Category Archives: Supporting Each Other As We Age

Thanks for the Laugh

Thanks to all of you who send me your good laughs. Here’s another one from Katherine.  

In praise of Women Who Read.
One morning a husband returns to the cabin after several hours of fishing and decides to take a nap.
Although not familiar with the lake, the wife decides to take the boat out, since it is such a beautiful day. She motors out a short distance, anchors, and reads her book. Along comes a Game Warden in his boat.
He pulls up alongside the woman and says, ” Good morning, Ma’am, what are you doing?”
“Reading a book,” she replies , (thinking,”Isn’t that obvious?”)
“You’re in a Restricted Fishing Area,” he informs her. “I’m sorry, officer, but I’m not fishing, I’m reading.”
“Yes, but you have all the equipment. I’ll have to write you up a ticket. ”
“For reading a book,” she replies.
“You’re in a Restricted Fishing Area ,” he informs her again .”
“But officer, I’m not fishing, I’m reading.”
“Yes, but you have all the equipment. For all I know you could start at any moment. I’ll have to write you up a ticket and you’ll have to pay a fine.”
“If you do that, I’ll have to charge you with sexual assault,” says the woman.
“But I haven’t even touched you,” says the Game Warden .
“That’s true, but you have all the equipment. For all I know you could start at any moment.”
“Have a nice day ma’am,” and he immediately departed.

MORAL:
Never argue with a woman who reads. It’s likely she can also think.
Sure God created man before woman.
But then you always make a rough draft before the final masterpiece.

New Nativity

Thanks go to Katherine Snelson.  This is the best!

How I Love This Laugh!

Give Marian a Hug

Sue Wheatly Carr  wrote to the email group that John Moore, Marian Strong Moore’s husband, died at the beginning of December.  He had been diagnosed as having Dementia with Lewy Bodies, the second most common form of progressive dementia after Alzheimer’s Disease.

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/lewy-body-dementia/symptoms-causes/syc-20352025

If you’d like to be in touch with Marian, her email address is MSMO4@sbcglobal.net.

The Gift of Menopause

The Gift of Menopause by Annelise Capossela (from the NY Times)

NASHVILLE — There are things I miss about being fertile. A waistline. Hair thick enough to hide my pink scalp and skin fitted enough to prove I have bones. Ovulation — those heady days each month when every cell was vibrating, when just the brush of my husband’s arm against mine could make unloading the dishwasher feel like foreplay. I truly miss ovulation.

I also miss sleeping. I remember sleep with such fondness. I fell asleep once leaning against the warm knees of the boy sitting behind me at a high-school football game. Back when I was fertile, I could close my eyes at night and wake up eight hours later, sometimes nine, feeling perfectly happy. Behold the bright new day! See how it reaches toward the horizon in all its hopeful promise!

Now my internal thermostat is broken. I wake up to throw off the covers and lie there, wondering if my beleaguered country can survive the cataclysm that has befallen it, if the Earth itself can survive the convulsion it is undergoing. Feeling old and tired and very worried — that’s not a recipe for hope.

For the last few years, my husband and I were living in a dog hospice, caring for the ancient dachshund we inherited when my mother died and the ancient hound/retriever/shepherd mix who helped us raise our sons. This summer we had to say goodbye to both of them. I walk through the rooms of our quiet house now with a constant lump in my throat.

“Maybe we need to travel more,” my husband said.

“Maybe we need a puppy,” I said.

All that energy, all that untrammeled wiggling, cuddling, licking love — a puppy is the very personification of hope. But when I filled out the adoption application for a local animal-rescue organization, their website kicked it back with a note that read, “Validation errors occurred.” The “error,” it turns out, was my age. Under the field where I had typed “56,” the website had noted (in bright red letters, lest I miss the note), “This number is too large.”

This number is indeed too large for some things, but I’m grateful to have reached it. I’ve buried too many friends who were younger than I, and I feel more keenly than ever the bounty of this beautiful, temporary life.

The pyrotechnics of youth may be gone, but I have learned that there’s no aphrodisiac like long love, like the feeling of knowing and being known, of belonging to a beloved’s body as fully as you belong to your own.

And it’s easier now to shrug off failure. It’s easier to shrug off most other things, too: missed opportunities, the unwarranted anger of others, fear of looking like a fool. A person who is not afraid of looking like a fool gets to do a lot more dancing.

Why did I ever worry about whether my party dress was enough like everyone else’s party dress to be appropriate without being too much like everyone else’s party dress to be derivative? When bangs were in fashion, why did I ever cut my own bangs with the sewing shears?

I was never a woman who turned heads, but menopause has made me invisible, and I love being invisible. Why did I ever care if strangers thought I was pretty? Worse, why didn’t I think I was pretty at an age when everyone is pretty? “Oh, how I regret not having worn a bikini for the entire year I was 26,” wrote Nora Ephron in “I Feel Bad About My Neck.” “If anyone young is reading this, go, right this minute, put on a bikini, and don’t take it off until you’re 34.”

I don’t know if it’s menopause or simply aging, but time’s winged chariot has freed me from bikinis, among other things. Life is full of obligations that can’t be shirked, but always there are “obligations” I’m not obliged to do. No, I don’t want to sit on that panel. No, I don’t want to attend that fund-raiser. No, I don’t want to go to that party. The days are running out, faster and faster, and I have learned that every yes I say to something I don’t want to do inevitably means saying no to something that matters to me far more — time with my family, time with my friends, time in the woods, time with a book.

For many women, menopause can be far more brutal, but for me even the insomnia has been a kind of gift, if only because the gorgeous world is most gorgeous in the first light of dawn. The songbirds, their fledglings hungry from a long night of fasting, are most active and most garrulous at sunrise. The doe and her spotted fawn have not yet found a cool place to settle under the trees, and the bullfrogs are still booming out their baritone disputes. The webs the micrathena spidershave spun in the darkness have not yet been torn by falling leaves and wind. The filaments, stirring in the irregular light, are their own little suns.

The night I learned I was too old to adopt a rescue puppy, I woke in the dark and headed to a nearby lake at sunrise. A host of rough-winged swallows were scooping gnats from the air above the water. Three great blue herons and two little green herons all stood still as sentries on the shore. A raccoon hauled itself onto the bank, shedding a shower of water drops that gleamed like diamonds. A pair of fledgling barred owls demanded to be fed while their sharp-eyed parents watched the ground, waiting for some small creature to trundle through the underbrush. Nearby, a chipmunk was crouching motionless under a fallen tree.

And when I got home, there was an email waiting for me from the animal rescue organization: It said I am not too old to adopt a puppy at all.

 


Google “MHC Class of 1961” to see and contribute to our class website, created by Webmaster Liz Barrett, a place for connecting, boasting, learning, and mostly SHARING our accomplishments:: our art, poetry, stories, work, music, plays, sports, daily lives, photos, good books, activism, travels — whatever you’d like to share with classmates..

 

Staying Safe

Yesterday I had my annual Medicare wellness check.  The nurse said that at my age I should have a bar in the shower.  So I took her advice.

Thanks to Katherine Kaufman Snelson for this laugh.  I can always count on her to put a smile on my face!

Judy Weinstein Segal

Editor’s note:  as this deals with Alzheimers, I’m sure there will be others who are willing to share.  Just send me your posts if you’re interested.   June 2018

My husband, Bruce, and I recently attended the show “Bull in a China Shop”, a play by a recent MHC grad, Bryna Turner.  The play tells about the romantic relationship between Mary Wooley and Jeanette Marks, while also highlighting how Mary Wooley singlehandedly turned Mount Holyoke from a finishing school for young women into an institution that offered them a serious education.  It played off Broadway last year to rave reviews and is currently having a six week run in Chicago.  We really enjoyed it.  The dialogue was terrific with lots of very funny lines and the Chicago cast was great.  Overall, I was quite impressed by the talents of the playwright, although there were some aspects of the script that, at least in my view, could benefit from more work.  At any rate, it is something to watch for and enjoy if it comes to a location near you.    

On a personal note, Bruce and I relocated from DC to Chicago about three years ago to be closer to family.  If there are other classmates in the Chicago area, I would enjoy being in touch.  I can be reached by e-mail at judywsegal@gmail.com and by telephone at 224-307-2448.
 
At the time of our move, Bruce received a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s and I have been thrust into a caretaker role as his disease continues to progress.  Over the past three years, I have learned by sheer trial and error an enormous amount about how to take care of a loved one with this diagnosis.  If there are other classmates who are also on this journey, I would be delighted to share information.
 
                                                                   Judy Weinstein Segal

Lexophile

What a hoot!
“Lexophile” describes those that have a love for words, such as “you can tune a piano, but you can’t tuna fish”, or “To write with a broken pencil is pointless.” An annual competition is held by the New York Times to see who can create the best original lexophile.
 
No matter how much you push the envelope, it’ll still be stationery.
If you don’t pay your exorcist you can get repossessed.
I’m reading a book about anti-gravity. I just can’t put it down.
I didn’t like my beard at first. Then it grew on me.
Did you hear about the crossed-eyed teacher who lost her job because she couldn’t control her pupils?
When you get a bladder infection, urine trouble.
When chemists die, they barium.
I stayed up all night to see where the sun went, and then it dawned on me.
I changed my iPod’s name to Titanic. It’s syncing now.
England has no kidney bank, but it does have a Liverpool .
Haunted French pancakes give me the crepes.
This girl today said she recognized me from the Vegetarians Club, but I’d swear I’ve never met herbivore
I know a guy who’s addicted to drinking brake fluid, but he says he can stop any time.
A thief who stole a calendar got twelve months.
When the smog lifts in Los Angeles U.C.L.A.
I got some batteries that were given out free of charge.
A dentist and a manicurist married. They fought tooth and nail.
A will is a dead giveaway.
With her marriage, she got a new name and a dress.
Police were summoned to a daycare center where a three-year-old was resisting a rest.
Did you hear about the fellow whose entire left side was cut off? He’s all right now.
A bicycle can’t stand alone; it’s just two tired.
The guy who fell onto an upholstery machine last week is now fully recovered.
He had a photographic memory but it was never fully developed.
When she saw her first strands of gray hair she thought she’d dye.
Acupuncture is a jab well done. That’s the point of it.

This Made Me Laugh So Hard!

Thanks to Katherine Snelson!

The Typographical Error

The typographical error
Is a slippery thing and sly.
You can hunt it ‘til you are dizzy
But it somehow will get by.
Till the forms are off the presses,
It is strange how still it keeps;
It shrinks down in a corner
And it never stirs or peeps —
The typographical error
Is too small for human eyes,
Till the ink is on the paper . . .
Then it grows to mountain size.
The boss, he stares in horror,
Then grabs his hair and groans,
The copy reader drops his head
Upon his hands and moans.
The remainder of the issue
May be clean as clean can be.
But the typographical error
Is the only thing you see.

Author Unknown