Ever looked in a mirror and wonder who is staring back at
you?
I turned 54 this past June, and I didn’t even realize it until
a month later when a friend pointed this fact out. “What?” I reacted, not believing my ears. I
remember going into denial.
“No, I’m
not. Really? Oh Shit!”
Flash forward a month. I’m reviewing old VCR tapes my father
made of family Christmases, and vacations he and mom too. I find a video of a
wedding rehearsal when I was twenty-six.
I watch a slender woman who is preparing for her big day. Her face is
flawless, sans wrinkles, puffiness, and dark circles under her eyes. I breathlessly observe her interact with the
people helping to ensure their big day is a success. She’s focused, healthy and energetic, full of
smiles, and joyful as she laughs and makes jokes during what can be a stressful
experience. I find myself asking, who is that woman?
I’ve been asking myself this question a lot over the last year
when I look in the mirror, get on a scale, or go to the doctor. I ask myself
this question day end and day out as I come home from work exhausted and
drained of energy, disinterested in life.
The woman in the video is a woman who’s lived a lot of
life. A marriage and a divorce. A miscarriage and the realization she’s never
to have a child. A move to Colorado and a move back home to Kentucky. Failed
attempts at owning a business and self-employment. Several short-lived
relationships, and one long-term relationship that broke her heart. Financial hardships,
struggles, bankruptcies and a foreclosure. Loss of fur-babies, a mother, and
now a father suffering Lewy-Body Dementia. And finally, a sense of let-down by
none other than herself.
I suppose the mid-fifties are the “mid-life crisis”? I thought I had that in my late forties. Yes,
I have made some rotten choices, though decisions I felt were in my best
interest at the time. I held on to hopes
and dreams far too long when I needed to let them go sooner. I consoled myself
with food rather than the comfort of friends or healthier options. I’ve
isolated myself when I needed to be surrounded by supportive and loving people.
I am who I am today because of my choices, actions, and
decisions; all of which took me down the path of where I am today. We all are
the results of our choices, actions and decisions. Today is a day I can
implement change, but the daily struggle of changing is real. We fall into the
ruts, such as a demanding job that exhausts me, leaving little to nothing left of
myself for myself. Exhaustion that leaves me unmotivated and disinterested in
my home life and self-care, and feeling anti-social. Heaven is coming home to
beagles who are happy to see me, and only need me to open the back door a
couple times in the evening and fill their food and water bowls. They demand so little of me where it feels
the rest of the world demands more than I can give.
I realize that I am at choice in how year 55 plays out. A week
in Colorado, away from my life offered clarity on who needs to be first on my
list of priorities. This concept is foreign to me as I have always been taught
to put others first. I have willingly put others first before me. It’s who I am
– I believe in service to others. But to what sacrifice? I lost somewhere along the way the important
lesson if taking care of myself. I came
home to serve my parents. I have served people with developmental disabilities.
I serve low income families and their children. I serve the staff who serve those
families. Sometimes, I want to scream, who’s taking care of me?
But the answer is obvious.
I am responsible for me: my life choices, my actions, my decisions. I am blessed to have a small support group of
friends and family who are there for me, when I need help and ask for it. I am
blessed to have a great job that allows me to make a difference in people’s
lives. I must remember to take care of me first, so I am in a good place to
support others. You know, that
whole oxygen mask thing.
And so, to the young woman in the video I didn’t recognize,
I love you. And I know you’re still somewhere within me. You’re smarter and
wiser. I just need to find your wide-eyed expectation of great things that lie
ahead, even at the age of 54. I call forward the Light and Joy you brightly and
willingly shined twenty-six years ago forth to reflect from me as I look into
that mirror today. I am receiving you with open arms and cannot wait feel you
again.
Share your reactions to this post in the comment section and let the author know if what she's feeling resonates. Do you recognize yourself in the mirror? Are you finding it hard to shift with the aging process? We are in this journey together!
Share your reactions to this post in the comment section and let the author know if what she's feeling resonates. Do you recognize yourself in the mirror? Are you finding it hard to shift with the aging process? We are in this journey together!
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