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August 2008 Issue
The Big
"60"
by Charles Lowery
My big "60" birthday
is coming and my high school class is having a reunion because
most of us are almost 60! We are now officially too old to die
young. It is funny how we describe age. When you are a kid, you
are so proud of your age that you talk about it in fractions.
"I'm five and a half." Well, I guess I'm fifty-nine
and a half. I turned 30, I reached 40, I made
50, and I guess someday I'll hit 70. After that it's day-to-day
you are happy to hit Wednesday. In your 80s, you
hit dinner. Then it is really day-to-day.
The insurance company sends you calendars weekly. I'm not going
to live in denial. My wild oats have turned to shredded wheat,
and my narrow waist and broad shoulders have switched places.
It is the autumn of life and all of my organs have headed south.
Let me give you a few signs that you may have too much sand
in the bottom of the hour glass. It takes longer to rest than
to get tired. Everything is starting to wear out, fall out, or
spread out. Your knees buckle and your belt won't. You have too
much room in the house and not enough in the medicine cabinet.
You look forward to a dull evening. You drive with your hands
in the ten and two o'clock position, and by the time you get out
of the car, your grandkids are already in the house. You pull
a muscle while applying Ben Gay. Your favorite song is playing
in the elevator. You finish entire novels in the bathroom. Actually,
you were thinking about putting a revolving door in the bathroom.
You choose cereal for the fiber instead of the toy.
You know you are getting older if:
You have ever wished that there is a thermostat replacement
therapy which would allow you to regulate your wife's temperature;
You have ever said: "You call that music?"
You would rather watch CSI Miami than go to Miami.
You get excited over cheesecake flavored yogurt.
The kid you used to baby sit is now preaching at the
Pastor's Conference.
One of your thrills in life is heated car seats.
You have to speed up in order to get over the speed
bump, and the only thing you pass on the interstate is an Amish
wagon.
Your clothes have come back in style twice.
The winter pants you hung in your closet last year have
shrunk two sizes.
One way you can tell that you are getting older is by how much
you remember. I can remember when kids rode in the back of the
station wagon facing the cars behind them. I can remember who
shot J.R. I can remember when Coke was something you drank, grass
was what you mowed, and pot was what you cooked in. Closets were
for clothes and not for "coming out." Aides were helpers
in the principal's office. But I can also remember what Churchill
said: "The farther back you can look, the further forward
you can see."
There are some benefits to getting older. You get to eat dinner
at four o'clock. Your joints are more accurate than the local
weather service. There is nothing left to learn the hard way.
You can hide your own Easter eggs. You don't have to worry about
avoiding temptation; it avoids you. Also, there is less peer pressure
because there are fewer peers.
Since there is no such thing as birthday control pills, I am
going to my reunion. Most of the people there will probably be
too old to recognize me. The punch will be spiked with prune juice,
and we will play some sixties music. Of course, the words will
be different. They will play songs like "There Ain't No Burrito
Mild Enough" or "Hair Potion Number 9." And, of
course, the classics Herman's Hermits' "Mrs. Brown You Have
a Lovely Walker," the Bee Gees' "How Can You Mend a
Broken Hip," and Leslie Gore's "It's My Procedure and
I'll Cry If I Want To" will all be playing on our eight-track.
"Charles," you might say, "this old age stuff
is funny but where is the wisdom? That's what old geezers are
supposed to have."
As we get older, each birthday ending with a zero comes with
two presents: First, an extra dose of reality to the fact that
one day we will all be like Jimmy Hoffa gone. Second, it
is an excellent time to evaluate the quality of our lives and
ministries. For me, I'm not giving up on fun. Now, I know fun
is a lot like insurance the older you get, the more it
costs. I also know that I have to run twice as hard to get there
half as fast. But I'm not ready to trade in my Nikes for some
bunny rabbit slippers. I'm not interested in any form of organized
bingo or putting clothes on a dog or any other animal that already
has fur. I'm a simple guy.
Here's my philosophy: Life is not about young and old, it's
about dead and alive and I'm alive. Remember, Moses was
80 before he started his real ministry. Maybe it takes some serious
aging before some of us are ready to be really used by Him. So
give me that bottle of Geritol; I mean the Battle of Jericho.
I don't know what an old geezer is, but I'm not one of them. Give
me a fish pill, and how do the younger people say it?
"Bring it on!"
Charles Lowery is a member of First Baptist
Church, Bossier City, Louisiana, founder and president of LIFE,
Inc., and is in a fulltime speaking ministry. You may contact
LIFE, Inc. at 903-881-9422 or www.charleslowery.com.
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Copyright
© 2008 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
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Nashville, Tennessee 37203
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