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What Was All That About? By Alan Alda |
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I don’t think I made a conscious decision to live forever. But, it’s working out that way. It started twenty years ago in But in that “I’m sorry, what?” She said it again: “How long would you like to live?” It wasn’t such an extraordinary question, but it was different from anything I’d been asked in the previous twelve interrogations, or in any other interview. I was glad not to have to hear myself recite the same boring account of my rise to world power through my fantastic creative process and I let my imagination loose a little. “A hundred and six,” I said. “I’d like to live to a hundred and six. If I can still make love.” She smiled and made a note. The next day, my wife, Arlene, opened the newspaper and read the headline: “WATCH OUT GIRLS. ALDA WANTS TO LIVE TO 106 AND STILL MAKE LOVE.” Arlene put the paper down and looked at me. “A hundred and six? Give me a break.” We laughed about it but, for reasons that would take until I’m a hundred and six to analyze, from that moment I assumed that the number 106 would be my life span. I was certain of it. I think of myself as rational: I ask people where they got their information before I take seriously their thought that life as we know it will end on Tuesday. But from that moment on, I had no doubt that I would last until exactly 106. And in good health, too. Arlene doesn’t like the idea that we might leave our children the job of cleaning up after us when we’re gone and every once in a while she’ll say, “We’re getting older. I think we should clean out the closets.” When she says this, I look at her as though she’s nuts. First of all, whenever I do go, I’m going to be dead. Let them worry about the closets. But, far more importantly, we have a good thirty-five years before we’ll be gone. (I’ve included her in my lunatic belief that 106 is the magic number.) I’m not under the impression that I’ll live at least that long; 106 is the exact, drop-dead number. I’ve been so sure of it that when I was interviewing scientists on the television series Scientific American Frontiers and was told that, eventually, people will live to 150, 200, and possibly longer, I was depressed. I felt I had shortchanged myself. I should have picked a bigger number. I was too impulsive that day in This crazy thought persisted even after I nearly died on a mountaintop in Now, though, I had a new worry. Would I live all those years without having lived them in the best possible way? Having faced the empty blackness in I became obsessed with this thought, and that brought on a second book. This I remember nightlong youthful conversations, trying to figure out an answer to the question: what are we here for? Now I see what a t I’ve spent my life in the theater, so some Maybe that’s us at the end of our lives. Maybe it’s more about having enjoyed it than understanding it. At the end when, as the Italians say, la comedia è finite -- we’re lying there in our suite at the Worldwide Hotel, about to check out and thinking, so what was that all about? And at that moment, the door to the bedroom opens and the chorus dances into the room, singing: “What is the moral? Must be a moral. Moral tomorrow. Comedy tonight!” Actor and author of Things I Overheard While Talking To Myself |
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