Last night I happened to read an article by a Mom who visited two high schools with her daughter. The student guide at both, as it happened, told how hilarious senior night was, when the seniors dressed as old people, tottering on canes, bent, with quavering voices, white socks, trousers pulled up to their ribs, etc.
Ok, I get it. They are kids, they are part of our culture, they are dealing in the usual stereotype.
In stark contrast, Kidder's book goes behind the canes and thick glasses and spends time with real people in a Northampton nursing home.
The challenges these folks are facing display anything but weakness. The thing about old people is that they are as individual in age as they were in youth, if not more so.
There are many people in the home, but he focuses especially on a few. Lou is a gem, but I got especially fascinated by Joe. At first Joe seems least likely to make the changes he needs to make to live the rest of his days well.
What you see through Kidder's eyes is how remarkable ordinary people are.
We operate under the supposition, which became widespread in the 19th century, that there is normal aging and pathological aging. It goes with a morality that celebrated individual success and individual control of health. "This new morality stripped away the spiritual solace that former conceptions of aging had offered every elderly person and replaced it with a dual view...a psychologically primitive strategy of splitting images of a good old age of health, virtue, self reliance, and salvation from a bad old age of sickness, dependency, premature death, and damnation." It is still very much with us.
Joe of the fiery temperament, with powers greatly diminished by stroke, takes control of himself. Through his friendship with Lou he accepts his situation, and in the process improves life for those around him.
Kidder's reflection is that the central problem of life at Linda Manor is, after all, "only the universal problem of seperateness: the original punishment, the ultimate vulnerability, the enemy of meaning."