A PAFC blog authored by a team of experienced adults who have come together to share personal experiences, perspectives, and insights regarding the challenges and opportunities of growing older in Larimer County. We invite your comments, no matter your age. If you are over 50 and interested in joining our team of contributors, please contact Kirsten Hartman (kirstenhartman@comcast.net). We also invite you to explore our Graceful Aging Series at: https://www.pafclarimer.org/graceful-aging/
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
Technology and Us
Who says we are technically challenged? How else do you find the nearest coffee shop from the Denver Civic Center?
Sunday, September 16, 2018
Sunday in Old Town Square
Today my husband Terry and I took a walk through Old Town Square on our way to the theater. This group of players was having a grand time performing on the bandstand. They were absolutely great. A multi-cultural and multi-generational musical creation. I just loved it but had to move on and did not have time to get their name.
Thursday, August 30, 2018
Reliving the Hawaii Ironman 20 years later
Reliving the Hawaii Ironman
Diane McCary, 76 and her husband Pat, 78, used to live in
Kona, Hawaii. Now they live in the Colorado mountains, but they have never
forgotten the years they spent running, biking and swimming on the Big Island.
They worked too, she as a high school math teacher and he as a psychologist.
Whenever they could, they indulged their athleticism, so much so that it became
contagious. Their daughter Kristen and son Mike became triathletes as well.
In October 1998 the McCary family did the Hawaii Ironman
together. They each swam 2.4 miles in the ocean, biked 100 miles and followed
up with a full marathon-- 26.2-miles.
In October 2018 Diane and Pat will be back in Hawaii to
watch this year’s Ironman. And while they are there, they will do their own
event to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their milestone family
accomplishment. They’ve given themselves a week to do the above distances at
their own pace. Because of work and family obligations, the kids won’t be there
in person to join their parents but they will be cheering them on.
Here’s how the McCarys are preparing. They work out 45
minutes to an hour and 15 minutes every day, increasing their running, walking
and swimming as the time draws closer. Pat spends hours on the stationery bike.
Diane bikes weekly. In June they did a two-day mountain biking trip together.
They also work out regularly in the pool.
Pat has had prostate surgery, a hip replacement and lives
with bone-on-bone in his ankle. Diane says, “I function with a lot of worn out
parts. We do the best we can with what we have left.” She quoted her
father-in-law who said “I’d rather wear out than rust out.”
Stay tuned. I plan to report on their week in Hawaii in
October.
By: Libby James
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Grocery Bags
I like my grocery bags heavy. The heavier the better. I take my own bags to the store and they can
handle being overloaded. Also this cuts
down on the trips between car and house.
Because I have white hair and wrinkles, I think the
clerks think I can't handle the weight
But I am strong and I consider carrying heavy bags to be
a good workout.
I have recently learned that not all folks of a
"certain age" like heavy bags, so I am wondering how you feel about
this issue?
Written by Jess Sue Kerchenfaut
By: Kirsten Hartman
Monday, August 20, 2018
”May I help you?”
At the service desk at a familiar big box store, a young man asks “And what can I do for you, young lady?” Since I have talked about this type of comment/question recently as rather patronizing, I blurted out “do you call everyone young lady?”
I consider it irritating not cute. A friendly “may I help you?” works fine for me. He did answer yes to my question, but doubt it is true. I did say “well, good”. Am I being too sensitive here? What have you experienced and how do you feel about it? By: Meliss Anderson
I consider it irritating not cute. A friendly “may I help you?” works fine for me. He did answer yes to my question, but doubt it is true. I did say “well, good”. Am I being too sensitive here? What have you experienced and how do you feel about it? By: Meliss Anderson
Monday, August 13, 2018
Do you want my seat?
“Here Ma’am,
you can have my seat”, said the young fellow on the crowded Max the late the other
night. Well, I hesitated, looked at all
the people standing, and with a reluctant sigh sat down. Then I went thru all the other thoughts.
Thoughts such as, maybe the very over weight person standing nearby could use
the seat, or did I look as tired as I felt?
I appreciated the tone and the way the person offered the seat to me. I almost took the seat as a way to thank the
person. Then I felt “privileged” to be offered a seat. Privilege and respect
can go a long way, but am I really in a privilege class? Does being a healthy,
fit senior with a little grey hair make me a “privilege” person? If the bus had come to a sudden stop, if I
were standing and holding a bar above me, would my arm/shoulder get more
damaged than the young twenty something standing next to me? Possibly. Again with grace and gratitude, I enjoyed my
Max ride! How do you feel when offered a seat on the bus?
By: Kirsten Hartman
Sunday, August 5, 2018
No Time to Spare
The first essay in Ursula Le Guin’s book, No Time to Spare, a collection of her
blogs, is called “In Your Spare Time.” In it she describes a questionnaire she
received from Harvard in 2010, prior to the sixtieth reunion of the graduating
class of 1951. She was a graduate of Radcliffe, affiliated with Harvard but not
yet officially a part of it because of gender issues.
It asked some interesting questions, among them:
1. If divorced, check the box for once, twice, three, four
or more times. Are you: currently remarried, living with a partner, or none of
the above. She asks, how is it possible to be divorced and still be none of the
above? Well, it is technically possible, I think, but the point she makes is
that it is doubtful such a question would have been asked on a reunion
questionnaire in 1951. And she points out that we have “come a long way baby.”
2. Given your expectations, how have your grandchildren done
in life? She finds that one hard to answer as she has a 4 year-old grandchild
who she says is doing just fine. She does not have expectations for him but
rather hopes and fears for his future related to the way she says the
environment “has been screwed up by profiteering industrialism.”
3. Are you living your secret desires? “My desires are flagrant,”
she responded. She failed to answer the question with a yes or no.
4.”In your spare time, (now that you are retired) what do
you do?” Check all that apply (a list of 27 items followed) beginning with golf
and followed by racquet sports, shopping, TV, bridge and creative activities
such as painting, writing, photography.
I love her response to this one. LeGuin is a well-known sci
fi writer, has a stellar reputation and has made a comfortable living at her
work. She says, “I am not retired because I never had a job to retire from. My
life work has been those creative activities, categorized by the questionnaire
as hobbies.”
LeGuin asks, “When all the time you have is spare, that is free, what do you make of it? The
opposite of spare time is occupied time and all her time is occupied, she
says—by living. That includes sleeping, daydreaming, keeping in touch with
friends and family on email, reading, writing poetry, embroidering, cooking,
eating, cleaning up the kitchen, shopping for groceries, walking, travelling,
watching a movie, exercising, snoozing with her cat in the afternoon—none of
this is spare time, she says. “I can’t spare it.”
"What is Harvard thinking of," she asks? "I am going to be 81
next week. I have no time to spare."
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