College Girlfriends Weekend Essentials:
Wine √
Comfy Clothes√
Junk Food√
No Makeup√
Wine√
Junk Food√
Sweet Tea √
Wine√
My college girlfriends are coming! Send up the Bat Signal! Sound the alarms!
This has been a long time in the planning. The group messages, texting, etc. started many months ago. The logistics have been ironed out. It has been over 13 years since ALL of us have been able to get together at one time. Fingers crossed, no last-minute issues will derail this event.
I am calling it the “How the Hell are We Turning 60” weekend. It is stunning to all of us that we have been out of college for……38 years?!?! The march of time continues to astound.Continue reading…
FUNERALS, MEMORIALS AND THAT FINAL PARTY
As I sat in church waiting for the memorial service to start, I looked around at the many family and friends that had gathered to remember a dear lady. So many lives touched. So many memories shared. My first thought? “Would this many people come to my funeral? Did I even know this many people?” (Maybe if there was food involved. People love a good buffet.)
That was followed closely with: “I should make some more friends. Maybe do a little networking.” Sad, huh? I was actually thinking about how to be more popular for my own funeral.
I admit to comparing myself to the deceased at all the funerals I have attended. And I have attended many funerals in the past few years. Paul is a deacon at our church, which has a large percentage of elderly members. During one particularly busy year for “passing”, we jokingly called Paul the Deacon of Death, so many people from his group of families “went home to the Lord”.
It is the one time where you are the center of attention and you can’t be there. The planning and thought that would be put into arrangements. I have a reputation for putting together a great party, so I expect a good send-off. Christina and Paul would feel the pressure from me “beyond the grave” to get it right! But I won’t be there to revel in the success of another well done gathering.
One thing that has always bothered me, is what I call the Sainting of the Deceased. I knew some of the recently departed, and saintly might not have been a word I would use. Of course, this is not the time to bring out a list of grievances and examples of bad behaviour. But it sets a bad precedent. If I knew the person, then the phony sentiment is annoying. If I didn’t know them, I start comparing all their wonderful accomplishments (minus all the crappy stuff that gets edited out) and feeling terrible about my selfish, ordinary life. I come away thinking, “I suck.I need to be a better person.”
People don’t think of me as kind and gentle and sweet. I am, at best, snarky and honest and straightforward. I recently told someone, “If I wasn’t snarky, I’d be living a lie.” He suggested I put that on a T-Shirt. Christina and Paul know how I feel about insincerity. Christina promised if anyone starting spewing sweet drivel about me, she would stand up and shout, “You don’t know my Mother!”
And then there are the overachievers. One of my regular reads is the New York Times Obituaries. I look at the length of the write-up. I look to see if there is more than one write-up. Big money philanthropists get multiple obits, paid for by each cause they generously supported. Who has been keeping this detailed timeline of achievements, ready to pull out at the moment of death? I haven’t done much, and I can’t remember half of the events in my life.
For example: (These are fictional, but based on some of the obits I read, I don’t think I’m far from the mark)
–“He wrote a book while working full-time and getting his PhD in quantum physics. All the while, he had time to coach his daughter’s softball team and serve meals at the soup kitchen”
— “She got her medical degree while raising eight children and still found time run a support group for women at the homeless shelter.”
Who are these people? Aliens?
In some future posting, I may attempt to discuss my feelings about actually being dead. That will be trip into my emotional state, I might not be willing to take (or expose to you, good reader). This is strictly all about THE SHOW, the grande finale.
Just one more detail, Paul and Christina:
There better be cocktails and champagne and music that doesn’t come out of a 1800’s Hymnal.
That’s all.
DON’T FEAR THE TECH…..
*I know I promised a posting on interesting To 60 and Beyond women characters in fiction and media (in the biz, we call it a “tease”), but it is still a work in progress. And it’s my blog and I can do what I want!*
I pull out my “never without” smartphone and scroll through the many apps. I find the Weight Watchers icon, click to open and…..nothing. All of the items I scanned, the recipes I saved, my weigh-in stats, gone. NOOOOOOOO! Continue reading…
“Beauty lasts five minutes. Maybe longer if you have a good plastic surgeon.” – TIA CARRERE |
“I saw what’s going on under my chin. I don’t want to be the one the president has to pardon on Thanksgiving.”
– JOAN RIVERS
Adventures in Cosmetic Surgery, Epilogue
By the time I hit the publish button for this posting, I will be almost 5 weeks post surgery.
Where to begin?
I spent the first night in Dr. B’s recovery suite, upstairs from his office. A beautiful apartment overlooking the water. The view is pointless. I spent most of my time with cold compresses over my eyes.
I am riding high from the drugs, but I am also buzzing on adrenaline. I did it! It’s over and I didn’t die! Continue reading…
Pre-op to Post-op
Adventures in Cosmetic Surgery, Finale
The rush of scheduling appointments and test, all needing to be completed before my Pre-op with Dr. B, is a near Herculean task. (I’ve had an easier time getting a reservation at a Zagat rated restaurant) Some of the highlights: The lab draws 5 vials of blood. The Schirmer’s Test for dry eye involves sticking strips of paper into your eyelids – twice! My blood pressure is a remarkable 90/60.
With all the boxes checked off, I head for my Pre-op appointment. This should be a 5 minute no brainer — do this, don’t do that, be here at this time, bring this, sign these forms. Hold that thought.Continue reading…
SNAP OUT OF IT! (Moonstruck) I STILL feel bad about my neck
Adventures in Cosmetic Surgery, act three
When last we heard from our fearless heroine, she was an emotional basket case. It seemed that perhaps this cosmetic surgery wasn’t such a good idea…..
In my previous post, I had fled Dr. A’s office in a near panic.
Paul and I spent the next few hours at a bar that was, literally, next door. A bar next to a Cosmetic Surgeon’s Office? Genius. Dr. A is probably the owner. It’s a win-win.
The upshot of theContinue reading…
YOU NEED IT or what a cosmetic surgeon should not say
Adventures is Cosmetic Surgery, part two
I knew I only wanted my neck done. Possibly something to get rid of that red postmenopausal neck and decolletage (love that word).But that was all! I was firm! Uh-huh.
I chose three surgeons, because three is the magic number for getting quotes. I would like to say I had a systematic, well thought out list of criteria for how I chose these three, but I’m not that analytical. I rely on my initial feelings and am generally happy when I trust myself. Without fail, whenever I have disregarded my Gut Reactor it has been a mistake and I was furious with myself for ignoring the internal warning signs. Having said that,Continue reading…
I FEEL BAD ABOUT MY NECK (Nora Ephron)
or
Adventures in Cosmetic Surgery, part one
Here’s where we talk about not succumbing to the pressures of the world to look younger and to find our inner beauty and let that be our guideposts. That sounds amazing. The place where that happens is called Heaven. But in a world where Christie Brinkley and Jane Fonda and Helen Mirren are setting the looks standards for our age group, I am caving.
And I am not alone. According to a recent New York Daily News article, 85 percent of 55 to 64-year-olds said they are unhappy about “at least one” body part. The article went on to say that a report commissioned by RealSelf.com – an online community around elective cosmetic procedures – showed that the trend to seek help from a cosmetic doctor is on the rise by more than 200 percent.
The cover story of the upcoming issue ofContinue reading…
June 17, 2015
OH, THE PLACES YOU’LL GO! DR. SEUSS
What to expect for this coming of age year? As I said in my last post, I have been looking toward 60 for a few years, and not with all excited anticipation. I have often rolled my eyes at the super positive cheery attitudes with accompanying clichés.
“It only gets better!”
“All the pressure from your younger days to be perfect is gone!”
“60 is the new 40!”
“Age is only a number!”
Blah, Blah, Blah.
There are several types of people who make these statements: The woman with a frozen, toothy insurance salesman smile, but an expression in her eyes that says,”Yeah, I know it’s crap, but I’ve got my own issues.” An individual who just popped her daily Lexapro. And finally, Continue reading…
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