Religion Magazine

On Turning 60

By Marilyngardner5 @marilyngard

On Turning 60This is 60!

I'm turning 60 on Monday, and I'm here to tell you that if you let it be, life is terrifying. Just today, four days before the auspicious birthday, a news article made its way across the algorithms of social media to inform me of the "Wuhan coronavirus." Evidently even as I write this, a patient is being isolated in a tiny room, treated by robots, as doctors protect themselves and others from this deadly virus.

And here I thought I would die of old age and wrinkles - but no - it's going to be Wuhan. By the time I had finished reading the article I was that patient. As a true trauma thief, I had stolen the identity and the disease and instead of celebrating me on my 60 th birthday, my children were gathering to say goodbye.

It was a beautiful moment, though just in my imagination. Every mother secretly longs for the deathbed remorse of their children, don't they? The "if onlys" and "I wish I hads."

But these moments were not to be, because this was all in my imagination. So, in the spirit of Ann Lamott, here is my "I'm turning 60 and this is what I know..." post, here you have it. (Except that she was turning 61, but whatever.) Do with it what you will, but please be nice to me.

  1. 60 is not an age. 60 is a concept. "I'm turning 60!" I say to the mirror, trying to get used to is, but it won't happen. My internal middle age self won't have it. I'm going to be one of those people that looks in the mirror when I'm 80 and says "Who are you, and why are you in my mirror and where did you put my chin? Show me my real self!" Which leads me to my second point...
  2. Real is not what we see. Real is much deeper than that. We spend so much time curating and cultivating, pretending and posturing - but real is beyond all that. Real is wondering how anyone can truly love you, yet moving forward believing that anyway. Real is knowing that the eternal is forever and the now is just now. Real is knowing there is a greater reality in this thing called life. Real is the paradox and dance of joy and sorrow in this thing called life.
  3. God will never give you grace for your imagination - so, my mom taught me this many, many years ago. I believe I first heard it when I talked to her, crying, saying I was afraid that my husband was going to die. He didn't die, though I went to his funeral that day and wept. It was a beautiful funeral and I was a beautiful widow.....of course it wasn't real, and I wasted a lot of time crying that day. "God doesn't give you grace for your imagination, he doesn't give you grace for what you think might happen. He gives you grace for the real thing - and that in abundance." Ask anyone who has gone through a tragedy, and they will echo this.
  4. Motherhood is hard. You will never love more, you will never have your heart so broken, you will never have more sleepless nights - and not because of babies that don't sleep. But if you can get through it, and that is a big if, the friendships of your adult children and the grace that they find in their hearts to give you is just miraculous. Trust me on that one.
  5. Find yourself a faith. I borrowed that from this past season of The Crown. As Prince Philip's Orthodox mother enters the scene, she says this to her son: "Let this be a mother's gift to her child - the one piece of advice. Find yourself a faith. It helps. No. Not just helps. It's everything." Life is so dang hard. Faith for me has made it not just easier, but so worth it. Just the other day a stranger told me "you wear your faith in your cross and in your eyes." I've never had a more lovely compliment. I just hope it's true.
  6. Make friends with people who are younger than you. When our son visited us in Kurdistan, he looked at us and said "Mom and Dad! All your friends are my age!" It was true, and there were reasons for it within that context, but beyond that, we've always had friends - good friends - who are younger. They keep us grounded. They remind us that we don't have to have our lives all together. They accept things in us that our peers find tiresome. They remind us that life will go on once we are gone.
  7. There is nothing like a good cry. It's like the first signs of spring after winter, like the longing and release when you see a stunning sunset. It's the release of all those things we bottle up and think we can control. Have yourself a good cry when you need it.
  8. Get your preventive health care appointments. I mean it. That colonoscopy? It will find the polyp that turned into cancer for your friend 6 years ago when she was due for one. That mammogram? Get it - I mean it.
  9. Forgive, and forgive, and forgive again. The bitterness that wells up from lack of forgiveness is so much worse than the polyp that turned into cancer. It's a poison that you drink every day. I have learned the hard way. Give people the proverbial "benefit of the doubt" - don't assume the worst. It's so easy, isn't it, to assume bad intent. Especially when we're tired, when we're sad, or when we think we see the person's middle finger angrily sticking out at us. But maybe they were just born that way. Maybe it's not us.
  10. Love fiercely, protectively, and with abandon. You will get hurt - of course you will! You will want to smash things. You will cry. You will rage. But oh, to have on my gravestone "She loved God, and she loved others." That would be success my friends! That would be true success.

Okay - I'm done. I haven't died of Wuhan yet - but there's always time before Monday.

Oh and also, if you are interested - what I really want for my birthday? I want my dear ones to support this community health initiative in a place that I called home last year, a place and people that I love dearly. Click here to give a dollar or ten! Community Health Initiative in Kurdistan

Love, Marilyn


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