There’s a certain kind of confidence you carry through life without even noticing.
It shows up when you walk into a room and don’t think twice
about where to sit. When you take the stairs without checking the handrail.
When your body quietly cooperates with whatever your brain suggests.
For most of us, that confidence sticks around for decades.
Until one day… it doesn’t.
I was reminded of that recently while sitting with a group
of friends, coffee in hand, solving the world’s problems the way retirees do, comfortably
and without deadlines.
One of the guys, a fellow who had spent most of his life in
motion, told us about his “winning moment.”
A few years ago, his hip failed him. Not gradually, not
politely, just packed up and left the job. Surgery followed. Now, doctors will
tell you these things are routine. Very safe. The odds of complications? About
one in a hundred.
He paused, took a sip of coffee, and smiled.
“I won,” he said.
Unfortunately, not the kind of lottery anyone wants.
The replacement didn’t work. He’s now waiting for a second
surgery, moving with a cane, managing pain, and adjusting to a body that no
longer follows instructions as reliably as it once did.
He also admitted something else.
“It was the first time I’d been in a hospital in over fifty
years,” he said. “Scared the life out of me.”
Now here’s where the story could have gone one way, the way
we’ve all been trained to expect.
This is the point where someone says, “Well, that’s ageing.
Nothing you can do.”
But that’s not what happened.
Instead, he looked around the table and said, “I’ve been
lucky. I’ve seen people worse off than me. I guess it’s my turn. I’ll deal with
it.”
And then, almost in the same breath, he started talking
about how quickly he expects to recover after the next surgery.
That’s the part that caught my attention.
Because it lines up almost perfectly with what researchers
have been discovering.
For years, the dominant story about ageing has been simple:
we peak, we plateau, and then we decline. Slowly, steadily, inevitably.
It’s a neat story. Easy to understand. Completely wrong, or
at least, incomplete.
A large study following more than 11,000 adults over the age
of 65 decided to look at things differently. Instead of averaging everyone
together, which tends to smooth out the interesting parts, they tracked
individual journeys.
What they found was surprising.
Nearly 45% of participants improved in either cognitive
function, physical ability, or both over time.
Let me say that again, because it goes against everything
we’ve been told.
They got better.
Not younger. Not magically immune to ageing. But better.
Around a third improved their brain performance. A
significant number were walking faster years later than when they started.
And here’s the real kicker.
The researchers looked at what people believed about ageing
at the beginning of the study, and then checked whether those beliefs predicted
what happened later.
They did.
Strongly.
People who believed ageing meant inevitable decline were
more likely to decline.
People who believed they could stay capable, adapt, and even
improve were far more likely to do exactly that.
This isn’t just about attitude in the cheerful, “think happy
thoughts” sense.
It’s deeper than that.
Beliefs seem to act like instructions, quiet signals that
shape how the body responds over time.
So when someone says, “Well, at my age…” it’s not just a
comment.
It’s a direction.
Now, let’s be clear about something.
This isn’t about pretending everything is fine when it
isn’t. My friend’s hip is very real. The pain is real. The frustration is real.
Ageing brings changes. Some of them are inconvenient. Some
of them are serious.
Ignoring that would be foolish.
But assuming that decline is the only possible outcome? That
might be just as foolish.
Because here’s what often happens.
We absorb the cultural script. The jokes about forgetting
names. The quiet lowering of expectations. The idea that your best years are
behind you.
And then, without noticing, we start living into that
script.
We move a little less.
Try a little less.
Expect a little less.
Until one day, the script feels like reality.
But what if it isn’t?
What if it’s just a story that needs editing?
My friend, with the faulty hip and the unfortunate lottery
win, is already rewriting his.
He’s not denying the setback. He’s not pretending it didn’t
happen.
He’s just refusing to let it define the rest of the story.
And that’s something all of us can do.
It starts small.
Noticing that inner voice when it says, “You can’t do that
anymore.”
Questioning it.
Looking around for people who are doing exactly what you
thought wasn’t possible, and realizing the rules might not be as fixed as you
believed.
And maybe, most importantly, keeping your sense of humour
intact.
Because if you can laugh when your body surprises you, and
it will, you’re already ahead of the game.
So here’s a challenge for you.
Think about one belief you hold about ageing. Just one.
Maybe it’s about what you can’t do anymore. Maybe it’s about
what you shouldn’t even try.
Now ask yourself:
Is that a fact?
Or is it a story I’ve accepted without question?
Because the evidence is starting to point in a different
direction.
The road ahead isn’t a straight downhill slope.
It’s a lot more like a path with turns, bumps, and the
occasional uphill stretch that reminds you, you’re still very much in the game.
And if my friend can look at a second hip surgery and say,
“I’ll be back on track soon,”
Then maybe the rest of us can loosen our grip on that jar
just long enough to reconsider the story we’ve been telling ourselves.
Who knows?
You might still get it open.