Older…wiser…YES!
We’ve been going through a bit of a transition in our house regarding our plans for the future and it’s required a lot of physical, emotional and psychic energy over the past month or so. It’s taken me a while to process my feelings about how life will look going forward; to stare my fears and anxiety in the face in order to grow and evolve. We all come to forks in the road where we need to choose a path. I’m working on doing that from a place of wisdom, rather than fear; a place of growth, rather than stagnation.
I was corresponding with someone that I consider a mentor about some of the choices I’ve been struggling with and he told me that the problem with getting older is that sometimes we make choices based on fear; fear of shaking the status quo, fear of losing what we’ve worked so hard to accomplish and accumulate, fear of making the wrong choice. He reminded me that I’ve always been one to make bold choices and now is certainly not the time to suddenly start making decisions based on fear of the unknown.
Because, let’s be honest: life IS unknown. No matter how much planning and scheming and plotting we do, it’s a crapshoot. Giving into fear makes no sense because in the end, we all get whipsawed by fate. Adaptation is a better guiding principle.
I have a dog tag necklace that has one word on it: Fearless. I wear it to remind myself to speak, act and live a fearless life; I’m good with that. As I get older, I’m trying to embrace that concept more and more. I know way more now than I did 20, or even 5 years ago and I’m emboldened by that. It’s a shame that we don’t value and revere the wisdom that our elders can pass along.
As a kid, I would cringe and shut my ears every time my mother uttered the words “I’m older and wiser than you”. In fact, I ignored the sage advice that usually followed that statement for a very long time, much to my detriment. I’m finally starting to understand the whole ‘older and wiser’ concept because it’s true. I’m morphing from being irritated by older people AND younger people, into reverence for the old and their life experiences and amusement at the young and unwise. I know what’s it’s like to be young and stupid and I can’t wait to be older and wiser. Acceptance, adaptation, fearlessness; those are my new buzzwords.
I’m reading a book by Richard Rohr, called “Falling Upward: A Spirituality For theTwo Halves of Life” and his premise is that the first half of our lives is all about building our container, while the second half is for filling it up. We work hard to build a life, a career, a family and we end up making a lot of sacrifices that can sap our souls. The key is to get to the place where we can finally enjoy and fill that ‘container’ that we’ve spent so much time and energy creating.
I’ve built my container; it felt a bit crowded with extraneous stuff, so I’ve spent the past few months purging it. Much of it has been a physical purge of possessions and junk, but it’s been equally about purging expectations, both mine and others. I’m purging the past to make room for the future. My container was full of a few too many moldy leftovers. Things I was afraid to throw away. Not any more.
Acceptance. Adaptation. Fearless. Moving forward.