Monday, May 4, 2026

It was built over time.

 There’s a moment that sneaks up on many of us as we grow older. It doesn’t arrive with a loud announcement. It comes quietly, often disguised as common sense.

It sounds like this: “Don’t be silly.”
Or, “That’s for younger people.”
Or the one that does the most damage of all: “What if I make a fool of myself?”

And just like that, a door begins to close.

But here’s the truth, plain and simple. That voice didn’t start with you. It was built over time.

As we moved through life, raising families, working jobs, paying bills, and showing up when it mattered, we became practical. We had to. Life demanded it. We learned about limits. Time mattered. Money mattered. Responsibilities mattered. We learned that not everything works out, that not every dream survives, that sometimes love comes and goes.

And slowly, without even noticing, we began to believe something deeper: that what we can see, touch, and measure is all there is. That we are defined by what we’ve done, what we have, and what we’ve lost.

That belief is useful for survival.

But it’s terrible for living.

Because underneath all of that practicality sits something stubborn and alive, a quiet sense that there’s more. A feeling that something is still unfinished. That there are still parts of you waiting to be explored.

Many people call that feeling “incompleteness.”

I don’t.

I call it an invitation.

Think about it. If you truly felt complete, if there was nothing left to discover, no curiosity left, no spark, what would you do with your days? Sit still? Wait? Fade quietly into the background.

That’s not how you’re built.

That restless feeling, that nudge that says, “there’s still something more for me”, that’s the very thing that has carried you through your entire life. It’s why you took risks when you were younger. It’s why you built relationships, tried new things, and kept going when it would have been easier to stop.

It’s also why you’re here, now, still wondering what comes next.

But here’s where many of us get stuck.

We have been taught, by life, by society, sometimes even by well-meaning friends, that this stage is about slowing down, being careful, not standing out too much. Somewhere along the way, “dignity” got confused with “playing it safe.”

Let me push back on that a little.

There is nothing dignified about shrinking your life.

And there is nothing foolish about being alive in a curious, creative, expressive way.

In fact, the real risk, the one we don’t talk about enough, is reaching a point where the days are safe, but flat. Predictable, but empty of excitement. Comfortable, but disconnected from that spark that once made you feel fully engaged with the world.

Now, let’s talk about fear.

Fear of looking foolish is powerful. It can stop you before you even begin. It whispers, “People will judge you.” It says, “You should know better by now.”

But here’s the twist: the people who seem the most alive, the most interesting, the most inspiring, are almost always the ones who are willing to look a little foolish.

They try things. They laugh at themselves. They don’t wait to be perfect before they begin.

They understand something that children know instinctively, and adults forget:

You don’t discover joy by playing it safe.
You discover it by stepping just beyond what feels comfortable.

I remember watching a grandfather at a park not long ago. His granddaughter was spinning in circles, arms out, laughing as if the world existed just for her in that moment. After a while, she looked up at him and said, “Your turn.”

He hesitated.

You could see it, the calculation. The awareness of people around him. The thought, “What will I look like?”

And then something shifted.

He stepped forward, stretched out his arms, and began to spin.

Was it graceful? Not even close.

Was it perfect? Not at all.

But his granddaughter’s laughter doubled, then tripled. And soon, he was laughing too, not the polite kind of laughter, but the kind that comes from somewhere deep and real.

In that moment, he wasn’t performing. He wasn’t trying to impress anyone.

He was participating in life.

That’s what creativity really is.

It’s not about painting masterpieces or writing novels, though it can be. It’s about engaging with the world in a way that is playful, curious, and open. It’s about allowing yourself to explore without needing a guarantee of success.

And yes, sometimes that means risking looking foolish.

So what?

Let’s be honest. You’ve already lived through far more challenging things than a little embarrassment. You’ve handled loss, change, uncertainty, and responsibility. Compared to that, trying something new and stumbling a bit is nothing.

In fact, it might be exactly what you need.

Because that feeling of “incompleteness” we talked about earlier? It doesn’t disappear by sitting still. It grows quiet for a while, maybe, but it doesn’t go away. It waits.

It waits for you to say yes to something.

Something small. Something simple.

Pick up a pencil and draw, even if it looks like a child did it.

Tell a story, even if you forget parts and make others up along the way.

Dance in your living room, even if the rhythm is all yours.

Sing along to Time Passages, even if you miss a few notes.

None of this is about being good.

It’s about being alive.

And here’s where it connects back to something bigger, something that matters not just for you, but for the people around you.

When you choose to live this way, you permit others to do the same.

Your children see it. Your grandchildren feel it.

They learn that aging is not about shutting down, it’s about opening up in new ways. They see that courage doesn’t disappear with time; it deepens. They understand that life is not something to endure, but something to engage with fully, right to the very end.

That’s how legacies are built.

Not just through what we leave behind, but through how we live in front of others.

So let me leave you with this.

That sense of incompleteness you feel. It’s not a flaw. It’s not something to fix.

It’s the engine.

It’s what keeps you reaching, exploring, and connecting. It’s what invites you into new experiences, even now.

You are not finished.

Not even close.

And love, real love, is not something you run out of or lose track of. It’s something you create, moment by moment, through the way you show up in the world. Through your willingness to laugh, to try, to connect, to care.

So go ahead.

Be a little playful.
Be a little bold.
Be just foolish enough to rediscover joy.

Because the alternative isn’t safety.

It’s missing out on the very thing that makes life worth living.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

They need to see the spark

 If you’re a grandparent, you are more than a keeper of memories. You are a builder of moments. A guide. A model for what living fully can look like at any age.

Your grandchildren are watching you, whether you realize it or not.

They’re not just learning from what you say. They’re learning from how you live.

And here’s the truth: they don’t need you to be perfect. They don’t need you to have all the answers. What they need is to see that life doesn’t stop being creative, curious, or meaningful just because we get older.

They need to see that the spark is still there.

I was sitting in my backyard not long ago, on one of those warmer afternoons when the air feels soft and time seems to slow down. I found myself watching the clouds drift across the sky. Not just looking, but really watching.

And I realized something.

Clouds are never just clouds.

They stretch, twist and reshape themselves constantly. One moment, they’re a flock of sheep moving across the sky. The next, they’re a mountain range, or a face, or something you can’t quite name but still feel. They are always changing, always creating something new.

I can see the mountains from where I sit. Solid, steady, unmoving, or so it seems. But even they change, depending on the light, the mist, the clouds that wrap themselves around the peaks. On some days, the mountains feel sharp and clear. On others, they soften into something almost dreamlike.

When I was younger, I didn’t need to be reminded to notice these things.

Imagination came naturally.

The coastline wasn’t just a line separating land and water; it was a puzzle, a maze, something to explore. The bark on a tree wasn’t just texture; it was a pattern, a story waiting to be traced. Even lightning during a storm wasn’t frightening; it was alive, dancing across the sky, full of energy and meaning.

Children understand this instinctively.

They know that imagination brings the world to life.

But somewhere along the way, many of us set that aside. We became practical. Responsible. Focused on doing what needed to be done. And there’s nothing wrong with that; we built lives, after all. We raised families. We contributed.

But now, in this stage of life, we have something many people don’t.

Time.

And with that time comes a choice.

We can let the days pass, or we can reawaken that spark.

Not in some grand, complicated way. But in small, meaningful moments.

Sit outside and really look at the sky.

Play a song and let it carry you.

Tell a story, not perfectly, but honestly.

Pick up a pencil, a camera, and a notebook.

Ask a grandchild, “What do you see?” and then share what you see.

That’s where creativity begins again.

And when your grandchildren see you doing that, when they see you curious, engaged, open to wonder, they learn something powerful. They learn that life doesn’t narrow with age. It expands, if we let it.

They learn that imagination isn’t just for the young.

They learn that growing older doesn’t mean fading away; it means deepening.

So yes, we hold onto the photos when we can find them. We listen to the songs that take us back. We honour the memories that shaped us.

But we don’t stop there.

We create new ones.

Because in the end, it’s not just about how clearly we can look back.

It’s about how fully we choose to live forward, right here, right now, with the people who matter most, and the moments that are waiting to be noticed.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Memory changes shape as we do.

 My daughter visits from Australia every two or three years. When she is here, she looks forward to looking at photo albums of pictures from when she was younger. This time, the albums were moved, but cannot be found. It's not about the fact that the albums were moved; it’s about what they hold. Moments she can step back into. Faces, places, versions of herself that still feel close when she turns a page. She isn’t living in the past, she’s visiting it, the way you might revisit a favourite park or a familiar street.

And me? I have been noticing something different. When I look at the pictures from my past, they are still there, but the edges of my memories have softened. Where once there were sharp details, now there’s more feeling than fact. That’s not loss as much as it is transformation. Memory changes shape as we do.

Then along comes a song on the radio, Time Passages by Al Stewart, and suddenly it all clicks into place. The song doesn’t just talk about time; it carries it. The slow drift, the pull backward, the realization that even when we don’t try to hold on, something in us still reaches. “I’m not the kind to live in the past…”, and yet, there we are, from time to time, casting a line into those waters.

Music does that in a way nothing else can. A photograph shows you what was. A song lets you feel it again. It brings back not just the image, but the heartbeat of the moment, the room, the laughter, the quiet, even the person you were back then.

Working with caregivers and people living with Dementia adds a deeper layer to this understanding. Time doesn’t stretch the same way for everyone. For some, yesterday fades quickly, and even this morning can slip away. What’s left is now, this moment, this breath, this connection.

And that’s where the real lesson lies.

Time doesn’t wait for us to remember it. Used or unused, cherished or ignored, it keeps moving. But when memory begins to loosen its grip, the present becomes more than just a passing point; it becomes everything.

So, we seize it. We fill it. We make it count.

A song was played together. A laugh shared. A hand held just a little longer.

Because in the end, whether through photos, music, or fleeting moments, what matters most isn’t how clearly we can look back, it’s how fully we choose to live right now.

Friday, May 1, 2026

May is generous

 There’s a quiet invitation that arrives with May. It doesn’t knock loudly. It asks us to slow down, to pay attention, and, more importantly,  to listen.

Because finding beauty in a broken world isn’t about escaping. It is about noticing what is still growing, still singing, still reaching for the light,  and choosing to do the same.

May is generous that way. It’s spring at full strength. The air softens. Gardens begin to stir with intention. If you walk outside early enough, just before sunrise, you’ll hear it,  the rising chorus of birds in full voice, calling, answering, filling the morning with a kind of music that asks nothing of us except our presence.

By day, the world becomes a gallery. Trees, now fully leafed, offer shade and movement. Wisteria drapes itself like nature’s artwork. Peonies arrive boldly, both fragrant and fleeting, reminding us that beauty doesn’t last forever,  and maybe that’s what makes it matter.

Even the light stretches itself differently in May. In many parts of the Northern Hemisphere, the sun lingers past 8 p.m., giving us more time to notice the subtle shifts of evening. Meanwhile, in the Southern Hemisphere, the rhythm gently turns toward autumn,  a reminder that every season, everywhere, carries its own kind of beauty.

And woven through all of this is something deeper. In many places, May is recognized as Mental Health Awareness Month,  a timely nudge to listen not only to the world around us, but to ourselves and to one another. Stepping outside, breathing in the season, can calm the mind in ways we often forget are available to us.

Here in our community, May also carries tradition. For over a century, we’ve gathered to celebrate May Day. There’s something timeless about watching children dance around the maypole, ribbons weaving together in bright patterns, then unwinding again. Rooted in a tradition that stretches back some 600 years to places like Wales and Scotland, the dance tells a simple story: the turning of the seasons, the lengthening of days, and the joy of community moving in rhythm together.

And May continues to invite us to celebrate in many ways. Across Canada, families gather for Mother’s Day, honouring care and connection. The long weekend of Victoria Day signals the unofficial start of summer, with parades, fireworks, and the familiar opening of backyards and fire pits. National Accessibility Week encourages us to build a more inclusive society for everyone.

It is also a time to recognize the rich cultural threads that shape our country,  celebrating the histories and contributions of Jewish, Asian, Polish, and Haitian communities, among many others, who continue to strengthen the fabric of Canada.

So perhaps the task this May is simple, but not always easy: pause, notice, listen.

Step outside. Watch the light change. Hear the morning chorus. Take in the brief, brilliant life of a flower. Join a celebration, or create one of your own.

Because when we choose to see the beauty around us, we don’t just discover it,  we quietly begin to create more of it.