Turning Fifty
People who say life begins at 40 are optimists. People who say it
begins at 50 are liars. I’ve only been 50 for a few months
and I’m already tired of it. It’s like the warranty on
a GM drive train: Five miles past your limit and the transmission
falls out. I’ve strained more tendons and pulled more ligaments
in the last six months than I knew I had. Someone told me it was
dietary – so I took some supplements.
Somebody told me my chi thingy was messed up, so I had some acupuncture.
I even went to see a homoeopathist who asked me about my relationship
with my father and gave me some sugar pills. I was still becoming
a small collection of muscle spasms so I went to see somebody with
a medical degree and he said, “You’re fifty. Get used
to it.”
So I’m trying to get used to it. I buy my ibuprofen in the
twin value pack and I live in the basic fear that has gripped middle-aged
people from when the first Cro-Magnon threw his back out picking
lowbush cranberries. An aging Thomas Jefferson put it this way, “Here
a pivot, there a wheel, now a pinion, next a spring will give away.”
Tom, ol’ boy, I hear you. I keep catching whiffs of death
not only on my good health, but also on my career and my cozy American
lifestyle. I try to convince myself I’m hallucinating because
things are actually going better than ever. I’m at the prime
of my life in everyway except the way I feel about it. There must
be some genetic trigger that forces us to start panicking about our
age at a certain point. Age 50, for example. It could be nature’s
cute little way of piling on added stress so we’ll all have
heart attacks and get the heck off of the payroll.
So I try to relax. I have a kid in college and a two-year-old in
the kitchen for god sake. I can’t afford to become one of these
cranky and tired old codgers, yet. I don’t even have time to
learn how to suck at golf.
Sure it’s a long way back up from the Lego pile these days,
but I have a lifetime of experiences and hard won wisdom to impart
to my boys and I want to stay sharp. I think my mind might already
be sagging a little bit. Yesterday I tried to tell the little guy
why we don’t eat rocks, and I drew a blank. I couldn’t
remember why we don’t eat rocks. Why don’t we eat rocks?
I talk to my older boy about his future. How to prepare for it.
Opportunities he might explore. I might as well be telling him how
to soften animal hides with his teeth for all the good it does him.
I don’t know what he’s up against in this world. I have
no idea where the prizes are in this economy. I don’t even
know which is Game Boy and which is X-box.
I’m a dinosaur. Not even a big scary dinosaur. More like one
of those lumbering bloated ones that are always featured with razor
toothed little meat-eaters attached to their underbellies.
But it’s not like fifty years of living hasn’t taught
me how to cope, and I’m doing what I’ve always done when
faced with a frightening and depressing new challenge. I get frightened.
And depressed.
But, these are not terminal afflictions and I intend to survive
this stage of life just like I did my clumsy childhood, my unbalanced
adolescence, my ill-conceived twenties, and my – whatever that
is we used to do in our thirties and forties. I thought that was
middle-age. But I was an optimist back then.
as heard on XM Radio's Bob Edwards' Show
October 18, 2005
www.xmradio.com