She’s right, of course, because
she’s a psychologist. (Joke.) She’s right because she’s both smart and wise. What
life stage is left after retirement but death, she argues. She’s noted that in
talking about retirement, I’m really fixating on death. A newspaper article
about a home for the aged, beautifully written and containing some moving
stories, fascinates me.
I am thinking more about the
deaths of my parents—86 and 84 years old—and my role in their final years. They’re
well enough for now, but at this age one fall can snuff you out pretty quick.
My father is visibly winding down; I doubt he’ll get to 90. A daily crossword
is not enough to sustain a body and mind in decline.
I look at them and ponder my body’s
inability to do the things it once did. Bits drop off, organs lose their
vitality. I cough more—things stick in a less supple throat; I forget things—dementia,
oh please, not that; I don’t do or deal with stress any longer—I bolt at the
mere whiff of a hassle.
I counter my good woman’s
argument by saying that I have no intention of sitting around waiting for the
reaper. I want to get on with myriad things: living like a Serbian peasant, training
to be an Olympic cyclist, being an award-winning onion-grower, loving better
than Casanova, and penning a major best-selling novel/memoir/guide-to before I
cark it.
She repeats that after
retirement comes death. And yes, since not having a job and deciding I didn’t
want to work any longer, I’ve been paralysed. I’ve not got on with the
templates project, she postulates, because I am grimly hanging on to a job
role, to an identity as a worker. So I
avoid finishing the job, she says.
And she’s right. Since
discarding the idea of being a paid volunteer on the Newstart allowance, the
crippling inertia is lifting. I am looking for jobs, I am back on the bike with
purpose and vigour, and I’m banging away at those templates.
Rock on.
1 comment:
Great that you are back, my good old friend. I suspected you were having personal issues of the nature you described. The best is yet to come I'm sure.
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