Next Avenue Logo
Advertisement

25 Things They Don't Tell You About Pushing 50

The good, the bad and the ugly of aging

|
June 9, 2015
|

(This previously appeared on TheMid.com.) 

When you reach a certain age, your worldview changes. This slideshow is the author's funny take on what's different from her new nearly-50 vantage point.

 

Getty Images/iStockphoto

Hot flashes, OK, but cold feet, too?


Getty Images/Fuse

Pushing 50? Ha! You'll need to take a dozen ibuprofen before you push anything. Including an elevator button.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

You will still feel somewhere on the age spectrum between 18 and 25. Always. Until you catch a glimpse of yourself in the mirror.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

Amazingly, your legs will require less shaving.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

Have you ever seen a turtle's neck? That.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

Everyone is younger than you now. Not just famous actors: your brain surgeon, your pilot, old people.


Getty Images/Wavebreak Media

Single sex is better: You know what you want, and you ask for it. Married sex will always be married sex, but your dreams will be just as lurid.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

Hello, automatic AARP subscription!


Getty Images/iStockphoto

You're still mad about that thing that happened back in 1982, but you no longer dwell on it. Or at least not that often.


Getty Images/Monkey Business

In fact, you no longer care about anything. In a good way.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

If a friend cancels lunch on you three times, that's it. Sayonara. You don't have time for this.


Getty Images/Zoonar RF

True wisdom, you'll realize, is knowing how much you'll never know.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

Menopause is actually a blessing in disguise. No more tampons! No more birth control! Good lord, you'll think, did I really put up with that insanity for decades?


Getty Images

Congratulations. You have officially become your mother.


Getty Images/Ron Chapple Studios RF

Veins: Who knew the body contained so many veins?


Getty Images

When they take a biopsy and ask if you'd rather have the scar here or there, you'll look at the doc, laugh out loud and say, "Seriously? Just add it to the pile."


Getty Images/iStockphoto

A glass of wine at dinner will no longer put you to sleep. It will wake you up at 3 a.m.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

That bulging savings account you were planning on at this age?


Getty Images/iStockphoto

You'll be hanging out with this amazing woman you meet at a party or work, and you'll suddenly realize she’s closer in age to your children than to you.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

Your tolerance for 24-hour cable news will plummet below zero.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

In fact, one day you'll be watching the news, and you'll suddenly realize that anything else you could be doing, including tweezing or rubbing your corneas with shards of glass, would be a far better and/or more enjoyable use of your time.


Human folly becomes interesting to you instead of an irritant. More often than not, you're able to stand back from it all like an anthropologist studying a hapless, primitive, indigenous tribe.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

Rereading Shakespeare, you'll suddenly stop and think, "That dude was smart." By the same token, if you're reading a book that doesn't thrill you by page 10, that’s it. Straight into the donation pile.


Getty Images/iStockphoto

All those hours you put into child-raising are now paying off in dividends you could have never imagined. You'll be having dinner one night with these once helpless, endlessly needy humans and think, “Oh my God, I'd be friends with these people even if I hadn't pushed them out of my vagina.”


Getty Images/iStockphoto

Speaking of vaginas … No. Never mind. Let's not even go there.


Deborah Copaken is a columnist for The Atlantic and The New York Times bestselling author of The Red Book and Shutterbabe, among others. Her next book, Ladyparts, will be published by Random House in 2021. Read More
Advertisement
Meeting the needs and unleashing the potential of older Americans through media