Skip to main content

THE GOLDEN YEARS OF LIFE

 

Margaret & Mal Ferris

13:42 (5 minutes ago)
to BernardRobiJoeme




GOLDEN YEARS OF OUR LIVES


If you are 50 to 70, allow me to speak to you with the respect you deserve & the mischief you secretly enjoy.

This is the age when you wake up & your knees greet you before your spouse does. You sit on the bed first. You negotiate with your back. You stand up slowly like a govt project. You clear your throat not because you are sick but because your body is confirming that all systems are still online.

Welcome to the golden years, where your mind is youthful but your joints have started making independent decisions.

Here, good health is no longer a luxury. It is a full time occupation.

You must walk. The deliberate walking of a person who knows that if you do not move your body, your body will move you to the hospital. Walk like you are inspecting land that you own. Swing your arms with purpose. Let people think you are training for a marathon. You are actually training for independence.

Add a little strength training. Lift light weights. Use water bottles if you must. Your legs, arms, and core must remember they still have work to do. Otherwise they will retire before you do.

Practice standing on one leg. Walk heel to toe like a tightrope performer. At this age, falling is no longer a joke. You do not fall and laugh. You fall and relatives start receiving phone calls.

Now let us talk about food.

This is not the time for fried things that shine like they were polished. Your plate must now resemble a garden. Greens. Beans. Fish. Fruits. Nuts. Whole grains. Food that looks like it came from the soil, not from a factory with loud music.

Eat like someone who plans to meet great grandchildren.

Reduce sugar. Your body is no longer interested in youthful experiments. It wants peace. It wants fiber. It wants protein. Spread that protein across the day. Eggs in the morning. Beans or lentils at lunch. Fish or light meat in the evening. Your muscles are slowly packing their bags. Feed them so they stay.

Drink water. Not only tea. Not only coffee. Water. Your organs are tired of guessing what you are sending down there.

Sleep now becomes sacred. You cannot watch loud television until midnight and expect your brain to cooperate. Dim the lights early. Eat light at night. Drink a calming herbal tea. Create a cool, dark room and sleep like a respected elder, not like a university student on holiday.

Short naps are permitted. In fact, they are recommended. This is the only age where sleeping in the afternoon is called recovery, not laziness.

Go for your check ups. Do not fear the hospital. Fear ignorance. Check your eyes. Check your BP. Check your sugar. At this age, prevention is cheaper than storytelling at funerals.

And please, do not retire socially.

Join groups. Laugh with friends. Attend gatherings. Tell stories that begin with “in our days.” Sing. Dance slowly to old music while seated if you must. Social laughter is medicine that does not come in tablets.

Play games. Cards. Puzzles. Read. Write your memoirs. Learn how to use that smartphone properly. Surprise your grandchildren by knowing more about apps than they do. Nothing unsettles young people more than a tech savvy grandparent.

Garden a little. Touch the soil. Grow something, even if it is only herbs in a pot. The sun, the air, and the small daily responsibility will keep you alive in ways medicine cannot.

If food alone is not enough, speak to a doctor about supplements. Vitamin D for bones. B12 for nerves. Calcium. Omega three. A little protein powder in porridge if your appetite has become unreliable. Do not self prescribe like a village chemist. Ask first.

Above all, cultivate joy.

Laugh easily. Forgive quickly. Reduce stress. Limit alcohol to the level where you can still remember your own name. Save your money. Protect your peace. Choose calm over chaos.

Because between 50 to 70, you are no longer preparing for life. You are protecting it.

This is the age when true wealth reveals itself. The ability to stand up without assistance. To walk without fear. To sleep without pain. To eat without a long list of forbidden food

Comments

Mwarabu said…
"Above all, cultivate Joy" Very true.

Popular posts from this blog

A message from Mervyn Maciel from his Hospital Bed

Morning my dear friends. Want to write to each one of you but I am exhausted! Thanks for everything. You have done much for me. Being discharged today after three long weeks. Have to live with pain for the rest of my life! Home at last, thanks to all of your prayers and kind wishes! From Mzee Mervyn Maciel to all of you. Morning Skip. Please don’t think I am or have been ignoring you – quite the opposite hard to spill it out with diminishing gufu (strength). Wish they could establish what is causing the chronic bleeding in my brain region. I want to sing again and write so much however gufu na shindwa mimi (lack strength is hampering me. Please thank everyone for their prayers and for enriching my life. I was the dunce in the family: My brothers Rev Joseph SJ and the late Wilfrid are my heroes. I owe them so much, also my darling Elsie and each of my loving children, including Conrad who suffered so much during his short life. Our faith kept us going during those painful days in Marsab...

GREG PATRICIO: My life in Kenya

                                                                My Life in Kenya                                                                                                     ...

MORE photos of cricketers in Kenya added

More cricket photos added! Asians v Europeans, v Tanganyika, v Uganda, v East Africa, Rhodesia, etc some names missing! Photo Gallery of Kenya Cricket 23 photos: CM Gracias, Blaise d'Cunha Johnny Lobo! Ramanbhai Patel, Mehboob Ali, Basharat Hassan and hundreds others.