pretend_farmer

pretend_farmer
Location
Scottsdale, Arizona, United States
Birthday
March 04
Title
Maker
Company
Rancho Laurena Rustic Arts
Bio
A wanton young lady of Wimley, Reproached for not acting more primly, Answered, "Heavens above! I know sex isn't love, But it's such an attractive facsimile."

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JANUARY 27, 2011 3:27PM

Four Years and Counting

Rate: 10 Flag

Four years until I’m at the age Daddy was when he died, he was 52 and, in another month, I’ll be 48. This weighs heavily on me, more than it should. My inner self-loathing gets the better of me and I think of all the success he had, all the success I have not.

 

Last week, my neighbor Michelle suggested that I need Ritalin. Ritalin, like I have ADD and can’t focus on anything. But that’s wrong. I can focus on a myriad of subjects, hobbies and creative interests, reading, knitting, farming, painting, sewing, glasswork, writing, computer programming for Chrissakes. I just can’t stay interested in them for long periods of time and I don’t know why. I tell people I bore easily and I do but it’s more than that. I’m interested in learning to do something, I figure out how, and then I am no longer interested. My intellectual curiosity has been met. I know a moderate amount about many, many things, Jack of All Trades, Master of None.

 

This flaw of mine has gotten worse in recent years. I’m afraid my time is drawing nigh and, if I can’t discover that one thing, all this life will be for naught.

 

Yes, I have beautiful brilliant children who, without me, would not grace this world with their presence. Yes, I’ve made a lot of things that I have sold or given as gifts, objets d’art and craft that I’m reasonably confident are admired.

 

But honestly? I’m almost 48. Instead of a career, I pick up bartender and server jobs for needed household-running funds. I’m terrible with money management; I fail as a homemaker. Laundry piles flow like lava out the laundry room door, dog hair rests in clumps in the corners, windows are dirty, floors are worse. I’m a good but inconsistent cook. I have a good but inconsistent life.

 

When Daddy reached 50, and before he was diagnosed with the melanoma that would kill him, he commented that he had made it farther than his own dad, a binge-driven alcoholic who went to “dry out” and failed, no “rehab” in those days, at least not in its current incarnation. Part of my father doubted he would make it to 50. Perhaps, that is why he worked as hard as he did, became such an enormous success at a relatively young age. I haven’t done that.

 

Years move faster as one ages. Tempus fugit and all that. And I’m not afraid to die. I’m afraid to not live.

 

 

Author tags:

family, success, failure, life

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You echo many of my own questions Pretend Farmer.
At fifty four, I feel like I am starting anew and doing what now at this age?? Competing for minimum wages with kids.
I am horrible at finishing things too.
Good to see ya here again. It has been a while since I have read one from you dear.
i think you're a very interesting person! You are using your life and your talents...I mean using them....nothing you mention is a flaw...it all just makes you a more interesting person. Now, that memoir you were going to write?
Thank you all. Joy is an elusive feeling, I'm afraid, but I do try.
well, crap. i wasn't around when you were writing here a lot, but i know of you through denise and was surprised -- shocked, more like it -- at this. besides all those things you list that you learned, when fascinated, to do, you're a terrific and very funny writer. does the yardstick by which we measure success in life have to be how many dollars we've earned? doesn't it count for something -- or a lot of somethings that you're really really good at doing all the things you've learned? or maybe you just need to come to san diego and the three of us will go out for drinks? now *there's* an idea. ;
Honest and transparent . . . chica, you're doing good . . . be good to yourself . . .
I understand this feeling more than I care to.

Ms. Stim's father died at a similar age. She's now older than he was at passing. You'll be fine.
Intense writing, Lauren, please do some more, it might help. And remember, medicine has changed radically since you lost your father. Even since we lost Karen. (If she got diagnosed a year ago instead of three years, she still be with us). Positive attitude kept her going longer than anticipated anyway, the doctors confirm their amazement at that. You've got positivity, just gotta find it again and tap into it.

You're loved and admired a lot, your flaw isn't a flaw to so many of us who can't do half of what you can. xoxo
We never know how long we have...statistically my husband should have made it to 66...he was barely 58. The death of loved ones has a way of snaking into our psyche and plays all sorts of havoc with our thoughts. What I have discovered is those very thoughts are what rob us of our meaningful times, what is happening now, which is all we have really.

Lauren live each day as fully as you can, be happy with your accomplishments...when you think of who is remembered from 100 years ago it is but a mere drop when you consider how many people went before us.

You must figure out what living means to you, more than wages is a beginning. You are pretty amazing...isn't that enough?
Find your mojo girl. Take a self-only weekend and concentrate on this: if you knew you only had one year left to live, how would you live it?

And do that.
I wish this weren't so familiar to me...my being 50 and my father having died at 54...
Hang in there, you sure write powerfully. : )