The Joy of "Ageless"
I celebrated my 65th birthday this week secure in the fact
I’m not yet “old.” That’s because I continue failing to check the boxes that I
believe would qualify me for that definition.
When I was growing up, “old” meant looking, dressing and
acting a certain way. That involved wearing pantyhose, keeping a weekly beauty
parlor appointment, never sleeping late, and always wearing lipstick. If that’s
the standard, I’m not old yet … and I really don’t plan to be.
I haven’t bought pantyhose in 25 years. I go to a salon, not
a beauty parlor - and only every couple of months for a trim and touch-up. The
closest I get to lipstick is Burt’s Bees tinted lip balm stashed in every
pocket, drawer and bag. And yes, I can still sleep late like a teenager.
But hitting the Medicare-qualifying milestone of “old” in
the eyes of the government prompted me to consider more deeply this whole idea
of “aging.”
What exactly is old?
How old do you have to be before you qualify as “old”?
Is it when you start having those age-related medical tests
like a colonoscopy, mammogram and bone density test?
Is it when you qualify for the senior discount at the
pharmacy?
Is it when the server calls you ma’am instead of miss?
Is it when those old people cartoons on napkins don’t seem
so funny anymore?
I’m finding it increasingly difficult to look at random
people and tell their age. Growing up, I identified “my age” as someone in my
grade at school. When I moved back to Columbia ten years after college
graduation, the “my age” definition seemed to have shifted.
People I once thought of as “way older” or “way younger” when
I was a kid suddenly seemed “my age.” I’ve laughed often with an adult friend
who was a cool, senior cheerleader when I was a nerdy eighth grader. Now we say
we went to high school together.
I’m on the tail end of the Baby Boomers and the leading edge
of friends starting to retire. I’ve long since received my first AARP
invitation and now technically qualify to live in my parents’ retirement
community.
Someone recently told me she thought I was “aging gracefully.”
Is that a nice way of saying she noticed I’d stopped coloring my hair?
So, I’m seeking a descriptor for somewhere between “middle
age” and “old” … especially if “old”
involves lipstick, beauty parlors, panty hose and sleepless nights.
Maybe that word is “ageless.”
Does age even matter?
I’ve had so many conversations with friends recently about how
much chronological age even matters. Is it just a number on a driver’s license?
Should age drive our decisions? Should we consider age more a matter of how we
feel and not how we look?
A painful elbow injury last summer reminded me that age does
affect how I feel. I’m fairly active. I know my limits and when I can push
them. While I’m often the oldest in a workout class, I can typically keep up.
But when I asked my doctor what I could do to heal my elbow and prevent another
injury, all he could offer was, “Stop aging.”
I recently came up on several black and white photos of
myself doing something I enjoy immensely – playing the uke with my band. The
photos were taken about eight years ago and clearly illustrate joy,
concentration, fun, focus and passion in playing.
But when I looked closer, I noticed the lens that had
reflected joy, fun and passion the first time I looked was also capturing my
age spots, wrinkled neck and sagging jawline.
I immediately realized I was judging myself in a way I’d
never judge my friends. I quickly recalibrated my thought process recalling how
one friend had said she thought I looked like a “badass” in the photos (I took
that as positive feedback).
Maybe this friend had also noticed the age spots, sagging
jawline and wrinkled neck. But what really came through was the fact we were
enjoying the heck out of something we were doing just for the joy of it.
And that’s what I call ageless!
(photo credit: Shell Suber)
You are an ageless badass.
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