw
an ad in the local paper for a low-residency MFA program in creative writing in
my area, I applied and was admitted. It has turned out to be much more than the
time-filler I had hoped. During this decade, I have published a memoir, numerous
nonfiction essays, short stories and plays. I’ve been nominated for several
writing awards and been published over a hundred times. The lifelong pattern
has resumed: solace in achievement and a merging of the creative and the
intellectual. I’m still in regular contact with my former partner who is doing
well in her current environment and I have a warm relationship with my son and
his spouse. I have maintained long-standing friendships with several people, mostly
via email. Many of my friends are dying, and not only the older ones. I’ve been
to more funerals in the past ten years than I have in my lifetime. They serve
as a reminder. Carpe diem.
At 77 I’m having the predictable genetic
and age-related medical issues that will likely shorten my life. Most every
joint that could be replaced, has been; I’ve had several TIAs, and recently
undergone triple bypass, open-heart surgery. Relationships have offered both
the highs and the lows in my life but living alone has opened up a sense of
freedom and serenity. I’ve learned I am happier on my own. I have done most
everything I wanted to do in my life and value having no unfinished business
anywhere. I remain open new discovery, prepared to meet the inevitable challenges
I know will engulf me in time.
Significant learning happens
throughout the lifespan. Each decade has taught me about my strengths and
limitations but, the most important lesson I’ve learned is that I can make it
through anything if I trust in my inner voice. It seldom fails.
* * * * *
Pam Munter has
authored several books including When
Teens Were Keen: Freddie Stewart and The Teen Agers of Monogram, Almost Famous,
and As Alone As I Want To Be.
She’s a former clinical psychologist, performer and film historian. Her essays,
book reviews and short stories have appeared in more than 150 publications. Her
play, “Life Without” was nominated by the Desert Theatre League and she has
been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Pam has an MFA in Creative Writing and
Writing for the Performing Arts. Fading
Fame: Women of a Certain Age in Hollywood will be published in early 2021.
The biographical essay was so engaging, that it pulled me along with it! A fascinating story, well-told. I actually "needed" to read this! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI agree with Amy. Such an interesting life told with warmth and honesty. It left me wanting more.
ReplyDelete