Monday, August 04, 2025

To Hell with Aging!

 

On August 17, I turn 75 years old. That’s a BIG number! Does it mean I’m old now? When do people get old? What’s the calculus between old and young?

Last night I made an impromptu run to Kroger at 10:15 to pick something up. When I arrived and parked on a lot almost devoid of cars, it felt a bit spooky.  I forgot the store only keeps one door open at night, and I parked near the wrong door. As I exited my car, I looked around, checking out the surroundings. There’ve been a lot of carjackings and juggings in Houston and I didn’t want any trouble.

Hmm. Looks scary with no people around. Am I safe? I mean, I’m an old lady … Hmm. Am I an old lady?

I immediately thought about myself at 23, head up, shoulders back, arms swinging, striding purposefully down the sidewalk near my home in Laclede Town, the avant-garde, mixed-use apartment complex I lived in when I went to graduate school at Washington University in St. Louis.

Here I am, shoulders back, head up, arms swinging, striding purposefully across the lot, just like 1973. Is that old walking? No, it is NOT!!

Feeling a little cocky – just try something, amorphous villain, I’ll clock you good with my purse! – I strode into Kroger, bought my item, and walked back to the car, safe and sound. But the question of oldness didn’t leave me. What does it mean to BE old?

The classic indicators:  you’re frailer, slower, unsteady at times. You have under-performing quads and hamstrings that make it hard to pick yourself up. You suffer innumerable aches and pains. Unexpected confusion hits you at times. You have fatigue but can’t sleep.

I recognize all those signatures of aging in myself, but here’s the rub. I’ve had them for 36 years! At 39, I received the devastating diagnosis of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus. In a transaction I’ve immortalized in my recently finished memoir,* I told the doctor I had heard of two kinds of lupus, one that was a skin disease and one that kills people. She replied, “You have the kind that kills.”

That rude introduction to my future unnerved me, but lupus did not kill me, at least it hasn’t yet. What lupus did was give me all the attributes of old age decades before I should have had them. It’s been a rollercoaster ride of incapacities, impairments, and infirmities interspersed with periods of relative well-being. I feel thankful for every day I’ve had, whether in pain or not, to share a life of love with Michael, to watch our children (and now grandchildren) grow up, to find personal fulfillment.

And where does this reflection lead me? To hell with old age – I reject it! I won’t claim young, but I’ll claim steadfastly to standing upright and moving forward despite all the years in my tally.

*My memoir is The Requirements of Love: Forging a Family Against the Odds. It hasn’t been published yet, but I’m working on that.


4 comments:

Trilla said...

From this old and older lady, you are a mere chicken with adventures to looks forward to and words to write! Keep up the speed and enjoy the trip!

Rod Tanner said...

Excellent, really enjoyed reading this....

Lane said...

I salute your earned wisdom, Trilla!!

Lane said...

Thanks, Rod!