This last birthday was hard for me...so hard that 8 months later I'm still reeling from it.
I am 32.
I am in the midst of a MASSIVE mid-life crisis.
At 32? you laugh. 32 isn't old! you argue. 32 is the prime of life! you say.
Bullcrap.
But allow me to explain.
I have fibromyalgia, of course, which makes me feel like I'm living in a body more than twice my current age, but that's not the whole of the problem. The problem was that damned BYU biology class I took at 19 years of age. You see, I sat in that biology class (hating my science courses - I was a theater education major! Science is mostly irrelevant in my field...and don't bother arguing with me!) just trying to pull a passing grade and wondering just how long 50 minutes really was, doodling on...well, anything I happened to have to doodle on. I remember exactly ONE fact from Biology 101: it is at the age of approximately 32 that your cells begin to die off faster than they regenerate.
Oh, crap, I thought to myself. At 32 you start to DIE. ... And then I calmed down and thought, well, heck, that means I have another 13 years to be young! AWESOME!
And then it was 10 more years of being young...and then 7, and 5, and suddenly I was 30, but that was okay; I still have 2 more years to be young! 31 was a bit more rough, but I wanted to milk that last year of youth for all it was worth. I was in feasibly the best shape of my life courtesy of my foray into gym-rat-hood, and it was at this point that I abandoned the idea of plastic surgery in favor of self-acceptance (see the archives; look for Korean bathhouse). I was okay at 31.
I freaked out the day before my 32nd birthday.
But this is what happens when you spend 13 years of your life - over a third of your existence! - telling yourself that life ends at 32. Youth evaporates on your 32nd birthday. Oh, dear lord, I was terrified, and it didn't help that the day before my birthday I had MAJOR intestinal trouble that had me running screaming to an urgent care. You don't want the details, but needless to say, I considered my doctor visit proof that life was over.
I woke up the morning of my birthday and took some time to scrutinize my face. I have a few tiny crows' feet wrinkles that have cropped up in the last couple years, plus a little crease just below my brow line above the bridge of my nose. The lines around my mouth are now (very faint) parentheses tracks. Oh, and I still get acne. (Really? What the hell?! I'm 32 and I'm not talking a stray zit every few months, I'm chasing half a dozen pimples around my face all the bloody time!) I looked in that mirror and every single line, every flaw was a detriment: because I was officially 32, none of those imperfections had any chance of ever making a retreat. I was stuck with them...and they were only going to get worse.
Vanity? ... ... ... ... Fine, vanity. But also panic. I was living in a body that already hurt inexplicably, and it was suddenly OFFICIALLY all downhill from there.
I became depressed. Badly depressed. Despondent, really. I cried a lot. It was pretty pathetic. And the more depressed I was, the more I found to be depressed about. Less than a month after my birthday my elder child began 1st grade...meaning he was gone 8 hours a day. A couple weeks after that, Child-the-Younger began preschool 10 hours a week, meaning I had 10 hours a week entirely to myself. To most SAHMs this would mean party-time. To me? Well, my body can't produce any more munchkins, but our Dream For a Future Family always included upwards of 4 kids. I had imagined my life a bit differently: babies in the house forever, kids NEEDING me 24 hours a day for a good decade of my life. Suddenly at 32 my kids didn't need me anymore. (Yes, I KNOW they still need me, but when you're in the depths of despair, things are a tad bit skewed.) My self-proclaimed purpose had been thwarted by my body's inability to continue in the process of creation.
So I asked myself, NOW WHAT? And my answer?
You, dear Reader. It was time to explore me, time to decide who I was and who I was going to become. I have tried to answer that question in myriad ways - painting, cooking, gardening, photo and video editing, knitting, you name it! - and the answer I kept coming back to was WRITING. True, there was a lot of self-acceptance and some serious self-realization and actualization that had to happen, too, but 8 months later my garden is growing itself, my painting is sporadic, I cook anyway, photo and video editing happens as required, I've got some hand-knitted scarves hanging in the closet...and I'm about to publish my first book in a trilogy.
You, Reader, have given me new purpose. I adore my family, worship my husband, live for my children, and continue on in my (generally) happy role as SAHM...but now I also get to share my story, my characters, my ideas with you in hopes that we will connect somehow in that realm I have created. I am excited, no, THRILLED to see my book in print, knowing someone may someday pick it up, read it, and imbue it with their own meaning.
I had a midlife crisis at 32, it's true...and it was You who pulled me out of it. Thank you. I will be forever grateful.
With great affection,
Jessica
This is my blogosphere home: my outlet and rant station, my information-sharing forum, and a way to track my experience as an eager and determined writer, stay-at-home Mom, and Jenny-of-all-trades on the road to becoming a published author. Enjoy!
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Showing posts with label SAHM midlife crisis 32 biology aging fibromyalgia hobbies purpose depressed depression wrinkles birthday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SAHM midlife crisis 32 biology aging fibromyalgia hobbies purpose depressed depression wrinkles birthday. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
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