Well, I'm 42, the age that is, as you know, the answer to
life, the universe, and everything. (Modest pause here for you to insert
comments about how I don't look 42 at all . . . aw, shucks, thanks, that's kind
of you.)
Middle-aged.
And is that "aged" like a good cheese, or is it
more like the rattle-trap van we are driving, always with our fingers crossed
that the tailpipe won't drop off in the road? (Can't say that my tailpipe is
all that much better, so I guess that says something . . . )
Anyway, I guess it's time for a State of the Nation for you,
my three-or-so loyal blog readers who almost had a heart attack this morning
when you saw on your reader that I had actually updated. Thanks for giving in
to your curiosity and reading on to find out why I would visit this old
haunting ground after all these months of ignoring you. And so without further
ado, let's get on with
Darlene At 42!!!!!!!
PHYSICALLY: Well,
after that nice comment of yours on how I don't really look 42, I hardly need
to go into detail here. But I'll be honest: I'm not looking twenty anymore. I
did spend an awful lot of time (well into my thirties, really) wishing I looked
older, or at least my age. Finally I struggle with that no longer! I somehow
passed over that line—I'm not sure when—but there is no doubt that when I go
down to campus in a few weeks, no one will mistake me for an undergrad. I look,
I must admit with a big sigh, like Somebody's Mom. Part of that is my fault,
because I refuse to go to the drastic lengths that seem to be the common
behavior here in my neck of the woods (South Jordan :
Plastic Surgery Capitol of the World) to look twenty years younger than I am. I
dress, I am sorry to say, too much like a mom, and do my hair too much like a
mom, etc. When it became clear to me that I was not going to ever go to heroic
measures, I began trying to accept my "mom-ness." It's hard.
I've mentioned it before, but our culture is seriously
lacking in acceptable ways for "older" women to dress with dignity
and taste. I want to switch to saris or those beautiful African robes and wraps
that older African women wear. In our culture, it's either dress like you're
trying to be twenty (and look silly doing it, or else put a lot of time and
money into sculpting yourself down into that shape) or spend an awful lot of
money at places like Anne Taylor. Neither of those is going to happen.
I am, however, so far avoiding the Wal-Mart sweat pants
look. Most of the time.
Anyway, so I look like a mom, especially around the hips.
And around the eyes. I've got crow's feet, which don't bother me too much, and
two permanent parallel vertical frown lines between my eyes, which do. My chin,
what there is of it, has always been bad, so there's not much to say here. My
gut sort of spreads out on the floor in front of me when I lie on my side (I
know, right? ew.) or hangs weirdly when I do down-dog. My feet have gotten
bigger along with my behind. My aunts (on both sides) all became more
pear-shaped as they aged, so I know there's not much I can do about it, though
I do try. (Latest reassuring mantra: "Women need to be soft in the middle;
it's preparation for grandparenthood. Who wants to snuggle on a hard
tummy?")
Speaking of exercise, I notice my age there, too, though
it's harder to tell since I've never been in very good shape, even when I was
young. Summary: I'm slow and heavy in whatever I do. But I haven't given up
trying. Currently, I'm struggling with golfer's elbow, which is crazy, since
I've never been golfing in my life. But I ran five miles yesterday, which is
something. (I also spent the rest of the day completely exhausted and feeling
like death-warmed-over. Will my body ever get used to the exercise and quit
feeling that way after I run?
As for my health in general, I have to say that I am MUCH
BETTER than I was a few years ago. I am still heavy and tired, and I'm
beginning to suspect that I may be for the rest of my life (very depressing,
but still lots better than I had feared at one time). I almost never get those
weird "attacks" anymore, and when I do they are very mild. Though I
still feel like I COULD, I don't HAVE to go to bed right after dinner these
days. I am not struggling with brain fog anywhere near as much as I was.
Maybe (knock on wood) I have a few years of clarity before the
menopause fairy comes to take it all away again . . .? (Knock on wood again.)
So, there it is. I'm saggy and a little draggy but able to
do all I need to and pretty much all I want to, too. I will never, NEVER take
that for granted.
INTELLECTUALLY: Well, this one is (wince) "on my
mind" these days. Because I'm going back to school, and I am seriously
suspicious that I have lost much of my brainpower to raising kids. It's hard to
concentrate on longer, deeper reading projects. Heck, it's hard to stay awake
at night. I've forgotten almost everything I learned in college, especially
things like how to do research and the names of major movements in world
thought. Will it all come back as I need it? Will I be as smart as the freshmen
I'll be teaching? Not sure, not sure. This one is going to take some faith and
some really hard work.
Also, there's nothing like an election to make myself doubt
myself. The thing is, I have the hardest time committing to a "side"
or an ideology. I'm pretty good at seeing the flaws in people's arguments, and
(especially) at recognizing manipulation (of facts or emotions). In the end,
too often I end up voting AGAINST someone than for someone, and too often I am
unduly influenced by rudeness (as in, I tend to turn against a party when I
hate how its followers act towards other people). I wish I were smarter. For
now, I just try to surround myself with smart people who share my standards and
basic beliefs (love your fellowman; value agency . . . but--well, you see the
problem). A big problem is, though, that some of the most amazingly smart and
kind people I know are Republicans. And some of the most amazingly smart and
kind people I know are Democrats. Sigh.
SOCIALLY: This last
year or so has been the worst of times and the best of times for me. My closest
friends moved out of my life (physically or emotionally). But then—wonder of
wonders—a new set of really cool women moved into my ward. These are not just
cool women, but they are married to cool men—whom my husband actually likes and
gets along with! This has rarely happened before. These new friends in my ward
are so cool that we can even go camping together as families. I am so happy
about this; it has been such a blessing. I have had good friends in my life
whom I could talk to but they haven't always been local. Now I have some
nearby, in real life, and it's great. The only problem is that they all have
younger families than I do, so they're still in that "home with kids all
day" phase while I am a free woman during the day but seriously booked in
the after-school hours. Oh well; that will change. (But it reminds me so much
of my Pocatello
days, when I was the one with young kids and my friends were older, with their
kids all in school. I wanted so much to go out together in the evenings,
because I needed to get out for a break, and they wanted to be home in the
evenings with their kids, whom they hadn't seen all day. That was a really hard
difference to straddle, and I was lonely.)
SPIRITUALLY/EMOTIONALLY:
Doin' pretty darn well, all told. I'll start school in about a week. I'm
scared. The things that frighten me: 1.)
I'm still weak physically, and the stress/strain of doing so much more mental
and physical work than I'm used to will make me sick again; 2.) my parenting/children will suffer. My
beautiful cousin Kathryn, who also returned to college for an advanced degree
not long ago, gave me good advice, "Just take it one day at a time."
I realize that much of my fear has to do with big ol' consequences that are
quite a bit in the future and may never come to pass. If I try to live each day
well and not panic so much about setting up systems so that life will be easy
the whole time, I'll do better. Faith. When it became clear that I would not be
able to do this degree one class at a time, as we had originally planned, we
prayed hard and still felt we had a "go-ahead." Maybe, I sometimes
think, my kids NEED me to be a little more gone, and a little more emotionally
invested in something other than them. (Certainly I know my teenagers wouldn't
mind having my fingers a little less in their lives.) So I'm open to the
possibility that this all could be a GOOD thing even for them.
My testimony, my relationships with others, my feelings
about parenthood all go through changes as I get older, waxing and waning and
then waxing again. I guess the thing about being older is recognizing that the
waxing and waning are nothing to panic about, and that the key is to stick
things out, to be patient with myself and others, and things get better, in
general, over time.
I am optimistic in general, these days, about myself and
about the world. I don't share the feelings of doom that it seems so many
people do about the State of the World. There are ugly things, I admit, but
there are good things, too. God hasn't given up on us; good people haven't
given up on the world; there is still great goodness and kindness and justice
going on. The most distressing thing is that families are breaking down, but I
still believe in the Good News of the
gospel: no one is doomed, whether because of a broken family or Evil in the
Media or whatever. There is always hope, there is always potential for change,
there is always the atonement waiting to be used. I guess that's my greatest
testimony: always there is potential for progress.
So, that's me at 42, and I think it's a pretty nice place to
be.
3 comments:
Thanks for the update! I loved reading this.
Yay Darlene! I'm proud of you.
Kathryn
I enjoyed reading this too. What's slightly embarrassing is that I only came over to Google Reader because Facebook was briefly down. (But I read your post first!)
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