Tag Archives: anti-aging

Mem’ries…What’s Too Painful to Remember, Blah, Blah, Blah

The Way We Were (Mem’ries) sung by Barry Manilow

Many of us who are over age 50 worry about our mental health and our memory. We worry about lots of other things, too, until we forget what it was that we were worrying about.

We’re pretty concerned about losing our memories and the possibility that we may develop dementia or Alzheimer’s. Lots of us blame our memory loss after age 50 on stress or menopause or loss of testosterone, whatever is in the news that week. Then we try to replace our memory by using bio-identical hormone replacement therapy or some other anti-aging cure.

Recently I lost some essential items and couldn’t find them anywhere.  I blamed the loss on robbers.

I know….that sounds like something your grandmother was probably saying just before your well-meaning aunt packed her bags to take her to the nursing home (uh, retirement center.)

I mean, what else could have happened to an extra large Wal-Mart bag that was loaded with a 4-pack of Angel Soft toilet tissue and a 6 month supply of Dove bath soap? It’s not like it was a tiny package that held, say…oh, I don’t know…something tiny…like maybe a  bracelet or maybe a bean.

I looked everywhere: closets, trunk of car, backseat of car, under my bed, on the front porch, on the back stoop, under the kitchen sink…any place I could have stuffed a bag or set one down and forgot to pick it back up.

Is it too far-fetched a notion to think that thieves may have broken into my house, and then finding absolutely nothing else of value, left with my toilet paper and soap?

To be honest, I do know it is too far-fetched an explanation.

All other explanations require that I face some of my personal issues. Yes, I have others besides my current tissue issue.

One is that I’m messy. Another is that I’m cheap. A third is that I’m lazy. There. I said it. I am messy, cheap, and lazy. These are three of my faults, although I have others that I’m not going to face today.

These faults complicated my tissue problem. I’m pretty sure they are the reason I couldn’t  find that blasted bag of toilet paper.

After re-tracing my steps many times and looking all possible places lo, so many times, I have finally come to a conclusion and closed the case.

The following scenario is a re-enactment:

On the day in question (I can’t remember what day, of course)  I carried my Wal-Mart purchases into the house, placing them, including the sack containing toilet tissue and bath soap, on the kitchen floor.

Because I am lazy, I only unpacked and put away a few of the purchases, leaving the sack containing the now missing items on the floor.

Later, I cleaned the kitchen and, because I am cheap, put trash in Wal-Mart bags placing them near the bag that would eventually be lost.

Then, again because I’m lazy, I left all bags on the kitchen floor overnight (or so), finally gathering all bags (including the one…well, you know…) and tossing them into the Dumpster in the alley.

That’s my conclusion based on my investigation. I don’t know if it’s correct because I still can’t remember what I did with that durn sack.

I have a clue, but no memory.

Whoo…glad I figured that out.  But now I’ve  added another issue, memory loss, to all the others.

While I was upturning the house for my lost purchases, I found a package of six Dove soap bars under the bathroom sink. It wasn’t the one I was missing. It was one that I’d bought a while back and forgot I had. Anyway, that discovery fixed the soap problem.

I solved the tissue issue by going to the Walgreen’s down the street and restocking. As it turned out, a 12-pack of Angel Soft was on sale there.

When I returned from the store I put two rolls of tissue in the bathroom and the other ten rolls in the hall closet. I check on them every day or two, just for safekeeping.

Mem’ries….If we had the chance to do it all again, tell me…would we? Could we?

 

Give Me a White Flag…How to Look Young Over 50

I surrender. I give up. I’m waving my white flag.

I just finished reading another article on looking young over 50

Another article that showed haircuts guaranteed to take 10 years …maybe even 20… off my appearance.

Another article where the subjects have a new haircut, but  also had a make-up re-do, had their clothing colors and styles changed, had their hair color changed and had a professional photographer take their pictures.

Sure they look young over 50. They’ve practically been airbrushed into oblivion.

Oh, yes…I might add…their AFTER  photographs were also Photo Shopped. Suddenly their faces are smooth. Their AFTER photos are remarkably free of facial flaws.

  • No under eye bags.
  • No dark circles.
  • No deep forehead wrinkles.
  • No deep smile lines at the corners of the mouth.

There’s no haircut in the whole frickin’ world that can change that.

Now I’m a little angry. But I’m not angry because my hairstyle doesn’t make me look young over 50.

I’m angry at myself.

I’m angry because I wasted my precious time reading that stupid article.

I’m angry because I still delude myself into thinking that I can reverse what time has given me, that I think I can regain my youth with a hairstyle. Believe me… for me to look young over 50 is going to take more than a change in my hairstyle!

I’m not angry that I look my age. I’m angry that I waste my time caring about it.

I agree that first impressions are important. I understand that we are initially judged by our looks.

But frankly, I’m tired of caring about it.

I believe there are better ways to spend my precious, limited time here on this Earth.

Give me a minute, I’ll come up with something.

I’m pretty sure that I don’t have to be an unwrinkled, Photo Shopped, youthful looking person to serve food at our local homeless shelter.

I doubt I’d have to wear color coordinated clothing that “takes 10 Lbs. off” to hammer nails at a Habitat for Humanity building site.

I’m positive I won’t be judged by my appearance should I volunteer at our hospice center.  I think my help would be welcomed if I could distribute coffee, juice and comfort to the families who have relatives there, even if I don’t look young over 50.

I should stop wasting my time by caring about looking younger than I am and spend my energy on just simply caring.

I can’t regain my youth, but by God, I can reclaim my integrity.

I surrender. I give up. I look my age and I don’t care.  I’ve got more important things to do than worry about looking young over 50.