T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
55.1 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Mon Apr 12 1993 11:48 | 2 |
| For a thorough examination of one manifestation of midlife crisis, read
_Jennifer Fever_ by Barbara Gordon.
|
55.2 | or do we mean midlife transition? | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Apr 12 1993 14:01 | 17 |
| I was at a conference on midlife a few weeks ago, and the phrase "midlife crisis"
was used only to dismiss the concept. Leaving the spouse and career, buying
the sports car and heading West seems to be just a media stereotype. Sure, it
happens to a few folks, but so does getting struck by lightning.
Most people I know are more comfortable with a phrase like midlife transition.
I am 48 and have changed more in the past 3 years than I did in the previous
twenty. But I still have the same wife, job and car. Sometimes it has
been painful, and sometimes still is. I have also cried more in the last
3 years than in the previous twenty. I am comfortable with a lot of ideas
that would have seemed impossibly weird to me a few years ago. But I would
not call my experience a midlife crisis.
Am I typical? More or less, by what I hear.
Is every midlife like mine? Definitely not.
|
55.3 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Mon Apr 12 1993 14:23 | 5 |
| "Midlife crisis" is used in some cases to describe a feeling that one
is a fraud, that one's career growth and other accomplishments were
made by bullshitting one's way through and that it is only a matter of
time until the day of reckoning. It is a very real phenomenon, but the
people who suffer it are apparently a small minority.
|
55.4 | | STAR::ABBASI | checkmate! | Mon Apr 12 1993 14:51 | 3 |
| someone in soapbox said that only married men get the mid-life crisis.
\nasser
|
55.5 | regarding his career mostly | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | love is strange | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:09 | 5 |
| re .4, no, that's not true. I know a 40 yr. old, single, guy, who has
been feeling like he's going through a sort of mid-life crises.
Lorna
|
55.6 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:12 | 6 |
| When I see a mid-40s guy in a Corvette convertible, I usually say "Ah, another
mid-life crisis!" But I might also say this if I see a mid-40's guy who
leaves his wife for a mid-20's gal. (Women also leave their husbands in
similar circumstances, but this seems rarer.)
Steve
|
55.7 | another angle | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | love is strange | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:25 | 12 |
| People can have non-materialistic mid-life crises, too, though. A
friend of mine who has a high paying job, in corporate America, is now
questioning the fact that he may not have used his intelligence and
education to help other people, to the degree that he would have liked.
In other words, he's saying to himself - Yeah, sure, I'm considered
successful, I have a good job, and make good money, but have I really
done anything to make the world a better place? Is what I have spent
my adult life doing, so far, really valid? I can respect that. I
think it's good that a successful man ask himself questions like that.
Lorna
|
55.8 | | STAR::ABBASI | checkmate! | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:32 | 4 |
| i have a feeling that iam going through an early mid-life crisis right now.
\nasser
|
55.9 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | There are no mistakes in Love... | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:55 | 13 |
| Lorna:
A Midlife crisis is usually a spiritual, rather than a material,
crisis. Some generalizations: it's often about making one's mark;
it's often about intimations of mortality; it's often about fear:
fear of growing old and useless, fear of dying, fear of being
forgotten; it's sometimes tied to the death of one's father.
Some men react to this crisis by grasping at the accouterments of
youth: a pretty new wife, the toys of young adulthood, and so forth.
Others find a (new -- different -- renewed) spiritual path that helps
them come to terms with their fears, anxieties, feelings. They often
weather the crisis with dignity and grace.
|
55.10 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Pretty Good At Barely Getting By | Tue Apr 13 1993 14:05 | 11 |
| I don't know about the mid-life crisis thing, but at 41 I noticed that
I've changed a lot in just the past year. Mostly, I don't get excited
over issues like I use to. Physically, I don't give a dam about weight
loss to enhance appearance anymore and only care a little for health
reasons. The "take me as I'am attitude" is prominent. Career wise, I'm
not so uptight about anymore. I don't worry about getting TFSO'd like
I use to. I figure I'll just do something else, or nothing if that be the
case. Another thing I've noticed is that there are a lot more good
looking women in the world than when I was younger. I wonder why that is ?;)
Jim
|
55.11 | Ah, fleeting youth! | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | but faith is another matter | Tue Apr 13 1993 14:32 | 9 |
| re .10, that's funny. I'm 43, and I've noticed that there are a lot
less good looking men in the world than when I was younger. :-)
(or at least good looking men my age or older! Now, even 20 yr. olds
that I wouldn't even have thought were cute, when *I* was 20, look pretty
good to me, compared to the old goats my age & over!!!)
Lorna
|
55.12 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Tue Apr 13 1993 17:53 | 29 |
| From: MKOTS1::SUBSCRIBER "Please respond to the person(s) mentioned in the message 13-Apr-1993 1226" 13-APR-1993 15:04:47.37
To: @[.data]distlist_216049491993041312234930.dis
CC:
Subj: LUNCHTIME SEMINAR
***Please do NOT reply to this message, contact XCUSME::BONE***
LIFESTYLE CONNECTION presentation:
"SPORTS CARS AND FINDING YOURSELF"
Crisis in Mid-life
People often begin to behave strangely when they hit
mid-life. Men are prone to buying red sports cars and
having affairs with younger women. Women want to "find
themselves", and completely redefine the roles they have
been living. Are these just stereotypic descriptions of
mid-life transition? Is there truth to the mid-life crisis
myth?
April 23 - Friday
12 - 1:00
Customer Dining Room
MKO1-2/J22
Speaker: Dr. Bruce Cedar, Stoney Brook EAP
To register send mail to XCUSME::BONE
|
55.13 | | TENAYA::RAH | study it. analyse it. | Wed Apr 14 1993 02:18 | 2 |
|
at 41 i have found that i can ferret out shallowness much more easily.
|
55.14 | Been there/Am there | GLDOA::KATZ | Follow your conscience | Wed Apr 14 1993 14:58 | 7 |
| Having been going through it for a few years now I can say
that for myself it has been a total viewing of my past
and present as a way of getting to the future that I want.
Not always pleasant but I am making my future the way I want
it regardless of what the marketing folks tell me I should
want. So I have become less materialistic, more spiritualistic
and more realistic. Not a bad change.
|
55.15 | Constant reflection required -- short of narcissism, of course | DOCTP::BINNS | | Fri Apr 23 1993 11:50 | 5 |
| Less likely to occur if you think about yourself and your life
regularly and honestly throughout adulthood -- hence, no big surprises
at 40 or 45.
Kit
|
55.16 | it happens if you're lucky! | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Fri Apr 23 1993 18:25 | 18 |
| RE: .15
Yeah, I thought so, too, until I experienced my own mid-life.
Something about turning 40 sure makes you think.
I realized that I always thought of myself as both young and somehow
invulnerable, even immortal. And I saw that I am teetering on the edge
of not being "young" as is conventionally thought. More important, I
am at the half way point of my healthy life, based on an average
expectancy of 80 years and adding a few for lucky genetics.
So the real question became: Given that my life has a limited span,
and I've already lived many of my given years, how do I best use the
remaining years? What do I really want? Life is just too short to
suffer if you can do otherwise.
Laura
|
55.17 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | blue windows behind the stars | Mon Apr 26 1993 11:05 | 15 |
| When I turned 40 (3 1/2 yrs. ago), it did bother me for a few days. I
remember thinking that even if I lived to be 80, it was already half
over and that was a pretty scary thought. Also, it seemed like just
yesterday that I had turned 20, and it seemed as though the past 20
yrs. had gone by in the blink of an eye. I used to think (when I was
in my early 20's) that it would take forever to get to 40. But, it
didn't take any time at all. Time goes by so fast. It scared me to
think that the next time 20 yrs. had flown by, I would be 60 (on the
threshold of old-age....better than the alternative, of course).
For a few days these thoughts really bothered me, but then I got caught
up in living again and stopped thinking about it.
Lorna
|
55.18 | life has its surprises, even when we think we have prepared. | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Tue Apr 27 1993 13:27 | 10 |
| .15> Less likely to occur if you think about yourself and your life
Kit,
May I ask how old you are?
I am 48, and four years ago I would have said I had thought about my life
regularly and honestly. Now I would say that almost all my honest thinking
has been done in the last four years. I don't know what I may say ten years
from now.
|
55.19 | | SALEM::KUPTON | Red Sox - More My Age | Wed Apr 28 1993 15:51 | 20 |
| Just a side thought....
A foreign bio-tech company has suspended the aging of a single cell
life. The company has a branch in MA. They expect to market a product
within ten years that will radically slow the aging process and
stabilize the body.........
With that thought in mind, would you want your life to continue for
a few extra years in your mid forties? fifties? sixties?
The other thought.....what if you have a car accident and die at
42? You thought you were in a mid life crisis....you were actually at
midlife at 21.
We consider midlife to be 40 or so, but with the end being unknown,
I tend not to worry about anymore....
Turning 30 was worse than 40.
K
|
55.20 | what's the quality of these added years? | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu Apr 29 1993 13:01 | 27 |
| .19> With that thought in mind, would you want your life to continue for
> a few extra years in your mid forties? fifties? sixties?
Sure, although it depends on the quality of my life at that age. I'd be glad
to have a few more years at present quality. Beyond that, I don't know, but
based on people I know, I might turn down a few more years in my 70s and
would probably turn them down in my 80s.
It's like that old anti-smoking dialog:
"If you quit, you can add five years to your life."
"Who needs the 5 years? I don't care whether I die at 80 or 85."
"But the five years you add are in the middle. Keep smoking
and you will be a wheezing old man five years before your time."
When I hear of some treatment that will add years to my life, I always
want to know whether it adds in the middle or the end.
.19> The other thought.....what if you have a car accident and die at
> 42? You thought you were in a mid life crisis....you were actually at
> midlife at 21.
In my case, I would have missed out on midlife altogether. For me midlife is
a psychological transition, not a date or a fraction. Mine began when I was
44, but I don't expect to live to be 88.
|
55.21 | 45 sounds about right for mid-life. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Apr 29 1993 14:02 | 7 |
| At 80 my grandfather started teaching himself to type, so that he
could write his memoirs. At 90 he was still walking several miles per
day. A fair number of my relatives have taken the attitude that life
begins at 80.
My parents (just touching 70) are starting packing for a month
camping/caravaning round Europe.
|
55.22 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Thu Apr 29 1993 15:43 | 10 |
| A friend's grandfather was high in midlife when he died. He worked as
a hand on a horse ranch. One day he was bucked off a horse he was
breaking, and landed on his head. This occurred a few weeks after his
85th birthday.
Midlife is, as pointed out, not a chronological point but a
psychological one. A few years ago I decided that although I will grow
older, I will not allow myself to grow old. When I made that decision,
I didn't realize that I had to grow up first, but - having grown up an
amazing amount since turning 40 - I still consider it a valid decision.
|
55.23 | ya never know | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Thu Apr 29 1993 16:39 | 9 |
| At 75 my grandfather took a camping trip across the US, at 79 he was in
excellent health, still walking several miles a day, and chopping his
own wood. At 80 he ate a piece of watermelon, that turned out to be
contaminated with salmonella, and suddenly died of food poisening.
What a heck of a way to go, after being so healthy, for so long! So,
ya never know.
Lorna
|
55.24 | Old Lady in Maine | SALEM::KUPTON | Red Sox - More My Age | Fri Apr 30 1993 13:45 | 16 |
| I love to tell this true story:
My mother's aunt is now in her 90's. She had 23 children and raised
them all in the woods of Upper Frenchville, Maine. She lives by
herself, cuts her own wood, grows flowers, herbs, and has a small
vegetable garden that she tends. .........most amazing:
she's been totally blind since the age of 23. (don't know the desease)
She's outlived most of her children and is still very healthy, has
her dog (not seeing eye, but as well trained) and is one of the most
interesting people I've ever met. Listens to the radio and TV news. If
most of us could be as self reliant as this women, life would be a
breeze with sight.
Ken
|
55.25 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Fri Apr 30 1993 17:23 | 20 |
|
At 41, I now definitely feel I'm in the second half of my life.
What do I do about this ?
Well, I keep doing the things I like to do. I play tennis several mornings
a week before work. I take ballroom dance classes and attend dances. I
play go (an oriental board game).
But there are other things I do now too that I wasn't as into doing during
the first half of my life. I meditate every night. It relieves fear of
death, which has been a fear of mine since I was a child. I also attend
a 12-step program concerning relationships and sexuality. I didn't
do such things in the first half of my life.
You're right, there's no way of knowing where the halfway point of my
life is. For me, it's a spiritual shift from just "hoping I'm still in the
first half" to "acceptance of my death and my connection with the universe".
/Eric
|
55.26 | | TENAYA::RAH | loitering with intent | Sun May 02 1993 00:24 | 2 |
|
go needs to become an x client.
|
55.27 | Thoughts on life-time self-examination | DOCTP::BINNS | | Fri May 14 1993 14:18 | 44 |
|
>.15> Less likely to occur if you think about yourself and your life
> Kit,
>
> May I ask how old you are?
I'm 46. And what I mean is that people usually describe mid-life
crisis in terms of realizing one's limits, even one's mortality, and
having to deal with a range of issues based on that realization.
While I don't consciously spend a great deal of time "studying" myself,
I have always examined myself and thought about myself with the same
curiosity that I do other things that interest me -- you know, on the
commute, before falling asleep, over an extra beer, whatever. In so
doing I have considered the changes I go through, physically,
emotionally, pscychologically, and what they add up to at any
particular point in my life -- in other words, who I am. If they add
up differently at different times I notice it.
I may or may not do something based upon what I discover. For example,
at 28 I realized that the 20 lbs that I had slowly added to my 185 lb
6' 2" body had to go if it ever was to go -- so I changed my diet and
started running again, and in 5 years was back where I wanted to be.
Nor do new assessments necessarily mean limits -- it was only at 33
that I first fell in love. This was an expansion, not a limitation.
And this was something I *didn't* do anything about. I (perhaps
foolishly) accepted the situation. Fortunately, my soon-to-be wife
simply met me, clubbed me over the head, and dragged me back to the
cave.
When I do find limits scary (early ones were "I don't seem to know how to
have romantic love" -- at about 18, and "I'll never be president" a
couple of years later) I have never felt that they were a sudden
unexpected presence in my life. They occur all the time.
Conversely, age brings advantages. At 46 I am more confident, know
more, am more personally satisfied than I was at 26. (I admit that I
must drop "more physically fit" -- something I could have said 2 years
ago before I developed a herniated disc!)
Kit
|
55.28 | limits can be a good thing | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Fri May 14 1993 14:45 | 28 |
| When I say that mid-life means one realizes one's limits, that's not
necessarily a depressing realization. It can actually be quite
liberating. For example:
0 I'll never be a great jock. I am freed from that expectation. I no
longer have to measure up. Now I can go out with the guys and throw
the ball around, and just have a fun time.
o I'll never be president of Digital. I am freed from expectations to
advance myself high up the ladder. I can concentrate on my strengths
and build my career through lateral moves and incremental gains,
meanwhile having time for my personal life.
o I'm not tall, dark, and handsome. But I'm attractive in my own way,
dress nicely within my budget, and feel I really have empathy and can
love women. Women will appreciate me for who I really am. Those who
are looking for a GQ cover can look elsewhere; I don't want them
anyway.
o I've got back trouble that keeps me from walking long distances. I'm
sorry I can't walk all over Boston with my kids, but I can plan outings
so that we have lots of fun anyway.
Sometimes limits themselves are liberating. We are free to pursue the
maximum within the limits.
Hope this helps,
Laura
|
55.29 | | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Mon May 24 1993 00:16 | 14 |
| Umm, it was brought to my attention that in my .28 I didn't make clear
what realizations are mine, and which not. I should say for the
record, that I was putting these items in what I understand to be a
man's point of view. (They parallel similar realizations I've had as a
woman.)
I never aspired to jockhood, gave up on corporate ladder climbing ages
ago, and am not concerned about being attractive to women or pleasing
them sexually.
OK, big D, clear enough? ;-) Now you can stop teasing me about this
one, and find something else, eh? :-)
Laura
|