In The System

Over tea the other day a friend and I were musing aloud, as older women tend to do over afternoon tea, about the sorry state of the world and what might be done about it, when she suggested, “Why don’t the women of the world just band together and fight the system?!” Of course we both knew this was like saying, “Why can’t there be peace on earth?” – pie-in-the-sky talk. 

Nevertheless, I recklessly responded with, “Oh, I have some theories about why women don’t!  Maybe up to half of them are married and comfortably in the system and don’t see the need to change it,” I said. “Plus, nearly one quarter of older women are on antidepressants that might be blunting their senses and causing them to be apathetic about the overall situation. That leaves the rest of us, many of us divorcees, either too timid, too exhausted, too broke, or too powerless to fight back.”

This wild theorizing steered our sedate teatime conversation (Who would guess that two sweet little octogenarians would be wannabe revolutionaries?) into why so many older women are on antidepressants. As I wrote in my last controversial WOW post, “What Could Be Good About Feeling Bad?,” “the antidepressant drug industry in the U.S. is big, big business. It earned $6.19 billion in 2024, with a projected rise to $8.67 billion by 2034.

“And white women are the largest users. According to a CDC (Centers for Disease Control) 2020 data brief, ‘Nearly one-quarter of American women aged 60 and over take antidepressants.’  

“‘Why, I wonder,’ I wrote in that blogpost, ‘do so many grown women need to be subdued in this way?  Could it be that we older women would pose a threat to the prevailing order of things if we were freer to think and act and feel to the fullest?’ (https://blog.bonnieleeblack.com/what-could-be-good-about-feeling-bad/ ).”

I know there are systems and there are systems – like wheels within wheels. But in this context I see “the system” as “the prevailing order of things” mentioned above. It’s what we older women had been raised to believe unquestioningly is “normal” – a “man’s world” – a world predominately run by straight white men, for whom all other groups are subordinate. 

First, I must make clear I’m not condemning the women who take antidepressants. For many people psychotropic drugs are life savers, which is of course a good thing. My purpose is to dig deeper to try to uncover some of the possible systemic causes of their depression. Why are so many women given antidepressants in the first place? Why are so many white American women over 60 so depressed?

Here’s my main theory: They feel they’ve been discarded.

I’ve lived in Africa for a total of nine years – in three different countries for three years each – and I observed that by and large older African women are revered. They are honored. Especially in Mali, I saw, they are treated like queens. These women are not depressed. On the contrary, after a lifetime of catering to others, they are now happy to be sitting in thronelike armchairs, giving orders to and being catered to by everyone younger.

Similarly, here in Mexico, where I’ve lived for ten years now, abuelas (grandmothers) are highly regarded. It’s a beautiful, enviable thing to see, and I see it every day. We older gringas, too, are the beneficiaries of this general respect for older women.

Perhaps, I sometimes think, it’s only very old cultures that appreciate the intrisic value of older women?

Sadly, in the still-young U.S.A, which places inordinate and unreasonable value on youth and beauty, postmenopausal women are has-beens. If you’re no longer young and beautiful, and you can no longer bear children (preferably white children, which only white women can bear), then you’re sidelined. You’ve become invisible, discardable. 

This is indeed depresssing!

(Stock image of an “ideal” family in this “man’s world”)

To illustrate, let’s imagine Abigail and Chuck, a nice white couple from the Midwestern U.S., who met in college, fell in love and married soon after graduation. Abigail taught kindergarten for a few years, but when their children arrived, she stayed home to care for them while Chuck’s career advanced.

They became a happy little suburban family, and all was well. As the years passed, however, and as Chuck traveled more and more on business and the kids went off to college and beyond, Abigail felt increasingly isolated, abandoned, and old. She went through a difficult menopause, and her hair turned prematurely gray. She and Chuck no longer made love.

Then Chuck, a successful business executive by now, announced to her that he wanted a divorce. He confessed he was involved with a younger woman and they hoped to marry. Abigail was devastated. She felt she’d done “everything right” in her life. Why was she being thrown away like this? How could she start over at nearly 60, when being a housewife and mother had been her whole life?

She went to her doctor who pronounced her “deeply depressed” and prescribed antidepressants. They helped. She stopped crying. She was no longer in pain. She no longer wished to die. In fact, she felt nothing. She certainly didn’t have the fire in her belly needed to become a revolutionary for change.

 No, it took all the energy she had left just to try to pick herself up and get back into the system – lose weight, dye her hair, buy new clothes, read self-help books, relearn how to date (Chuck had been the only boy she’d ever dated), and find a new husband, a good man, who would love her and provide for her “until death do us part.” She knew she couldn’t support herself; she had to have a financially secure man. Because this is still a man’s world.

Multiply Abigail’s story by hundreds of thousands (or maybe more – approximately 3.4 million American women 65 and older were divorced in 2021, I just discovered), and you’ll begin to see why women can’t “just band together and fight the system,” as my friend suggested over tea. Teatime talk is one thing; action is quite another. But we must begin somewhere.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 

For much more on this subject, read: https://wilewomen.com/blogs/journal/why-are-mostly-white-american-women-over-40-the-biggest-antidepressant-market-on-earth-and-why-are-we-ok-with-it

12 thoughts on “In The System”

  1. The statistics are devastating and your point about our elder women being revered in older counties is a lessen we won’t soon learn in this country. If more women were voted into seats of authority, I know our world would be a better place. Have we already dismissed the legacy of RB Ginsberg?!

    1. Ah, yes, Michael dear, thinking things will ever change in this regard is definitely pie-in-the-sky thinking. Cyborgs will take over first, I fear. Anyway, we can still hope the U.S.A. grows up. And as for RBG? A distant memory.

  2. Hi Bonnie – Interesting perspectives. I never knew so many women are taking antidepressants. As a colorectal cancer survivor worried about recurrence, I take 30mg of Duloxetine every night to help me face the coming day. It works. Best regards.

    1. Thank you, Mikel, and best wishes to you as you continue your recovery. I’ve just ordered your book on surviving colorectal cancer, and I’m looking forward to reading it. (For others wishing to read it, here is the link for the 99 cent Kindle edition: https://bit.ly/4llu1HG.)

  3. The unfortunate truth is that even if Abigail had gone back to work teaching her kindergartners, by retirement age she would probably still have far less in SS accumulation to be able to draw on in retirement although perhaps she’d have been in a teachers’ pension plan. Divorce leaves many older women near destitute.

    I too am an older (74 soon) woman who’s appalled at the ubiquity of SSRI use, but I’m not sure that much has changed over the decades. In 1965-ish, the Rolling Stones sang about “Mother’s Little Helper” which was Librium, one of a different class of psychoactive medications that were prescribed to relieve women’s mental and emotional workload.

    The rub is what’s to be done about it. How to make a world in which people are truly partners in their relationships and in their homes. We don’t have a lot of successful models, sadly.

    1. Oh, so true, Maryann! Abigail’s story deserves to be better fleshed out — into a book, maybe? But, I wonder, who would read it? Who would publish it at this point? Who really cares about the Abigails of this world? Certainly not their financially comfy “sisters” who pride themselves on making good marriage choices by marrying wealthy men.

      Yes, if only women could/would band together for the benefit of all. I’m reading Yuval Noah Harari’s book HOMO DEUS right now, and he says the only way that humans have been able to get big things done throughout
      history is by ORGANIZING themselves AND believing in the same things (I’m paraphrasing, of course). It
      seems to me that women are too fractured to do this. So the inequities and injustices mount up. Yes, that’s the rub.

      Perhaps younger women are getting better at forming more equitable and fair partnerships. I hope so. But until ALL women join together to fix the injustices in the old, white-boys’ system, I fear not much will change.

  4. Dear Bon,
    The first thing I did after reading your blog was google “What percentage of Americans are women over 60?” The top AI block gave me figures from Administration for Community Living (ACL.gov), which I will assume are true for the sake of argument. “In 1922, there were 31.9 million women aged 65+, representing 17.3% of the total US population.” As this is a sizable chunk of America, I think we can assume that forces are working to control it and keep it in check. I know from personal experience that being over sixty-five frees a person from feeling she or he has to conform, carry water for any political entity, or remain silent about any perceived injustice. Is it any wonder that mass sedation is being employed to keep this group in its traditional place? Banding together to harness political power is difficult because it is the very thing the entrenched are tirelessly trying to prevent. But if it could be done, it could determine any and all elections.
    Love,
    Paul

    1. Thank you SO much for your thoughts on this, dear Paul. (I’m assuming your figures are for 2022 and not 1922 :-)) I especially love your line, “Is it any wonder that mass sedation is being employed to keep this group in its traditional place?” As ever, you got my main point: Older (which is to say potentially Bolder) women are being drugged into ongoing compliance with “the system.”

  5. This seems a bit unfair, Bonnie. Visit any Democratic office near any election, and 90% of the volunteers are women. I’d estimate 75% of people who show up for protests are women. That’s why it was so funny to see the photo of a man holding a sign that said, “If a straight white guy like me is out here protesting, you know it’s really bad.“ What he was really saying was that, other than in the ‘70s, when men were being sent to war and didn’t want to die for an ill-gotten cause, they have not been on the front lines of saving democracy or fighting for justice. Women have.

    1. Good points, Be! Thank you. Yes, demonstrations are a good place to begin, and sometimes they do manage to change things. But I was referring to the larger patriarchal system.

  6. Oh, and women’s complicity in it, right? Never more evident than in the rightwing but I suppose that also applies to the left.

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