You Are Not Who You Were, Only Older

by Evelyn on August 4, 2009 · 18 comments

woman-with-plastic-maskI turned 50 this past December, and guess what? My life isn’t over. I didn’t slide down that slippery slope of aging I kept hearing about. If anything, the most amazing thing happened. I woke up. I have morphed into my authentic self  like a butterfly emerging from  its cocoon. I was as surprised as anyone to experience this awakening, since I believed much of the rhetoric that abounds about decline, depression, and despair being hallmarks of aging.  I felt that angst in my 30s, but throughout my 40s and marching into a new decade I began to feel a different mantra struggling to the surface. This mantra said “You are not who you were, only older.” It wasn’t until I turned the corner on 50, however, that I let that mantra break free with all the strength of a gale force wind.

I began to seek out other women in midlife to find out if I was the lone wolf experiencing aging as a rebirth. I didn’t know what to expect, but what I found in talking with women in their 40s, 50s, 60s and beyond is a collective commonality. I found that, like me, they are happy being where they are, and have no desire to go back to any of the earlier stages or decades of their lives.  Suzanne Braun Levine talks about this very thing in her book “Fifty is the New Fifty.”  She writes: “The assumption is that youth – or at least younger – is the ideal state and that given a chance, no woman in her right mind would relinquish it. I have found the opposite to be true. Many of us are delighting in rejecting that backward-looking mindset and focusing on (to paraphrase the song from The King and I) ‘the beautiful and new things I am learning about me day by day.’  The range of things to learn about ourselves is now as wide as it hasn’t been since we were adolescents. So much about our bodies, our thinking, our relationships, and our approach to the world is under review – by us for a change.”

When you look at the reality, midlife and beyond is longer than any other stage of life. My mother is 92 and still kicking, despite two broken hips that have relegated her to a wheelchair. If I share my mother’s longevity genes, I have another 42+ years of life to live – way longer than childhood, adolescence or early adulthood stages. That’s a tremendous amount of time to simply endure, to simply exist.  Newsflash: I have no intention of simply existing, and neither do my midlife soul sisters, most of whom, like me, can expect to live another 25-30 years or more.  Our mothers and grandmothers may have felt “the change of life” meant their lives stopped changing, but for today’s midlife and beyond women, that meaning is no longer a fate acompli thanks to the women’s movement and our willingness to rewrite the book on aging.

The real challenge to this stage of life, as I see it, is to get to know ourselves in this new context. Who is this person who declares, “I no longer care what others think of me,” and means it?  Who is questioning the meaning of her work, and the nature of her relationships to see if they support who she is now?  Who is waking up to the wealth of possibilities, and is willing to tackle a new and totally out-of-character experience just for the fun of it?  Who, despite understanding that life and death are not just words any longer, keeps moving forward? 

The struggle is to learn which parts of ourselves are true and authentic, and which parts are conditioned responses based on “faulty” messages we may have received when we were younger.  For me, these “faulty” messages said that what I had to offer was my physical appearance – not my intelligence, not my compassionate nature, not my curiosity, and quirky sense of humor – and even that offering wasn’t  “good enough.”  That baggage has dogged me year after year, but the more I challenge it, the more I realize that it has nothing to do with reality – it has nothing to do with who I really am or what I have to offer. I wasn’t capable of knowing that, of owning that in my 20s or 30s, and just began to grasp it in my 40s. That’s why I can say with complete candor and honesty that given a pill that would transform me back to age 25, I would not take it. Yeah, right, you say.  Skeptics abound, I’m sure. Who wouldn’t want to be younger given the chance, but for me, going back to who I was at 25 means living the life of a people-pleaser, a caretaker lacking enough self-worth to recognize my gifts and maintain boundaries. The truth is, there is no magic pill that will transform us back in time, and we don’t need one. What we need is to live the stage we’re in, and to be willing to keep growing. Nothing makes us older faster than standing still, than stagnating.

That knowledge has empowered me enough to become an entrepreneur at age 50, and I work with other professional women 50 and over to create a midlife and beyond that’s as unique as their fingerprint. All the roads I’ve traveled have led me to where I am today. The lines on my face are reminders of these roads (though hopefully a little less weathered).  I know that my path is not anyone else’s path, despite that collective commonality I mentioned earlier. Each of us cuts our own unique trail through life. I also know that who I am today is not who I will be in 10 years, in 20 years. I will not be the same person, only older, but will continue to embrace the evolutionary process that is a fundamental part of aging.  And although the path I cut is uniquely my own, I’m sure my midlife soul sisters will keep me company along the way.

{ 18 comments… read them below or add one }

1 iiiweb August 4, 2009 at 3:36 pm

Excellent first blog post Evelyn!

I find it interesting to see how you have come to this new place in your life, and how you have chosen now to pursue what you feel is your life calling.

Me just starting out, it makes me want to challenge everything I have been taught, and everything I know as truth. Why should I wait till I am retired to find my life’s true calling? Seems that I should invest some time right now to figure it out. I know everything has it timing, but sometimes sitting around waiting for things to happen, well, they may never happen!

Keep up the good work Evelyn, what you have done has inspired me to really think about my life long goals, and passionately begin to pursue them. Life is short, we have to live!

2 Doug T August 4, 2009 at 11:47 pm

Evelyn,
I love your life in your words! You have so much enthusiasm it is intoxicating. Your devotion for what you feel/believe is paramount and it shows!!! Keep it up young lady! Doug

3 Joanne Fsadni August 5, 2009 at 7:30 am

Well said Evelyn! This December, I will have turned 50 six years ago. It was around that time that I began to seek out other midlife women almost instinctively. I found in them a bottomless pool of support and encouragement to let go of the more superficial concerns of my youth and dive deeper into who I am, spiritually, emotionally & physically and discover what talents and potential were as yet not fully realized. It lead to morphing a career as a graphic designer into pursuing a love of cartooning I had begun at age 9 and put aside for more “serious” pursuits.
Thank you for putting the process into words. The details and destination may be different for all of us, but the journey is the same.

4 Lisa Pecunia August 6, 2009 at 6:35 pm

Evelyn,

Thank you for this wonderful post. I will turn 49 in a few months and have just started a new business. It is the most exciting time of my life and my energy seems to know no bounds.

I look forward to the coming decade with as much zeal as I feared it 5 years ago. As women we all have been given different messages when we were growing up. Mine were not faulty as much as they were confusing and conflicted. It took life experience and soul searching to enable me and empower me to start doing what I wanted instead of what I felt would please others. The freedom that comes with this “new me” is tremendous.

Thank you for sharing your story.

Lisa

5 Evelyn August 7, 2009 at 9:20 am

Joanne and Lisa:

Thanks so much for your thoughtful and powerful comments. You both express your journey so eloquently and I would love the chance to talk with you about including your stories in the book I am writing on women at midlife. If you are interested and would like to explore the possibility, please drop me an email at evelyn@evelynkalinosky.com so we can start the ball rolling!

Evelyn

6 Evelyn August 7, 2009 at 9:23 am

Brian:

Thanks so much for weighing in on an issue that really isn’t just about women at midlife, but that men travel as well. I have had the pleasure of working with you, and that ability you have to continually challenge yourself, and your thought patterns and beliefs will serve you well on your journey. The great thing about life is that nothing is absolute (except that it continually changes and that it is finite) and you have the power to shape it the way that works just right for you. I know you will!

Evelyn

7 Eileen Williams August 8, 2009 at 9:26 am

Fantastic post, Evelyn. You’ve hit the nail on the head. The biggest misconception about aging is that growing older for a woman is a bad thing. Nothing could be further from the truth. I blog about these same issues at
http://feistysideoffifty.com/ and welcome another voice to the blogosphere!

8 Debra Stokes August 8, 2009 at 9:59 am

Superb writing, Evelyn!
You say this is your first blog? What a way to start! Sharing your journey to you with the world is a brave act of true independence. Kudos. I’m one of those who’ll be by your side walking her own path.
All the best,
Debra

9 Kathie M. Thomas August 8, 2009 at 5:06 pm

Me too, I went through the rebirth too and no longer remain apologetic for who I am or what I am. And now I’m allowed to share it – a lifetime of experiences is now coming out through published writing and my photographer.

10 Beverly Mahone August 8, 2009 at 7:40 pm

That’s the BEAUTY of aging!

11 Terri August 13, 2009 at 4:26 am

Dear Evelyn,

All though I am 4 years from 50 years of age, I can certainly relate to everything you’ve expressed. I so related with your blog post that I was wondering if I could share it w/ the readers of my women’s newpaper. I publish a bi-monthly educational newspaper for women in Central NJ. I do archive each Issue on our website at http://www.mercercountywoman.com if you want to take a peek. Please shoot me an email if you wouldn’t mind. I will definitely refernce you and WLE. Looking forward, Terri

12 Evelyn August 25, 2009 at 7:53 am

Beverly, Kathie, Debra and Eileen – Thanks so much for all your support. That’s one of the things I like about being part of the Boomer Diva Nation. You are all an inspiration to me!

13 Evelyn August 25, 2009 at 7:54 am

Terri – I’m grateful that my post was so relative to you. I’ve sent you a separate email responding to your question about your newspaper. Please reach out to me if for some reason you didn’t receive it, and remember midlife rocks!!

14 Jeri September 8, 2009 at 5:50 am

Evelyn,
What a remarkable evolution. We’ve known each other for so many years. You’ve always been a coach, even before you declared it officially, and I’ve been the recipient of your compassion, commitment and insight as we worked together in Wilkes Barre, PA. I turned 50 well before you and I always felt I lived the first 50 to fulfill the world’s expectations of me, ie. education, marriage, kids, home, income. The second 50 is about me, my choices, my mark upon the global world, my challenge to be the best I can be in a bigger arena. You’ve put it so eloquently in this blog post. Knowing you as I do, I would like to vouch to all the people who may be reading that this is the real authentic Evelyn, introspective, creative, careful, and perceptive who can see into your soul and ask just the right questions. And you love her for helping you understand more about who you are. I certainly do.
Kudos to you, Coach Evelyn, for a wonderful site and blog and all you’ve accomplished in such a short time.
Love,
Jeri

15 Evelyn September 8, 2009 at 6:16 am

Jeri:

I am truly humbled by your words and have been blessed to have your friendship, your mentorship and your vision to guide me over the past 6+ years. You’ve put your own intention out there so succinctly in your comments, and they speak to the authentic Jeri who is making Second Adulthood an enriching and vibrant journey that I am honored to be a part of in some small way. I’m sure our paths will continue to intersect in this next life stage, and I look forward to the connections. Keep on keepin on, soul sister!

16 Jeri September 8, 2009 at 6:30 am

Evelyn,

Soul sisters forever. I’m honored that you’re honored that… and that could go on forever as well. That’s another great thing about reaching midlife. Friends are cherished, friends are friends at a deeper level. Friends have seen each other evolve and because they share, history, everything is so much more enriched with layers and layers of understanding, challenging and reality checking, support without needing words, independent of time and distance. Thank you. Sounds like a whole other blog post.
Hugs,
Jeri

17 rosie September 11, 2009 at 11:42 am

I love and cherish what you said about not ever standing still. WOW, say it again!
I am looking forward to evolving financially, learning even more, helping others and getting Tina Turner legs with the grace of Nancy Wilson and determination of Beverly Mahone

18 Evelyn September 13, 2009 at 5:26 pm

Oh, Rosie – I could not have said it better myself! I have no doubt you will succeed on all fronts, including getting the legs of Tina Turner! Rock on….

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