F a t h e r L u k e 's dot Blawg

Have You Been Double Crossed Today?

Let’s hear it for a laugh

Change is when you look at a cool pond on a hot day and hesitate because you know it will give you a chill jumping into the cold. Then you jump.

My eyebrows are getting white. My knees don’t work the way they once did. I enjoyed running. I used to run half a marathon each day, until someone told me I shouldn’t burn my body up like that. So I stopped running. But I loved the long distance run.

I can’t even get out of bed unassisted, now. It’s my knees.

And recently? My right elbow has given way to arthritis. My hair is thinning. My memory is so full, sometimes I just blot out my entire life, not wanting to remember all the places I’ve been (good thing in some cases — although not one part of my life would I change; I really have no regrets — and just a plain waste of life forgetting all the rest…).

I am physically changing in ways that I am able to measure daily, something I have not been able to do since I was in my teens, growing, getting hair, those kinds of changes… .

I’d never given much thought to how I’d spend my “later days”. I imagine I suspected I’d be holed up in the Hotel I associate with my adult life. Sipping decaffeinated coffee, and posturing myself to be a great writer — misunderstood, unpublished, but great none-the-less — and scrambling to some piss-poor job to pay rent, thereby furthering the tortured writer personae only my friend Dr Zen has the wherewithal to kid me about.

And here I am. Living in Portland, with a woman I love, her kids, whom I adore. Really I do. Jenifer amazes me with her depth, and resiliency in some new way each day. The kids seem to be growing as I watch them… .

And here I am. With people who only know me as a guy who can’t get up from the sofa without help. A guy who has always had white hair. A guy who … . But they have no history of me like those I grew up with have a history of me.

Those who grew up with me know me as having found a family, now. A family that loves me.

And so it is. Life sneaks up on us. John Lennon was right. Life does happen to us as we make other plans. Snicker at the pop culture of it. But he who laughs lasts, laughs best. And life gets the last laugh.

Now I know how my grandfather felt when my mom and us four kids moved into live with my grandmother and him. An old man, not really understood. But perhaps loved, certainly remembered. But old.

- –
Okay,
Father Luke

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Filed under: Uncategorized — Written by Father Luke at 4:18 pm on Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

4 Comments »

Jenifer goes like this...

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Shultzy? Is that you?

Rodger Jacobs goes like this...

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

Yep, pardner. I’ve been walking with a cane for four years now due to the onset of arthritis in my knees and other joints (psoriatic arthritis, one of the rarest forms known to medical study) and I pop oxycodone like Chiclets for the pain. I also have to go to a hair stylist to have my hair cut to correspond to my rapidly receding hairline; I can’t just stand in front of the bathroom mirror with a comb and a pair of scissors like I did when I was younger. Aging can be a bitch, my friend, but think of the wisdom we have that others will take years to acquire. By the way, I turn 51 next month and I’m infinitely more terrified of that number than 50.

Father Luke goes like this...

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

Right. Seems funny to be in so much pain at such a young age. I mean, after all, Rodger, you and I both know that being in our fifties is still — ahem — young.

All other things being equal, I know you can relate. You have a bigger jump on your writing career than I do.
- -
Always the best to you,
Father Luke

Rodger Jacobs goes like this...

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

It took almost 25 years to find my groove as a professional writer, FL; once I got the ridiculous notion out of my head that I wanted to be a screenwriter, everything took off in a different and more positive direction.

And, yes, since Miss L and I live in a retirement community we are both reminded almost daily that one’s fifties are still considered young, albeit the grass is growing slower and there’s a lot of weeding that has to be done — of course, I’m speaking metaphorically because literally I couldn’t get down on my knees to do any weeding. Yesterday I bent over to pick something up off the floor of the bedroom closet and when I stood up I had the worst bout of motion sickness, a fun and unexpected side effect of the pain meds (Nausea is listed as the number one most common side effect of oxycodone, a morphine derivative, but if you drill down into the pharmaceutical lit more carefully you’ll discover that oxy is a neuropathic narcotic and that “nausea” side effect is actually motion sickness. Greater things through science.)

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