My daughter and her friends packed their bags, left their routines behind, and headed off for what they proudly called a “wild weekend” to celebrate turning fifty. Now, I remember fifty. In fact, I remember thinking it sounded older than it felt, like wearing a coat that didn’t quite fit yet.
Thirty years
later, I look at that milestone with a different kind of appreciation… and a
slightly slower exit from a chair.
We are a
funny society when it comes to milestones. We celebrate the obvious ones with
balloons and cake, birthdays, anniversaries, and retirements. We mark them
loudly, joyfully, sometimes even extravagantly. But the quieter milestones? The
ones that come with creaky knees, mysterious aches, and the sudden realization
that you make a small noise every time you sit down or stand up? Those we tend
to greet with a sigh… or a heating pad.
And yet,
maybe those are the milestones most worth celebrating.
Because
here’s the truth, wrapped in a little humour and a lot of honesty: every ache,
every wrinkle, every moment where you walk into a room and forget why you’re
there… is also proof of something remarkable.
You’re still
here.
Not in the
ground.
Still
standing. Still moving. Still part of the story.
Now, I won’t
pretend growing older is all sunshine and smooth sailing. There are mornings
when your body seems to hold a staff meeting before allowing you to get out of
bed. “All in favour of standing up?” “Let’s take a few minutes to discuss
that.” There are days when your back reminds you of things you did twenty years
ago that seemed like a great idea at the time.
And let’s
not even talk about reading glasses. Those things have developed legs. I’m
convinced of it.
But
alongside all of that comes something else, something that doesn’t get nearly
enough attention.
Perspective.
At fifty, at
sixty, at seventy and beyond, you begin to see life differently. Not because
life has changed, but because you have. You’ve lived enough to know that not
everything deserves your worry. You’ve experienced enough to understand that
most storms pass. And perhaps most importantly, you’ve gathered enough moments
to recognize what truly matters.
That’s why I
hope my daughter and her friends, in the middle of their laughter and
celebration, paused, just for a moment, to take that in.
They are now
wiser than they’ve ever been.
Not the kind
of wisdom you find in books, but the kind earned through living. Through
mistakes, through triumphs, through days that didn’t go as planned and days
that turned out better than expected. Wisdom that says, “I’ve been here before…
and I know how to move forward.”
They are
also younger than they will ever be.
That one can
sneak up on you. It sounds obvious, but it carries a quiet urgency. This moment,
right now, is as young as it gets from here. Which means this is not the time
to wait for “someday.” It’s the time to take the trip, start the project, make
the call, say the thing that’s been sitting on your heart.
Because if
there’s one thing age teaches you, it’s that time is both generous and
fleeting.
And then
there’s this beautiful shift that happens, almost without you noticing.
You become
less likely to wish without acting.
When you’re
younger, it’s easy to say, “One day I’ll…” Fill in the blank. Travel. Write.
Learn something new. Reconnect. Start over. But as the years pass, “one day”
starts to feel less like a plan and more like a question.
So, you
begin to act.
Maybe not in
big, dramatic ways. Maybe it’s small steps. Signing up for a class.
Volunteering. Picking up an old hobby. Saying yes to something that once felt
intimidating. But those small actions add up. They create momentum. And
suddenly, life feels less like something happening to you and more like
something you’re shaping again.
You also
become less likely to pray without having faith.
Not
necessarily in a formal sense, but in a deeper, quieter way. Faith in yourself.
Faith that you can handle what comes. Faith that even when things are
uncertain, you will find your footing. It’s a steadiness that comes from having
made it through before.
And perhaps
most importantly, you become less likely to hope without remembering the magic.
Ah, the
magic.
It’s easy to
think of magic as something reserved for youth, for firsts, for surprises, for
wide-eyed wonder. But if you’re paying attention, magic doesn’t disappear with
age. It just changes form.
It shows up
in a grandchild’s laugh. In a conversation that goes deeper than expected. In
the simple joy of a good cup of coffee shared with a friend. In the realization
that even now, there are still new things to discover, new people to meet, and new
stories to live.
Magic
doesn’t require perfection. It requires presence.
And maybe
that’s the real gift of growing older. Not the absence of aches and pains, those
seem determined to stick around, but the presence of awareness.
Awareness
that this moment matters.
Awareness
that you’ve come a long way.
Awareness
that while the body may slow down a little, the heart and mind have grown
richer, deeper, more capable of seeing what truly counts.
So yes,
celebrate the milestones. Celebrate fifty with a wild weekend. Celebrate sixty
with a story. Celebrate seventy with a laugh that echoes a little louder
because you’ve earned it.
And when the
aches and pains try to steal the spotlight, let them have their moment… then
gently remind them who’s in charge.
Because at
the end of the day, you’re still here.
Still
learning. Still laughing. Still becoming.
And that, my
friends, is worth celebrating every single day.