Something To Look Forward To
My friend Angie is a few years younger than me. I actually hired her at my last job – where we worked together and became friends. When I left that job we continued to hang out now and then. Angie was married when I met her, had one daughter while we were working together, and has had two more girls in the time since.
About a month ago Angie emailed to see if I was interested in going to see Sting in concert. (“Hell ya” was my answer, but that’s not the point of the story.) She was just three months out from having baby number three and wanted to have some fun before going back to work. So off we went to the concert. On the way home we were continuing our “catch-up” on each others lives. Angie was talking about the birth of her latest and final child, when she said to me, “My family is complete now. I feel like I have nothing to look forward to.”


My parents have decided to divest themselves of my childhood home and build a new house. After 38 years in the same place, they have accumulated a lot of stuff – and so have I.
Recently I picked up a book on learning theory for work, Lost Subjects, Contested Objects: Toward a Psychoanalytic Inquiry of Learning. It was recommended by a colleague, so I read it specifically to gain insight on my work in the education field. Second to my three years in intense therapy – this turned out to be the biggest “a-ha” moment in my quest for good mental/emotional health.
You often hear these complaints from women over a ‘certain age.’ “Where are all the good men?” “Why can’t I find a good man?” “I’m a good catch. Why am I alone?” Well I think I’ve finally divined an answer.
I’m not a fan of the “you know you’re old when …” jokes. Nor am I a fan of pointing out people’s ages – especially as one progresses on the continuum. However, a recent event reminded me of just how “old” I am in the eyes of younger women.
While talking about some relationship angst with my friend Kathleen – married eight years to her loving husband Jay – she tossed a film quote my way. Now Kathleen has been known to cite quips from Jane Austen to punctuate a conversation, but I’ve never known her to quote a cartoon.
I’m not a church-going person. I was raised in the Episcopal Church, but for about the past 20 years I’ve only gone – unless for weddings or funerals – at Christmas so my mother doesn’t have to go alone.
I had a nightmare about my situation with Frank. He and I were together and I kept asking, “Who is Amy?” He would change the topic immediately. I woke up so frustrated that I immediately wrote to him and said, “You need to tell me who Amy is. Please don’t ignore me anymore.”
I would like to take this opportunity to react to a comment that reader Sam left on my recent blog, “When Men Act Like Teenage Girls.”