I never disclose my age without absolutely having to, and then it’s grudgingly mumbled.
I’ll tell you why: I think we automatically classify people, consciously or otherwise, by this number.
If
I tell you my age, you’re immediately going to make some assumptions
about me: my musical taste (you’d likely be wrong), my favorite movies
and TV series (wrong again), all sorts of speculation about my personal
life and what it entails (or doesn’t).
I don’t want to know your number, either. I don’t want to formulate ideas about you based on that information.
My
grandmother probably started all this. When she was in her nineties, in
a hospital bed, with a nurse clearly holding a chart containing all her
medical information…she would dutifully recite her full name when asked
but visibly halt before giving up her birth year.
I know people who are very old in their thirties. I know people who run circles around me in their eighties.
So
why would any of us consent to presenting a stranger a number that’s
going to cloister us with every other person born the same year?
I
know my doctor needs to know, but even that is damned annoying. I’m
convinced the Publix drive-through pharmacy lady asks me every time just
to torment me (all the others recognize me and skip it, but she
refuses).
I have a birthday coming up; it’s not a milestone or anything, just one more year.
And
when I stare at that new number, it’s going to be with gratitude for
every single one that preceded it, not angst over whatever changes it
might deliver.
I once wrote a poem about aging:
I used to live in a house like thatAll shiny and pretty and newI gradually moved to this shabbier placeBut I much prefer the view
You don’t have to tell anyone your number. Let your smile and your energy tell them all they need to make their calculations.
Love from Delta.
Love it. I will be having a birthday tomorrow but I won’t say which one. I once had a young man who asked me how old I was. I told him the two things you never ask a woman are her age and her weight.
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