These Precious Days

Carole Leskin Photo/Used by permission.
Smithville Park (© Carole Leskin. Used by Permission)

It’s no secret. You can read about it in every type of media. Watch people discuss it on cable TV, even on PBS. There are books, podcasts and TED Talks. And you probably mention it to some of your friends. We view time differently as we grow older.

For those recently retired, without the structure of work, Time may go slowly. There is a struggle to fill the days and nights with things that matter. While for those who are further along, Time may go frighteningly fast. They watch children and grandchildren grow up and move on. The “bucket list” looms large. Will they get to do it all?

I have experienced both. Still do. But this year is different. I am no longer healthy, something I foolishly assumed I would be forever. TIME is filled with doctor appointments and tests. Pain. The startling realization that I am not going to ease my way into old age. I will, instead, live with physical limitations I never envisioned. A life I do not know how to live. And frankly, don’t want to. I am angry, frustrated, and sad. I feel like a different person. My freedom is diminished. My confidence is shaken. My expectations are shattered. I will be 75 in April. TIME. How much do I have left? How do I use it when I am trapped inside a body that is contrary to my image of what Carole would be like as an old woman?

Experience has taught me that answers to my questions often come at unexpected times and in accidental places. And age has taught me to listen. I did just that the other day.

It began with an abrupt change of plans.

I found myself on a picture postcard autumn day dressed and ready to go. I felt reasonably good (sometimes that happens for no apparent reason). Nothing to do. And something telling me that I had to use this TIME well.

I decided to drive to one of my favorite parks. Smithville Lake. Hundreds of acres with trails through old forests, along the Rancocas River, beside fresh running streams, and with views of farmland for miles. It is a National Historic Site, with ruins from the original Native American tribes, Revolutionary War, Old Mills, and an 1840s industrial village and mansion. It houses a new museum commemorating the well-known stop on the Underground Railroad that aided more than 800 slaves to continue their escape to freedom. I love this place and have spent the last 20 years exploring it in every season. There is still so much left to see.

I had not been there for more than a year. The drive, only half an hour, has been too much for me, and the walking next to impossible. For some reason, I knew I could do it on this day.

I chose to park close to the dam and walk along the trail beside the lake and village. Everywhere I turned, there was something beautiful! And even though I had hiked this area so many times before, it was as if I was seeing it for the first time. I understood why. TIME.

In a few days I will undergo a hip replacement surgery, robotic, complicated by my recent stroke and spinal degenerative disease. Assuming all goes well, it will be almost a year of physical therapy and additional care before full mobility is restored. No driving for several weeks and then short trips only. Lots of days spent at home alone. And probably a year before I can visit this special place again. Do I have a year? Growing old brings an almost sickening awareness that no day is guaranteed.

TIME. The knowledge that there is less of it. The need to savor every moment whenever possible. On this day I experience what I have seen and appreciated so many times before and yet is entirely different! Each of my senses is heightened. The color of the Lake isn’t just blue – it is purple, green, orange, and black. I am fascinated by the rust of iron spikes on the old fences. The reddish-brown of ancient bricks. The mold that clings to decaying wood. The stream doesn’t just babble. It murmurs, gurgles, and in places, yells. I hear the footsteps of hikers crunching on the gravel. People on bikes laughing, pointing out something that catches their attention. Birds splashing as they land on the water. The creaking of the abandoned buildings in the wind. I smell the fertile soil and blue algae. And at the end of the day I will taste the richness of freshly picked Jersey tomatoes and luscious blueberries.

I spend hours, walking slowly, covering only a short distance. Each step over uneven ground, cobblestones and mud, is a victory. My cane is my weapon. It crushes my enemy – frailty. I silently thank it.

Reluctantly, I return to my car. It’s much cooler now than when I arrived, but I roll down the sunroof anyway. My hair will blow in the wind. My fair skin will burn. In my mind I am singing Beach Boy songs. I am young. And then my internal radio tunes to another song — “These Precious Days.” I am old again. But wiser. Even content.

Lesson learned. I must use these precious days — however many there are — as if each is the last. Capture every moment of beauty. Love without inhibition. Feast at my table of life. Refuse to allow old age, physical disability, finances, loss and sorrow, dim my view of the glories that are mine if I look hard enough.

Here’s to PRECIOUS DAYS ahead!!

 

8 Comments

  1. A picture postcard of your pallet of thoughts and feelings given as a gift to the reader! Thank you for taking us with you on this precious day.

  2. Thank you Carole. Beautiful written. As one who lives with daily reminders of physical challenges, I will tell you that it can be done, and done well. Wishing you a refuah schleimah with your hip surgery and the strength to deal with whatever comes your way.

  3. Carole, as always, so beautiful. How wonderful that you took the opportunity to take that walk and that you are able to experience gratitude despite your challenges.

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