Ronnie at Time Goes By and Rain at Rainy Day Thoughts both wrote about aging and all its discomforts and our honesty with that. So I had to add my two cents.
Remember when people carried you everywhere and wouldn't put you down so that you could explore freedom on your own...no? Well at my age I can explore all I want and society provides artificial joints, walkers, mobile wheel chairs, pain killers and nice level boardwalks so that I can continue to do this exploration and I can do it on my own.
Difficulties in aging as a toddler: I remember when I was a toddler the first time I hit my head on the doorknob, and I realized that getting taller had its disadvantages. The next time I had to wear pants that were too tight and a dress that cut me under the armpits because I had outgrown them overnight. Now I am only slightly smaller than I was a few years ago and I have stopped growing and I like my height just fine, thank you. I no longer have to worry about doorknobs or clothes. If I outgrow my clothes, it is my own damn fault.
I remember when getting dressed was something that required intense study. The right length skirt, the perfect blouse, those awful bad hair days. Those were my teen years. Today getting dressed is primarily getting clean and finding something clean and comfortable to wear. I sometimes care that I don't look like a bag lady, but I don't dwell on it, because I do not care all that much what others think about how I look.
I remember the strain of new job interviews, the pain of writing proposals, the agony of public speaking, the careful dance of arguments with colleagues and the constipation of biting my tongue during my adult years when dealing with a crazy person in the office. I no longer worry about any of that stuff. I will not argue with you if I think I cannot win you over to my way of thinking, but I also do not hide my beliefs nor fear them. I will also listen to your side because I also do not think my beliefs are carved in stone.
I remember the agony of watching my children grow and leave me to pursue adventures of their own. The sad dullness of an empty house and my being fired as a parent. That was a real difficult age. I have out grown that agony and in these elder years I find I can accept the fact that I must allow my children to make their own mistakes and live their own lives, because that is what I wished from my parents. I also welcome all the free time I now have.
I remember during my 50's the concern and a little dread about aging and the difficulty of looking into those elder years ahead and becoming an old person who would have little to do with their time. Now that I have arrived here, I find it is just like being a younger person. It has its challenges and rewards and it is what you make of it. Some of the challenges can be overcome and others must be accepted with grace and compromise, like that teenage figure you were given. And the rewards at this time in my life are are a morning sunrise and and an evening sunset and all the time in the world to enjoy them.
So difficulties in aging are just a part of life at any age and if we did not have them, I am thinking we would not enjoy life nearly as much.
I saw an interview with the poet, Christian Wiman, who was diagnosed with a serious cancer in his 30's and I was amazed and pleased by the grace that he shows day to day. So difficulties must be handled at every age. Quit your whining.
Remember when people carried you everywhere and wouldn't put you down so that you could explore freedom on your own...no? Well at my age I can explore all I want and society provides artificial joints, walkers, mobile wheel chairs, pain killers and nice level boardwalks so that I can continue to do this exploration and I can do it on my own.
Difficulties in aging as a toddler: I remember when I was a toddler the first time I hit my head on the doorknob, and I realized that getting taller had its disadvantages. The next time I had to wear pants that were too tight and a dress that cut me under the armpits because I had outgrown them overnight. Now I am only slightly smaller than I was a few years ago and I have stopped growing and I like my height just fine, thank you. I no longer have to worry about doorknobs or clothes. If I outgrow my clothes, it is my own damn fault.
I remember when getting dressed was something that required intense study. The right length skirt, the perfect blouse, those awful bad hair days. Those were my teen years. Today getting dressed is primarily getting clean and finding something clean and comfortable to wear. I sometimes care that I don't look like a bag lady, but I don't dwell on it, because I do not care all that much what others think about how I look.
I remember the strain of new job interviews, the pain of writing proposals, the agony of public speaking, the careful dance of arguments with colleagues and the constipation of biting my tongue during my adult years when dealing with a crazy person in the office. I no longer worry about any of that stuff. I will not argue with you if I think I cannot win you over to my way of thinking, but I also do not hide my beliefs nor fear them. I will also listen to your side because I also do not think my beliefs are carved in stone.
I remember the agony of watching my children grow and leave me to pursue adventures of their own. The sad dullness of an empty house and my being fired as a parent. That was a real difficult age. I have out grown that agony and in these elder years I find I can accept the fact that I must allow my children to make their own mistakes and live their own lives, because that is what I wished from my parents. I also welcome all the free time I now have.
I remember during my 50's the concern and a little dread about aging and the difficulty of looking into those elder years ahead and becoming an old person who would have little to do with their time. Now that I have arrived here, I find it is just like being a younger person. It has its challenges and rewards and it is what you make of it. Some of the challenges can be overcome and others must be accepted with grace and compromise, like that teenage figure you were given. And the rewards at this time in my life are are a morning sunrise and and an evening sunset and all the time in the world to enjoy them.
So difficulties in aging are just a part of life at any age and if we did not have them, I am thinking we would not enjoy life nearly as much.
I saw an interview with the poet, Christian Wiman, who was diagnosed with a serious cancer in his 30's and I was amazed and pleased by the grace that he shows day to day. So difficulties must be handled at every age. Quit your whining.