Seventy. Seriously?: An Unfiltered Survival Guide

Let’s address the elephant in the room. Not the one with wrinkles and questionable knees — that’s me. I mean the sheer, unmitigated gall of turning 70. One minute you’re debating whether 40 is “the new 30,” and the next, you’re being handed AARP discounts like participation trophies for surviving gravity. Here are my utterly dignified, scientifically unverified observations on becoming a septuagenarian:

  1. Your Body Throws a Daily Surprise Party (And You’re Not Invited): Wake up. What hurts today? Is it the hip you never knew you had? The knuckle you didn’t sprain? Your earlobe? It’s a delightful game of “Musical Aches”. You stand up, and something cracks with the enthusiasm of a walnut in a vise. Is it your spine? Your resolve? The space-time continuum? Who knows? It’s the soundtrack of your life now. Background music: Crunchy Symphony in G Major.
  2. You’ve Achieved Peak Invisibility: Remember worrying about being judged? Honey, nobody sees you anymore. Walk into a busy store. Sales associates glance through you like you’re made of slightly opaque vapor. Teens bump into you without apology, mistaking you for a particularly weathered lamppost. The upside? You can mutter brutally honest commentary under your breath with impunity. “That haircut looks like a startled poodle!” No one hears. No one cares. It’s freedom wrapped in societal irrelevance.
  3. Naps Are No Longer Laziness; They’re Mandatory Life Support: Remember when naps were a guilty pleasure? Now, they’re a sacred ritual, a biological imperative. Sitting still for more than twenty minutes? Your eyelids get heavy. Reading a book? Snoozeville. Watching the news? Instant coma (arguably a survival mechanism). You don’t take naps; naps take you. Resistance is futile, and frankly, unwise.
  4. Your Relationship With Technology is… Complicated: You mastered the VCR. You sort of understood the DVD player. Smartphones? Smart TVs? Voice-activated toasters? It’s like trying to speak Klingon to a particularly impatient badger. “Hey Siri, call my niece!” Siri: “Playing Mongolian throat singing.” You accidentally mute the TV for three days and wonder why the world got so quiet. Every software update feels like a personal attack. You yearn for the simplicity of a dial phone. Ah, the satisfying Click-Click-Click of rotary dialing… pure bliss.
  5. You Develop Superpowers (Mostly Inconvenient Ones):
    • Super Sniffer: You can detect a single, slightly-off pea in the refrigerator from two rooms away. Perfume counters are now biohazard zones.
    • Ear/Nose Hair Cultivation: Seriously, where does it COME FROM? Overnight, your body decides to grow miniature Chia Pets. It’s bewildering.
    • Time Warp: Conversations frequently start with, “Back in 1973…” and end three hours later with everyone under 40 glazed over. You find it fascinating. They find it… educational? Maybe?
    • Selective Memory: Can’t remember why you walked into the kitchen. Vividly recall the exact shade of your third-grade teacher’s cardigan (mustard yellow, itchy wool).
  6. The Liberation is Real: Here’s the secret no one tells you: 70 is FREEDOM. You stop caring about:
    • Unsolicited fashion advice? Pfft.
    • Keeping up with the Joneses? Their lawn looks stressful.
    • Pretending to like terrible modern music? Nope.
    • Holding in gas in polite company? Debatable, but significantly less effort is made.
    • Awkward small talk? “Nice weather.” “Is it? I didn’t notice. Pass the Oreos.”
  7. You Become Deeply Suspicious of New Trends: Kale? Just repackaged lettuce, and probably a scam. TikTok? Looks like Epilepsy bait. “Influencers”? Explain their influence on my Oreo consumption. Zero? Thought so. You view anything described as “disruptive” or “a game-changer” with the weary skepticism of someone who’s seen games changed. And then changed back. And then changed into something ridiculous.
  8. Mortality Becomes Your Slightly Morbid Pen Pal: You don’t actually dwell, per se. But you do start reading the obituaries first in the morning. You note acquaintances dropping off the perch with unsettling regularity. You start sentences with, “If I make it to Christmas…”. It’s not depression; it’s realism with a dash of dark humor. You become weirdly invested in the longevity of Betty White (RIP, my Queen) as if her survival somehow boosted your own odds.

The Verdict? Seventy is… well, it’s something. It’s finding your reading glasses perched on top of your head. It’s groaning when you bend down and then groaning again when you stand up. It’s realizing that “young at heart” mostly means you still find fart jokes funny. It’s bewildering, occasionally frustrating, often hilarious, and surprisingly liberating.

Is it the “new 50”? Absolutely not. Fifty had knees. But it’s my seven-zero. I’ve earned every laugh line, every gray hair (even the ones in the ears and nose), and every glorious, uninterrupted nap. I’m a walking, talking (sometimes napping) testament to resilience, questionable life choices, and the enduring power of elasticated waistbands.

So, here’s to 70! May our naps be long, our aches be manageable, and may we never, ever have to figure out what the Metaverse actually is. Pass the Oreos, please and thank you. Oh, and maybe that industrial-strength ibuprofen.

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About Ol' Big Jim

Jim L Wright has been a storekeeper, an embalmer, a hospital orderly, and a pathology medical coder, and through it all, a teller of tall tales. Many of his stories, like his first book, New Yesterdays, are set in his hometown of Piedmont, Alabama. For seven years he lived in the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world, Amman, Jordan where he spent his time trying to visit every one of the thousands of Ammani coffee shops and scribbling in his ever-present notebook. These days he and his husband, Zeek, live in a cozy little house in Leeds, Alabama. He’s still scribbling in his notebooks when he isn’t gardening or refinishing a lovely bit of furniture. His book, New Yesterdays, can be found at Amazon US, Amazon UK, Smashwords, and Barnes and Noble.
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5 Responses to Seventy. Seriously?: An Unfiltered Survival Guide

  1. Unknown's avatar Anonymous says:

    Epic stuff, Jim. I have two-and-a-half years to go before I join you. Assuming you’re still around, that is 😉

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Lifetime Chicago's avatar Lifetime Chicago says:

    I know….I am turning 70 in November

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Yes, indeed, Jim.

    Liked by 1 person

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