Thereâs a brutal moment in youth when you go from looking up to your elders to looking somewhat down on them. Or at least seeing them with a more jaundiced eye. Maybe it happens at a party. You glance around the room and realize the gentleman you once saw as distinguished has cheerfully dipped a half-eaten chicken wing into a bowl of hummus. You see what one might politely refer to as a ânot youngâ woman waving her arms around with a little too much gusto on the dance floor. And it hits you: They donât realize that theyâre old.
So how do you know when itâs happening to you?
There are a few signs. For me, it was contentedly listening to my favorite podcast, one in which three funny, charming and totally-with-it co-hosts â the kind of guys Iâd want to hang out with, the kind of guys Iâd label âcoolâ or âhipâ or what do they call it now â banter around and feel like a part of the gang. Then I reckoned with the fact that they are all in their 50s.
Itâs that shift from copying the outfits of your slightly younger colleagues to realizing that their fashion choices would not look at all OK on you. And then moving on to the final frontier: looking at the outfits of your much younger colleagues and really not wanting to dress like them at all. With a lurch, you understand that youâve entered the age in which wearing jewel tones is meant to be a good idea. Welcome to the long slide.
Then it starts hitting you repeatedly in the face. Itâs all those little moments: waking up after a really good, long nightâs sleep only to feel worse off than you did when you got into bed the night before. You donât bounce out but instead heave yourself up to audible snaps and crackles. You learn that you can inflict a grave injury to your own body simply by reaching for the alarm clock in the wrong way. You know that when you wind up in physical therapy it will not be the result of a marathon or water-skiing but because of something that happened on a sidewalk.
Itâs in understanding that after a lifetime of incremental improvements to your self-care regimen, youâve finally figured out how to make your face and hair look the best they possibly can at precisely the moment itâs all for naught. Your resting face that in an earlier decade may have given off a miffed vibe has hardened into something that more closely resembles unbridled fury. âWhatâs wrong?â people ask you while youâre daydreaming or gazing softly into the middle distance.
Boomers, we know, didnât appreciate getting long in the tooth. Theyâre the ones who started this whole fight against Old. But as a Gen Xer, I have to assume itâs worse for us. Our entire life is built around an aura of disaffected youth. There is no natural progression for that energy into middle age. I donât see us easing into words like âseasonedâ or âmature.â Millennials will no doubt take their own kind of offense to aging when itâs their turn, but that is not our cross to bear.
For we are tired now, and some of this comes as a relief.
Nobody is waiting for you to join TikTok, and it is a blessing. You are not wanted there. You donât have to keep up, keep up, keep-keep-keeping up. You can let some of it go. You donât need to understand Harry Styles. You will never head off to a Super Junior concert. Itâs fine to have no idea what Dua Lipa does.
You see small children in the wild and, rather than find them cute or amusing or in any way fun-seeming, you instead think, âI donât have to do that anymore.â
Many things are no longer your problem. And plenty of well-worn excuses enable you to shrug off your oldskie ways. If youâre a woman, you can blame it all on hormones, just like a teenager. If youâre a man, you can wave it off as a midlife crisis; youâve got lots of novels that help explain.
You realize you are getting closer to something inconceivable only a short time ago: the grandma years. When you are a grandma, you wonât even need excuses. You can behave in ways entirely inexplicable to everyone younger than yourself and it will be seen as an eccentricity. You can sidle up to strange men in line for the movies and take some of their popcorn to give to your grandchild, the way my grandma did. You can pretend to have gone entirely batty whenever it suits you. You can pretend you donât know that youâre shouting or that you canât hear anything anyone else says.
And you know what? It starts to feel like something to look forward to.
- Author Unknown