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#1
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I'm a 76 yo female with numerous chronic illnesses. I wonder why I resist seeing myself as old, even though physically I can't do the things I was able to do a few years ago and don't look young any more.
Why am I resisting seeing myself as old? |
#2
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I think we just hate the thoughts of it. I hate looking in the mirror anymore. and I think it keeps you younger at heart too!
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__________________
He who angers you controls you! |
![]() dymund
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#3
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Dearheart, none of us wants to see ourselves as "old." And besides, we're only as "old" as we feel mentally! I don't feel 63, but my body is certainly older than that! LOL Mentally, I feel about 25.
![]() Keep resisting feeling old! You'll live longer my friend! NEVER feel old! God bless and take care! Hugs, Lee
__________________
The truth shall set you free but first it will make you miserable..........................................Garfield |
![]() dymund
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#4
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76 ? you young chicken you, you youngster you, you're just a kid !
Not an OLD goat ! but a YOUNG kid ! You can be 76 years OLD, or 76 years YOUNG. Why be old and crinkly ? When you can be young and silly ! Why feel your age ? Better to enjoy the experiences, and wisdom you've gained and thank God, you've lived to 76 years YOUNG. What you going do with the next 35 years until you have to then admit to yourself you're old ? Why worry about age, or labels ? I'm 52 and I admit I FEEL OLD purely because of my miserable existance, but hey, that's just me. My lovely Dad is 82, still working and looking after himself and a house and garden that all take time and energy. He's as sharp mentally as ever, thank God. I've not asked him if he feels old, but he doesn't show his age. Yes the arthritic joints give him grief, but he is active, and totally independant. I do thank God, for that, when you see what alzheimers and dementia does to people. Hey, celebrate your reaching 76 and barely noticing. Hoping you've been happy and will continue to be. Share your secret ! Enjoy feeling the way you do ! Long, long, forever young x |
![]() dymund
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#5
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We don't have the experience of old until we get there and it keeps surprising us. Ladyzero thinks she feels old at 52 but you and I know, dymund, that she doesn't quite know what old feels like yet. Think about it; the younger one is the more one looks forward; an older teen has schooling, work, building a family, etc. to look forward too and mid-life people are concentrating on their careers and family and how they're going to pay for kids education and retirement and worrying about their parents, etc. But you eventually get to an age when all that is done, you've tried all you wanted to try and/or are able to try and working worries don't influence you any more than a woman's menstrual cycle concerns one after they've been through the change.
But until you get to a particular stage, you think you know what it is like but are always surprised when you get there, it's different. Age is like that for me. There isn't anything to "look forward" to, there's just the idea of getting older. Whenever I give up an interest these days, finish a project, it's exceptionally hard because I've truly "been there, done that" for all I can or want to do. It is hard, even with my wonderful imagination and other skills to come up with the "next" forward project. It's hard to think ahead; I bought my husband and myself canes with seats on the ends of them because we were going to the beach and I've learned the hard way that if I were to get tired and have only the sand to sit on, I'd be in pain and danger, perhaps unable to get up at all. One's grandchildren run to leap into one's arms but I flinch because I'm not that strong and stable anymore to take leaping children for granted and have various pains/bad knees that, if accidentally hit, would bring me down in a great deal of pain. But understanding why I can't just sit on the floor and play monopoly for hours or can't go to bed and sleep for more than 2-3 hours straight/through the night and wake refreshed, that understanding is much slower in coming. My aunt, my father's sister, is 92 this year. She wants to die already, be done with it and I am beginning to understand/be able to imagine that desire and sympathize with her. I don't want to die yet but I can see the trend of how I feel and how it's not going to get any better/easier as I age. I read a book written by an 87 year old psychologist and she talked about how one feels in one's 60's a certain way but then gets to the 70's and then the 80's and, "To be in one's 60s again!" takes on a different meaning than it has to me, in my 60s.
__________________
"Never give a sword to a man who can't dance." ~Confucius |
![]() dymund
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![]() dymund, ECHOES
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#6
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Perna, do you recall the title of that book?
Aging totally freaks me out. |
#7
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Quote:
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