Tag: self-care

Past the expiration date?

I’ve been thinking about expiration dates. I fear I have ignored too many in my life.

I’m not talking about a can of biscuits, but rather relationships, jobs, situations, etc. Things that more than outlived their freshness and yet I stayed on…out of fear, laziness, or just inertia.

Funny thing is, looking back, once I cut myself free from whatever it is that long had stopped being a healthy choice, my life got so much better. Whoda thunk?

What I’m hoping is this: now that I’m wiser (!) and older, perhaps I’ll spot much earlier when it’s time to let go of something toxic. Move on. Stop the madness. Resist.

Because there’s just not enough time to waste on things that are harmful to us.

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Problem is, often the harm is sneaky and slow, and we don’t see what it’s doing to our spirit. Nibbling away at us quietly like mice in the night. I don’t know about you, but I’ve set out traps and called in exterminators and plugged holes and watched Mickey and Minnie enough times to know if you don’t completely get rid of the problem, it’s coming back…and with friends.

So I’m hoping this time around, in my older years, I’m taking action quicker.

For example, the work situation that asks too much and returns too little. The “friendship” that really isn’t. The romance that tears down, instead of building up. The incessant user of our energy…whatever or whoever it is…that is not enriching our soul, but eroding it.

Enough already!

Meditation is one strategy. When the urge to give in to the bad energy comes over us, we can sit still, find our breathing and try to let the feeling pass. Sometimes it works, sometimes we just want to scream or throw a rock. (I think that’s okay, as long as it’s done safely.)

Helping others is a good idea. Get out of myself and get into helping another person…whether it’s a phone call to someone struggling with something, or inviting someone to lunch who never gets out. Volunteer at a local shelter. See just how powerful my “good” energy can be when directed in the right direction.

Make a list. I’ve always said being a tad neurotic can come in handy. I like to write down the pros and cons of what I can’t seem to give up. Chances are the “bad” side of my list is much longer than the good.   So why waste any more energy there?

Start over shot

Of course many situations are much more difficult to change. A painful romance or abusive marriage. A job that pays the bills but steals your soul. It’s up to each person to decide when enough is enough, and how to safely and positively walk away.

Just as M. Scott Peck says in the first line of The Road Less Traveled, “life is difficult”. So I know we have to expect some trial and strain in even the best situations and relationships. But I also know that for me, looking back, I often stayed in the rowboat much too long…after all the food and water was gone and the sharks were gnawing on the side…and now wonder why I didn’t just take my chances in the water.

Because I do know how to swim.

Or at least dog-paddle.

I’ve got the wrinkles to keep me afloat.

 

“Self-care is never a selfish act—it is simply good stewardship of the only gift I have, the gift I was put on earth to offer to others.”

                                                                       Parker Palmer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Self Care After 50.

Most of us boomers and beyond are pretty good at taking care of others. We’ve had enough practice. Whether when raising children, watching over nieces and nephews, or taking care of our parents as their health faded. We know how to wipe chins, listen to tearful confessions, and hold a wrinkled hand.

And yet, when it comes to taking care of ourselves, we often fall short.

photo-1428263197823-ce6a8620d1e1A friend tells us about a situation that is causing pain, and we offer advice. Someone we love worries over an injustice and we bristle over the fact that anyone would hurt our loved one. Yet we find it hard to be as protective of ourselves.

Oh, it will be okay. We’re fine. Yes, it hurt, but we’ll get over it. Oh, we’re sure they didn’t mean to be so rude.

It’s wonderful to be kind and forgiving to others. But why is it sometimes so hard to be that way towards ourselves?

Maybe we forget we even have the power to really be kind to our inner self. We want others’ approval; we want to fit in; we want to do what “is right.” Yet perhaps what we need most right now at this point in our lives is our own approval.

Our own forgiveness.

I doubt anyone gets to the boomer and beyond status without making a few mistakes. Not achieving a goal we just knew we would accomplish. Missing out on a major career opportunity. Letting that true love get away.

So we think we’ve failed.

But I don’t agree. I think that many times, that “wrong road” we took actually was right where we needed to be.

We learned a lot, grew stronger, and probably discovered things about ourselves and others that we would never have known had we been “successful”.

photo-1413920346627-a4389f0abd61There’s a lot to be said for persevering through a tough challenge. And regardless of where we have come from, what matters most is where we are right now. Are we living life as we hoped?

Do we greet each day with anticipation?

Is there a moment of happiness each day, or at least contentment?

Can we find a reason to laugh each day?

And most of all, do we treat ourselves gently, with respect, love, and a little slack?

I think each of us has earned, and deserves, that much. Remember the 1986 book “How to Be Your Own Best Friend”? It was all about self-love and acceptance, and it was somewhat ahead of its time. There were critics who thought that being your own best friend was an odd idea. Yet those who embraced it cheered how for the first time, they felt permission to just be who they are.

And it was a reminder of how important it is to feel okay in your own skin. Which after 50+, 60+, 70+, and beyond years, feels pretty good.

Scars and all.

 

“I celebrate myself, and sing myself.”

   Walt Whitman

 

 

 

Saying no and yes.

How do we guard our time?

When it seems we have so little of it to ourselves, how do we smartly and politely stand our ground when asked to take on extra tasks or chores that eat into our private moments?

As people over 50, we most likely have served on countless committees and cleanup crews, manned registration tables and put up signs, taken down displays and more…many times on a Saturday, or an evening, holiday, or other time period when we’d rather be elsewhere.

file641274354480I don’t consider this the same as true volunteering or philanthropic efforts that truly benefit those in need. If I have a warm place to sleep and food in my refrigerator, you bet I can get up early or stay late and help someone less fortunate. Volunteering is not only the right thing to do, it’s energizing and uplifting.

I’m talking more about those requests that are far less dire…events or things that have nothing to do with survival or quality of life. Times when it feels that the person asking has not prepared adequately and now needs you to fill in. Or when someone won’t call upon those who said they were on board, but aren’t showing up, and didn’t inform anyone.

That bothers me. Maybe it’s a major character flaw, but so be it. It just feels like the same people get asked time after time to save a situation, while the masses happily skip off to whatever it is they suddenly need to do.

Do you ever feel like you’re the dependable one, so you’re always at the top of the list? And if so, why is it you feel guilty when you actually occasionally (but I’m guessing rarely) say no to one of these requests?

Helping out and pitching in is great.

Being taken advantage of is not.

Asking someone to help you out of a jam is fine.

Asking the same person constantly because you either think he or she has nothing better to do, or because you’re not willing to ask someone who threatens you, is unfair.

In fact, I think it’s terrible.

Maybe we all need life-sized cardboard cutouts we can carry around with us, and when we spot a “user” approaching us, we can hold up our cutout and block their path.

KC_IMG_5388There’s nothing wrong with saying no. Giving yourself a pass on something that doesn’t feel right. Choosing to spend your free time as you choose, even if that means you’re not “doing” a lot. You don’t have to be married or a parent or grandparent to have a busy life. If there’s anything getting older teaches us, it’s how precious our time is.

We’re supposed to help each other. But we’re also supposed to take care of ourselves. It’s a fine line.

Here’s some words to consider by poet Naomi Shihab Nye:

The Art of Disappearing

When they say Don’t I know you?

say no.

 When they invite you to the party

remember what parties are like

before answering:

Someone telling you in a loud voice

they once wrote a poem.

Greasy sausage balls on a paper plate.

Then reply.

If they say We should get together

say Why?

It’s not that you don’t love them anymore.

You’re trying to remember something

too important to forget.

Trees. The monastery bell at twilight.

Tell them you have a new project.

It will never be finished.

When someone recognizes you in a grocery store

nod briefly and become a cabbage.

When someone you haven’t seen in ten years

appears at the door,

don’t start singing him all your new songs.

You will never catch up.

Walk around feeling like a leaf.

Know you could tumble any second.

Then decide what to do with your time.

 

 

 “Do not follow where the path may lead.  Go, instead, where there is no path and leave a trail.”

                    Ralph Waldo Emerson

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