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Taking a Leap!
An Interview with Sara Davidson
By Brad Lemley, DrWeil.com News
Your new book, Leap! What Will We Do with the Rest of Our Lives,
looks at how the boomer generation will handle life past age 50.
When it comes to aging, what's unique about boomers?
This is a situation that is unprecedented in history. Never before
has such a large number of people reached age 50, 60 and beyond
in such good shape (and Dr. Weil has had a hand in that!). Their
kids are gone, they are freer, and they may have 30 more years of
vibrant health. So instead of golfing or sitting on a boat, these
people are at peak of their game. They want to contribute, be involved,
be active in some way. But where are their models of how to do that?
At the same time, a lot of people don't want to work quite so hard
anymore. I heard someone say the other night, "If I could work
20 percent less, and take 20 percent less compensation, I would
do that in a second." But they are not sure how that could
happen, because in many professions, if you start backing off you
lose momentum and you are out of the game. So we are having to invent
and create a new way of being in this new part of life, which I
would say is roughly after 50 and before 80.
Is it really true that we are healthier than past
generations?
By all of the accounts I have seen, it is true, and not only of
people in their fifties, but also those of us at the top of the
boomer wave who are hitting 60. I ski with the master's race team
where I live in Boulder, Colorado. We have people on the team who
are in their 70s and 80s who are competing. And we also have people
like me, who did not even begin ski racing until their 50s. It is
possible physically to stay strong and do a lot of things. But at
the same time, I don't want to pretend that change does not happen
in your body, and I don't think Dr. Weil asserts that either. The
changes that are going to happen to us physically in the next 20
years are greater than any that have happened since adolescence.
So we have to make adjustments, and not be in a state of denial,
but we can continue to keep ourselves relatively strong and flexible
indefinitely.
In your book, you discuss an inevitable stage you call "passing
through the narrows." What is that, and what was it for you?
I interviewed over 200 people to research this book. I found that
everyone, no matter how much achievement or fame or money they had
attained or not attained, everybody went through what I call the
narrows, which is your transition to the next part of life. It could
happen as early as your late 40s, it could not happen until your
70s. But at some point, you are going to experience something like
a stripping of identity, a huge questioning: Why am I still here?
What are the next years for? What do I really want to do? How can
I feel that my time here has mattered?
If you don't go through this voluntarily, either the
world or your body will force you to. In my case, I did not do it
willingly. I went kicking and screaming. In my late 50s, three things
happened at once. First, my kids were going off to college. Second,
I lost my ability to write for television which I had done for 25
years, it was the way I supported myself and my family as a single
mom. Because I was getting older, nobody was interested in having
me work for them, even though I felt I was writing at the top of
my game. And third, my partner, who I had hoped to spend the rest
of my years with, left abruptly.
So suddenly, my lover, my livelihood and my children
were being yanked away from me, and there was nothing I could do
about it. For the first time in my life, I had nothing to do. I
have always been overscheduled and multi-tasking. I wrote scripts
in the bleachers at little league games. Suddenly, I had nothing
to do but sit in an empty house with no partner to console me or
have fun with or take breaks with. Suddenly I had to date again,
which was horrible. Suddenly, my kids, who had been my first thought
on waking and my last on going to sleep, were not in my daily life.
And in my career, I felt like Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman,
desperately trying to stay in the game and being humiliated. I thought,
at my age, I have written bestsellers, I have put TV shows on the
air, why am I hustling, why isn't the phone ringing, why are there
dead ends everywhere? I was brought to my knees and had to go into
a whole different mode of operation.
Which was?
My mode of operation had been, create a vision of what you want
to do, work like hell and you will get it done. And don't accept
no for an answer. But now, it was not working. So I really had to
be receptive to what was going to serve me at this time. What I
found was that it was not as much about making things happen as
it was about listening and receiving and looking inside and waiting.
In the book, you say that your spiritual counselors
kept advising you to surrender, and you hate the term. Why?
I said, "Surrender to what? It sounds like I'm on a battlefield
- should I lay down and let the tanks roll over me?" What I
came to learn is that surrender is not being a victim, is not being
vanquished, it is not being defeated. True surrender, which I was
being advised to do, is opening your arms to whatever comes and
accepting it.
Also, I was told that there are fallow periods in
life, just as there are with plants in fields. Sometimes, it is
winter, all the leaves drop, nothing is happening above the ground.
This is the time to wait and realize that the work is happening
under the ground. So I went through this period of not knowing what
I was to do. It took three or four years before things began to
fall in place. It involved my moving to a new place, it involved,
ultimately, writing this book, because as I looked around, I began
to see that I was not alone. And I think this is really important
for people to know who are going through this: You are not alone.
You are not crazy. The fates don't hate you, they are not punishing
you. It's natural, normal. The best thing to do is embrace this
period of transition or at least accept it. Accept that this is
a transition, and I don't know what will happen. There are all kinds
of possibilities. I need to stay open.
Eventually, you did take decisive action. How did
you ultimately decide what to do?
I have a spiritual teacher named Nina Zimbelman who I have worked
with for many years. She had always told me to listen to your "knowings."
It is that small, still voice inside. If that inner voice is giving
you a message, she said, "lean into it."
In my case, the inner message that came to me was
simply a word, and it was "Boulder" as in Boulder, Colorado.
I had already decided to move, the question had been where. When
the word "Boulder" came to me, I went on the internet
and looked it up. I found out that it has 300 days of sunshine a
year; access to skiing, hiking and rafting; a university; a spiritual
center with teachers of every stripe from Wicca to Irish Celtic
to traditional Christianity, Jewish Renewal, Buddhism...since I
am on spiritual path, that was encouraging, it would give me a lot
of nourishment. So that's how you lean into it; you start to investigate.
If the doors open and it seems to flow, probably, it is a knowing.
If you run into roadblocks, if gates come up and it just does not
flow, then maybe it isn't a knowing and you should just move on.
At first, it looked like it was not flowing, then
it did. I found a job and a house and I met lots of wonderful people.
And eventually I moved here. But when I got the word "Boulder,"
I was not immediately ready to sell my house and move. I had to
lean into it, explore it first.
And sometimes, your knowings don't lead you to something
you consider a happy outcome. Sometimes, your inner guidance wants
you to have an experience you need to have, but that you would not
sign up for. Those kinds of knowings are important, too. Thomas
Moore, the author, said if you are going to live by your intuition
and follow those inner knowings, you have to be willing to fall
on your face nine out of ten times. So it does not mean that just
because you get a knowing you are going to have a great, perfect
outcome. But you will be living in an authentic way that feels aligned
with your deepest self.
Why are there celebrities in the book?
They're a small percentage - 20 or 30 of the 150 people in the book.
I wanted to include famous people because we all have a feeling,
and I think "People" magazine and other celebrity magazines
encourage this, that these stars get all the goodies. They are so
much in love, they have their beautiful kids, their beautiful house,
and you sit there and feel worse and worse as you turn the pages.
But when I looked at people who are playing the game
at a high level, who are in the public eye, I found that all of
them had to go through this humbling narrows just the same as I
did. Carly Simon, for example. Her career was on the skids at the
same time she was diagnosed with breast cancer, had a mastectomy
and chemotherapy, at the same time her kids were leaving and she
and her husband were deciding to live separately. So she had a complete
reduction, where, as she put it, she felt "discarded like a
dog." She started recording songs in her daughter's old bedroom
and mixing them herself, which is what she had done at age 19, making
music to please herself, because she said, "That was the only
star I could follow."
If you ask around, everybody has a period when it
seemed their life just fell apart. It happens at different ages,
but I don't think anybody gets through life without going through
a time like that. And of course the secret is that those are the
times when we have the greatest potential for real growth. Because
when everything is going well, you don't have any motivation to
work hard on yourself, to become a more conscious, more connected,
realized person. But when everything falls apart, and you abandon
all hope, that's when the light enters.
The end point of all of these stories seems to be
the need to live in the present moment, that we have to embrace
what is happening now.
Yes, it all leads in the direction of letting go, being open, and
being here now. It's real simple to say, harder to do. One of my
main motivations behind this book is that a lot of what is written
about getting older is kind of boosterism: you can do anything,
you can have a great life, it will all be fine, you can look young,
you can stay young. They don't really take into account the deep
inner work that can happen at this time of life. And as I said,
most people will experience a call to this deep work whether they
want to do it or not. So I really wanted to stress that it is not
all tripping though the flowers to the final exit sign.
In the narrows, when you are reduced, made naked,
it is fundamentally about the stripping away of what you thought
was your identity. I'd always thought, "I am a mother, a writer,
a partner." Now, I am not an active mother, I am not a writer
anyone wants to hire, and I have no partner. Who am I? This time
of life will require that we look deeper at who we really are, and
that we come up with an authentic sense. We won't get it from a
teacher or a master or a book. This is a generation that does not
trust accepted wisdom or rules, that likes to find out for themselves.
I think we will operate that same way in the next part of life.
You've been friends with Dr. Weil for 40 years, and
he has the last word in your book. You tell a great story about
your lunch conversation at a teahouse in Boulder.
Yes, when Andy and I were walking out afterward, I nodded toward
a very old man in a wheelchair, and said, "That could be us
one day, wheeling along."
Andy looked at the man and looked back at me, imagining
the two of us in wheelchairs. Then he raised an eyebrow and said,
"I'll race you."
To contact Sara Davidson or share your story, visit
www.saradavidson.com.
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