Magic City Morning Star

Forum | Wiki | Advertising | RSS Feed | About Us 

Last Updated: Jan 3, 2010 - 3:13:12 PM 

Millinocket, East Millinocket, Medway, and all of Maine!
Staff Login
Donate towards our web hosting bill!

Front Page 
  News
  -- Local
  -- State
  -- National
  Community
  -- Historical Society
  -- Maine Elks
  -- Maine Grange
  Business
  -- IRS News
  -- Win at Work
  Education
  -- History
  Tech Notes
  Entertainment
  -- Comics
  International
  -- R.P. BenDedek
  -- Kenneth Tellis
  Outdoors
  Sports
  Features
  -- D. R. Crews
  -- J. G. Fabiano
  -- M Stevens-David
  -- Down the Road
  -- Laura on Life
  Christianity
  Obituaries
  Today in History
  Maine Politics
  -- Susan Collins
  -- Michael Michaud
  -- Olympia Snowe
  Opinion
  -- Editor's Desk
  -- Guest Column
  -- Scheme of Things
  -- Thomas Brewton
  -- Stephen Crockett
  -- Michael Devolin
  -- Tom DeWeese
  -- Ed Feulner
  -- William Jud
  -- Jim Kouri
  -- Alyce Maragus
  -- Julie Smithson
  -- Paul Streitz
  -- J. Grant Swank
  -- Nathan Tabor
  -- Doug Wrenn
  -- Tony Zizza
  Letters
  Agenda 21
  Book Reviews
  -- Old Embers
  Notices
  Archive
  Discontinued


As Maine Goes
Restore The Republic - The Home of the Freedom Movement!
www.rockymountaintrail.com
Alliance for the Separation of School and State

Scheme of Things

Celebrating Birthdays
By Nan S. Russell
Jan 3, 2010 - 3:06:53 PM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Spoken like a seasoned life traveler, the words from my three-year old granddaughter came as an assumptive statement of fact following our shopping excursion. "I don't like old people," she told me. "Well, I'm old and you like me," I said. "No Nana, I don't like old people." I know what she means. I don't like old people much either.

I've been giving that word, "old," particular thought of late. While this month marks the beginning of a new decade, it also heralds for me a new age bracket. Yet after months of self-reflection, I've concluded the word has little relationship to my chronological age.

Recently, a business acquaintance was telling me about his mother, who unbeknownst to him is the same age as me. He said his mother declared she was tired of learning and couldn't keep up with the new technology. He was concerned that she was choosing aging over changing, at a time when her life expectancy remained decades long.

Tucked inside any generational label: Matures, Baby Boomers, GenXers, or Millennials, you'll find old people: old thinking, old acting, old being. These people age without evolving, persist without reflecting, and take more from life than they give.

I don't want to be old. But it's not some Peter Pan fantasy of my body not aging or wrinkles not deepening or grey hair not sprouting. It's a declaration of intention to keep a zest for life, an openness to adventure, and a spirit of gratitude.

I used to think it was enough to understand evolving and aging as separate concepts, and to choose the first. I used to feel that welcoming each passing year as a gift denied to many was enough to provide clarity, as each milestone reaffirmed a finiteness to one's life. And I used to believe that we grew old when we gave up our dreams and it was enough to keep pursuing them, but some dreams expire and should be given up or changed.

When people say they want to live to be a hundred, I silently pause. I used to think longer was better, too, until my father died of Alzheimer's, and dementia has my mother living in a parallel universe devoid of joy. So in the scheme of things, I've come to realize in six decades that growing old and growing older is a lot more complicated than any pithy bumper sticker philosophy. Still my granddaughter was instrumental in helping me articulate mine.

In December when my granddaughter turned three, the weeks leading up to her birthday were filled with a game she called, "Let's Play Birthday." She'd name whose birthday she wanted to celebrate and we'd wrap pretend presents, wiggle to music, and add an imaginary scoop of love to make-believe cupcakes. "That's too much love," she'd tell me every time I decided to add an extra scoop.

But that's what I do know about getting older, (not old), and celebrating life's birthdays. Give those extra scoops along the way, because there can never be too much love.

(c) 2010 Nan S. Russell.  All Rights Reserved.

Nan S. Russell is the award-winning author of "Hitting Your Stride: Your Work, Your Way." More about Nan and her work can be found at www.nanrussell.com. Author of "Hitting Your Stride: Your Work, Your Way" (Capital Books; January 2008) Sign up to receive Nan's free monthly eColumn at: www.intheschemeofthings.com.


© Copyright 2002-2009 by Magic City Morning Star

Related Articles:
Celebrating Birthdays - Jan 3, 2010 - 3:06:53 PM


Top of Page

Scheme of Things
Latest Headlines
Experiencing Magic
Saying No to New Year's Resolutions
Life Is Like A Buffet Table
Seeing the Mountains
A Bit of Reflection

Animal Den - Gift Shop for Animal Lovers!
A Dinosaur of Education - a blog by James Fabiano.
Buy Alvina's book now with PayPal
Buy The Call of Katahdin from Amazon.com
Wysong Foods - Pets and People Too
1-800-PetMeds
Buy Weapon in Heaven from Amazon.com
Different products for unique babies!
Save on Outdoor Gear at the Outlet
Altrec Logo: Free Shipping
Caribou Coffee Company

Google
 
Web magic-city-news.com