| |
|
24 November, 2005
On Aging
One sure sign that you're aging is the incomprehensible, irresistible desire to write a column about signs that you're aging.
Perhaps another is asking your parents for a super-fancy brand-name electronic bathroom scale that tracks your weight, body mass index, ratio of water-to-beer intake, number of episodes of The X-Files watched on DVD, and general degree of commitment to actual weight loss.
Of course, I didn't ask for the scale. My wife did. For her birthday. You know how women are. Of course, I step on the scale far more frequently than she does. (It's fun, okay? When you first step on it, these little munchkins show up on the display telling you which foot you're leaning on more, so I try to get them perfectly aligned, like it's a video game. So maybe I haven't grown up as much as I thought.)
Speaking of The X-Files, I've definitely noticed a change in my fashion taste. These days I think Fox Mulder looks really sharp in his suit and patented FBI Alienchaser model (tm) trenchcoat. I never thought I'd say it, but that guy makes a suit look good.
I think getting excited about the prospect in my near future of sleeping more then seven consecutive hours maybe be a sign of aging. I used to resist sleep like a teenager resists authority. Now my pillow is a sweet, sweet friend that I miss dearly for most of the day, because I'm swamped with work and plagued with what the all-night party kids are slangily calling "sleep depo". (Or was it "sleep depot"?) In fact, I'm having fond thoughts of my pillow right now. I sure miss it. Of course, if I was truly grown up, I'd have written this column before the late-night last minute.
I listen to more jazz music these days. Does that mean I'm getting older? Or is it just that young jazz fans are simply annoying? I do still like heavy metal. But only the heavy metal that was new when I was younger. I knew I was becoming a grumpy old man when I first said "Music these days is terrible. Music hasn't been good since 1998." Wow. That was a shock.
But the biggest sign of aging that I've shown lately is my use of the word "equity". Applied to myself. Ugh. A university friend recently lamented that, in my college days, I used to seem to have a funk music soundtrack following me around wherever I went. "Yes," I argued, "but soon I will have equity."
Indeed, we are on the very verge of buying a condo. The pragmatism of paying myself instead of paying a landlord has become a siren song. Indeed, that lacks the romance of youth. But it also lacks the poverty of youth.
Don't get me wrong. I still practice Buy Nothing Day, recycle obsessively, put a jar of marbles in the toilet to reduce water use, ride my bike almost everywhere, host a show at a campus radio station, promote alternative energy, drive an old used car, love Homestar Runner, and so on. But how can one justify thinking of the earth's future if one isn't thinking of one's own?
The owner of a company I contract to regularly recently complemented me on how calmly I was handling the tidal wave of work I've experienced lately, which includes volunteering and the various tasks involved with real estate deals.
Perhaps that's the surest sign of aging: an increased aptitude for calmness. And I believe it comes from finally being mature enough to get my ducks in a row.
[top]
|
| Choose a column below: |
| |
15 August, 2007
Summer vacation 2007
|
16 February, 2007
February funk
|
12 January, 2007
What is plain language?
|
5 December, 2006
Writing the LSAT
|
6 November, 2006
Saddam's execution
|
2 October, 2006
Young, scared, and condemned
|
1 September, 2006
Eliminating legalese
|
2 August, 2006
Sexist me
|
27 July, 2006
Regulating Canadian TV Content
|
22 June, 2006
What's a hippie?
|
17 May, 2006
Why have kids?
|
11 April, 2006
"Get Some West", a dream of a radio show
|
9 March, 2006
Religious intolerance and Danish cartoons
|
1 February, 2006
WTF? (On the importance of writing skills)
|
28 December, 2005
If you don't vote, you're an idiot
|
24 November, 2005
On Aging
|
18 November, 2005
Buy Nothing Day
|
22 October, 2005
Halloween brings eerie coincidences
|
8 October, 2005
Autumn's not so bad
|
17 September, 2005
Sticking it to people who forward e-mails
|
13 August, 2005
Premier Klein Warns of Supernatural Terrorism
|
9 July, 2005
A Columnist's Travelogue
|
4 June, 2005
Oppression Cocktail: One Part Religion, One Part Government
|
30 April, 2005
Episode XVI: A New Pope
|
26 March, 2005
Red Lake Massacre: Another American School Shooting
|
19 Febuary, 2005
The Healing Power of the Brain
|
17 January, 2005
A Media Tsunami
|
18 December, 2004
Is Winter Biking Activism?
|
13 November, 2004
The Meaning of Horror
|
9 October, 2004
How to Shoot Yourself in the Foot: A Lesson
|
4 September, 2004
Technology: A Double-edged Pen
|
14 August, 2004
On writing clearly
|
16 July, 2004
Percy Schmeiser vs. Monsanto
|
12 June, 2004
Malcolm Azania
|
15 May, 2004
Learning to Ride a Bike
|
10 April, 2004
Responsible Computing
|
13 March, 2004 The "Low-carb" Fad
|
5 February, 2004
A day at the beach
|
10 January, 2004
Are you a slave to your television?
|
13 December, 2003
Multi-level Marketing
|
15 November, 2003
Hollywood's Anti-Piracy Campaign
|
October, 2003
The Friendly Canadian Prairies
|
September 2003
"How's Married Life Treating You?"
|
23 August, 2003
Eastern Blackouts
|
26 July, 2003
Canada's swell
|
31 May, 2003
Canadian marijuana law
|
3 May, 2003
Canadian Literature and Culture
|
5 April, 2003
Truth in Mass Media
|
8 March, 2003
Careers away from home
|
8 February, 2003
Checking out Vegas
|
11 January, 2003
40-hour bus ride to the desert
|
14 December, 2002
Kyoto accord
|
16 November, 2002
U of A becoming more selective
|
19 October, 2002
Alberta's employment boom
|
21 September, 2002
Thinking about marijuana
|
24 August, 2002
Health care, or Wealth care?
|
27 July, 2002
The uniquely Canadian summer
|
29 June, 2002
Soldiers and freaks
|
1 June, 2002
My puritannical place of birth
|
1 May, 2002
Why activism?
|
6 April, 2002
Child porn or extreme art?
|
2 March, 2002
The Olympics are a farce
|
2 February, 2002
Information Control
|
5 January, 2002
Disintegration of language
|
8 December, 2001
Why do we live so far north?
|
3 November, 2001
Brand name America
|
13 October, 2001
Teachers' Pay
|
1 September, 2001
Consumption: Disease Old and New
|
4 August, 2001
Paying the Global Costs of Automobiles
|
7 July, 2001
Whyte Avenue Riot
|
9 May, 2001
Good fences make good neighbours
|
14 April, 2001
A healthy relationship with parents
|
14 March, 2001
Sheep's clothing, wolves' reputations
|
17 February, 2001
American universities in Canada
|
3 February, 2001
Love just the way you want to
|
6 January, 2001
Alberta's barren future
|
23 December, 2000
What is Christmas, anyway?
|
25 November, 2000
Learning on the job
|
28 October, 2000
Family-oriented community?
|
30 September, 2000
Freedom and happiness
|
2 September, 2000
Consumerism in Bulgaria
|
3 June, 2000
Visiting Ottawa
|
29 April, 2000
School Shootings:
A Year Later
|
8 April, 2000
A love shop in St. Albert
|
18 March, 2000
Why reality TV?
|
19 February, 2000
Raves
|
5 February, 2000
Try listening on Valentine's Day
|
8 January, 2000
The new millennium is for thinking
|
4 December, 1999
The retail Christmas
|
10 November, 1999
Young people and Remembrance Day
|
16 October, 1999
Wayne Gretzky Drive
|
18 September, 1999
High School students protest smoking ban
|
21 August, 1999
Breast Enlargement
|
26 June, 1999
Witchcraft
|
5 June, 1999
School Uniforms
|
30 May, 1999
Corrupt St. Albert RCMP
|
22 May, 1999
Littleton and Taber
school shootings
|
1 May, 1999
Gay Marriage: Less God, more love
|
3 April, 1999
Drunken grad night
|
March, 1999
All-consuming materialism
|
20 February, 1999
What are you so proud of?
|
30 January, 1999
Try a buy-nothing Valentine's Day
|
9 January, 1999
The Real Value of Education
|
December, 1998
New Year's Resolution
|
24 October, 1998
On Faith
|
September, 1998
The Starr Report
|
2 September, 1998
High school hazing crimes
|
1 August, 1998
Brand name clothing
|
15 July, 1998
Smoking is rude
|
17 June, 1998
Sex and Violence
|
20 May, 1998
Hockey Fever
|
22 April, 1998
Religion is not Law
|
11 March, 1998
Gay Bashing
|
18 February, 1998
It's Only Hair
|
17 January, 1998
"Riot" at a St. Albert heavy metal show
|
| |
| [top]
|
|
|
|