The End of the Beginning
Forty is one or two random wiry white hairs poking out amongst the ginger and fine, crepey wrinkles at the apex of my cleavage. It’s a few blue spider veins on the back of my calves, an eye doctor warning me that “readers” are inevitably coming, probably next year, a knee that hurts for no diagnosable reason. Forty is old enough to know better, and no longer too young to care. Forty is when “middle age” shifts to fifty, because hey, life expectancies are increasing all the time. Forty is when high school classmates and older relatives whom I don’t remember being old start dying off.
Forty is parenting a middle schooler while some of my friends are having a surprise baby and others become the parents of new high school grads. It’s hitting my mid-career stride, feeling knowledgeable without feeling smug. It’s being well-insured and keeping up with routine oil changes, annual physicals, and world events. Forty is attending concerts of bands past their prime and feeling like it’s still OzzFest ’99.
Forty is do or die, give up or hold out, wind up or wind down. It’s the beginning of the end or the end of the beginning. Forty is quality over quantity, balancing the enjoyment of life right now against retirement savings, and the enjoyment of food against the bathroom scale. Forty is the precipice between “can I see your ID” and free coffee at McDonalds. If life were a cheeseburger, forty would be the patty.
Forty is taking stock of everything so far. The scent-memories of a rural childhood are still easily summoned and I can tell you the name of every elementary school teacher I had. I remember the bullies, the best friends, the notes passed, my freshman year locker combination. I remember my D in algebra, graduation, my first legal purchase of cigarettes. Broken hearts, favorite books, all the words to my favorite songs. My dorm room, first apartment, favorite professors. More graduations, first job. My wedding, house hunting, my first positive pregnancy test. My children’s babyhoods. Grudges.
Forty is wondering: Will there be new homes, new cars, out-of-state moves? Sickness, financial troubles, tragedy? Are the best years yet to come, or have I already said good bye? Who have I seen for the last time but don’t know it yet? Have I rolled my eyes at my last cat-caller? Has the window closed on this or that ambition?
Forty is shock that life is no longer a preamble to the future I tried as a child to imagine. That future is here, it is now. This is life and I am in the thick of it. If there are changes I want to see, the time to make them is now. It doesn’t have to be a downhill slide into my grave from here, although it feels a little like it on this day, when I am no longer thirtysomething (I remember when that was a show about old people.) I do not feel forty. But I am forty, so I guess this is what forty feels like, by definition.
Forty is looking back and realizing I have made through four decades, and have something to show for it. Forty is knowing that life has changed slowly and it is not going to now suddenly speedwalk me into the nearest convalescent home. I am the same as I was yesterday. Forty is knowing not everything is within my control, but my thoughts and actions and attitude are.
Here’s to 40-the end of the beginning of the rest of my life.
Happy birthday! I turned 40 myself a couple of days ago. I think the most disconcerting part of 40 for me is enumerating the relatives I have who are older than me and then feeling uneasy and sad at how few there seem to be. All the grand-whatevers mostly gone; gorget about the great-grand-anyone’s and a lot of simple title holders without any grand prefixes starting to become absent.Report
Happy Birthday!Report
Happy birthday! A lovely piece, thanks for writing it!Report
Happy birthday! (You won’t believe how much better it gets.)Report
Happy B Day. Just wait, there will be the day when 40 feels like being young.Report
Indeed. I used to wish for my 25-year-old knees back. After bicycling this afternoon, I’d cheerfully settle for my 40-year-old knees.
Happy birthday to all the youngsters!Report
Happy B-day! (& to North also)Report
Happy Birthday! My 40’s were great! 50 mumble, mumble is pretty great tooReport
Happy birthday!Report
Forty is also the beginning of not *caring* so much. Getting older is a blessing. Our culture is an outlier. 🙂Report
Happy birthday, it helps to stop countin’, and those aren’t gray hairs, they’re just really blonde highlightsReport
Happy birthday, too. I’m 45 now, and most of what you write resonates with me. (I have no kids, so that’s a big difference.) However, the fact that I’m middle aged still hasn’t hit me. I mean, I know I am middle aged (or hope I am–knock on wood–…..it’s always possible my next hour is my last), but I don’t *feel* it. But maybe that’s what it’s like to feel middle aged. One thing I’ve noticed is that the music that gets played in stores, etc., tend to be from my youth, in a similar way that music that got played when I was young tended to be my older siblings’ youth, or even my parents’. One day, I’ll stop recognizing the music.
One weird thing is that my 9 nieces and nephews range in age from about 30 to 39, and my oldest will be 40 next February. (I have much older siblings and they had kids in their early 20s). Many of them have kids of their own (I’ve actually lost count and haven’t met about half of them). My point is, many of them are quite more mature than I am even though I’m older.Report
The wife and I were talking around the subject of age not long ago. One of the things we realize is that our internal age, that mental picture you have of yourself as you go and do all the things that occur in life, is much younger than our actual ages. I mentally picture myself as about 30, and she as probably 25. This affects how we perceive people looking at us, what clothes we think are appropriate, how much physical work we can do around the house, etc.
This plays out in many ways; how long is appropriate for her to dye her hair? Is she driving a “mom” car (she has no kids), do I have any chance at being cool with my music choices or do the instantly become uncool when I listen to them, and so on. I’m 48 and my wife is 45. When did we get old? It seems to have been a binary switch.Report
Yeah, I have something similar going on. But I also am around a tempering mechanism… I think “yeah, inside, I’m 25…” and then I talk to one of the 25 year olds we have littered around the building and, after about 3 minutes, I remember “oh, yeah… I’m one million years old.”Report
The wife has that, as she works at the university, but me, my clients are usually 20-30 years older than me.Report
My mental age is probably a lot younger than my numerical age. (However, if most 45 year olds have the same mental age as I do, then maybe my mental age is the correct mental age for my numerical age? There’s something like an infinite regress going on.)
Even so, I’m occasionally reminded that I’m getting older. So far, the reminders have been mostly benign or things I can take with stride. And for the most part, they’re reminders that so far I’ve been very fortunate and haven’t had to face many of the challenges others have. My first visit to an emergency room (for myself…I’d been there other times for other people) was only this year, and the cause turned out not to be what the doctor feared. But it was still a wake up call of sorts. And of course, I know many others who have had much worse, and earlier in their lives.Report
Little things that remind you you’re old… My wife has been binge-watching the original Twilight Zone, and I occasionally watch an episode with her. There were a staggering number of actors and actresses on the show that went on to be stars/regulars on highly successful TV series — and we recognize most of them and know the shows. “Oh, look, it’s Samantha from Bewitched.”Report
I had a couple of direct reports, who are in their late 20’s/early 30s, and I made a casual reference to Dire Straits’ “Money for Nothing” and they didn’t know what I was talking about.* Not that it’s necessarily a good song, but still….
*On the other hand, it might be one of those songs they’d recognize, or find familiar, if they heard it.Report