What Comes Around

21/05/2008

Average Rating: 2 stars

Comments:

A funny thing is happening to me as I age. I find myself becoming more compassionate towards other people.

Except the ones who don't use deodorant before boarding public transport, or waste electricity, or treat public areas like their own personal pigsties ...

May I start that sentence again?

A funny thing is happening to me as I age. I find myself becoming more compassionate towards other people, as I notice my body taking on traits that I used to ridicule in the past.

Once upon a time (and I say this from the lofty perch of my thirties), I was young and glorious and invincible and ruthless*.

If you were lucky enough to grow up in a country where you didn't have to worry about where your next meal was coming from, or if your house would still have a roof in the morning, then you would have probably felt the same way.

Plump with collagen, buzzing with high metabolisms, turgid with potential, it was easy for us to dismiss overweight people as "lazy" and people who were trapped in unfulfilled lives as "losers".

We prized confrontation and rebellion over discretion and compromise.

We couldn't understand how someone could just "let themselves go", and swore that it would never happen to us.

And then of course, the best revenge, the hardest slap in the face, was that it did happen to us. (Try to hold on to this sweet thought the next time some bright young thing disses you.)

The first changes that we notice are in our faces and bodies. In a gruesome parody of adolescence, we find hair where there wasn't any before. Wrinkles have been thrown in as a kind of booby prize, and knees twinge when you walk up and down stairs (well, mine do).

When you are young and bits of you are effortlessly defying gravity, it is easy to say that you are going to age gracefully.

But you know what? The other day, I caught sight of my behind in the bathroom mirror.

It frightened me.

In that moment, the thought of paying someone to install extra scaffolding in that region (and perhaps remove some debris) didn't seem so repugnant.

Thankfully, there is a plus side to losing control of our bodies. At the very least, we are reminded of the things that we will always have. We can even work on them for free, without going to Thailand on plastic surgery tours.

Brains, a great personality, and a sense of humour. When the looks go (and they will go), we're going to need them. If we can just remember that, I think we'll have a ball.


* Although I didn't realise it at the time.

Reader Comments

crystal

22/05/2008 at 18:02

I am very glad to say that the old adage "Life begins at 40" has in my case proven to be correct, life is more exciting, i am pushing more boundary's and and i am more radical than ever.
(On the downside my body is also more radical and is staging protests on a far to regular basis.)
My only wish is that the rest of us, who have had the benefits of a good life and continual safety and housing etc...begin to do something for those that don't have it.
Give a beggar some change
Buy a raffle ticket for something you dont care about.
Throw some change in a busker's cap
BUY THE BIG ISSUE
Just use that which you have..to help those who do not.

Jaymez

06/06/2008 at 17:12

Crystal, while you have a big heart, I think you hould be more thoughtful about dispensing charity. In Australia it is illegal to beg and unneccessary too. It shouldn't be encouraged. I recently visited Toronto in Canada where they have a major problem with 'panhandlers'. Often US citizens who come over the border to work the crowds for some lucrative money. Some become very aggressive when you don't give them money. Others have been discovered to own expensive cars and houses and live otherwise luxurious lives. Also, raffleticket fundraising is often carried out by professional fundraisers where sometimes less than 10% of the money raised, goes to the charity in whose name the tickets are sold. There are lots of charities who you can donate directly to who have to submit to audits.

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