Laps

Jane, Age 73

I have a new goal for this summer. It’s just for myself; admittedly, inspired by my sister who took up swimming after she retired. I am swimming the length of our community pool, and increasing the distance each time I jump in.

The weather is hot here, so morning swims are refreshing, and peaceful. I enjoy the pool when by myself, or with my Saturday swim buddy. Glad to be gone when the afternoon crowds appear.

Now that I’m almost retired from my work schedule, much of what happens at home is shared with my husband…cooking/food shopping/errands etc. I’ve lost the feeling of complete independence that came with my own office/ title/work desk/schedule and professional responsibilities. So this swimming is purely my own, and the satisfaction that comes with each increase in distance swum is for my personal pleasure.

When I shared this venture with my twelve year old granddaughter, she seemed surprised…then thoughtful. I hope it will inspire her to set some of her own goals, and to challenge herself to aim a little higher in whatever she undertakes.

Posted in Family matters, Our bodies, our health | Tagged | 2 Comments

70 things to do before I turn 70

Peggy, Age 69

I decided December 1, 2012 that I wanted to do 70 things I had never done before I turned 70!!!!!!!!!!!! So to that end I have been recording all of my accomplishments. (I am counting this OK?)

I will be married 50 years September 14, 2013 (If we stay together another 5 months LOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) I have 3 daughters, 3 son-in-laws, and 8 grandchildren I am very blest!!!

I sadly lost my Mom Feb. 8,2012—-I was her daughter, power of attorney, driver, grocery getter, mail reader, and whatever else she needed as she was totally blind the last 21 years that she lived!!!

My Mom was an amazing person, she played the guitar and sang, wrote songs, and wrote three books after she was blind.

I have also had the privilege of counting one of my best friends as a “sister” who turned 70 March 18, 2013!!! She and I started a card club when we were 18 and it is still going strong today!!! The card club boasts 9 members and 4 of them are our daughters!!!!! Our card club crew are BFF’s.

We would do anything for each other and what a wonderful comraderie!!!

Posted in About turning 70, Family matters, Looking ahead, Stories | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Speed bumps on memory lane

Read our newest post at Huff/Post50!

or

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jane-giddan-and-ellen-cole/speed-bumps-on-memory-lan_b_3018851.html

If this link doesn’t work, just go to the Huffington Post site, find Huff/post50 and type in Jane Giddan and Ellen Cole.

Enjoy!

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Finding it hard

Annemarie, Age 73

I am 73 years old and find it hard to come to terms with getting old. I miss my youth, the attention, the energy I had, and having something to look forward to. My time is spent caring for my husband who has changed so much that I don’t know him. We have three children and eight adult grandchildren. Sorry to be so negative but this is how I feel.

Posted in Family matters | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Fear of the unknown

I will reach the ripe old age of seventy on March 22, 2013, which is already lightly knocking on my door.
 
To give you a full picture of my situation, I am an only child who has had no natural children. I was married for twenty-nine years and was divorced ten years ago. My ex-husband had two children from a previous marriage, so I had two step-children. I still have a relationship with my step daughter.  We also became involved with a foster son during our marriage and I still have a wonderful relationship with him and consider him my son. He and his wife have three beautiful, sweet children who I love. I’m retired and live alone.
 
My foster son lives three and a half hours away.  He is encouraging me to move closer to him so I will have someone to check on me and someone to give me support when needed.  I am very independent and always have been, even during my marriage. I live in a tri-level house, with all bedrooms and bathrooms on the second level and the laundry room on the bottom level. This is a very ill-arranged house, but most don’t think of such things in their younger years. Afterall, it has a beautiful view!! I know in time I will be forced to move from this house. The stairs are already challenging, since I broke my ankle at age 65, had surgery, and it did not heal properly.
 
I have tried to entertain the idea of moving to the little town where my son, his wife, and three children live. I only want to make one move.  I have lived in this house for thirty-nine years.  I feel totally safe and comfortable here and have a beautiful view of a lake from my front door, which has brought me much pleasure down through the years.  My yard is large and un-level and even though I enjoy working in the yard, I can no longer keep it going without help.
 
I recently visited my son and his family with my close friend.  While there, my friend and I went riding around and found a house for sale that I kinda liked.  It is an older house, with loads of storage space, and has the master bedroom, master bath and laundry room on the bottom level.  There are two bedrooms and a bath upstairs, but they would only be used for guests, in my case. I made a trip back to meet with a realtor.  My friend and I both really liked the house as did my son and daughter-in-law. I’ve collected antiques for years and my furniture could really be show-cased in this house.  I have a lack of storage space where I currently live and this place has tons of storage space including a very large room behind the carport with shelves for storage.
 
I actually became excited about the house and it’s been one of the few things I’ve been excited about in a very long time. I admit I’ve gotten into quite a rut here.  I actually don’t have any really close friends here. I worked in the neighboring town for thirty years and my job was my life.  After I retired, I realized how few people I really knew here. My friends were with the company I worked for and scattered all over. My college roommate lives approximately an hour and a half from where I currently live and my girlfriend who traveled with me to my son’s, lives probably about an hour and a half away in the other direction and she’s still involved with a job so we don’t see each other that often.  I do have one other really good friend who lives completely across town and we meet for lunch occasionally.  Those are my three closest friends–no close friend nearby. I did join a Red Hats club and I go to that but have only made casual acquaintences.
 
I’ve given you all this history to help you understand my situation. I haven’t bought the house but was getting very close to making an offer (my son was going to handle all that for me). It’s all become over-whelming and terribly so. I have accumulated tons of stuff at this house after thirty-nine years, that, coupled with being a pack rat.  I work one day on trying to go through things and the next day I can hardly walk due to my ankle.  So it goes.
 
This week end I am getting cold feet and lots of doubts are creeping in.  The only view from the “new” house is one of the ugliest houses I’ve ever seen which is across the street. It is located in a small town. Even though I grew up in a small community, I have absolutely loved living here with easy access to good restaurants, theaters, shopping, different types of entertainment, excellent grocery stores, etc. plus a beautiful view. If I moved, I would have to make a lot of adjustments plus the temperatures there average four to six degrees colder, which I hate.
 
On a positive note, if I moved, I would have a son, daughter-in-law and three grandchildren checking in on me and would have loads of activities to keep me involved. I would also have a job waiting for me, a sit-down job, with one of my son’s friends. I definitely need more interaction with people plus I could use the extra income. During my days here, in the rut I’ve been in, I have been prone to stay at home and have stayed on the computer ordering things.  It’s a means of entertainment, of sorts, yet it has caused credit cards to soar. I order mostly clothes, and have worlds of them in closets with the tags still on them because I no longer go anywhere.

If I moved, I would have a ready-made set of friends through my son’s family and I absolutely love the church they go to.  My daughter-in-law also works there.
 
I’m scared to death!!  What if I move and am miserable and all I can think about is the place I’ve left with the beautiful view. What if I’m not happy there?  On the other hand, I’m not exactly happy here either–just comfortable. I realize happiness is not a place; it’s a state of mind, or at least that’s what I’ve always been told. I really don’t know what my true feelings are.  I’ve been on a roller coaster for days–one minute being semi-excited about the house and displaying my antiques and then I think about looking out the window at that gosh-awful ugly house across the street. The next minute I feel so over-whelmed that I literally think a move is virtually impossible.
 
Surely I am not the only seventy year old (or almost) to experience such conflicting feelings. Many older people, including my parents, have been faced with the difficult decision of uprooting themselves or being upooted by relatives as a necessity. Reality tells me that I do need to be closer to people who care about me. I also have cousins close to the small town.  In fact I grew up only about an hour away from the location of the house.
 
I know, from taking care of my parents their last three years, that it’s only going to get worse.  By that, I mean I will be forced to give up some of my independence.  The time came when my parents could no longer drive, do their grocery shopping or handle their business without my help.  They were 83 and 84 when they died.  I hope I still have some good years left before all of that occurs, BUT, if I live long enough and face reality, these things will happen.
 
I am one who will not give up her independence until absolutely necessary and my son knows that.  Still, I need to face reality. I also need to consider him because he makes the long trip every time I have some medical procedure, etc. I use to do that with my parents, so I know what it’s like, especially when one has a job.
 
How do I conquer the “fear of the unknown?” I’m in such a quandry now that I honestly don’t know what I feel about anything.  I have all these thoughts swirling through my mind. If I were young, I could move, knowing I could always move back if I wasn’t happy.  But, I’m not young; I’m older than dirt!! And, I only want to make one move–even if that’s possible.
 
The house is darling, with a front porch and a back porch, which I’ve always loved. It has the conveniences I need and will have to have at some point in time if I live long enough.
 
What do you think? Do I do something that I’m not totally convinced that I want to do because it seems the most intelligent thing to do or do I remain comfortable, always wondering what it would have been like and knowing at the same time that a move is inevitable–maybe not now, but definitely in the future.
 
In some ways, I’m beginning to feel old, yet, in other ways I refuse to.  I’m going to a Keith Urban concert next month and belong to his fan club.  I’ve practically become a Keith Urban groupie these last few years.  In a way it’s funny, at my age, but I have no apologies because I genuinely like him and his music. I’ve also started to wear more bling than I’ve ever worn.  In my earlier years I was probably more “old lady” like because I was always very conservative.  Now, the more bright colors and the more bling, the better!!
 
I have been through a lot during my latter years and already have had to make a lot of adjustments.  I went through the end of a twenty-nine year marriage, retired from my job after thirty years, had a double by-pass, broke my ankle with resulting surgery and then last year broke my wrist and had surgery on it. Financially, I’ve gone from two people supporting a household to one and from a regular salary with bonuses to a fixed income. It hasn’t been easy, but I’ve made it and I have peace in my life.
 
I am in the final stretch and I want to make the right decision.  I want my last years to be happy, healthy and peaceful.I might have met my Waterloo with this decision and I have no crystal ball. As a seventy year old, I’ll bet I’m not the only one going through this sort of thing or who has already gone through this. I wonder what others feel and experience and what helped with their decision making.
 
This has been rather lengthy, I realize, but I wanted to give the whole picture.  The way I found your site is by googling, out of desperation, how does a seventy year old make a decision to move, or something like that  Anyway, I kinda think it was fate that brought me to your site and I think it’s wonderful that you’ve started it.

I would love to hear what others think about the situation, but, unfortunately, I need answers quickly.  The offer needs to be done this week or I stand to lose the opportunity of getting this particular house and should I move, I really think this particular house was in many ways made for me–even though it has a gosh awful ugly house across the street. Ha!
 
Thanks for listening.
 

Posted in About turning 70, Family matters, Looking ahead, Where to live | Tagged , | 8 Comments

71 The second time around

Amy Bryant, Age 71+

According to the calendar, my 72nd birthday is coming up; and calendars don’t lie. Neither do I as a rule, but this year I’ll be making an exception and I will tell the big lie.

The thought of 72 makes me shudder. For me, that was the year that defined old age with its white hair, wrinkles, and granny fat. Don’t get me wrong, I love having grandkids, it’s just that I’m more the flamboyant, redhead Nana.

Seventy-one was a great year. Newly single (for the third time in my life), moving into an enchanting town, living in the midst of the woods with bayside waters a few paces away; I was surrounded by friendly, creative, loving people. Having reinvented myself as an author, I joined Safety Harbor Writers and Poets.Resurrecting my passion for dance, I joined a local Flash Mob group, performing at street fairs, parades, and the Dali Museum to name a new. 71 was a perfect year; and I intend to keep it that way.

Despite my Medicare card, the big slap in the face of 65, that birthday held no regrets. Perhaps because it was softened by a celebration, given by my kids, and reuniting me with lifelong friends.

I survived several other age-defining years. Remember “don’t trust anyone over 30?” Well at 30, I was long legged, pregnant, and mini-skirt clad; a perfect combination to get me over that fearsome hurdle.

At 50, I was newly single and newly married, each for the second time. Usually mistaken for 35, and being “hit on” by men in their late 20s, I sailed through that milestone without flinching.Except for my AARP membership that my mother, in a fit of mischief, gave me as a birthday gift.

Despite my Medicare card, the big slap in the face of 65, that birthday held no regrets. Perhaps because it was softened by a celebration, given by my kids, and reuniting me with lifelong friends.

So here I am, at the close of my 71st year. A year filled with newness, adventure, some challenges, but mostly the feeling of adolescent freedom and wonder. You think I’m giving that up? Not anytime soon. So when you wish me Happy Birthday and sing, “how o-old are you?” I’m going to lie, totally guilt free, because this year I’m going to be 71…the second time around.

Posted in About turning 70, Ageism anecdotes, HUMOR, Looking ahead, Stories | Tagged , | 1 Comment

What’s next?

Shirley, Age 77

I just found this website. I am 77 and had just retired from my second career last June (child care) and had my right knee replaced in mid-September. I am realizing the importance of keeping fit. I plan on joining a gym this week so I don’t lose what I worked so hard to gain during outpatient physical therapy. I live in the Pacific Northwest and I don’t enjoy walking in the rain, a gym makes sense.

I do miss working and am pondering what to do next. Since my surgery, I am getting around with a cane, but still use a walker if outdoors on uneven terrain. Reading is something I enjoy very much, however, I’m ready (almost) to become more active. Any advice would be welcome. Since the age of 15, I have worked, worked, worked – now what? I am blessed with supportive friends, but they are married and I have been divorced 40 years. My only child, a son in his mid-forties, just moved to AZ … so now what’s next?

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Power of positive thinking

Kathi, Almost 70

I turn 70 in about 10 days and am probably happier now than I have been for a long time. I never thought I’d be in the position I am in at this point in my life, but it’s not something I can’t cope with. I have been divorced twice and am now living in a senior apartment with rental assistance, as I have a low income. I went to work about eight months ago in a four year program for low income seniors. It is great, as it gives me a little extra money to spend, and gives my life more purpose.

I live in the Midwest where I have lived most of my life. After graduating from high school, I went right to work and soon after got married. My husband and I moved out of state for about half a year, returning to raise a family. My second marriage took me out of state for six years, but I’m happy to be back to my roots and my family.

I know I have made some bad choices in my life, but looking back, I don’t think I would change anything. Along with the bad was good and I try to remember those times. I am thankful for so many wonderful experiences I have had in my life. I don’t have many regrets as all the times, good and bad, helped to make me who I am today. It is hard for me to imagine that I am the age I am, as I feel much younger and am told I look younger. I, by no means, feel like I’m nearing the end of my life. There are places I want to go and things I want to do. My health is good, so there is no reason why I shouldn’t go out and stimulate my mind and meet new people. Maybe something will change in my life that will give me the opportunity to travel, as that is really the only thing I would still like to do.

My mother always talked about the ‘power of positive thinking’ and I’m glad she instilled that in me, as it has helped me over the years. I dreaded turning forty and laugh about that now. I don’t dread turning 70, I’m enjoying it!

Posted in Stories | 2 Comments

One day at a time

Sarah, Age 72

I’m 72 years young because I feel like I’m sweet sixteen and ready to go anywhere at anytime even when my knees are killing me.

I worked 27 years for a retail store in the training & development department that trained young executives in becoming buyers for the store. I also worked in the video department that put together the scripts for the celebration of Fortnights of different countries. I took an early retirement from there to work at two catholic churches until I turned 65.

I had all kinds of plans of doing this and that when I retired; especially travel was most on my mind. We did do some travelling but found out real quickly that to do that it takes a lot of money, so we slowed down a bit.

My interests are now focused on taking walks when my knees don’t hurt; learning to cook new recipes; doing a little sewing every-once-in-a-while. I have also volunteered to work a couple of days out of the week at the church I attend. What I like the most is spending good quality time with my grandchildren, especially when they don’t have school.

My husband is 75 and we’re so fortunate to be able to do things together, relax and take one-day-at-a-time.

Posted in Family matters, Our bodies, our health, Technology and contemporary culture, Traveling, Work life and retirement | Leave a comment

Pondering the “last great event of a person’s life”

Lynn, Age 62

Working on my Retirement Project I came across “70candles” and was immediately drawn in, especially by the phrase “The baby boomers are fast on our heals, and want to know what lies ahead.” I’m one of those Baby Boomers, and I have become absolutely fascinated with how we, individually and culturally, respond to aging. Recently retired, age 62, from my final employment career as a RN. I received my B.S. in Nursing at age 55, and have a B.A. in Biology and a M.A. in Theology. I only mention these because they, also have important roles in my world view.

During the last 5 years I worked as a Visiting Nurse in an upstate NY college town. It wasn’t the kind of nursing I thought I’d be doing but I fell in love. I experienced the incredible privilege to be present with patients, and their families and friends, through the process of long- or short-term illnesses, inevitable decline, and death. I have suffered with them though very hard decisions. I have comforted, advocated for, and rejoiced with as well. We were also managing health and decline.

It was this experience that inspired my Retirement Project, and it is this blog that inspired me to write this note. I want to help people be better prepared for, and more thoughtful about, the ramifications of the process of aging and inevitable decline; what can we reasonably expect? and how might our responses and choices affect our families, friends, and/or society?

The bottom line is that we, as a culture, continue to fear dying. Yet, in spite of the vast resources available, including Living Wills, Advanced Directives, Palliative Care, and Hospice only a very small percentage of our population uses even these. We may even have Wills, and Life Insurance but we don’t usually talk about it until there is no other choice. The saddest part is that we have turned the process of dying & death into the most negative thing in our lives, rather than seeing and experiencing it as a wondrous thing to behold. We prepare for births by learning about the process, we go through the process with some reasonable understanding of what to expect, and we celebrate the outcome- the first great event of a person’s life. Should we do no less for the last great event of a person’s life?

I know that this blogspot is dedicated to “Flourishing” and few people might relate talking about the process of decline as an example of “Flourishing,” but I think we have a big opportunity. That’s why I’m reaching out to my sisters engaged in “this Longevity Revolution.” Because if this is “the revolution” what will it look like when so many more Baby Boomers are 70+?

So I’ve been taking informal surveys and pondering about how I can develop this Retirement Project idea. You have a lot of wisdom and experience among you and I’d love to hear your thoughts and opinions.

Posted in 70 from other perspectives: looking forward and looking back, Looking ahead, Our bodies, our health | 7 Comments