Sailboats and airlines move in exactly the same manner, never in a straight line, self-correcting all the time. Our lives should be pretty much the same. That sounds about right during most of our lifetime until things gets harder with age.
Staying relevant for anyone at any age can be quite a challenge today.
These are trying times for even the most blasé among us. Normal political
practices are tripping over themselves with standards and norms are being
adjusted, maligned, and dismembered on a daily basis.
Now, artificial intelligence makes anything digital questionable; what is real and what isn’t. It’s bots for breakfast and cloud-based data swirling in cyberspace all around us. No wonder we can no longer trust news sources to give us the truth; straight and honest. It seems as if everyone has an agenda; for themselves, their clients, and their objectives in life.
For older folks it gets even harder to filter the shaft (BS) from the
real and authentic. I think that’s why many of us in this older generations
just want to ‘gave it a rest’ once they reached retirement age. It’s happened
before; just as Tom.
News correspondent Tom Brokaw celebrated his generation by calling them ‘the greatest generation.’ He hero-worshipped their struggles during the Great Depression, their heroic actions in World War Two and their resiliency during the post-war recovery.
This was my parent’s generation. The one I was supposed to look up to
for guidance, inspiration and an idea of what one does when one has lived a
full life and was now retired. I am of the boomer generation but each
succeeding generation supposedly possessed unique qualifications that made them
something special too. Yet, it was the ‘greatest generation’ that had supposedly
started it all. I beg to differ.
While most of us morphed into adulthood and were facing daily
challenges and struggles with our jobs, career advancements, relationships, and
world events, many of the ‘greatest generation’ had divorced themselves from current
events in their lives. It was if they’d been through all of that before and now,
they just wanted to enjoy their retirement and shed themselves of the
challenges most of us were facing on a daily basis.
On the surface it seemed a well-deserved retirement schedule forged out of long hours at work and raising a family. The downside of that entrenched isolationism on their part is that they were not staying relevant to the world around them. The world continued on and they stayed in their old place, stuck in the past even as it became more and more irrelevant.
One of the frequent laments that Sharon hears from women her age is the fear that their spouse is ‘getting old’ on them. It’s a real concern that the man in their life is closing down to the real world. They fear their partner’s opinions, attitudes and reactions reflect a continuing disconnect from everyday reality. Many of these men see a world that is changing all around them and they don’t like it.
Monday morning quarterbacking became a favorite game to play because
they had the time. Old men gathered at the coffee shop to talk at one another
and seldom if ever listened to what was being said. If and when they did happen
to listen, the conversation usually centered around bitching about taxes, local
and national government, believing the propaganda all the political parties
were spewing forth on the air waves and in print. It was seldom if ever
positive and more likely a sad lament of times past and the failures of future
generations rather than their own.
Now I and millions more like me are of that senior generation. The boomers are getting older and some, unfortunately, have morphed into that same isolationist routine of living. The corner coffee shop is full of old men bitching about taxes, politics and politicians and the futility of trying to talk sense into that younger generation. Here we go all over again.
Staying relevant to the world around us seems to be the only answer for my generation. To stay informed, involved and committed to something is far better than to remain entrenched in yesterday and the glory of one’s past. The world cares little for our opinion. They do respect our action. And in the end, our actions may be the only thing that counts.





























