At a certain age you make discoveries about yourself. Above fifty you realize mirrors are far too prevalent. You have begun to appreciate comfort over
appearance. So clothes and footwear
reflect that. It is the slippery slope,
which will end eventually with you shopping in your pyjamas and slippers, but
you have decided to be realistic instead of in a state of denial.
Other people become sources of amusement. The types you recognise bring a knowing smile to your face. Those you don’t bring a curious welcoming grin to your face. Those who you vaguely suspect you know but may have forgotten get an odd smile but with raised eyebrows. Small children and babies are delightful to watch and bring a strange happiness to your heart. After all, it seems only yesterday you were climbing frames and sitting on swings yourself, shrill with excitement.
Other people become sources of amusement. The types you recognise bring a knowing smile to your face. Those you don’t bring a curious welcoming grin to your face. Those who you vaguely suspect you know but may have forgotten get an odd smile but with raised eyebrows. Small children and babies are delightful to watch and bring a strange happiness to your heart. After all, it seems only yesterday you were climbing frames and sitting on swings yourself, shrill with excitement.
Your grown up children now view you as unreliable, forgetful
and naïve. When did they stop needing
you to hold their hand crossing roads and suddenly start lecturing you on
traffic safety? It was only yesterday
you were terrified of them being abducted by strangers. Now, they lecture you on directions, details
of time, appointments and behave oddly protective of you in crowded city
centres. You took them for their jabs
for measles etc now they ask in cross tones ‘Did you remember to take your
medication?’ They are embarrassed by
you on a regular basis because you have no longer the self consciousness of
youth. Not giving a darn about what
others think has severed the control reins. Things that used to embarrass you no longer make a dent in your
ego. It helps that the balloon-like ego
of your youth has gone. That feeling of
being brighter, chosen, special has sunk down to a wrinkled prune. Making a dent means just rearranging the folds
and has little effect.
You don't suffer from youth’s primary complaint – boredom. A scene in your head or a taste can bring alive your past. A scent can drag memories out of the shadows. When you meet old friends you greet each other like veteran warriors, sharing stories of triumphs and displaying wounds of bitter defeats. You lift your cheek to feel the breeze, to soak up the sun’s rays and sigh with the bliss of it all. To be alive and to relish each second that passes. What a richness! If life is wasted on the youth it is embraced and enjoyed by the rest of us.