Speed # One:  All out race!
Speed # Two:  Dead stop!
Conclusion?  Delusional thinking and denial of the reality of dealing with time and anxiety.
Ha!!!
I just spent the last hour reviewing journal articles on `denial of  aging.'  I've even got a book on that subject waiting for me at the  Prescott Library.
With the wife gone for a week and being relatively immobile while the knee heals up I've spent waaaaay too  much time `thinking.'   Such a waste!  Not my best `muscle,' i.e., from  the neck up.  
I preached two mantras in my clinical practice as a psychologist: "Action Defines Us" and "Behavior Precedes  Awareness."  One of my patients even went out and got me a ball cap with  those phrases emblazoned on it as a retirement memento.
Take my own advice: Think less.  Do more.  
A good deal of the reason I am so active with cycling is so that I can  wear myself out.  (DSM-IV-TR diagnosis: Cyclothymia.  Just a tad short  of all out mania).  Just a different way of dealing with the same  anxiety that creates alcoholics, zealots, workaholics and others among  us burning up excess psychic kerosene.  
The challenge of `retirement' is in being able to integrate life's accumulated wisdom and the strengths it brings, and a relative certainty about the  trajectory of the future having an ultimate downward slope (unless of  course I'm on a 4% downhill descent into Wilhoit on a 75 degree angle left  turn doing 36.4 mph on a posted 25 mph speed limit ... then the slope is  a right angle, straight down.  I got lucky and am here to tell about it.).  
I really did feel pissed that I came in behind 51 other people in the recent Skull Valley Loop Challenge.  Angry, in fact.  I gave myself no `slack' for probably being among the 3 oldest people racing.  Some of  it is good fuel for motivation.  A lot of it is denial of `inherent' athletic/genetic limits and limits imposed on me as a consequence of age.  
Transition.  Age and the time to think about it carefully and with acceptance and courage. A denial of it ...  thinking that "I'm different and I'll prove it" can prove futile.  And `resistance is futile.'  
Of course, we all know that the only people without stress in their life ... are dead!
Sermon over.
 
 
LOL! Good sermon Rev. Dan! I agree that doing is of increasing importance as we continue to mature.
ReplyDeleteDylan Thomas says it well:
"Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light."
51 people ahead of you? I would have been tickled to have had 51 people BEHIND me! HA!
Looking forward "raging" together again when you get healed up.