It was one of those slow summer afternoons you don’t forget.
I was lying
on the grass, looking up at the sky, watching clouds drift by. But they weren’t
just clouds. Not really. One became a dragon. Another turned into a shark. And
before long, there was a full battle unfolding overhead, sunlight flashing,
shadows shifting, the outcome uncertain.
Nothing had
changed in the sky.
Everything
had changed in how I saw it.
That’s
imagination.
And
somewhere along the way, many of us set it aside.
Not all at
once. Not intentionally. Life got busy. Responsibilities took over. We learned
to be practical, efficient, and realistic. Those are good things, necessary
things. But quietly, almost without noticing, we began to rely less on
imagination and more on routine, memory, and habit.
And then,
one day, we realize something feels… flatter.
That’s
where this conversation matters.
Because
imagination is different from fantasy, and the difference is important,
especially as we grow older.
Fantasy
often takes us away from the world. It creates an escape, sometimes comforting,
sometimes entertaining, but it doesn’t ask much of us. We sit back, we watch,
we drift. There’s nothing wrong with that in small doses. We all need a break
now and then.
But
imagination?
Imagination
brings us back to the world, only now we see more.
It allows
us to look at the same situation and ask, “What else could this be?”
It helps us step into someone else’s shoes and feel what they might be feeling.
It invites us to find solutions where before we saw only problems.
Imagination
builds bridges.
Fantasy
builds walls, comfortable ones, perhaps, but walls, nonetheless.
And here’s
why these matters so much for seniors.
As we age,
the challenges don’t disappear; they just change. Health concerns, shifting
roles, loss, uncertainty… these are real. And if we face them only with memory
(“this is how it’s always been”) or limitation (“this is all I can do”), life
can begin to feel smaller.
But
imagination opens it back up.
A man who
can no longer travel far can still imagine journeys, then find ways to bring
pieces of those journeys into his daily life. A woman facing mobility issues
can reimagine how she connects with people, with purpose, with creativity. A
grandparent can turn an ordinary afternoon into an adventure simply by asking,
“What if…?”
Imagination
doesn’t deny reality.
It expands
it.
I’ve seen
this in the smallest, most powerful ways.
A
grandfather sitting with his granddaughter, reading a story, not just reading
it, but bringing it to life. Voices, pauses, questions. “What do you think
happens next?” Suddenly, it’s not just a book. It’s a shared experience.
A group at
a centre taking on a problem, not by listing limitations, but by imagining
possibilities. “If we could do anything, what would it look like?” And from
that question, ideas begin to form that logic alone might never have uncovered.
That’s the
role model piece.
Our
grandchildren and great-grandchildren are watching us. Not just how we manage,
but how we live. If they see us shrinking, limiting, stepping back from
curiosity, they learn that aging is about less.
But if they
see us imagining, still exploring, still asking, still creating, they learn
something entirely different.
They learn
that aging is about depth.
About
seeing more, not less.
And there’s
another layer here, one we don’t talk about enough.
Mental
health.
Imagination
is not just a creative tool. It’s a protective one.
It helps us
reframe difficult moments.
It gives us a way to process change.
It keeps the mind active, flexible, and engaged.
Without it,
thinking can become rigid. Days can blur together. Problems can feel fixed and
final.
With it,
even a hard day can hold possibilities.
Not because
the difficulty disappears, but because we are no longer trapped inside one way
of seeing it.
I sometimes
hear people say, “Oh, I’m not imaginative.”
I don’t
believe that.
I think
it’s more accurate to say, “I haven’t used that part of myself in a while.”
Because
imagination doesn’t vanish. It just gets quiet.
And like
anything else, it returns with practice.
It starts
simply.
Looking at
the sky again and seeing more than clouds.
Reading a story and stepping inside it.
Asking “what if?” instead of “what’s the point?”
Trying something new, not because you’re sure of the outcome, but because
you’re curious.
It doesn’t
require grand gestures.
Just a
willingness to see differently.
So yes,
enjoy fantasy when it offers rest. There’s nothing wrong with that.
But don’t
stop there.
Return to
imagination.
Use it to
engage with your world, not escape it. Use it to connect, to solve, to create.
Use it to show the next generation that life doesn’t become smaller with age; it
becomes richer, if we allow it.
Because
somewhere above us, even now, the clouds are still shifting.
The dragons
are still there.
The stories
are still waiting.
All we have
to do… is look up.