Ref. Joan Chittister, The Gift of Years: Growing Older Gracefully, New York: Blue Bridge, 2008, pg. 179-183.
Humility must be
cultivated if we hope to grow in love and compassion as we age: If we learn anything at all as time goes by
and the changing seasons become fewer and fewer, it is that there are some
things in life that cannot be fixed. It is more than possible that we will go
to our graves with a great deal of personal
concerns, of life agendas, left unresolved etc. So has life been wasted? Has it
all been for nothing?
Only if we mistake the
meaning of the last period of life. This time of life is not meant to solidify
us in our inadequacies. It is meant to free us to mature even more. This is the
period of life when we must begin to look inside our own hearts and souls
rather than outside ourselves for the answers to our problems, for the fixing
of the problems. This is the time for facing ourselves, for bringing ourselves
into the light. We are invited to
consider aging as an opportunity to grow into our true and larger selves.
Now is the time to ask
ourselves what kind of person we have been becoming all these years. And do we
like that person? Did we become more honest, more decent, more caring, more
merciful as we went along because of all these things? And if not, what must we
be doing about it now?
Can we begin to see ourselves as only part of the universe, just a
fragment of it, not its center? Can we give ourselves to accepting the heat and
the rain, the pain and the limitations, the inconveniences and discomforts of
life, without setting out to passively punish the rest of the human race for
the daily exigencies that come with being human?
Can we smile at what we
have not smiled at for years? Can we give ourselves away to those who need us?
Can we speak our truth without needing to be right and accept the vagaries of
life now without needing the entire rest of the world to swaddle us beyond any
human justification for expecting it? Can we talk to people decently and allow
them to talk to us?
Now, this period, this
aging process, is the last time we’re given to be more than all the small
things we have allowed ourselves to be over the years. But first, we must face
what the smallness is, and rejoice in
the time we have left to turn sweet instead of more sour than ever.
A burden of these years
is the danger of giving in to our most selfish selves. A blessing of these
years is the opportunity to face what it is in us that has been enslaving us,
and to let our spirit fly free of whatever has been tying it to the Earth all
these years.
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