Too Old for this Shit
I’m just finally starting to get used to myself as everything is falling apart. It’s true what they say that you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone. Just when your skin finally clears up and you decide that you don’t look half bad in your favorite pair of jeans, the wrinkles start coming.
My mother maintains that it was the same for her, that by the time she decided she was pretty she was looking back on the photos thinking this about a woman twenty years younger. I like to think that I’ve come to this conclusion at an age younger than she was when she thought this of herself, but the thing is it’s all relative. She still looks fantastic in her sixties, but with the way I’ve been living by the time I get to her age it’s the most I can hope to think that I’ll look like I’ve been backed over by a bus instead of an entire conga line of cars.
I wonder if we’re not supposed to like ourselves that much because it’s easier to let go of things that we didn’t know we had—cellulite isn’t so crushing if you never realized you had nice legs in the first place.
I never had the confidence to ask for the things that I wanted. Even the way I wanted to be treated was somehow off the table. At waitressing jobs in my late teens and early twenties I was confused when someone said inappropriate things about me or grabbed at me. I usually just ended up deciding that the person who’d done it had made a mistake because they were behaving the way you would with an attractive woman and I believed that I was not that.
Now that I’m almost considered to be too old to dress the way I like I’m finally comfortable enough to do it. I imagine that I’ll be the senior citizen wearing a top hat and black lipstick, finally brave enough to read at open mike nights and purchase a pet fox.
Sometimes I feel like we should get two lives: one to figure out how to get used to ourselves and how the world works, and another to have fun and enjoy the things we’ve learned. I’m realizing only now that my mother was right about so many things, and perhaps our parents are the only leg up that we really get in this life.
It feels like I’m just starting to catch up, and yet my twenties are pretty much over and I imagine that I’ll feel the same way at the end of my thirties. I’ll be the woman disrobing in the middle of the store before someone finally takes me aside and shows me that there are fitting rooms for such things and that yes, I really can have my own.
Life is like a test that you didn’t get to study for. I feel as if I just haven’t learned enough at this point to keep up. It’s like being stuck in your own version of Groundhog Day, and whatever I’m meant to learn I refuse to. As if I’m continually being reincarnated as a stink bug.
Kona Hawaii 2016