It happened earlier this month in Georgia. I was given a “senior coffee” without requesting it.
I didn’t realize it until I was sitting at the table eating and glanced at the ticket. My husband laughed and said, “Saved us some change.” My reaction was totally different. I spent a few extra minutes in the restaurant’s facilities looking in the mirror wondering if I truly looked that bad today.
I realize that I had bought into the cultural mentality that being old is something to avoid—which is silly because the real alternative is death. While eternity in heaven is something I look forward to, I am living my life to the fullest now. So, back to the senior coffee moment.
Since that day, I’ve been re-evaluating my routines. Exercise, healthy eating, weight control, laughter—all of these things were extensions of what I have been doing all my life. As for makeup, hair styles, clothes, to be honest I have adapted them somewhat. I’ve learned to accept my energy limitations more readily instead of pushing through them—because the recovery period is a lot longer than it used to be.
But none of this is really the issue. The issue is that someone noticed and acknowledged my age—noticed that I was in the senior citizen category—without me telling them. Why was that –in my psyche—a bad thing?
So I’ve been making lists of all the good things I am enjoying in this stage of life: a stronger relationship with God than ever before, grandchildren (and their parents, of course), writing a book, my husband (without his support I wouldn’t be writing a book), good friends, …
As for the things I miss, I’ve adapted the list. Every one of them has an addendum. So I don’t turn heads any more—I can enter into real conversations more easily (you figure out the “why” for yourself). I need more down time—I get to enjoy more down time. My hair is quite gray—modern hair dye is effective and actually good for your hair. What to wear—if I like it, I wear it, so who cares?
No matter what age you are, you’re getting older and closer to the next stage of life. How are you adapting?

What an encouraging email. Another positive is that seniors get reductions sometimes for tickets, transportation costs, restaurants, etc. I wave my gray flag on these!!
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Mom, you are beautiful, and I see it better now than when I was little because I know you better! Your beauty comes from within, the peace, love, and joy that light you up!
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Thank you, lovely daughter.
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That was an uplifting and positive article. I actually felt proud when I could get all the Senior discounts.
Always ask, there everywhere. Kathie, you are very comfortable person to visit and share with. You have
an openness & kindness that draws people to you. Oh, and you’re beautiful too. Jeri K
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Once you quit dying your hair, there is no longer any need to ask–the gray hair usually brings an offer. 🙂 Thanks for your kind words.
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