@karinweiss
Good afternoon Karinweiss,
I appreciate your candidness in your writing; being honest with oneself and being introspective regarding who you really think you are can be a new and positive begining in your life. Everyone ages naturally and true, we can realize that some of our capabilities are diminishing but there are so many more aspect to we human beings then we think. I too enjoy being alone but unlike when I was younger and dreamed about a life alone in the wilds of different countries and locations, once I experienced those conditions, I could not possibly thrive without others; including pets.
Throughout the eighties I was involved in several different adventures throughout South America and those experiences helped repair my then broken self. I am 80 now and have a wonderful life with my Gal whom I met in 1990. I could never live my life alone again. We are a tribal people: I am Italian, French and Native American. I faced life and death situations, cancer, waring activities, other illness and life threatening medical procedures, a triple by-pass and so on. I would have given up at the end of my 80's adventures but when I met my Gal, i realized that sharing ones life with others, fulfills our completness. We ride our three wheeled recuments about 100 miles per week, stay in fairly good shape. Yes were slower, I am in pain fairly frequently, refused meds like you, good choice, but we just keep going. We stay involved within our community. I have a permanent colostomy, walk with two canes anyplace I choose to go, yet I am not through yet.
Please don't feel alone, don't resort to just being with you. You, all of us are so much more dynamic than we think we are, we just have to keep putting our selves out there. Take a walk in nature, sit by a stream or a fireplace. smile at folks as you pass bye, and help others when you can. By giving of ourselves to others, either in service or simple conversations, or simply saying hi to a stranger is so beneficial for everyone including you.
Pick a day to do something with someone else, even a stranger: go to your market and strike up a conversation with a stranger and engage everyone you pass along the way. A smile really helps. Just try something, as my gal puts, who is celebrating her 15th year of sobriety, "move a muscle, change a mood."
Write back and let me know how your doing. Please!
Sincerely, Jofree
@jofree An awesome post! Let me add, even though I need to be masked all the time when I am out and about with people, I make it a point to have the smile that is under my mask, go all the way to my eyes. People can tell! These days my gait is much slower, so my normal comment to others is, "go ahead and "play through!" I am motivating as fast as possible. People seem to be in a rush, and it is nicer to just take it as it comes.
Ginger