Indiscriminate Drivel

Coming to Terms with 50

When I was a child, there was a television commercial where two women held out their hands and another person had to guess which one was the mother and which was the daughter by looking at their hands. I don’t even remember what the product was – moisturizer cream? Dish soap? Who cares.

In the smugness of my youth, I always thought this was dumb. Hands? HANDS? I mean, come on. The signs of aging were grey hair and wrinkles on your face. Hands all looked the same.

Right?

Much later in my adulthood, I decided I was going to grow old gracefully. I mean, Retinol is still in scope and Spanks are required, but I wouldn’t use Botox or have plastic surgery on my face to hold onto my youth.  Perhaps this is just the smugness-du-jour.  Perhaps in a few years, I’ll blog about my procedure and why I changed my mind.

Besides, if I got Botox injected into my brow, how would my children know when to run and hide in fear?

For today, I stand firm.  I didn’t think it would be difficult.  I had never struggled with aging. Many of my friends turning 40 had issues. Heck, even some turning 30 did. I turned 40 with aplomb. Even 45.

Somewhere around 47, it hit me like a ton of bricks and 49 has been brutal.  Like Sarah Palin could see Russia from her porch, I can see 50 clearly from right here at 49.

50.

~~~~~~~~~~~

In the past few years, both of my oldest daughters have gotten married. One with a big, traditional wedding and one with a more quaint and non-traditional approach.  That first wedding is well-documented on my blog. I think I referred to it as my ‘prom’. It was lovely and I got to buy so many matching dresses, I was in heaven.

I shared many photos of the event here on my blog and elsewhere, but I didn’t share one. In fact, I didn’t share this one with anybody. When I was looking through the photographer’s photos and I saw it, I went “Awwwww…”  It was so sweet – my mother putting a bracelet on the wrist of my youngest daughter.  Cute, right?

Until I realized my mother wasn’t there when we were all getting ready and the one who managed that bracelet’s clasp was me.  Me. Just to be sure, I checked the wedding ring in the picture.  Mine.  Those were my hands. I’d never be on that dish soap commercial now, and aging does, in fact, show in our hands.

old hands

I am turning 50 this year. I have a 30 year old daughter and a 10 year old daughter and 3 more in between those two.

My hands are old and my hips sometimes ache and I’m either losing some of my hearing or getting better at tuning people out.  There are a lot of things going on here – things happening that didn’t used to happen, things that used to happen that have stopped (thank the lord for small favors!) and things that annoy and, occasionally, disgust me. But that’s not the whole story.

I’m working on it, this turning 50 thing. By the time the day arrives, I want to be at peace with this struggle and ready to celebrate the joy of it.

Because, baby, I am still a force to be reckoned with. I’m on top my game at work, I continue to hone my writing skills, I’m funny and smart, I’ve mastered the art of eye-liner and I still wear cute bras.

Come at me, 50.  I can take you on. These old hands know a thing or two about managing life.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

PS: This post is reflective of how I feel today. Next week I may well be sobbing about how my nipples now point south. Well, one of them anyway.

By |May 21st, 2014|Indiscriminate Drivel|Comments Off on Coming to Terms with 50

Are You There, God? It’s Me, Linda

Are you there LindaDear God,

It’s been awhile. I feel like I should start with an introduction, maybe an apology, or perhaps an explanation is in order.

You see, I haven’t called on you in… well, years. And the truth is, I don’t really believe in you.  I’m not sure if I do, to be honest. If you are there, it’s kind of pointless to lie about that, I suppose. You know.

I grew up with you, visiting often.  I said the words they taught us to say.  I guess I believed in you then, but it wasn’t this deep and big belief – it was just sort of expected of me and I usually did what was expected of me.  I still do, mostly.

Somewhere along the line, I realized I didn’t really believe.  Or maybe more accurately, I just didn’t feel it – didn’t feel your presence, didn’t feel an absence of this missing thing inside of me.  I didn’t need you, or maybe you didn’t need me.  If you exist.

Most people I know who believe feel your presence, and they feel you fill this need in them.  I’m happy they have you for that.  I always thought if I had that hole – felt I was missing a piece of a puzzle and you were just the right fit – that I would embrace you.  But I never had that, that missing thing.

Now? Well, there’s a hole.  I don’t know if it’s a God-shaped hole or not.  It may be a midlife crisis shaped hole.  Or maybe it’s a hole burned into me by the hormones of peri-menopause.  It could be the hole of being unfulfilled in the ways of this physical world – realizing I’m coming up on 50 and I have a big dream that isn’t getting any closer at all, one I always thought would be closer by now.  Or perhaps it’s because of that other stuff – the stuff I won’t talk about here, but you know what I mean, ’cause if you are receiving this message then I assume you are able to see into my head and my heart and my spleen and my soul and you know.  You know.

It’s kind of nice to think words aren’t necessary, but then again I am overflowing with words.  You made me, if you exist, so I guess I kind of blame you.  I open my mouth and words just tumble out.

I have a friend who said “If you’re struggling, reach out to him. He’s been known to help others.  Maybe he can help you.”

Last night, as I lay in bed drifting off, I did just that.  It wasn’t prayer in the way we learned when I was a kid.  It was more like a letter from camp.  And then it turned into a blog post.  And, well, here we are at 4:57 AM and I can’t sleep so I’m writing to you on my blog.

I think I’ve just admitted that I’ve used you for blog-fodder, God.  I don’t know if that’s a sin or not.  If it is, it’s one of vanity – I’m using you for a self-serving purpose.  But sometimes my words here touch others, connect me to them, so maybe not.  Maybe it’s a good thing.

See how confusing it all gets in my head, God?  I blame you.

I’m not sure what the point of this is.  I don’t feel that I’ve a right to ask for anything.  I feel grateful for so very much – there is so much good fortune in my life.  If you are real, perhaps I should thank you for that.  So, thanks.

What I want, if I were to ask for anything, is for peace.  You might think I’m a real saint to seek peace for the world, but I’ll confess, God – I’m being selfish. I want peace for myself.  Peace of mind.  Balance in my life. Acceptance of what is, or a clear path to change it to what I think it should be, could be.

In the meantime, I’ll just keep muddling through.  There are moments of great joy – sometimes even days and weeks of it.  I appreciate the hell out of those.  Maybe that’s poor wording, but you get my point.

I want – need – my balance back in order to find my peace.  I don’t mind life being hard.  I don’t mind being tired all the time.  I accept that I will work until two weeks after I die. I get that I will gain 3 pounds when I glance at a cake.  I’m not happy about it, but  I get all that.  But I need to feel I’m more part of what I’m working for – that it’s half mine, that it needs me in ways beyond the ones that aren’t fulfilling.  I need to be connected to it, to share in it equally.  I’m missing that.

Now that I put it all down into words, it sounds like the age-old quest of the human race.  Peace, acceptance, balance, fulfillment.  Maybe it’s a midlife-crisis shaped hole I’m trying to fill after all.

And God?  Maybe it wouldn’t be too much to ask for me to find a more efficient way to wrap things up and bring them to a proper conclusion without blathering on and on and on.

Amen.

(See what I did there?)

 

 

Dear Carol Burnett

The_Carol_Burnett_ShowDear Carol Burnett,

I have so much to say to you, I don’t even know where to start!!

My birthday was just a couple weeks ago and my daughters bought me a Carol Burnett Show Limited Edition DVD Collection of Favorites Chosen by Carol Herself.  I was thrilled! Well, the name was a little long for my liking, but still, overall – thrilled.

Because of this, you’ve been on my mind a lot and I wanted to write to you.

One thing I’ve realized — you know that game where someone says “You can have dinner with anyone, alive or dead. Make your choice.”  Have you ever played that? Well, in the past, I’ve always just responded “I pick DEAD!” because that way I could do all the talking over dinner. People kind of annoy me so I thought dead was a safer option, plus I like to talk a lot.  But — at the gym this week, I realized it’s YOU!  You are the one person I would love to have dinner with.

God, I hope you like Red Lobster.

Anyway…

I grew up watching your stuff .  Your show was my favorite show on television and now that I have this DVD (don’t make me type that awful, horrendous title out again!), I’ve been watching some of the episodes and… well, there’s no other way to say it – CAROL – I MISS YOU!

I am definitely not one of those creepy stalker people. It’s not like I’ve kept up with your every move over the years, but occasionally you show up in the news or on an episode of Law & Order.  It occurs to me that I fell in love with you in your career prime and you have managed to age into your golden years with a tone of dignity and integrity and I respect the hell out of that.

Carol, I’m glad you don’t look like a team of plastic surgeons worked you over.  Thank God for that.

Anyway…

I still don’t know what I want to be when I grow up.  I’m 48 and I’m trying to figure it out.  I do know that it includes writing and speaking and humor. I thought maybe if we could go to Red Lobster, I could ask your advice, because while I was watching that ridiculously-named DVD, it occurred to me that you didn’t get your show while in your 20s.  I’m not sure how old you were and I’d hate to guess, but could be that you didn’t peak until your 40s.  Could be.

I’m in Procurement, Carol. You might not even know what that means, but it’s the corporate equivalent of your mop-and-bucket job.  I gotta figure out how to turn that into something more fulfilling before I’m too damn old to care any more.  Holy shit, this just got a little too serious… let’s steer it back to lighter topics, OK?

Even if you don’t want to be a career advisor to me, the Cheddar Bay Biscuits are TO DIE FOR.  I imagine people like you probably don’t get to Red Lobster too often.  Let me bring the middle class to you, Carol.  Over the years, you brought me so much joy – Cheddar Bay Biscuits are the least I could do to pay you back.  We’ll have some laughs. I promise I won’t ask you to do your Tarzan yell.

Well, I won’t take up too much more of your time.  Let me know if you want to go to the Lobster.

Love,

Linda

ps: I was going to make an open letter to Erma Bombeck because she is my humor-writing idol, but she’s also dead. I’m not calling you First Runner Up or anything – I loved you BOTH equally – you filled different spaces on my idol dance card.  Still, I figured I had a better shot writing to you because of the whole not-dead-yet thing.

ps2: Could you and your old cast and Betty White do some sort of special?  I love Betty White too, so I just needed to work her in there.

ps3: I’m funny.  You can take my word or you can go read my tweets. Might be better if you take my word.

 

By |January 13th, 2013|Indiscriminate Drivel|Comments Off on Dear Carol Burnett