Like Popeye, I yam what I yam, and ain't nothing I can do about it
Today I am trying to decide if I want to do any work whatsoever. I’ve sold two stories this week, and that’s pretty good, and I have a business appointment later in the afternoon concerning website material I’ve written for a local business, so I think I’m kind of caught up.
And, anyway, it’s my birthday. No, please, no fanfare; no to-do. Just simple greetings and warm wishes will suffice.
Anyway, birthdays are weird things. In fact I am only one day older than I was yesterday, not a year older, so why do we make such a fuss about them? Yet we persist in doing so. Really, the birthday should only be significant to the person impacted, since it is the one day of the year that he or she can actually claim as his or her own. Well, their own along with all the other people who share that birthday.
I was thinking about birthdays in a general sense, however. When we are very young we long for our birthdays. We are impatient about them. We always want to be older so we tell people we are five-and-a-half, not a mere infant of five. Or, maybe ‘going-on-six.’ That sounds even more impressive. When you’re very young you can’t offer much to impress people, so your age will have to do.
This fascination and obsession with ones age continues into the teen years because by certain ages you can do certain things that had formerly been denied, like drive a car legally, drink alcohol in a bar legally, vote, and join-up and risk being blown to ratshit in Afghanistan or Iraq. And, ultimately you can pass that magic bar that suggests you are finally a ‘grown-up.’ This is only a legal status, however. At an emotional and behavioural level, however, some people never pass that mark.
For me, I stopped being enchanted by my age when I was around 30. Actually, that was a pivotal birthday for me in the sense that I didn’t like it at all. My twenties were over and somehow I felt I had missed out on grabbing the magic ring on the carousel ride. I hadn’t made it by 30. And, nobody over 30 could be trusted, went the wisdom of the day. After that I tried to stop paying attention to my age, mainly because I liked it less and less each year.
I haven’t reached the point of lying about my age, or of subtracting years. I haven't truly entered the realm of curmudgeonly geezerdom yet, I don't think. Still have all my own hair and some of my teeth and am still most positively impacted by my wife's pretty face (and other stuff.) On the other hand, I no longer tell people my age. I want my creds to still have impact professionally and personally, and don’t want to be reduced to the realm of ‘old fartdom’ by somebody who just stopped peeing the bed two years earlier.
Anyway, there is solace. Winston Churchill didn’t even become Prime Minister of England until he was 68, and Ronald Reagan was well over 100 when he became president.
And, anyway, it’s my birthday. No, please, no fanfare; no to-do. Just simple greetings and warm wishes will suffice.
Anyway, birthdays are weird things. In fact I am only one day older than I was yesterday, not a year older, so why do we make such a fuss about them? Yet we persist in doing so. Really, the birthday should only be significant to the person impacted, since it is the one day of the year that he or she can actually claim as his or her own. Well, their own along with all the other people who share that birthday.
I was thinking about birthdays in a general sense, however. When we are very young we long for our birthdays. We are impatient about them. We always want to be older so we tell people we are five-and-a-half, not a mere infant of five. Or, maybe ‘going-on-six.’ That sounds even more impressive. When you’re very young you can’t offer much to impress people, so your age will have to do.
This fascination and obsession with ones age continues into the teen years because by certain ages you can do certain things that had formerly been denied, like drive a car legally, drink alcohol in a bar legally, vote, and join-up and risk being blown to ratshit in Afghanistan or Iraq. And, ultimately you can pass that magic bar that suggests you are finally a ‘grown-up.’ This is only a legal status, however. At an emotional and behavioural level, however, some people never pass that mark.
For me, I stopped being enchanted by my age when I was around 30. Actually, that was a pivotal birthday for me in the sense that I didn’t like it at all. My twenties were over and somehow I felt I had missed out on grabbing the magic ring on the carousel ride. I hadn’t made it by 30. And, nobody over 30 could be trusted, went the wisdom of the day. After that I tried to stop paying attention to my age, mainly because I liked it less and less each year.
I haven’t reached the point of lying about my age, or of subtracting years. I haven't truly entered the realm of curmudgeonly geezerdom yet, I don't think. Still have all my own hair and some of my teeth and am still most positively impacted by my wife's pretty face (and other stuff.) On the other hand, I no longer tell people my age. I want my creds to still have impact professionally and personally, and don’t want to be reduced to the realm of ‘old fartdom’ by somebody who just stopped peeing the bed two years earlier.
Anyway, there is solace. Winston Churchill didn’t even become Prime Minister of England until he was 68, and Ronald Reagan was well over 100 when he became president.
Labels: age denial, birthdays, fear of geezerdom
11 Comments:
I hope you enjoy today...and all your days. Celebrate yourself every day.
My birthday finally quit being important to me this past year. Oh well.
Ian, happy birthday!!
HUGS!
Happy Birthday, hope you had a fun filled day.
I often forget how old I am as I feel younger the older I get :-)
Age is a funny thing, isn't it?
Well, I wish you a happy day on this occasion and a happy day everyday!
("Reagan was well over 100 when he became president." LOL!)
Happy b'day Ian. know the feeling. I had a student ask me my age today so I asked what age she thought I was and she said 45 or so... made my day. On getting older it gets easier to be "I yam what I yam". You kind of stop caring what people think of you...life is too short.
So once again have yourself a really nice b'day.
Too late. :) You got your fanfare, Ian. You're not old, but you can add years to get the old guy privilage of not having to work.
Happy birthday Ian.
I just "celebrated" my 55th yesterday. Age never had any particular significance for me until now and I'm sitting here wondering what the hell happened...I think I'm having a "mid-life" crisis.
Anyways hope you're being feted in style on this day,
Regards
Darjean
happy birthday ian. birthdays are very special to me. i celebrate mine the whole month.
Hello Ian!
"A very merry unbirthday to you", since today is not your birthday :)
As usual, a very interesting post. Funny how the older we get, the more discreet we become about our birthdays... men & women alike.
As Mark Twain said:
"Age is an issue of mind over matter. If you don't mind, it doesn't matter."
So true! :)
Well, I missed reading your post on the right day, but there you go...
I'm actually glad to have made it into my 40s where, suddenly, age isn't all that important anymore. Though I sometimes think it would be nice to go back knowing what I know now.
Happy Birthday Ian. I usually tell people I am about 10 years older than I am so they look shocked and exclaim how great I look!
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