Lady Gaga is everywhere. When I scan the channels there she is--in yet another interview, another video, another performance, another commercial. And I admit, I can't get enough of it.
But while I'm enjoying the ride, there's a lingering malaise that's sitting in the pit of my stomach like an undigested dessert, and I'm getting a tummyache.
It's strange listening to Gaga, because her music has reignited a love of pop that I haven't felt in a long time, and I feel something like a teenager again, when music was the sustenance of my existence. But here's the rub: I'm not a teenager anymore--far from it, in fact--and all that went with my love of music in those days is long gone.
For example, when I listened to pop music as a young person, it stoked the dreams of me doing that myself one day, and so much of what I chose to do was put towards making those dreams a reality. As a kid, I dutifully took my music lessons, and as I got older, I joined bands, developed my songwriting and performing abilities, put my own band together, and hit the road. I recorded and released two CDs, was a critics' darling, and came close to publishing and record label deals, which always ended up falling through.
Undeterred, I kept at it, but as the years began to pass, an eerie feeling soon emerged, which was this: If my dreams don't come true, if I don't end up a truly professional singer/songwriter (who no longer needs the day job), then what will happen to me? Who will I be without my dreams, or worse, without those dreams fulfilled?
For years, even decades, I didn't allow those worries in, because like any good young person, I thought I would live forever. And I believed, perhaps naively, that provided my heart was in my work, as long as I didn’t sell out, then everything would turn out fine. There was nothing to be concerned about. I worked hard, my music was good, and I was committed. What could go wrong?
Well, what went wrong far exceeded anything that I could have imagined in my wildest dreams, as my health, which was never very good in the first place, took a dive in 2004 that brought me to a full stop. And just like that, it was all over.
While I’ve pursued other creative interests during this time, like writing and painting, and even dance for awhile, music will always be my first love as songwriting is what I do best. But when I became so ill and was racked with such unrelenting pain, there just wasn’t anything to write about anymore, and I knew I was done for a very very long time, maybe for good.
Whether it was creative exhaustion or the inability to put physical suffering into a song lyric (or a combination of both), I knew that my music days, for the most part, were behind me, but I was just too sick at the time to grieve over it, as most of the time, I was just trying to stay alive.
But in the last few months, I’ve noticed that my spirits have picked up, which has led me to picking up my guitar again, right around the same time Lady Gaga began promoting the release of her new disc. While her songs inspire me so, I painfully realize that I’m no longer the teenager who can fantasize that I’ll be like her one day. And frankly, I don’t know what to do with these feelings.
In short, I feel like crying all the time it seems, despite my rebounding spirits, because the days of dreaming about a music career are over. Let’s face it: No record company is looking to hire a 52-year-old pop star.
Some have suggested that I get back into the game as simply a songwriter, but even that takes money (to record demos), hence the realization of another grim reality: I’m flat broke. This illness has wiped me out so completely that I live in a Section 8 HUD apartment, am on Social Security disability, and am in chronic pain most of the time. This is NOT how I expected my life to turn out.
So when I see Lady Gaga in all her glory, talking about how she “stuck to it” to achieve her dreams, I think of the millions and millions of other aspiring performers who also gave it their all, sometimes for their entire lives, and have ended up with absolutely nothing, other than some wonderful songs that no one knows or cares about.
On a positive note, I’m so skilled as a songwriter that I no longer have to hone my craft for a lifetime in order to pen a tune. Instead of dreaming about it, I can pick up the guitar or sit at the piano and just do it, provided the inspiration is there, which is a BIG proviso, by the way. Without inspiration, I’m no better than a no-talent hack with nothing to say.
But the negative note seems to be ruling the day, it seems, for at least this day. I just heard a passing car blasting Gaga’s “The Edge of Glory,” which is an edge I sat on for a very long time. The scales just never tipped my way, and there’s a giant ache now where my dreams used to be.
Maybe it’s time to grieve for them, as I gave up everything to have them…marriage, children, and careers in other fields. I went for it 100 percent without a net, and now I’m splat on the ground after having fallen off the wire.
I don’t regret it—not a bit. But I feel just so so sad.
******************************************
About me:
A live performance, 2003: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKJV2u9uh2M&feature=related
My Etsy Shop (what I'm doing now): http://www.maryannfarley.etsy.com
A recorded song, with photos of last October's Occupy demonstration: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTKobZr19c8&feature=related
****************************************


Salon.com
Comments
It's absurd and sick that our dreams need to be fulfilled by 30 or we're finished, but it's our society's reality.
"We endeavor to persevere."-Churchill
Now if I could just convince myself...
I rated this before but my computer crashed so came back to comment.
rated with hugs
I seem to be echoing Lunchlady all over the place lately but Yes ! Give us a song ! If Brassawe can do it ( check out Cleva over there ) you can !
ps. "Without inspiration, I’m no better than a no-talent hack with nothing to say."
Never a truer word, Mary Ann. Thanks for this post.
Fernsy--I think you've hit on something that everyone here would agree with. Yes, why ISN'T there a need or a place in this world for a 52-year-old singer/songwriter...someone unknown.
If I were a lawyer, I'd be at the top of my game at this age, and respected for all of my experience. Yet as a singer/songwriter, when I'm ALSO at the top of my game in terms of my craft, I'm somehow not valued. How insane is that?
Again, thank you all for such loving thoughts.
:)
Rated. I'm wondering what I want to be when I grow up, so far, a race car driver, a forest ranger, or a famous movie star!! :D
Success is at least in part, a lottery. You had a lot of competition from folks who may have been better connected ("It's who you know, not what you know").
I guess one piece of advice I'd offer you are these four words: Forgive yourself, a lot.
Rated, with hugs.
sometimes i forget that.
I was just thinking much the same thoughts. Millions of people who try an artistic career end up in the same situation. It is hard.
I wanted to be a writer, but then I went through a catastrophic divorce and developed major depression and OCD. My brain chemistry changed, I just could not write as well. I could still write but not nearly as easily.
I am 60 and I have some of the same regrets, and wondering if I made a mistake to do this. I think it just goes with the territory. But if we had not tried, we probably would not have been happy. We would have been haunted with the feeling that we could have made it but were too chicken.
I have not faced the health tragedy you have. But I have some of the same regrets.
Just be gentle with yourself, and try to survive. I think you did the right thing. At least you had some success before this all happened.
Just a thought.
Your reflections remind me of a teacher I used to share my feelings with. I told him, "But its too late for me to be in the Olympics or become a ballerina." And he said, "Yes but you can still play sports or dance."
Or I thought about artists who get better with age - like Neil Young or Bruce Springsteen. It's not all about a record company and becoming a pop star; it's about staying true to your art and advancing it - for yourself. Not that you're asking for advice - and sometimes I get annoyed when OS becomes too focused on the problem and less about the writing - but your art is your art and always will be.
You're quite the talented musician by the way. I still remember the videos you posted a while back. You should have stuck one at the bottom of this.
It's really not all that different with art. An artist needs to be heard and understood, as it's the dialog between artist and audience that provides so much fuel to continue. Just look at how much appreciation Gaga constantly gives to her fans.
While I did have my share of appreciative fans, maybe a part of me was greedy--I wanted more. I prefer to think, though, that I was just the good mother to my songs, who wanted them to go out into the world and be all they could be, as I like to think they would have added something of value to the public song catalog.
Maybe that's what pains me most...that, more than me, they never got their chance. Not matter what your creation may be, it will always be painful should a piece of work not find its audience.
Whether or not one chooses to continue is an entirely different matter.
Thanks again for such helpful thoughts.
I was delighted to log onto open.salon this morning after a lengthy absence on my part to find that you have a new post. As I mentioned to you before, the first post I read on open.salon was one of yours that I found through a Google search for a certain subject and I found you, and since then I've read all your posts and look forward to new ones because you inspire me.
I'm sad to hear about your aspirations not quite being fulfilled and again find that my life is similarly parallel to yours in some respects. I too have spent all of my life thus far striving to become a professional singer but with lack of a supporting network of people around me, I've found it hopeless to continue on with my dream.
Again though, reading your post, I've found a spark of inspiration that's slowly growing. I may not become a famous singer and being a pessimist I am certain I won't but I'm still feeling I can accomplish something with my music. I've never toured, never had a full band, but perhaps there is a chance to share my music with some, to give life to my dreams, if only for a brief moment, for a small crowed.
I hope you keep with singing and songwriting. I'd love to hear you sing and read/hear songs you've written. You inspire me and I hope you continue to find inspiration for you and know that your fans here will always think of you as a star!