Life is a journey without a map. You
come to a fork in the road of life and choose a direction.
When things that once shocked you begin
to amuse you, you've crossed the first barrier of true wisdom. Every time I
reach a new age in life, I spend a long day dwelling on my painful past,
blessing the present and ignoring the future. Then I wake up the next day and
start all over again.
While everyone follows a different Path
in Life, there seems to be a general pattern.
Age 1-3 – You are a mass of human jelly
trying to walk across the room without falling on your face.
Age 4-5 – You’re a helpless squirt
being cared for by flawless parents who love and protect you.
Age 6-12 – You struggle through grade
school, making friends and dodging bullies. Somewhere along the line you
discover your parents aren’t exactly perfect and embarrass you with their mere
existence
Age 13-17 – As a teen-ager, you stumble
into your niche as one of the in-crowd or a jock or a nerd or a greaser or a
nobody. No matter which category you fall into you’re an outcast but you don’t
actually realize it unless you’re a nobody. You become rebellious of authority
and change your hairstyle accordingly.
Age 18-20 – If you’re lucky, you go on
to college and party for four years. If not, you marry your high school
sweetheart and begin a life of quiet desperation involving employment, raising
a family and maintaining a lawn.
Age 21 – You are now of legal age to
consume alcohol, so you discard your fake ID’s.
Age 22-29 – You get a job that’s much
less exciting than expected and try real hard not to go insane spending five
days a week working for some lame idiot. You don’t think much about the future,
except to fantasize about winning the lottery or writing a novel or sailing around
the world or becoming a movie star.
Age 30 – Your first real zero year. You
sense you’re in a rut and consider doing something drastic, like switch jobs or
switch spouses or join the Merchant Marines. Instead, you change your
hairstyle.
Age 31-39 – You coast along, fairly
optimistic about the future. You’ve acquired a bit of money by now and perhaps
have the house and automobile you’ve always wanted.
Age 40 – A bad zero year. You ponder
deep thoughts about the meaning of life. Material things seem less important
and you wonder what went wrong so you change your hairstyle reflecting your
contemplative mood.
Age 41-49 – You switch from a fancy car
to a practical car. If you have kids, they are going off on their own to screw
up their own lives. You begin to read self-help books, buy a treadmill and eat
more yogurt.
Age 50-59 – You put on a few pounds
that are now harder to take off than when you were younger. You stop eating
yogurt and start eating whatever pleases you the most. The treadmill collects
dust in the garage.
Age 60 – Another bad zero year. You
have now slipped across the line to become an old codger. You begin to worry
about your health and change your hairstyle from stylish to whatever is the
most comfortable.
Age 61-79 – You have lots of
conversations about medical procedures and read the obituaries daily. Your back
goes out more than you do and you change your hairstyle one last time, just for
something exciting to do.
Age 80-99 – You smile more often but
don’t know why and call everyone “Bub” because it’s easy to pronounce. Your
favorite exercise is sitting and you now have more hair growing out your ears
than on your head.
Age 100+ -- You now live in a strange
world of young whippersnappers who seem to be from a different planet. You
spend much of your time trying to remember things, like your own name and where
you put your teeth.
___________
Quote for the Day – "True terror
is to wake up one morning and discover that your high school class is running
the country." Kurt Vonnegut
___________
Bret Burquest is the author of 12 books. He lives in the Ozark
Mountains with a few dogs and where life is something you do when you can't
sleep.
___________
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