April 22, 2009
I have recently begun to notice that I am getting older.
Quickly.
I am aging, and it's showing up. This is corresponding with the very real and swift acceptance that I am an adult. I'm a grown-up dealing with grown-up things in a grown-up world.
This doesn't have to do with paying bills. I've done that since I was 17. It's not about budgeting a paycheck and planning the deductions ahead of time. It's not gassing the car or painting a wall. It's not in car insurance or health records. It's not the lack of being carded when I buy alcohol, it's not that people occasionally call me "ma'am". It's not even about going to work, I've been doing that for 21 years now (how shocking to write, shocking to read).
It's not even a feeling. It's like I'm a curio cabinet, you open the doors and there on the shelf is a small urn labelled "Adult". The urn is surrounded by bits of ephemera - a piece of sea polished glass. A feather. A tiny plastic bracelet. It's replaced the urn labelled "Child", which I suspect was never really in there. I think it was empty in there in the beginning. I think there was nothing in me back then.
Those things, they're all responsibilities. There's something more to this, something with more gravitas. It's not having children, any teenager can pull that off. Yes, an element of being an adult has to do with Monday - the nursery called, Nora was ill. I went and got her, gave her some medication, and then flipped my work "Open" sign to "Closed" and took a long nap with her, curled up beside her and fussing over her to make sure her body temperature was right. There is a part of being an adult to that.
But that's not really it. I think it's more about being weary, to some extent. You operate on less sleep than you would like. It's about routines - you write a blog post at 9 am, you drink two cups of coffee before 8, you sit in rush hour traffic at 8:15. It's about being precious about things - you like the granite countertop to be wiped whenever you see a ring on it. You want the dishwasher to be emptied when the cycle is done. You like the bed to be made when the last person exits it.
I see things that make me understand that I'm an adult. A while back a blogger lost her triplets. This week another blogger's daughter passed away. Yet another blogger faced down the anniversary of his wife's death, which happened one day after their daughter's birth. The news keep bringing up Baby P, which is still an incredibly painful story after all this time. And our friend is still hoping to keep hold of his foster daughter, to be able to keep her safe and loved.
Maybe that's what it is. You see rebels shifting people from parts of their countries, their homes. You see children beaten, starved, abandoned. You see earthquakes burying people in mountains of rubble. You see your family being a dick about things because that's all they know how to be. You see the unemployment figures soaring and the house prices plummeting. You see the veins and lines in your hands getting more prominent, you feel your joints as they start to fail.
You become and adult because the news, the world, the environment made you become one. You see the downfalls that we have, the failures, the successes, the joys, and you take them all in because your feet make sure you stay there and do so. You soak up the sun and think of skin cancer, you inhale the flowers and worry about the bees, you know in the back of your mind that you are a responsible person with obligations and people who depend on you. But above all, you read and see things that make you ache and which you know are things that are absolute, that are things you cannot change. Instead of bring a kid and trying to find a way to build a time machine to go back and make things good again, you lower your shoulders in defeat and accept that these things are horrible, they're unbearable, but you cannot create that time machine you wish you could, you cannot make things better.
You spend your life hoping to become the person you think you could become.
And then you see a photo of yourself, and your wrinkles, and the toll that some things have taken on you (both positive and negative) and you realize that maybe you already are that person you hoped you could become.
It's not what you'd expected.
It never is.
Posted by: Everydaystranger at
08:49 AM
| Comments (17)
| Add Comment
Post contains 858 words, total size 5 kb.
Posted by: Amanda at April 22, 2009 10:26 AM (Lcghc)
Posted by: Hannah at April 22, 2009 10:27 AM (V2CrS)
Posted by: Secret D at April 22, 2009 11:31 AM (01nNz)
Posted by: ~Easy at April 22, 2009 12:45 PM (IVGWz)
Posted by: Jules at April 22, 2009 01:34 PM (X/837)
Posted by: Solomon at April 22, 2009 01:38 PM (x+GoF)
Posted by: Charles at April 22, 2009 01:39 PM (HGTOK)
Posted by: shanna at April 22, 2009 02:18 PM (9Gp5q)
Posted by: sue at April 22, 2009 02:51 PM (0K+AI)
Posted by: Jungletwins at April 22, 2009 08:00 PM (wyPEC)
Posted by: Jungle Mom at April 22, 2009 08:29 PM (wyPEC)
Posted by: Raul at April 23, 2009 12:38 AM (lxc1h)
Posted by: Terry at April 23, 2009 03:08 AM (XRq3E)
Posted by: kenju at April 23, 2009 03:49 AM (hMUhQ)
Posted by: Sarah at April 23, 2009 06:35 PM (fJpeI)
Posted by: Betty M at April 23, 2009 07:50 PM (RUrdu)
Posted by: Wacky Mommy at April 27, 2009 06:59 AM (aTwh2)
35 queries taking 0.0507 seconds, 141 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.