Aging is not ‘lost youth’ but a new stage of opportunity and strength.
It’s a winter Saturday morning, dreary and grey and bare. Outside my window I look down on my garden; the trees bare, branches arcing and cascading with delicate, raw beauty. The rose bushes are pruned, the soft flesh of the grapefruits fall with an ugly crash to the grass below. Verdant reen grass, green shrubs, green moss landscape my view, with little other color to brighten my spirits. The bones of the garden are exposed in all their raw and graceful and startling vulnerability, green but not growing. We both are waiting to bloom.
Outside my window I set up a new bird feeder this winter, right next to the birdbath. I carefully filled it with seed, positioned it next to the safe haven of a Lavatera bush, under the bare bones of the pistache tree. I’ve followed all the steps, but still the birds flit and fly around it. Not one is perching this winter. They won’t stop where I want them to. They refuse to land. What do they have to fear? Maybe they know something I don’t.
This winter, I’m in my 50th year of this life, fifty years of aging gracefully. I can feel it in my bones, in the sinew of my shoulder, in the crick in my back when I bend down to clip the fragrant narcissus blooming in my backyard bed. It’s hard, this aging. It’s hard when Facebook flashes images of my youth; class photos from elementary school, sixteen-year-old sojourns to Stinson Beach, the goth days that stilled my soul. I click and eagerly ingest the memory, scan the photos for others I recognize in their youth. Sometimes I see them aging gracefully, too.
People see my photos and say I haven’t changed. But it stuns me, really. Physically, maybe not so much- a few pounds heavier, my face a bit fuller, my breasts a bit lower and my body baring the glorious work of motherhood. But inside, sometimes I don’t even recognize myself. I feel the stripping down happening this year, the leaves falling to the ground and in place, my bark, my branches growing and reaching and sometimes fracturing and not caring who sees.
I see my daughter’s face, clean and fresh and smiling. Her friends look just like her, really. Their eyes shine with the wisdom of college freshmen, off and eager and full of the energy that youth and growth offers. Her second decade, her time when the world is brimming with experiences, her mind teetering with the excitement of a new home, a new school, a new love.
My son towers over me, long and lanky and grinning with the kind of smile that makes me wonder. His eyes gaze with an old wisdom yet his body pulsates with the youthful need to move, to skate, to ski. His time when dreams deferred have altered his course, his world changing and he is riding it out, gracefully.
I tell my middle school students that well behaved women rarely make history. I write and read and teach and share my stories, feeling bits of raw bone shining through. I prune and rake and weed and dig, waiting to bloom, to wake up, to uncover the beauty, to expose the substance, to pull off the overgrowth. To strip down to my core, to discover the beauty of aging gracefully.
Fifty years, an indicator of a number of breaths and beats and moments my body as been growing, aging, learning. Can you see the grey and the lines and the wisdom that comes with half a century of work?
I won’t stop. I have nothing to fear.
I have everything to learn.
Can you see ME?
Comments: 20
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Jenn @ The Art of Better
January 21, 2015This is a beautifully written piece! It is the kind of writing you just want to savor. It seems like each decade I feel like a different person also. Thank you for sharing!
Jenn @ The Art of Better recently posted…Monday Mash-Up 01.19.15
Jennifer Wolfe
January 21, 2015Oh thank you, Jenn, for this lovely comment. Yes on becoming new each decade!
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Nina
January 20, 2015Inspiring! Yes, wisdom and experience and truth are priceless and I will take a few wrinkles (or more) to earn those virtues.
Nina recently posted…Acquaintances vs. Friends
Jennifer Wolfe
January 20, 2015Nina, I look at aging the same way…I’ll likely be one of those grey haired sassy-pants ladies who doesn’t take crap from anyone – I earned it!
The Dusty Parachute
January 19, 2015This is a really beautiful post. I’m really enjoying having the time to figure out who the mid-40s me is, but I do sometimes lose my bearings when I realize just how far past 30 I am (while still thinking I should be 30!)
The Dusty Parachute recently posted…My Million Dollar One-Word Resolution for 2015
admin
January 20, 2015Isnt it amazing, how we can feel a certain age in our mind’s eye? For me each decade unveils a new part of myself, and while i do mourn parts of my youth, i love this adventure!
Marcia @ Menopausal Mother
January 19, 2015Beautiful imagery here . Very much how I feel now that I’m in my fifties.However, I wouldn’t go back to my twenties if you paid me. I’m pretty content with where I am now in life. 🙂
Marcia @ Menopausal Mother recently posted…Goin’ South
admin
January 20, 2015Agreed! The twenties were painful…i certainly do enjoy the parts of me i discover with each passing year. Thanks for commenting today.
Karen
January 19, 2015This is a poignant and insightful piece. I look forward to each year ahead of me and the opportunity it brings. I will endeavor to age gracefully (with a touch of silliness thrown in for good measure). Thank you for a great read today. Best, Karen
Karen recently posted…Sunday Smiles- Do You Mind?
Giveaways 4 Mom
January 19, 2015I love your post. It is very beautiful.
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Sarah (est. 1975)
January 19, 2015Awww. Stinson Beach.
What a well-written piece. I’m ten years behind you but coming up quick!
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Sandra
January 18, 2015great post Jennifer!
Jennifer Wolfe
January 19, 2015Thank you, Sandra. I’m glad you stopped by today!
Amanda @ queenofthelandoftwigsnberries
January 18, 2015What a beautifully written post. I especially love that you teach your students that well behaved women rarely make history. Looking forward to continuing to read your story and see what amazing things you accomplish in your 50th year!
Jennifer Wolfe
January 18, 2015Thanks, Amanda. I’m looking forward to this year, too – I’ve got big plans!