鈥業鈥檓 thankful鈥: A centenarian鈥檚 approach to life
This centenarian counts gratitude as a key contributor to her long, happy life, one that included growing up with Nat King Cole and Gwendolyn Brooks.聽
This centenarian counts gratitude as a key contributor to her long, happy life, one that included growing up with Nat King Cole and Gwendolyn Brooks.聽
If age is more than a number, what else is it? For Martha Mae Dorsey Boles, age 103, it鈥檚 also an increased sense of thankfulness. Mrs. Boles was born in 1918, the last time there was a pandemic. She was too young to remember that public health crisis, and for this one, she鈥檚 too lovingly sheltered by her family to be exposed to its harm.
Throughout the world, more people are living beyond the 100-year marker. In the U.S., the Census Bureau predicts there will be more than 130,000 centenarians by 2030. That鈥檚 a small number of people as a percentage of the country鈥檚 nearly 334 million citizens. But centenarians are worth watching because it鈥檚 not just their length of days but also their quality of life that makes knowing more about them vital to us all.
While science has acknowledged many factors leading to longevity, Mrs. Boles, the mother of four, grandmother of seven, and great-grandmother of four, credits one more: gratitude. She says being thankful for the good things in life has played a role in her overall health, especially now that she鈥檚 in her 100s.聽
鈥淲hen I can鈥檛 go to sleep, I think about all the good things that went on in my life, and then I have such good sleep and good dreams,鈥 says Mrs. Boles. Longevity has been a family tradition: Her mother lived to be 99, and three of her six siblings well into their 90s.
Memories of history in the making
Some of the good memories she鈥檚 thankful for include listening to a fellow student at Chicago鈥檚 Fuller Elementary School play the piano during assemblies. That young man was Nathaniel Adams Cole, known to the world as Nat King Cole, a jazz pianist, singer, and the first Black man to host a nationally broadcast television show. She remembers her younger sister, Anita, playing with Gwendolyn Brooks 鈥 the first Black recipient of a Pulitzer Prize and Illinois鈥 poet laureate for more than 30 years.
There are memories of her DuSable High School friend Timuel Black, the Chicago historian and civil rights leader. Mr. Black, who died this year at 102, and Mrs. Boles frequently attended a school reunion that honored civics teacher Mary Herrick, until the pandemic curtailed the annual gathering.
鈥淢iss Herrick, a white woman 鈥 all the teachers were white back then 鈥 shared African American history with us, even though it wasn鈥檛 in our schoolbooks,鈥 recalls Mrs. Boles. 鈥淪he also gathered us at her home to talk to and meet Black leaders. Once James Weldon Johnson was there.鈥 (A poet, Johnson wrote 鈥淟ift Every Voice and Sing,鈥 often referred to as the Black national anthem.)
An avid reader as a child, Mrs. Boles brings new meaning to the term 鈥渓ifelong learner.鈥 Though her eyes are not what they used to be, learning hasn鈥檛 stopped, just changed media. Now, she learns by listening to the news and documentaries on public television. She is especially curious about the decades of her childhood.
鈥淚 can get on the computer and learn about anything,鈥 she says, 鈥淚 was sheltered by my parents. It wasn鈥檛 until I was a young woman that I realized that they kept a lot of things from us when we were growing up. There was a civil rights worker whose home was burned down. It was near ours. I didn鈥檛 know about that until much later in life because my family didn鈥檛 talk about hurtful subjects.鈥
鈥淟ove will cure everything鈥
What was shared, notes Mrs. Boles, was her parents鈥 faith, something she still finds important. This learning came more by what John Dorsey, a Baptist, and Mattie Mae Horner Dorsey, an Episcopalian did 鈥 not what they said. 鈥淢y parents were quiet people,鈥 says Mrs. Boles of her father, who worked as a hotel waiter, and her mother, a homemaker. 鈥淭hey let lots of people room with us until they could find a job and get settled. This was when the Great Migration was happening, and Black people were moving up from the South.鈥
One person who stopped by the home was a 10-year-old boy, George Boles. He was there with his grandfather, who was visiting a friend staying at the Dorseys鈥 home. Some years later, Martha Dorsey and George Boles met again, wed in 1947, and reared their children, remaining close until his passing in 1999. 鈥淚 never felt more loved,鈥 she says of their union. 聽聽
As she鈥檚 moved along in years, Mrs. Boles has come to know that things that were once considered deficits can become assets. 鈥淚 always was the slowest person in the family,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y sisters used to tease, 鈥楳artha is slower than molasses in the winter.鈥 But being slow and careful is a lifesaver now. People are doing things so speedy today, and it鈥檚 just getting speedier as the years go by. I don鈥檛 cook now, but I used to take my time cooking. Now I take my time eating. If you enjoy something, you should take your time with it.鈥
Not one to be rushed, Mrs. Boles never drove a car, although she did take driving lessons. 鈥淚 liked riding the streetcars,鈥 she says.
Grateful for life and the gift of having many good memories, Mrs. Boles has learned that some things need to be forgotten if you鈥檙e going to be happy. 鈥淚f something disturbs me, I just throw it out of my mind,鈥 she says. 鈥淟ife has disappointments, but I put them aside. My mother used to say, 鈥楲ove will cure everything.鈥 It鈥檚 certainly kept me going ... and I鈥檓 thankful.鈥