It happened this week. I was minding my own business when out of the blue, with no warning…I turned 58. (Yes, I’m one of those women who tell their age. I say to hell with it.)

If you asked in my teens or twenties, what this time would be like I would’ve conjured up those old women in “Zorba the Greek,” all bent, dressed in black, and shaking their fist at the sky.

Instead something odd happened. This time of life isn’t what I expected. I keep waiting to feel used-up and done and regretful, but somehow that keeps eluding me. Here are three things which surprised me the most…

I’m happy. I expected my late fifties to be spent looking backward, poring through old photo albums, living out memories from the past, most of the fun over. I expected them to be full of melancholy and what if’s?

What I didn’t expect was to be still excited about the future and strangely content with the present. In many ways, I’m cheerier than my angst-ridden twenties, tired, young parent thirties, and “Who the hell am I?” forties. Life is good.

I’m healthy. Okay, healthy isn’t the same as perfect. I have a few medical issues and unexpected aches or twinges I always assume are life threatening.

But I have to say, for the mileage, this jalopy’s purring along pretty well. I never expected to be doing yoga everyday and sprinting up the occasional staircase. I never expected to still be wearing jeans and tank tops and high heels. I never expected to still like my body.

I’m still young. Okay, maybe not on the outside, but inside. I used to think I’d be sidelined in my late fifties, watching those crazy kids have all the fun. Who knew I’d be one of them? My bucket list keeps getting longer, not shorter.

I was ambitious and serious when young, plunging single-mindedly toward a horizon, which never quite materialized. Now little things bring enjoyment – having lunch with friends, reading with my cat on my lap, watching the seasons change in my backyard.

Who knew? The things I used to rush through on the way to real life turned out to be real life.

And yes there are things that suck about growing older. I always avoid surprise mirror attacks, like the other day in a store when I saw this beleaguered older woman who turned out to be me.

Or how in movies 70-something actors are romantically-paired with females young enough to be their great-great-granddaughters. Women are always bombarded with the message we only count as bodies and if you’re over 40, you’re way past your shelf life.

But eff-it. Before my grandmother Nana died, she told me not to tell her new boyfriend her real age. “He doesn’t know I’m 87,” she whispered. “He thinks I’m only 82.”

And maybe that’s what growing up is all about. It’s relative. The goal lines keep moving. We’re as youthful or old as we believe we are.

And if we’re lucky, we’ll keep feeling young… at least on the inside.

What are your thoughts on aging? Comments are always welcome and if you’d like to receive postings by email, just press here. Thank you so much for reading and sharing!

P.S. Found this great fitness site called HVMN which answers some of our most pressing exercise and health questions. Check it out.

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