T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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643.1 | Congratulations and welcome! | MORO::BEELER_JE | Hit hard, hit fast, hit often | Tue Sep 10 1991 11:31 | 10 |
| What's the big deal? For some people it is a "big deal" and it never
ceases to amaze me. From *my* perception when the first digit of your
age is a '2' people still consider you a ... well ... kid. When the
first digit of your age is a '3' then you may marginally be considered
as an adult and it's not until the first digit of your age is a '4'
that people will accept you (at face value) as an adult.
Hey, enjoy it ... it's better than the ... alternative.
Bubba
|
643.2 | Better at 40 than 20 | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Tue Sep 10 1991 11:41 | 7 |
| Even better than how other people's estimation of you increases, how
about your own estimation of yourself? I was never unhappy with who I
was at any given time, but I'm sure I'm more confident, in control,
generally at ease, etc at 44 than I was at 24. And I still feel like
I'm 24! That's win-win.
Kit
|
643.3 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Sep 10 1991 11:50 | 11 |
| But the passage is like no other. You can now start to figure out how
many years of work are left. 25 years.........:-) Goes by like a flash
of light. You start thinking of retirement, start counting all them
gray etc. :) And worst of all, if you are starting to date agian, like
self, you realize how old you really are when you want that woman/man
half your age, but realize that there are worlds of differences in
converstation and you feel soooo old that you start counting their ages
and figure out that your going to meet mom and dad and they might be
your age!!! Gee, sounds not like a win-win. Other horras are middle age
spread, if it has not hit you in the waist yet. As the Queen of Hearts
said to Alice, "you got to run twice as fast to stay in place....."
|
643.4 | Different strokes for different folks ... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Hit hard, hit fast, hit often | Tue Sep 10 1991 12:36 | 6 |
| "...the passage is like no other..."
Perhaps, but, I've known people who have "on turning 30" birthday
parties - they think that they are "over the hill" at 30 !!!
Bubba
|
643.5 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Sep 10 1991 12:40 | 3 |
| Yes, but!!!! They are having a party. How many of them get one on or
after 40 that want to admit to it? :) Me?? I want to be remembered as
the Jack Bennie type. For ever 38! Or was that 39???? :)
|
643.6 | why not a 40th party? | CLUSTA::BINNS | | Tue Sep 10 1991 13:21 | 9 |
| > Yes, but!!!! They are having a party. How many of them get one on or
> after 40 that want to admit to it? :) Me?? I want to be remembered as
Well, my wife gave me a memorable 40th birthday party -- a surprise
party so unexpected that I was quite disoriented on re-entering my
house after a false errand, to see a wonderful gathering of friends
from many of my past lives.
Kit
|
643.7 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Sep 10 1991 14:44 | 5 |
| Kit,
Wait a couple of years! And you to will say, "Oh! Why I didn't
think I was this old!" As you gaze upon a cake of candles more than the
40 count!:)
|
643.8 | age or die | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 10 1991 14:46 | 9 |
| look, when you get old, you can get away with saying what you MEAN without
offending anyone...they just say, "oh, you know how they get at that age"...
I'm looking forward to getting a motorized wheelchair and a long cane so I
can poke people and whack their fannies to get them out of my way...and I'll
say anything I want to and embarass the young folks. I'm looking forward to
be a great curmudgeon.
I figured out a long time ago, that either you get older or you die. Of the
choices available, aging isn't unattractive.
|
643.9 | 40=transition time | CAPNET::RONDINA | | Tue Sep 10 1991 15:50 | 6 |
| What's the big deal about 40?
Mid life transition is. Read Seasons of a Man's LIfe by Levinson for
more insight. A real eye opener this book is.
Paul
|
643.10 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Sep 10 1991 17:51 | 8 |
| I used to think that 30 was when you became an adult. Now, at 38, I
think maybe it happens at 40. But that doesn't seem like enough time
to make it. :-)
I did figure out that middle aged is how old your parents are. Old is
20-30 years older then that. So you can't ever get there.
Alfred
|
643.11 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Hand me my old guitar... | Tue Sep 10 1991 17:55 | 15 |
| RE: <<< Note 643.10 by CVG::THOMPSON "Radical Centralist" >>>
> I used to think that 30 was when you became an adult. Now, at 38, I
> think maybe it happens at 40. But that doesn't seem like enough time
> to make it. :-)
Doesn't happen at 40 or so far hasn't happened at 41 either :^)
Jim
|
643.12 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Tue Sep 10 1991 17:58 | 8 |
| Alfred,
I've got news for you, you don't become an adult at 40 either ;-)
Actually it is having kids that makes you and adult... they think
you are so you become one. ;-) x 100
Bonnie
|
643.13 | _WHO'S_ not a kid? | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Tue Sep 10 1991 23:52 | 10 |
| Nonsense, Bonnie.
Kids make little difference.
At 43 I'm still wondering what I'll do when I grow up.
With any kinda luck, my oldest will finish her Senior year at Lehigh next year
and make up her mind before I make up mine.
-Jack
|
643.14 | let's talk about something else | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Wed Sep 11 1991 06:27 | 7 |
| Funny reading some of this stuff... because I too, don't feel like an
adult, and I'll turn 36 next month! I still wonder what I want to do
in life! I do tend to worry about the future... jobs... retirement...
how I'm gonna make it.
"Life is what happens, while making other plans." - John Lennon
|
643.15 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Wed Sep 11 1991 09:14 | 5 |
| -Jack
In your case, I don't think you'll *ever* grow up! ;-)
Bonnie
|
643.16 | | IAMOK::MITCHELL | skewed five degrees from normal | Wed Sep 11 1991 10:05 | 23 |
|
The Big Deal ?? Well, I guess it all depends on
where you are in life.
When I hit 40, I loved it. My son was 20, and we've
been able to enjoy a fantastic mother/son friendship.
He got married at 22 and now at 47 I have two
grandchildren ( 3 1/2 & 2 1/2) that I'm young enough
to play with and enjoy their growing up. My grand-
daughter calls me her *bestest friend*.....!
As for the aging........well each and every line
has been earned...and paid for in full with either
tears or laughter.
I've always lived by the words *go forward with
eagerness and live each day to the fullest*
kits
|
643.17 | Phasing out! | JUNCO::FISHER | | Wed Sep 11 1991 12:50 | 6 |
| I was told that it is time now to hibernate since sex drive is phasing
out, where women raise their in the higher peak. I don't know if I'm
looking forward to it. I'm 37.
D-
|
643.18 | do it right the FIRST time! | SYSTMX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Wed Sep 11 1991 13:37 | 8 |
| re: -1
nahhhh..... yer sex drive isn't "phasing out"... it' just that when
you get past 40/50ish you finally got it figured out and you don't need
all that practice!
tony ;^)
|
643.19 | Feeling 40... | CUPTAY::KOKERNAK | | Wed Sep 11 1991 14:06 | 35 |
| Whether we admit it or not, 40 is definitely a "Big Deal"!
I turned 40 this past August 5th. Last year my wife turned 40 and I
gave her the surprise party, "Over the Hill" decorations, video taped
the party...the whole bit.
As my "time" approached I decided that I would prefer to do something
different that would be special to me. Yes. Over the weekend prior to
my birthday we had the family celebration, gifts, cake, etc. But a few
months before I planned a get together with two of my best friends,
who also turned 40 this year, back in my hometown where they still
reside. We planned an entire weekend--golf, boating, barbecue lunch,
italian dinner, general wa-hooing and closing down one of our old
watering holes which was still around after 20 years!
The best part of that weekend was reminiscing and REFLECTION. I agree
with all that is said about turning 40. Yes, it is mid-life...that is
if you are lucky enough to live to be 80! Yes, it is that time to see
where you have been, where you are and where you're going. Yes, it is
that time to realize who you are, what do you want to be when you grow
up and start capturing all those dreams, not just chase them, anymore!
As one reply stated...go for the gusto...get all you can out of every
day. For 40 years we have been trying to get up on the surf board and
now it is time to start riding the wave, because before we know it our
wave is going to come into shore once and for all.
Personnally, I feel I've reminisced and reflected (and loved every
minute of it) until I am blue in the face. I am facing all those 40th
questions and can feel myself just about standing on the surf board,
ready to peak on my wave very soon. I say it is NOW or NEVER!
Reflect....Peak.....Enjoy!!!
MK
|
643.21 | Of course,I've still got 11yrs to go!! | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Wed Sep 11 1991 15:01 | 12 |
| With some of these replies, it's as though "Adult" is a bad word.
I don't see why "Adult" has to mean that you now have life figured
and that now you know what you want to do for the rest of your life.
By the way, "mid-life" crisis as it pertains to "40" is bull.
For some this "crisis" happens during their 20's or even 50's or
perhaps many times inbetween. Adult implies that a person has become
responsible for their life and its direction.
I guess, it's at 40 when we become reflective on our past and foreseeing
to our future; perhaps with either regret or anticipation. By this
time, 40, we've spent our youth and the rest of our lives is really
on a budget.
|
643.22 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Sep 11 1991 15:08 | 5 |
| I stopped worrying about individual birthday numbers when I turned 21.
40 will be just another number to me. I always look forward, not back.
I wouldn't want to be 21 again.
Steve
|
643.23 | It'd be nice to everyonceinawhile. | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Wed Sep 11 1991 15:31 | 18 |
| Although, I do look forward to more interesting experiences and
seeing my children become adults, I must admit that given the
chance-I'd love to be 21 on and off again.
21 is fun. I love the adventurous mind of a young person, the lack
of fear, the excuses and the first times. I don't miss the lack
of confidence though!! And truthfully, I'm really not looking
forward to finding the pefect hair color to cover-up my gray hairs
sure to come. I don't know, I'm curious too though as to how me
and my mate will act toward each other and whether or not we'll
read the paper together and if we'll get "high" together still.
I hope we'll be comfortable!! You know, it's kind of embarrassing
to see "older" people in real young "teeny bobber" clothes. It
seems some are O.K. but not all. I think, sometimes it shows just
how comfortable one is with his/her progessing years.
I guess, relaxation is the key. Enjoy the ride while it lasts.
But you pick the car.
|
643.24 | | HANNAH::MODICA | Journeyman Noter | Wed Sep 11 1991 15:52 | 16 |
|
Well...can't say I'm lookin forward to 40 in 14 months.
But then, I didn't handle 30 that well either.
Seems like each of these milestones highlites our mortality a bit
more than the last.
Of course, if I do get to 40 with most of what's left of my hair,
I won't complain too much. And the way my life goes, I imagine
I'll still be getting pimples.
But, as was said, it sure as hell beats the alternative.
Hank
ps. now if only I could get carded buying booze, that'd make my day.
:-)
|
643.25 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Wed Sep 11 1991 17:52 | 4 |
| Getting carded! Wow! I can't remember when that happened!:) Geeee! I
could do my Christepher Loid here. Aaaaaaaaaaahhhh...........
Wow?... Last thing I remember was that Sha-Naah-Naaah was on stage. Is it
still 1969?......
|
643.26 | Does anyone else feel pressure to have a mid-life crisis? | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Wed Sep 11 1991 20:59 | 11 |
| As I turned 30, I was desperately 22, hitting the clubs three nights a
week, dating a 19-year-old, living in a student slum. Now I'm 371 days
from 40, and I'm running thirty miles a week, shedding weight, thinking
about getting a "foil job" of highlights to cover my gray, and living
in a student slum (only now we own the three-decker). I guess one big
difference is that I really DO acknowledge that I'm not the same as the
kids on campus anymore, and that I'd generally not enjoy knowing them
(except for MIT engineers -- them folk fascinate me).
My marriage isn't doing particularly well, and it may be the case that
my 40th birthday present to myself will be singlehood. That's scary.
|
643.27 | | TENAYA::RAH | | Wed Sep 11 1991 21:59 | 5 |
|
if you are planning on being single and attracting wymmin,
by all means get the hair taken care of.
|
643.28 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Hell Bent for Leather | Thu Sep 12 1991 09:09 | 1 |
| .27 is a sad note...
|
643.29 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Thu Sep 12 1991 09:51 | 5 |
| RAH
It depends on the sort of wymmin he wants to attract.
BJ
|
643.30 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Thu Sep 12 1991 11:21 | 2 |
| Thanks, BJ.
- Cueball
|
643.31 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Thu Sep 12 1991 11:22 | 6 |
| Hey, Vick,
Women that only are interested in the 'pretty ones' loose out a lot.
Bonnie
|
643.32 | Use it or lose it | GRANPA::FBENJAMIN | Blackman come out to party | Thu Sep 12 1991 11:50 | 12 |
| RE: .17
Sex is like any other physical activity, use or lose it. It has nothing
to do with your age.
I am better now than I was at 18.
I am 38 and getting better. Come on 40's, let's do IT to the max.
Someone who enjoys getting older.....
|
643.33 | real women don't care about your hair :-) | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Sep 12 1991 12:31 | 8 |
| > if you are planning on being single and attracting wymmin,
> by all means get the hair taken care of.
However if it's a woman you are after don't worry about the
hair. You want a woman who can see beyond physical attributes
if you plan to be with her for any length of time.
Alfred
|
643.34 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Thu Sep 12 1991 13:02 | 1 |
| True Alfred ;-)
|
643.35 | | TENAYA::RAH | | Thu Sep 12 1991 16:21 | 8 |
|
re .28
what's sad about apprehending reality?
you obviously haven't overheard any female ridicule of baldness
recently...
|
643.37 | Gray hair rathole | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Thu Sep 12 1991 23:36 | 22 |
| I thought .27 was talking about Hoyt
.26> getting a "foil job" of highlights to cover my gray,
and that both notes were sad.... What's wrong with gray?! There's a
TV ad for a hair color "for men" (what, it only takes if there's a Y
chromosome?) and I think the guy looks mousy AFTER the treatment.
On baldness, the only configuration I find repellent is the 6-inch-
side-hair-plastered-over-the-top coif. The mind boggles (and the libido
seizes up)! What goes through their minds?! Frankly thinning or
sparse hair can be endearing to me, even, if it's cut to a fairly
rational length (depends; 1/2" to as long as 3" or so). The combing
"ruse" reminds me of a chubby kitten thinking it's hiding behind a
chair leg. Gimme a break.
And it does depend on the type of lady the gentleman is trying to attract.
Leslie
P.S. And what is a "foil job"?! As in tin foil or Curses, Foiled
Again?
|
643.38 | Even worse than a toupe !!! | JUMBLY::BATTERBEEJ | DILLIGAFF | Fri Sep 13 1991 05:58 | 15 |
| Just to continue the rathole, my uncle has about four strands of
hair combed from about an inch *below* and behind his left ear
across the top of his head. Trouble is it never stays there for
long and he has to keep draping it over the top again about every
5 minutes. He is very intellectual and tends to dress like fairly
badly. He is obviously not stupid or, in any other respect, self-
conscious. He must also see himself in the mirror. I for one will
never understand this type of behaviour.
Does something happen to them when they lose their hair in the same
way that Samson lost his strength, only they lose the ability to see
what idiots they look and that they only accentuate their baldness.
Jerome (who will go bald gracefully if/when the time comes!)
|
643.39 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Hell Bent for Leather | Fri Sep 13 1991 09:41 | 7 |
| Picking up where the network left me off...
The sad part (to me) is that you even have to be concerned about it. The
sad part is that women place so much importance upon it. I often wonder
if people who are so superficial are actually getting what they pay for
out of life... It isn't a knock against you; it's a knock against the
situation.
|
643.40 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Fri Sep 13 1991 10:28 | 4 |
| I always threatened my wife that I'd grow my moustache real long
and comb it straight back over my bald head. I don't have a moustache
now. :^)
- Vick
|
643.41 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Fri Sep 13 1991 10:36 | 16 |
| Vick
When I was teaching college there was almost always at least one
young man who was in the early stages of male pattern baldness,
and nervous/upset about it. When I explained how it was inherited
and that it results from excess testosterone, I would wind up
by telling the young man/men that they had 'more of what it takes'
than the guys with hair. The little joke never failed to cheer them up!
Years later, my daughter gave her father a coffee mug that read:
"Baldmen don't waste their hormones growing hair"
:-)
Bonnie
|
643.42 | | ISSHIN::MATTHEWS | OO -0 -/ @ | Fri Sep 13 1991 10:52 | 9 |
| I find this kind of amusing since, at the tender age of 35, my hair is
starting to make that trek toward the back of my neck. You wouldn't notice
it if you hadn't known me for a few years. The other day while I was
shaving, my wife said (in a very concerned tone) "You know, your hair is
starting to recede." I was a little surprised that it concerned her so
much. She seemed relieved when I told her that if my hair went then I'd
have one less thing to worry about in the morning.
Ron
|
643.43 | | NITTY::DIERCKS | None of your business!!!! | Fri Sep 13 1991 11:01 | 10 |
|
As my VERY bald voice teacher used to say (rest his soul):
"They only put marble on the finest furniture."
Greg, who can "do" his hair in about 20 seconds.
|
643.44 | From the other side... | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Sep 13 1991 11:32 | 6 |
| I get totally frosted at barbers who say things like "Wow, I guess
you'll never go bald" or "Your hair's thicker than a horse's tail"
I suppose I might be short on hormones but I doubt it.
ed
|
643.45 | Like a fine wine ... | MORO::BEELER_JE | Hit hard, hit fast, hit often | Fri Sep 13 1991 11:53 | 8 |
| I forgot the "best" part of 40 and beyond ....
My secretary has always contended that as men get older they get better
looking ... more mature ... more "character" if you will ... and that
it is patently unfair to women because as women get older ... well,
they just get older...
Bubba
|
643.46 | | ISSHIN::MATTHEWS | OO -0 -/ @ | Fri Sep 13 1991 12:14 | 11 |
| I find that the older I get, the more physically active I am. I've always
been very active, but as I near 40 (I'm 36 at the end of October) I find
that I'm fitter and faster than ever before. My wife, on the other hand,
is becoming more and more sedentary and she's ahving the problems
associated with it. Her back is troubling her and so forth. You can all
guess the response I get to suggestions she exercise a little. She even
snarls at her doctor when he makes the same suggestion. I feel bad for her
because I'm getting better with age (at least that's the way I feel) while
she's going in the other direction.
Ron
|
643.47 | One for the roada | CSC32::HADDOCK | the final nightmare | Mon Sep 16 1991 17:31 | 16 |
| re--baldness
I saw a t-shirt the other day that said,"
<continue at your own peril>
Last warning
"I'm not getting bald, I'm just getting more head!"
8^)
fred();
|