T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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200.1 | To be thirty again! | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Thu Feb 12 1987 09:45 | 27 |
| I have three years to go before I turn 40 and, although most people
tell me I don't look my age, it does scare me. The year that I
turned 30, my daughter started kindergarten, my marriage reached
the 7 year mark along with my growing realization of dissatisfaction
with it. This started me off on a 2 or 3 year period of personal
unrest and confusion, I think, because, although I never had had
any particular career aspirations, I had always expected to be happily
married and settled with my life by age 30 and I was anything but.
The good part of turning 30 was that I only looked about 23 and
people's reaction to hearing my true age gave my ego a great boost.
One of the things I've noticed in the past 3 or 4 years is that
younger men have stopped noticing me. (I mean, when I was 30 a
21 yr. old asked me out, not knowing I was married. I don't expect
to see those days again.) I'm average looking, but when I was younger
at least, even though I might have ultimately been passed over,
I at least felt like I was a contender in the romance game. Now
I feel like I'm not even a contender unless the guy is over 40.
But, *I'm* not really attracted to men that old yet. (And they
say men have mid-life crisis!)
Well, I don't know if this is as serious a response as you are looking
for, but the fact is I am aging, I guess, and it is beginning to
bother me for the above reasons.
Lorna
|
200.2 | YOUTH ORIENTED SOCIETY | SAHQ::CARNELL | | Thu Feb 12 1987 10:05 | 16 |
| I never really considered age. Until the last day of being 29.
That day just about killed me. I couldn't believe how I felt at
the time and looking back I still can't believe how I felt. My
actual birthday was fine. I guess it was just the passage of time
and not being able to stop it, not wanting to leave my twenties.
I don't know, I can't really explain how I felt that day. My 40th
birthday will be here in June and I really don't think I will feel
or act the same. It's like I was young, turning thirty meant I
was getting old, and now I'll be forty and it doesn't matter anymore,
I'm already old. This from someone who has always thought age was
unimportant. I think a lot of this stems from our youth oriented
society and until we get away from that we will all feel we are
over the hill by 30 (some feel that way at 25). This is really
terrible but it's just the way it is.
|
200.3 | Einstein thought time was an illusion:-) | BEES::PARE | | Thu Feb 12 1987 10:14 | 31 |
| In physics, time and space are very wierd concepts. Our scientists
really don't understand time very well at all (and age is a factor
of time, is it not?). Our whole aging process could be a figment of
our collective imaginations :-)
I sometimes think that we go through these eternal stages. We say
to ourselves, "Self! Well, I'm thirty now...I guess I'm getting old".
"Self, what does it mean to be thirty? How is it supposed to effect
my life?" And then for awhile we play that role.
I wouldn't want to be young again. It was too hard, I made too
many mistakes. I've found that very few people (men included)
really care about how old I am.
Being discriminated against because of age is something else
altogether. Not only is it against the law,...its a matter of your
very survival.
I had a friend (back in the sixties), who felt that
he was being discriminated against because he was black.
So, whenever he applied for a job and the application form asked his
race,...he said that he was white. He ended up getting a job.:-)
I was never sure if he just confused the heck out of them or if his
story about being from some tropic island worked but he got a job.
It's hard to learn to be a survivor at 55. The ERA is really about
survival.
If your mom has trouble getting work because she is 55, .....
perhaps she should be 39 ;-) (if society can't evolve quickly enough
to ensure our survival...we sometimes have to make up our own rules).
:-)
|
200.4 | Over 30 and Looking Good! | SSGVAX::LUST | Reality is for those that can't handle drugs | Thu Feb 12 1987 10:33 | 6 |
| RE: .1
Just as an aside:
Lorna, you are definately much better than just "average looking".
Give yourself a break.
|
200.5 | Age - A state of Whos mind | MRMFG3::J_FREIDUS | | Thu Feb 12 1987 11:03 | 39 |
| Age is a state of mind - who's mind - is the question...
This is and always will be (at least for a long time to come) a
mans world. Being born female has many advantages, yet one of the
disadvantages is the ageing process and stigma our youth orientated
culture "dumps" on us. When a mans hair begins to gray or fall
out, he is considered distinguished. We as women, are force fed
the notion that we must run to the hairdresser to color our hair.
The same for models in magazines these days, the younger the female
model the better, yet an older male model is very much in demand,
and the image they present is one of a "seasoned" person.
The paralells are endless, but it boils down to how, You feel about
Yourself....More than how old you're getting.
I am "over 30" but feel good about myself. I felt worse when I turned
25 than when I reached 30. Somehow the thought being "a quater
of a century" bothered me and I took an honest evaluation of my
accomplishments and it was amazing how far I'd grown. And I guess
this is the key( longwinded - sorry )
Don't let society tell you how you should be feeling about
yourself. Take an honest look at You, and pat yourself on the back
and for your accomplishments, recognize your shortcomings without
condemnation,and work to change what your unhappy with.
Life Is just beginning at 30, your out of the "unsure, self-conscious,
crazy 20s" and trust me there is a peace you feel with yourself
once you realize that 30 is just one small plateau in life.
And what the heck, find a "younger" man who'll be facinated with
your maturity......:) (smile?)
Which could be a topic in itself.
Younger men - older women.....
Hang in their sisters... we're worth it!!!!
|
200.7 | existential reactions | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Feb 12 1987 13:40 | 15 |
| I, too, all but flipped out when I turned 30. On the other hand,
for some reason 40 wasn't any problem for me, and I'm almost looking
forward to the half-century mark.
I think my differing reactions came from the same place Gloria
alluded to in her basenote: reaction to life circumstances.
At 30 my life was in a terminally sucky state, I felt trapped in a
terrible existance and could see nothing at all positive in the future.
By 40 I had reorganised my whole basis for existance, switched careers
(twice, sorta), and was feeling if not on top of things then at
least scrabbling determinedly up the sides.
=maggie
|
200.8 | decades | YAZOO::B_REINKE | Down with bench Biology | Thu Feb 12 1987 14:10 | 11 |
| It's nice to know that other people have reacted the same way
to 30 and 40. Turning 30 was really awful emotionally. A lot of
things changed that year, some doors opened and some others
shut, but nothing (as I look back on it now) was heavy duty
enough to have put me in that kind of a tail spin. Turning
40 was perfectly fine, except that saying the numbers out loud
sounded odd. I was kind of startled to realize that my age now
falls in the range covered by anti-discrimination laws. Forty
definitely isn't old, I'm not sure it's even middle aged ;-)!
|
200.9 | Positive suggestions for mom | ULTRA::ZURKO | Security is not pretty | Thu Feb 12 1987 15:06 | 15 |
| re: .0 on your mom's situation
She may be considered overqualified by prospective employers. If she
has loads of professional and life experience, they may have to pay
her more than a fresh out of school secretarial candidate. This sort
of discrimination really isn't any different from ageism and sexism
(undervaluing the secretarial position), but at least it's a different
slant.
Also, word-processing is considered the in secretarial skill to have,
according to a secretary I knew in another job, who was going to quit
Prime and do temp work. She said she was in demand because she could
put word-processing on her resume. Your mom might want to try getting
some WP experience (if she doesn't already have some).
Mez
|
200.11 | Time marches on for us all. | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Feb 12 1987 15:38 | 22 |
| I didn't worry about turning 30, except to consider that my career
hadn't yet gotten as far as I had hoped by that time - I'm almost
34. The thing about aging, from a personal perspective (I understand
about job discrimination against "older" workers, and it is a real
shame), is that EVERYONE does it. So, you are not "reaching the
plateau" all by yourself, while your friends and relatives and
coworkers all hang onto their childhoods like Peter Pan. Instead
you all stay contemporary, going through the various stages of life!
Paul turned 31 a couple of months ago (I told you all that I seem
to like younger men, right?), and a while after that, someone came
door-to-door selling, as it turned out, children's hand puppets
(they were even fairly nice handmade puppets). Paul happened to
answer the door. The puppet-seller said "Is your mother at home?"
After we picked ourselves up off the floor, we told him that Paul's
mother lives in Connecticut, and that we didn't need any children's
toys just now... actually, if we hadn't been so bowled over by his
assumption of Paul's age (Paul has quite a bit of gray hair on the
top, in amongst his delightful brown curls), we might have bought
one for our niece.
I don't worry about ages!
|
200.12 | I'm not worried...yet | ARGUS::CORWIN | Jill Corwin | Thu Feb 12 1987 16:15 | 13 |
| I'm 28, and I'm not worried about turning 30. I know too many people who are
over 30 to worry about it happening to me. Same with 40, or 50...
I remember being carded the last time I ordered a drink (probably about a year
ago). I guess I don't have to worry yet about looking older, but sometimes I
get tired of people assuming I've never used TECO or a slide rule or a DEC-10
:-)
I've also answered my door and been asked if my mother was home. I think next
time it's someone selling something or asking for money, I'll say no if I'm
not interested. :-)
Jill
|
200.13 | STILL KICKIN' | CAPVAX::HOWARD | | Thu Feb 12 1987 17:34 | 16 |
| Gloria, it sounds like your Mom is not only an older woman but
that she may be trying to re-enter the work force after some time
away. Is this the case? She should definitely learn word processing
if she doesn't know it already.
Aging can sometimes creep up on you with little cat feet. I am
over 40 and notice that it is harder to stay in shape. Dieting
and exercise take longer, and skin tone definitely goes. It does
hurt when you are no longer noticed by men as you walk by, and
especially when you notice them drooling over a 23 year old! It
is very easy to say that you don't care what society thinks, but
the youth cult attitude is very pervasive and affects all of us,
even those who say age is relative.
Marilyn
|
200.14 | Don't waste valuable time | FDCV13::KNORR | | Fri Feb 13 1987 11:53 | 13 |
| I fell apart when I turned 29, because I only had one more year
before 30!!!! the big one in my eyes. What a waste of time...
My 30th birthday was the best one ever... Friends took me out to
dinner. I had a very nice birthday dinner party another friend gave
me. It was great and it's been great ever since. I feel and look
better then I did when I was 18.. well maybe 24. The point I'm trying
to make is don't waste valuable time and energy worrying about your
age you can't do anything about it. What you can do is work out
if your not happy with you body. Buy a new outfit that makes you
feel good about yourself. Go have your hair done. Go try on some
wild clothes the teenagers buy. I do that a lot and I have great
time laughing at myself. Have fun..
|
200.15 | Think again! | PRISM::CICCOLINI | | Fri Feb 13 1987 16:57 | 48 |
| I couldn't wait to turn 30! Being a small blonde, I was "cursed"
with the little girl image that only age and sophistication can
overcome. I'm now 34 and am just beginning to "get some respect"
and I just wouldn't trade it!
Some thoughts on our "youth-oriented" society though;
Our society became "youth-oriented" with the baby boom generation
and I believe it will continue to be "boomer-oriented" as we age. We
are the largest target market for products, votes and advertising
which all capitalize on that and it's THAT which makes our society
"seem" this way or that way.
Already advertising, buzzwords, magazine articles etc are reflecting
the "maturing of society" which just means that the Madison Avenue
dollars are continuing to follow us. There are clothes now for
"real" women, not just emaciated models. Fashion itself is no longer
as faddish as it used to be because only young girls go for it.
Now, fads in clothing are clearly marketed only to the young. Hippies
are "out" because they matured into yuppies so yuppies are now "in".
Very soon, within the next couple of years or so, there will be
a major focus on mid-life crises as the largest segement of the
population, (boomers), becomes concerned with that. TV commercials,
movies, books, political campaigns and magazine articles will all deal
with that, still after the largest segment of voters/consumers. Then,
following that, ageing will become a major concern. We have just
begun as a society to focus on ageing and already we understand
Alzheimer's which until very recently was simply ignored as the in-
evitable result of ageing. Rest homes will become less institutional,
pop-psychology will deal with problems of the aged, products will be
developed and heavily marketed for this segment and magazines will
feature as many articles geared to ageing as they do now to diets.
Medical research in the area of biological clocks and so on will
become heavily funded and great strides will be made.
Geriatrics, once almost a "punishment" to doctors, will become as
lucrative and prestigious as obstetrics was during the baby boom.
Already obstetrics is on the way out. the AMA is even recognizing
mid-wives; something they JAILED people for in the lucrative 50's!
No, I'm not worried because "society" is going to age right along
with me. "Like the bulge in the belly of a satisfied snake, we
move through the times with change in our wake".
So don't worry about what orientation "society" has - if you're
a boomer, it's looking to YOU for definition!
|
200.17 | ahead of time! | YAZOO::B_REINKE | Down with bench Biology | Fri Feb 13 1987 21:20 | 5 |
| Steve, those of us who are already over 40 are just the leading
edge - what we are doing now will be fashionably "in"
in a few short years. We're not old - just avante guarde
Bonnie
|
200.18 | Fabulous!! :-> | PRISM::CICCOLINI | | Sat Feb 14 1987 10:15 | 1 |
|
|
200.19 | 34 and happy | MTV::HENDRICKS | Holly | Sat Feb 14 1987 13:20 | 30 |
| I'm 34, and as one of my favorite songs puts it "The older I get,
a whole lot better I feel".
Because of a difficult home situation, I never felt like a child.
I felt like an adult who was treated like a child, and bided my
time until I got out on my own and could live as I wanted to!
Every year has brought an increase in wisdom, power and resources.
For me, that makes life quite a bit easier. I never participated
much in a social whirl, so I never missed the validation that brought
some women.
Sometimes it's a little scary to look at my wedding pictures (age
19) and realize I look very, very different now. The most scary
thing for me, though, is to think that my body may start causing
me trouble if I don't take good care of it, and that "routine
maintenance" may not be enough.
I would never, ever go back to being a dependent child or teenager
again, though. I guess I wouldn't mind being 25 and knowing what
I know now, but all in all I like being 34.
The other thing that has been helpful for me is that most of my
friends have consistently been 5-10 years older than I am. I like
where they are and what they are accomplishing, so it feels good
to think about the next few years in those terms.
I do feel behind career-wise, though, but I wouldn't trade any of
the crazy things I did for having climbed the corporate ladder since
college!
|
200.20 | Younger/Older - Neither! | TIGEMS::SCHELBERG | | Mon Feb 16 1987 12:20 | 20 |
| I didn't feel old until I started dating my husband who was nineteen
at the time and I was 29. I thought it was normal to date younger
men wasn't everyone doing it? :-) It was some of my acquaintances and
my family who made me feel old, by saying stuff like "Aren't you
a little old for him" and "He's just using you"......"What every
you do don't marry him"!
Well I did marry him on my 31st birthday!
I don't feel any older and in fact I feel younger......he sometimes
acts alot older than me.....:-) and I don't see any difference marrying
him or a 38 year old - People think that he will start chasing younger
women when I'm forty.....well how about all the guys I know that
are forty and chase after the younger women.....I think it more
depends on the person than the age to be perfectly honest because
then I know some guys that are in their forties and wouldn't think
of going out with a women under thirty because they think they are
air heads......
Bobbi
|
200.21 | | PARITY::DDAVIS | Dotti | Mon Feb 16 1987 14:07 | 9 |
| re: 20
Bobbi,
Thank you for sharing that....I'm glad someone else feels the same
way I do.
-Dotti.
|
200.23 | Like fine wine we improve with age | ATPS::FODEN | | Fri Feb 20 1987 13:24 | 27 |
| I just turned 40 last August and at first felt really strange, because
the person I was in no way matched my expectation of a woman of
40. So I changed the expectation so that I define what this woman
of 40 is like.
I put a lot of attention on my health and staying in shape, because I
feel that will ensure the quality of my life through the upcomming
years. I find myself more self assured and appreciative of the person
I am. Less willing to be someone or something I am not. More wise
and able to enjoy my life and the people in it.
My children are almost grown, I had them when I was quite young,
so I now have more time to try new adventures and experiences.
Age is clearly a state of mind, I plan to keep young minded and young
bodied forever. I had a delightful Aunt who played golf, cross country
skiing, and kept up with many friends until she died unexpectedly
at 70. I remember her telling me that at 70 she didn't feel any
differently than she did at 40. And she never seemed old to me.
She didn't color her hair, had friends of all ages, some her former
kidnergarten pupils. She was loved and apreciated by all and lived
a full life until she died of a stroke. Only thing she did wrong
was ignore her high blood pressure.
I can receive the gift of her exuberance for life and add to it
my commitment to caring for my health. From where I sit the next
60 years or so ought to be great.
|
200.24 | Aging with Style!! | PIGGY::LMCLAUGHLIN | Lynn McLaughlin | Mon Feb 23 1987 15:32 | 56 |
| I'm just beginning to show outward signs of "aging". . . or should I say,
I'm just beginning to "mature." Upon close examination, my hair displays
a few gray hairs. . . and paths are developing that will one day house
wrinkles. Sounds wretched, huh?
Well, at first it does seem scary - this whole concept of aging. . . but, upon
closer examination, those "old" perceptions may be altered significantly. In
fact, after a little introspection, one of my goals was to one day become a
little old lady with style - always boisterous and involved, but most
certainly, an old lady - wrinkles, white hair, failing eyesight, the works!
Life is a process, and each stage harbors its own unique beauty and
pleasures. The insecurities that plague us today may seem rather
insignificant and a waste of precious time in our later years. With the
luxury of hindsight, today's questions may appear entirely inconsequential -
the answer continually being, "it really doesn't matter." Life, after all,
is what you make of what you experience.
If I am lucky enough to become an elderly lady, I hope to impart some of my
optimism and love of life to the people who share my corner of the world. I
want to talk to "youngsters" and help them to believe in themselves even though
their lives can sometimes seem so complex and bewildering. I want to
contribute to the world in whatever way I can - be it by taking a public
office, or volunteering, or publishing thoughts, whatever. I want to have
that I've-lived-a-full-exciting-useful-life look and see to it that I add
value wherever I have the opportunity to do so.
The disgrace in life comes NOT from demonstrating that you are human and just
as prone to the physical manifestations of aging as anyone else, but rather
from NOT putting your unique abilities to use.
We are all human. We won't be young forever. If you're not "quite as
pretty/ handsome" as you once were. . . it's probably time to take the
emphasis off outward appearances and put it into something much more
meaningful - helping others while expressing yourself.
The following words were written by Florida Scott-Maxwell in "The Measure of
My Days." I thought they were appropriate. . .
"Age puzzles me. I thought it was a quiet time. My seventies
were interesting, and fairly serene, but my eighties are passionate.
I grow more intense as I age.
To my own surprise I burst out with hot conviction. Only a few years
ago I enjoyed my tranquillity, now I am disturbed by the outer world
and by human quality in general, so that I want to put things right as
though I still owed a debt to life.
I must calm down. I am far too frail to indulge in moral fervor. . .
all this is very tiring, but love at any age takes everything you've
got."
Outward beauty, though wonderful, is fleeting. . . the beauty of the inner
self, though, outlives life itself. Appreciate that beauty!
Lynn
|
200.25 | I can't wait to see what I'm like at 70 | VAXRT::CANNOY | Go where your heart leads you. | Mon Feb 23 1987 17:02 | 12 |
| I'm not going to get wrinkles--I'm working on laugh lines.
I'm starting to go grey and I think I'll look fantastic with salt
and pepper hair.
There was a great last-page article a year ago or so in MS. which
talked about growing old and becoming a salty old lady who can say
anything she likes and is a terror to generations. I loved the idea.
I'm not getting old--I'm getting more experienced, more powerful,
more attractive and more fun.
Tamzen
|
200.26 | | ESPN::HENDRICKS | Holly | Tue Feb 24 1987 09:37 | 3 |
| re. 24
May Sarton has also written some beautiful words on ageing, especially
in Journal of a Solitude.
|
200.27 | as old as you think | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Oh no, it's HER again!! | Mon Mar 02 1987 19:06 | 18 |
| I must agree with .15 - I'm 37 and it seems at every age the baby
boom preceded me and made it the "in" age. I just keep waiting for
that birthday that puts me at the point where I can say what I feel
and not worry about the consequences. It seems it should be easier
as I get older (shouldn't it?).
Old (and sick for that matter) are really matters of the mind as
much as the body. My uncle is 78. At 50 he had 3/4 of his stomach
removed from cancer. At 55 he had cancer of the colon and had to
get a colostomy. His doctor told him he would have to have a sedentary
lifestyle and listed all sorts of forbidden foods. he wasn't to
do anything. Well, uncle Les decided he'd rather die doing than
sitting. He travels all over the country with the Kiwanas club and
visiting friends and relatives. He's ridden the train to the top
of Pikes Peak. But most important - he's still alive and when he
does die at least it won't be after 20 years of being a house hermit
like the doctor wanted. Liesl
|
200.28 | I can't wait! | NEBVAX::BELFORTE | Steven's BEST half | Tue Mar 03 1987 09:53 | 10 |
| I can't wait until I am 40!
I will have a 20 year old son and an 18 year old daughter!
I'll still be young enough to enjoy the last half of my life, with
grown-up children who won't need my constant supervision anymore.
Only 6 yrs and 13 days to go!
M-L
|
200.29 | yup, yup, I really am 35 | WATNEY::SPARROW | You want me to do what?? | Tue Mar 03 1987 10:22 | 8 |
| When people ask me how old I am, I tell them.. It freaks them out
that at 35 I don't hem and haw. I guess my thoughts are that I
earned every single minute, hour, day, month and year. I would
never go back, I love being able to watch my younger sisters and
think, ahhhhh, I don't have to go through *that* again!
I love my age!
vivian
|
200.30 | Something to look forward to! | ATPS::FODEN | | Fri Mar 20 1987 16:39 | 27 |
| When I am an old woman I shall wear purple
With a red hat which doesn't go, and doesn't suit me,
And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves
And satin sandals, and say "we've no money for butter".
I shall sit down on the pavement when I'm tired
And gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells
And run my stick along the public railings
And make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain
And pick the flowers in other people's gardens
And learn to spit
But maybe I ought to practive a little now?
So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised
When suddenly I am old and start to wear purple.
|
200.31 | practice makes perfect | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Playing with Fire | Fri Mar 20 1987 19:33 | 4 |
| Re. 30 - I really liked that. It's just how I feel. Each year I
care a little less about what *others* think I should be and more
about what *I* want to be. Some would contend that I've been practicing
for years. :*) Liesl
|
200.32 | Three cheers for reply #30 | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | the best is yet to be | Fri Mar 20 1987 21:16 | 4 |
| .30 That was great...that is the only way to be old and eccentric.
I can't wait!
|
200.33 | I'm there | OURVAX::JEFFRIES | | Mon Mar 23 1987 11:07 | 2 |
| I have my red hat and purple dress, I wear them at least twice a
month. :-)
|
200.34 | xxx days until retirement | KLAATU::THIBAULT | Swimmers Do It Wetter | Mon Mar 23 1987 13:11 | 8 |
| re .30:
My mom has that poem on her refridgerator at home. Methinks she
is following it to the letter. Her and pa are currently off somewhere
between VT and the Grand Ol' Opry doing anything they please. I hope
when I get to be their age I have as much fun, doesn't seem so bad to me.
Bahama Mama
|
200.35 | When I grow up...... | WATNEY::SPARROW | You want me to do what?? | Mon Mar 23 1987 17:04 | 9 |
| I have always invisioned myself in my older years, sitting on my
front porch, in my rocking chair, tush-watching men as they go by
and saying "come here little boy, wanna cookie?"
mom says if I don't mend my ways, I might just be that dirty ole
woman.
vivian
|
200.36 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Mon Mar 23 1987 17:43 | 41 |
| From context, this appears to have been meant as a response to this
string.
=maggie
============================================================================
Note 244.0 Down Hill Playing All The Way 1 reply
DONJON::FULLER 31 lines 23-MAR-1987 15:32
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marvelous! Absolutely Marvelous!! When I get to the "rocking chair
on the porch routine (if I ever do!) I intend to chuckle a lot -
in remembering the joyful experiences I've had, people I've met,
loved, insulted, discarded and admired.
In fact, I've met people of 25 who were already dead from the neck
up - Ageing is a state of mind - and since the entire population
is maturing, so to speak, it won't be quite so unusual to have white
hair, plus a physical appearance that speaks of caring. With all
the cosmetic surgery available - there is no reason why a person
can't have a better nose - etc.
But all the physical beauty is useless if along the way you haven't
developed interests other than self...
And as far as discrimination is concerned - it does exist!! However,
basic skills, i.e., word processing will open doors for the over
45 person - and if they temp long enough - they will be noticed
and employed. Besides, temping is interesting because you have
the opportunity to view different companies - operations -- managers
etc., and aren't as likely to become bored.
My hair is white (I was a blonde years ago) and it is the color
that would cost a fortune to have duplicated ... and it compliments
my skin ... I'll be smashing wearing my new red hat and purple dress!!
|
200.37 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Mon Mar 23 1987 17:44 | 26 |
| Moved to agree with .36
============================================================================
Note 244.1 Down Hill Playing All The Way 1 of 1
ATPS::FODEN 18 lines 23-MAR-1987 17:00
-< <Do tell us more...> >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since you began a new note for this, perhaps you have more to share
with us.
You speak of being blond years ago and temping as the way to get
a job at Digital. Are you an "older woman". If so perhaps you
can tell more of your thoughts and impressions of this "high tech"
company and your place in it, as well as some of the changes you
have seen in society over the years.
How do you keep from getting dead from the neck up? You sound like
a very interesting, lively and outrageous person. Is this true?
Also, are you a woman? Either way I'm sure you will be smashing
in the purple hat and the red dress.
I am glad you liked the poem. I have always loved it, and in many
ways live by it.
Alicia
|
200.38 | author? | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Mon Mar 23 1987 21:35 | 3 |
| Does anyone know the author of the poem quoted in .30?
I remember reading it several years ago and likeing it
very much.
|
200.39 | Forever Outrageous and Enjoying! | DONJON::FULLER | | Thu Mar 26 1987 10:06 | 61 |
| Today I rejoiced when I heard the news that the Supreme Courty upheld
the advancement of women - I must agree with some of the male callers
that it isn't fair - however, it has not been a fair world for many
ever...Fairness is not guaranteed!
One old and very popular hunting and fishing magazine - located
on Madison Avenue - had female writers using male names on the
by-line. So the person who was reading something about how I climbed
the mountain in Alaska to kill the grizzly - couldn't possibly relate
to that exciting story - if Mary Jane Smith were the recognized
author ... I know - I was there!! Reason: male writers would cost
more - thus females got the job!
I too related to the horror of turning 30. In fact one
of my favorite remembrances was my husband asking me why I was so
down in the dumps. I replied that "Tomorrow I'm going to be 30!!"
"Hell, you were 30 last year!" I felt absolutely wonderful and
figured if I had survived being 30 - 31 would be a breeze!! And
each birthday has since brought it's joys...
The problem with ageing is not with the individual who is maturing
- it is with society that has been fed the "Madison Avenue" pap
of "getting rid of wrinkles", (cosmetic accounts REALLY make
money!),"dye your hair at the FIRST sign of grey" - and all kinds
of solutions to medical problems. I once worked for a top advertising
agency which had a soap account - their theme that year was use
their soap and you were guaranteed to become a "bride" -- When I
commented that if a person just threw water on their face - they
could walk down the aisle if that were their goal - my boss explained
by means of a circle drawn - where I was at - and where the general
mentality of the general population was. They were responding to
the larger slice of the pie - so to speak.
Imagine someone believing that if they took laxatives for 7 days
- that they could indeed "break the laxative habit"
Advertising has indeed helped raise the standard of living by selling
various products. During WWII - when products were unavailable
-- Ford Motor Company very wisely had a simple billboard with a
simple statement - no picture - just "There's a Ford in Your Future!"
And just as soon as the war was over - that was the first thing
that everyone thought of - buying a car - a Ford!
The male market place has more disposable funds - thus the heavy
appeal - no matter the argument - to tititlate by using the most
desirable visual appeal to a male - a beautifully attired woman
- expensively jeweled - sells a lot of cars! Sells a lot of booze!
Sells a lot of "male cosmetics" - now sells a lot of instant dinners!!
And in the same vein - advertisers use GUILT - take WISK for instance!
That "ring around the collar" ploy caused many a female buyer -
to rush for instance perfection. (No one ever thought to ask the
wearer of the shirt to provide a clean neck before wearing the shirt!)
Guess one might say what is truly being sold is a form of instant
gratification !! And no one relates that subject with grey hair
& wrinkles ...
|
200.40 | getting better all the time! | NEWVAX::BOBB | I brake for Wombats! | Wed Apr 01 1987 16:17 | 32 |
| re: .30
The poem is great! A certainly the way to go through life.
I've realized that the older I get, the more secure I am about me
and the less I worry about what others think (unlike the painful
teens when if you're not like everyone else you're a freak....or
so you think). And I am having the best time of my life!
My behavior has become more relaxed (and outrageous...I've been
told) as I get older because I am more comfortable with me. And
I have also developed a "and to hell with what anyone else thinks
about it" attitude. One of the best days I've had was one where
I spent about an hour honking back at about 30 geese who were
surrounding me and honking for the corn I held in my hand. (Luckily
I was with friends so I didn't carted away to the funny farm...though
I think some of them were convinced I had lost it...)
I enjoy every year more and more and feel bad for anyone who is
depressed because they are getting older. I resent the passage of
time only because there is so much I want to do, not because it
is making me older.
I look at my Mom (65 yr. young) and keep hoping that I will get
old soon so I have as much energy as her!
Aging is natural. What is unnatural is the way our society has made
it something that is bad, evil, to be avoided at all costs, etc.
May I never grow up, but just grow older!
janet
|
200.41 | Me too! | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Mon Aug 03 1987 10:44 | 65 |
| This is a wonderful note.
I was one of those children who was sort of "born old" in both body
and mind. I experienced few of the "perks" that society awards
young women. Young men lusting after my 19-year-old contemporaries
lusted for me; I had zero social life, being a misanthropic bookworm;
I was not petted, pampered, taken care of, or looked down on by
anybody; mostly people ignored me completely or assumed that I was
taking care of myself.
I can now truthfully say that I am in better shape physically,
mentally, spiritually and certainly emotionally than when I was
in my teens and twenties. The body that looked somewhat peculiar
(to say the least) on a 15-year-old looks terrific on a 36-year-old.
Mathematics, a dicsipline I gave up in despair in my second year
of college I now regularly employ with great skill in my job (and
I didn't start to do that until after my 27th birthday!). I have
begun to rediscover the spirituality I rejected at 20, when I assumed
that in order to be "spiritual" I had to exhibit hidebound obediance
to an organization (I now realize that it was correct for me to
reject the organization, but a shame to amputate my spiritual urges
in the process). I didn't really start to face up to and shake my
emotional demons through therapy til after I turned 31. I cheerfully
confess my age (36) and revel in birthdays; I am exultant at having
been around "this long".
That said, I do recognize that society has been terribly youth
oriented. I wonder: excessive valuing of youthful women may be
a throwback to days when the "only" thing that made a woman valuable
was her childbearing capability _and_ being "fresh stock", i.e.,
not yet too worn out to keep on giving her old man heirs.
My mother will celebrate her 60th birthday this fall. She changed
jobs early this year at 59. It was not easy for her; she was widowed
in her 40's and has had a terrible time learning to function as
an independent woman (dad took care of literally everything while
he was alive). When the wretched conditions at her old job reached
a peak, I was counselling her every time we talked to start looking.
Her usual excuse was "no one will hire me, I'm considered too old,
you don't know what it's like, etc. etc." Now she had a valid point.
But finally I said in desperation to her, "Mom, if you think your
age will be that big a stumbling block, it _will_ be. It is now,
and you haven't even begun to pound the pavement because you're
letting it stop you from even getting started! Now, there's
no doubt that you will experience some age discrimination, but
you'll just have to ignore it and persevere, and _not_ let it stand
in the way of eventual success. _Just like I did, Mom, when I went
job hunting for the first time up here with *no college degree*_.
I knew that it made my chances longer, and that I'd have to work
harder to prove myself, and start lower on the totem pole than
someone with an MBA. But the point is that even with some cards
stacked against me, I went ahead and tried and _I've succeeded_!"
Well, she now has a job she likes, in much better working conditions
than her last job, where her age and experience is an asset.
The point is, if you gauge your life's actions by what you perceive
"society" is telling you you're worth, you stand a good chance of
failing completely. If you take the freedom to define your own
worth, and find ways to demonstrate it that will make your tiny
portion of society accept you on your terms, you've won.
Let's hear it for aging powerfully!
Marcia
|
200.42 | correction to .41 | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Mon Aug 03 1987 10:46 | 6 |
| Typo correction to the 1st paragraph of .41:
"Young men lusting after my 19-year-old contemporaries never lusted
for me;"
Marcia
|