Friday, April 10, 2026

The dragons are still there.

 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.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

April Showers bring May flowers and some Dad Jokes to pass the time

Here are 30 light, groan-worthy (in the best way) April dad jokes:

1.           Why did the flower bring a raincoat?
Because April showers were in the forecast!

2.           I tried to catch the fog in April…
Mist!

3.           What do you call a rainy day in April?
A “pour” decision to stay inside!

4.           Why are April showers so good at gardening?
They really know how to sprout conversation.

5.           What did the raindrop say to the garden?
“Don’t worry, I’ve got you covered!”

6.           Why did the gardener love April?
Because business was really blooming!

7.           What’s a flower’s favorite month?
May—because they finally get to show off!

8.           Why do flowers always drive so fast in May?
They put the petal to the metal.

9.           What did one flower say to the other?
“Hey bud, how’s it growing?”

10.      Why was the garden so friendly?
Because it had lots of root connections.

11.      What do you call a flower who tells jokes?
A real comedian-thus!

12.      Why did the rain break up with the sun?
Too many cloudy issues.

13.      What do April showers and good friends have in common?
They both help you grow.

14.      Why don’t flowers ever get into arguments?
They just let it grow.

15.      What’s a gardener’s favorite exercise?
Squats—planting and picking all day!

16.      Why did the tomato turn red in May?
Because it saw the salad dressing!

17.      What do you call a flower that runs on electricity?
A power plant!

18.      Why did the bee love May flowers?
Because they were bee-autiful!

19.      What did the rain say after a long day?
“I’m drained.”

20.      Why are gardens great storytellers?
Because they have deep roots and growing plots.

21.      What’s the best way to watch a spring garden grow?
With patience… and maybe a cup of tea.

22.      Why did the flower go to school?
To become a smart bud.

23.      What do you call a lazy gardener?
A pro-crastin-ator… (they’ll plant later!)

24.      Why did the daisy smile after the rain?
Because it finally got a fresh start.

25.      What do clouds wear under their raincoats?
Thunderwear!

26.      Why was the gardener so calm during April storms?
Because they knew good things were growing.

27.      What’s a flower’s favorite type of music?
Anything with a good beat to grow to.

28.      Why don’t April showers ever get lost?
They just follow the current!

29.      What did the grandparent say to the grandchild in the garden?
“Stick with me, kid—we’ll grow together.”

30.      And the classic reminder:
April showers bring May flowers…
…and May flowers bring pilgrims!
😉

If you share these with your grandchildren, expect at least a few eye rolls, that’s how you know they’re working.Top of Form

Bottom of Form

 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

A different kind of awareness

It was a conversation that stayed with me.

We were sitting in a quiet corner after a gathering, the kind where the noise has faded, but the thoughts are just getting started. Someone leaned in and said, almost with a sense of relief, “I don’t think so much anymore. I feel. I trust. It’s… freeing.”

And I understood exactly what they meant.

There comes a point for many people, often later in life, but not always, when something shifts. The constant need to analyze, to solve, to prove, to make everything fit neatly into logic and reason… it softens. A different kind of awareness begins to take its place. Call it spiritual awareness, presence, or simply a deeper way of being.

It can feel like stepping out of a crowded room into open air.

You notice more. You react less. You begin to trust moments instead of dissecting them. You feel connected to people, to nature, to something larger than yourself. And yes, there is a freedom in that. A lightness.

But here’s where I find myself pausing.

Because sometimes, in that movement toward spiritual awareness, people quietly set something down along the way.

Their tools.

Intellect. Logic. Common sense.

Almost as if those things belonged to an earlier version of themselves, one they’ve now outgrown.

And that’s where I gently push back.

Not because the shift toward awareness isn’t real, it absolutely is. But because those tools were never the enemy. They were never meant to be discarded. They were meant to be refined… and then reunited with this new way of seeing.

Think of it this way.

Imagine someone who has spent years learning to navigate the world with a map. Every road, every turn, carefully studied. Then one day, they discover something new, and they begin to feel their way. They sense direction. They move with intuition instead of strict planning.

That’s growth.

But if they throw away the map entirely? They may feel free for a while… until they’re lost in a place where intuition alone isn’t enough.

The real mastery comes when they carry both.

They feel the direction… and they understand the terrain.

That’s the balance I’m talking about.

Spiritual awareness can open doors that logic alone cannot. It allows us to sit with uncertainty without panic. It helps us see meaning where before we saw only randomness. It deepens our compassion, our patience, our ability to be present.

But intellect, logic, and common sense are grounding forces.

They help us ask better questions.
They help us test what we believe.
They help us act wisely, not just feel deeply.

Without them, awareness can drift. It can become vague, untethered, even misleading.

With them, awareness becomes powerful.

I’ve seen people on both sides of this.

Some who stayed so firmly rooted in logic that they never allowed themselves to experience the richness of deeper awareness. Everything had to be explained, measured, and proven. Life became narrow, even if it was orderly.

And others who leaned so far into spiritual feeling that they lost their footing. Everything became “energy” or “intuition,” but decisions lacked clarity. Boundaries blurred. Reality became harder to navigate.

But then some find the middle path.

And it’s something to see.

They think clearly, but not rigidly.
They feel deeply, but not blindly.
They question, but without cynicism.
They trust, but without abandoning discernment.

There’s a steadiness to them.

Their growth doesn’t just accelerate, it stabilizes. Their “blossoming” doesn’t just happen; it deepens.

And here’s the part that excites me the most:

When people rediscover their tools after expanding their awareness, something remarkable happens.

Their thinking becomes more insightful, not just analytical.
Their logic becomes more compassionate, not just correct.
Their common sense becomes more inclusive, not just practical.

It’s as if the tools themselves have evolved.

And so has the person using them.

I sometimes picture it like a garden.

At first, we focus on structure, planting rows, understanding soil, learning what works and what doesn’t. That’s our logic, our learning, our effort to make sense of things.

Then, over time, we begin to appreciate the flow of the garden. The seasons. The way things grow in their own time. The beauty that isn’t entirely controlled. That’s our awareness, our openness, our connection.

But the most beautiful gardens?

They have both.

They are tended with care and allowed to grow with freedom.

So, if you’re on that path, if you’re feeling that shift toward something deeper, something more expansive, embrace it. There is real growth there.

But don’t leave your tools behind.

Bring them with you.

Sharpen them with your new awareness. Soften them with your new understanding. Use them not to control life, but to engage with it more fully.

Because the goal isn’t to choose between thinking and feeling.

It’s to integrate them.

And when that happens, a different kind of freedom emerges.

Not just the freedom of letting go… but the freedom of knowing when to hold on.

Not just the freedom of drifting… but the freedom of direction.

And in that space, something truly powerful takes root.

Your awareness grows.
Your insight deepens.
Your balance strengthens.

And yes, your blossoming… blossoms.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

My role is , it used to be...

There’s a moment that doesn’t get talked about enough.

It doesn’t happen at the retirement party, when the cake is cut, and the speeches are warm. It happens later, on a quiet morning, when the alarm doesn’t ring, the calendar is empty, and a question drifts in:

“Who am I now?”

For most of our lives, the answer felt easy.

We were what we did.

Teacher. Manager. Electrician. Nurse. Business owner. Caregiver. Titles, roles, responsibilities, they gave shape to our days and, over time, to our identity. Even if we didn’t say it out loud, we began to believe it:

“This is who I am.”

And then one day, it changes.

We retire.

And suddenly, that familiar answer disappears. Not gradually, but all at once. The introductions shift from “I am…” to “I used to be…”

“I used to be a principal.”
“I used to run a company.”
“I used to…”

And if we’re not careful, that sentence quietly finishes itself in a way that hurts:

“…but now I am nothing.”

That’s the part of retirement that catches people off guard.

It’s not about money. It’s not even about time.

It’s about identity.

Losing a role can feel like losing a piece of yourself. And like any loss, it comes with grief. Real grief. The kind that doesn’t always show up as tears, but as restlessness, frustration, or a sense that something is missing.

Some people try to outrun that feeling. They fill the space quickly, going back to work, staying busy, saying yes to everything. Others try to numb it. And the truth is, substance use among seniors is higher than most people realize, often because people are trying to quiet that inner discomfort.

And then there are those who sit with it.

Not easily. Not quickly. But honestly.

They move through the stages we associate with any kind of loss, denial, anger, bargaining, sadness, and eventually, acceptance. Not the kind that says, “It’s over,” but the kind that says, “This is different… and maybe there’s something here for me.”

Here’s where the shift begins.

Because the truth is, we were never just our titles.

Even when we were working, what mattered most wasn’t the label on the door. It was what we were doing inside that role. Solving problems. Helping people. Creating. Leading. Building. Teaching. Listening.

Doing.

That’s the thread that runs through a life, not the title, but the action.

And that’s the key to stepping into retirement with a sense of purpose.

The people who navigate this transition best, the ones who seem to land on their feet, usually start earlier than you’d expect. Late forties. Early fifties. Not because they’re eager to leave work, but because they begin asking a different kind of question.

Not, “What will I be when I retire?”

But, “What will I be doing?”

It’s a subtle shift, but a powerful one.

Because when you think in terms of doing, you’re not limited by a job title. You’re opening a door to possibility.

You might be learning.
You might be mentoring.
You might be volunteering.
You might be creating something you never had time for before.
You might be connecting in ways that work once crowded out.

You’re still contributing. Still engaged. Still growing.

The difference is, now it’s on your terms.

I remember a man who struggled deeply in his first year of retirement. He had held a senior role for decades, and when it ended, he felt untethered. Lost. For months, he introduced himself with “I used to be…” as if that past role was the only thing that gave him weight.

Then something shifted.

He started helping a neighbour with small projects. Fixing a fence. Repairing a gate. One thing led to another. Soon, people were calling him, not because of his past title, but because of what he could do.

One day, someone asked him what he did.

He paused, smiled, and said, “These days? I help people keep things working.”

No title. No resume. Just truth.

And you could hear it in his voice; he had found his footing again.

That’s the opportunity retirement offers, if you’re willing to see it.

Not an ending, but a redesign.

A chance to reconnect with the parts of yourself that may have been sitting quietly in the background for years. A chance to ask, “What matters to me now?” and actually build your days around the answer.

So, if you’re approaching retirement, or standing right at the edge of it, don’t wait for that empty feeling to arrive before you start thinking about this.

Begin now.

Make a list, not of titles, but of actions.

What do you enjoy doing?
What have you always wanted to try?
Where do you feel useful, engaged, alive?

Because those answers will carry you forward far more than any job description ever could.

And if you’ve already retired and find yourself in that space of “I used to be…”, be patient with yourself.

You’re not starting from nothing.

You’re starting from experience. From wisdom. From a lifetime of doing, learning, adapting.

That doesn’t disappear.

It just needs a new place to land.

So maybe the sentence doesn’t end with “I used to be…”

Maybe it simply pauses there… and begins again.

“I used to be… and now I’m discovering what’s next.”

And that’s not a loss.

That’s an opening.