Maturing Youth

I was recently face down on a rolling bed, fingering the thin fabric of my hospital gown, and getting a scan of my insides.   The headphones sent waves of Taylor Swift, with a few muffled interruptions by the technician telling me to hold my breath.  But I could only focus on the sting from the doctor’s words that morning: at your age.

Hrrumph.  Really?  Had it finally come to that?  Apparently, I had been skating along gracefully all these years until I slid into the cement wall face first that morning.

There were many moments along the way that had, sadly, strengthened my little illusion.  There was the afternoon I spent at Sephora agonizing over whether I had fine lines, wrinkles, sagging, dehydration, or age spots.  Which was my worst enemy?  And was I correcting or preventing?  Or rediscovering my youthful strength?  Should I smear diamond flecks or gold particles on?  Could I afford either?  Overwhelmed by anxiety, I took one last look at the mirror, and decided my most pressing problem was the teenage-quality pimple on my chin.  I left to find some Clearasil.

And there was the ophthalmologist who forgot to write my power levels on my prescription.  Even though I was never able to get contact lenses as a result, I have a soft spot for him.  For in the dead of winter pallor and holiday party nutrition, he looked deep into my eyes and asked if I was a student.  Yes, my eyes had the health of a twenty year-old.  I suppose I should have asked if he meant graduate student, but I took the leap of faith in my favor.

And of course, my mother-in-law was part of the psychosis.  Every invitation to join her and her friends out in the suburbs on a Saturday night ended with a plea for attendance by the “youngsters.”  She meant me.  And my group of middle-aged friends.  So naturally I raced out the door in my sparkly shoes and Hello Kitty bag, only too happy to comply.

In my mind, the day of reckoning would arrive when I turned about seventy-two, and would have to stop going to Power Zen Spinning Boot Camp Fusion.  Unfortunately, my physician brought that dream to a halt a few decades sooner than expected.

So it seems I have no choice but to embrace reality, and embark on the journey as a mature adult.  Except I suddenly remember a business meeting a few weeks ago.  I had just expressed my surprise at the easy transition to the time zone of our meeting location.  One of the men turned to me and said, “Well, at your age.”

Leave a comment