Homage to Age and Femininity
 

HOMAGE TO AGE AND FEMININITY

BY ANNE LAMOTT ( from O magazine):

I was at a wedding Saturday with a lot of women in their 20s and 30s in sexy
dresses, their youthful skin aglow.  And even though  I was 30 or 40 years
older, a little worse for wear, a little tired and overwhelmed by the loud
music,  I was smiling.  I smiled with a secret Cheshire-cat  smile of
pleasure and relief in being older.  I would not give you back a year of
life lived.   Age has given me what I was looking for my entire  life - it
gave me me.  It  provided the time and experience and failures and  triumphs
and friends who helped  me step into the shape that had been waiting for me
all my life.

I fit into me now - mostly.  I have an organic life  finally, not the one
people imagined for me or tried to get me to have or  the life someone else
might celebrate as a successful one - I have the life I  dreamed of.  I have
become  the woman I hardly dared imagine I could be.

There are parts I don't love - until a few years ago, I had no idea that you
could get cellulite on your stomach - but I not only get along with me most
of the time now, I am militantly and maternally on my own side.

Left to my own devices, would I trade this for firm thighs, fewer wrinkles,
a better memory?  On some days.  That's why it's such a blessing I'm not
left to my own devices. Because the truth is I have  amazing friends to
whom  I can turn.  I have a cool kid, a sweet boyfriend, darling  pets. 
I've learned to pay attention to life, and to listen.  I'd give up all this
for a flatter belly?  Are you crazy?

I still have terrible moments when I despair about my body.  But they are
just moments - I used to have years when I believed I would be more
beautiful if I jiggled less; if all parts of my body stopped  moving when I
did.  But I believe two things now that I didn't at 30. When we get to
heaven, we will discover that the appearance of our butts and skin was 127th
on the list of what mattered on this earth.

And I know the truth that l am not going to live forever, and this has set
me free.  Eleven years ago, when my friend Pammy was dying at the age of 37
we went shopping at Macy's.  She was in a wheelchair, with a wig and three
weeks to live. I tried on a short dress and came out to model it for Pammy.

I asked if she thought it made me look big in the thighs, and she said, so
kindly, "Annie?  You just don't have that kind of time."  I live by this
story.

I am thrilled-ish for every gray hair and achy muscle, because of all the
friends who didn't make it, who died too young of AIDS and breast cancer.
And  much of the stuff I used to worry about has subsided  -what other
people think of me and how l am living my life. I give these things the big
shrug.  Mostly. Or at least eventually. It's a huge relief.

I became more successful in my mid-40s, but this pales compared to the other
gifts of this decade - how kind to myself I have become, what a wonderful,
tender wife I am to myself, what a loving companion.  I get myself tubs of
hot salty water at the end of the day in which to soak my tired feet.

I run interference for myself when I am working, like the wife of a great
artist would: "No, I'm sorry, she can't come.  She's working hard these days
and needs a lot of downtime." I live by the truth that "No" is a complete
sentence.

I rest as a spiritual act.

I have grown up enough to develop radical acceptance.  I insist on the right
to swim in warm water at every opportunity, no matter how cold, no matter
how young and gorgeous the other people on the beach are.  I don't think
that if I live to be 80 I'll wish I'd spent more hours in the gym or kept my
house a lot cleaner.  I think I'm going to wish I had swum more unashamedly,
made more mistakes, spaced out more, rested.

On the day I die, I want to have had dessert.  So this informs how l live
now.


I have survived so much loss, as all of us have by now - my parents, dear
friends, my pets.  Rubble is the ground on which our deepest friendships are
built.  If you haven't already, you will lose someone you can't live
without, and your heart will be badly broken; and the bad news is that you
never completely get over the loss of a beloved  person.

But this is also the good news.  They live forever, in your broken heart
that doesn't seal back up. And you come through. It's like having a leg that
never heals perfectly - that still hurts when the
weather is cold - but you learn to dance with the limp. You dance to the
absurdities of life; you dance to the minuet of old friendships. I danced
alone for a couple of years, and came to believe I might not ever have a
passionate romantic relationship - might end up alone!  I'd been so
terrified of this my whole life.

But I'd rather never be in a couple or never get laid again than to be in a
toxic relationship.  I spent a few years celibate. It was lovely, and it was
sometimes lonely.  I had surrendered; I'd run out of  bullets. But I learned
to be the person I wished I'd meet - at which point I found a kind,
artistic, handsome man. We have been together 20 months now.  When we get
out of bed, we hold our lower backs, like Walter  Brennan, and we smile.

Younger women worry that their memories will begin to go.  And you know
what?  They will. Menopause has not increased my focus and retention as much
I as I'd been hoping. But a lot is better off missed. A lot is better not
gotten around to.  I know many of the women at the wedding fear getting
older, and I wish I could gather them together again and give them my word
of honor that every one of my friends loves being older, loves being in her
50s, 60s, 70s.  My Aunt Gertrude is 85 and leaves
us behind in the dust when we hike.

Look, my feet hurt some mornings, and my body is less forgiving when I
exercise more than I'm used to.  But I love my life more, and me more.  I'm
so much juicier.  And, like that old saying goes, it's not that I think less
of myself, but that I think of myself less often. And that feels like heaven
to me.



 

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