Middle-Aged* warning depressing
This is horrible. Kafkaesque. I woke up with a sudden
realization—I’m not a bug. Much worse. I am middle-aged.
I expected to feel this way after my parent’s death early
last year. I’ve been feeling slower, not as enthusiastic about exercise—something
I never went two days in a row without doing. I wouldn’t get into running shoes
for anything less than 5 miles. But I suspect it wasn’t this that nudged me
into melancholy.
Perhaps when a friend mentioned he was having cataract surgery.
What! No worries, he responded, it’s outpatient! Or when a Facebook friend from
highschool announced that he was retiring from teaching at the end of the
school year. Congratulations! Or that a good friend, even younger than I, was
gifted with their first grandchild. Mazel tov!
These are significant milemarkers. We gauge how far we’ve
come and where we might be going next.
Where are we going
next?
I think what I’m feeling is a brittleness, a great
uncertainty. That what I once thought might not actually happen has happened.
My husband and I are finding ourselves often sleepless, fearful of the future.
This confession in itself is middle-aged. I can’t remember once worrying about
social security when I was 30. Really. Mostly when I was younger, I
worried I might not have time for all the things I wanted to do like graduate
from high school, college, get married, have kids, go to Europe.
The sun rose and set, and I graduated, got married, had the
daughter I dreamed of, we’ve traveled (See
European Schedule).
In my thirties I began to worry about my friends. Would we
finish the journey we began together? Then in my forties several of the people
I’d gotten closest to moved away. All the promises about raising kids together,
being there for one another collapsed under other obligations, other visions. Quite
a few divorces, a few have shocked me. The kids have lost touch with each
other, finding little in common. A few of those bright beautiful children of my
friends have passed away.
Here we are now, middle-aged. We stuck it out. Yet we are
wide-awake.
And I suspect we are not alone. There are teachers and
firefighters wondering if their pension will evaporate. All of us are concerned
that social security will become a bone thrown to placate those wishing for A
BALANCED BUDGET. That, along with raising the minimum age for Medicare, we will
be toothless and decrepit before eligibility. Brittle and broken.
I see it all around me, safety nets unraveling. The seniors
we serve at Friendly
Towers (http://www.friendlytowers.com/) and the epidemic
rise in elderly homeless especially at CCO (http://www.ccolife.org/). Many of these people lived
lives with few expectations anyway, on the margins. But now they are
discovering that even the bare basics are not going to be enough. SSI, Social
Security, a monthly pension will not magically make affordable housing appear,
re-instate food stamps mysteriously revoked, or cover the ever-increasing
co-pays. Then there are the constant scams.
God forbid they get really sick.
Jeremy Nicholls has written at his blog Setting Prisoners
Free of the disabled and elderly homeless that he has worked with. (http://freeingprisoners.blogspot.com/2013/01/the-mysterious-disappearance-of-very.html)
My fear is that I will end up like those I have helped, Les
Misérables. God help us.
Graceland Cemetery--down the street from where I live in Uptown, Chicago |
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