Okay,
I’ll admit it.
I’m feeling old.
The final nail in the coffin came
the other day disguised as a Chris Ballard article in Sports Illustrated about an aging superstar. “At 57 he is still
lean and graceful …”
57?
He’s
57!
I’m 57.
You’re probably wondering what aging
superstar is 57 and why would there be a piece in SI about him.
Yeah, well it’s worse than that.
That described the aging superstar’s
father, Joe “Jellybean” Bryant, Kobe’s dad.
So, in recognition of the aging
process, here are 7 things that remind people we’re older than we’d like to
admit.
1) You’re as old as aging
superstars’ dads. I remember my father rooting for George
Blanda back in the seventies because the two were only a few years apart in
age. At 48, George played in his last NFL game.
Unlike my father in the seventies, I
have to root for athletes’ fathers.
2) Authority
figures are younger than you. Oh, this awareness happened ages ago when I
made a routine visit to the doctor but this truth has only deepened since then.
Teachers, judges, police officers, congressmen, business executives, restaurant
managers … oh, the list goes on and on.
In 2008, a significant transition
took place for me. For the first time in my life, I was older than the elected President
of the United States.
3) You
get excited about the senior discount at a restaurant. Because of the
discounted price, my father brags about eating at a particular Chinese
restaurant in my hometown. He must have mentioned it a half dozen times during
my last visit.
I’m
not old enough yet for that discount but I’ve enjoyed the senior coffee at
McDonald’s for two years now (well, three plus actually because, before my 55th
birthday, they looked at me and automatically rung me up as a senior—sigh!).
4) You
get your first AARP request. All I got to say is this happened way too
early. I’m still in denial with AARP.
5) You’re
considering retirement from the morning basketball league. This one’s tough
for me because I’ve always been active. Our morning league includes doctors,
teachers, and other authority figures (see point #2) who are mostly middle-aged
guys. My knees keep reminding me I’m older than the few high school boys who
show up.
6) You
need the dog to walk you. Need I explain?
7) Someone
looks at you and your wife and thinks you’ve robbed the cradle. This
actually happened half a dozen years ago to Ellen and me. Ellen swears the
woman who said that is crazy (and I’m wanting to believe her in the worst way).
What would you add to the list?
ABOUT T. NEAL TARVER
Tom has spoken in churches across America, and in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.
ABOUT T. NEAL TARVER
T. Neal Tarver, a native Texan living in Wisconsin, has served churches in Texas and Wisconsin. He, his wife
Ellen, and son Daniel lived and worked for three years as missionaries in the
Russian Far East. Tom speaks enough Russian to both converse and confuse.
In 2011, Tom was selected as a semi-finalist in the American
Christian Fiction Writers’ Genesis contest. He’s also been a two-time winner of MBT’s “Make
Every Word Count Flash Fiction” contest. He has written articles for the
local newspaper and an international mission magazine. His debut novel, Dark Eyes, Deep Eyes, is available
through WestBow Press, Amazon, BARNES & NOBLE, and other retail outlets.
He currently writes from his home in Richland
Center, Wisconsin, or
from wherever his travels take him. He posts articles weekly at A Curious Band of Others.Tom has spoken in churches across America, and in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.
12 comments:
When your ready for bed at 5pm!
jennydtipton[at]gmail[dot]com
And naps are a given. ;-D
You know you're a geezer when you, the Administrative Assistant, who used to always be the youngest in the office, are now providing support for Doctors who are young enough to be your sons and daughters.
ARGH!
lol. Great post. I could sympathize -- if I was old enough. jk
Thanks for the untimely reminder, Tom. :)
Caroline, laughter is good medicine (and keeps you young at heart). Thanks for turning back the clock a few moments.
I knew I was getting 'up there' when I started looking down on the younger generation with a headshake and 'tsk tsk' for doing pretty much the same thing I ran around and did when I was young.
I found myself saying "Back in my day" recently. Heaven help me! But it was true: back in my day, we wore low rider jeans (but called them hip huggers) and platform shoes. I am now officially old enough to see my old clothes come back in style.
Well, I am clinging to my forties - at least till September when I hit 50. Still, I can feel it, see it. I just take comfort in the fact that wisdom comes with age and hopefully I am past all those 'follies of youth.'
Fun post!
I had no fashion sense in high school (at least, looking back in retrospect). I remember wearing turquoise bell bottoms with an orange turtle neck. Oh, my goodness, what were thinking back then.
Continue to ignore AARP! :)
I noticed Ellen got an AARP invite in the mail last week. The envelope remained unopened. Now we're both doing denial together.
Enjoyed this post. For years, I've needed a hand to get up from an examining table, but I blame that on my back.
We were invited to a baseball game and neither of us could sit on the berm longer than 5 minutes.
I realized my age when I had a birthday higher than my mother's last (she died just before 50).
Well, God looks at the heart (we can think young deep within), even when we have gray hair. I keep telling myself the Bible says that gray hair is a sign of wisdom.
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