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Stop Hating Yourself: The Joys of Getting Older – life beyond therapy

Joys of growing old

It seems like an epidemic: we’re all becoming older and feeling that we’re becoming more-and-more invisible. I get a lot of emails from mid-life gay men (and a few women) saying some version of: “I am physically aging much faster than I’d hoped (wrinkles, love handles, receding hairline, expanding belly). Who’s going to want me now?” Popular culture calls this a “midlife crisis”, but does it have to be a crisis?

Midlife crises shake up our lives for better and for worse, but – surprisingly – the biggest mistake is not having one at all. Amidlife crisis is a period of a time of intense growth and dramatic life changes that are exciting and terrifying. The “crisis” usually occurs between our late 30’s and early 50’s. How do you know you’re having a midlife crisis? It’s not only about how your looks change; more importantly, it’s about realizing that your values have changed. You realize that the values that have guided you for so many years no longer work. Something’s gotta give!

Most midlife crises are triggered by introspection, events like a death or a relationship ending, unhappiness with physical aging and/or money or career concerns. For many of us, physical aging hits us – hard -about this time. As one client told me, “What will I do when I’m not young and cute any more?” Unlike celebrities and movie stars, most normal people visibly age. More importantly, we psychologically age. This is also known as becoming “wiser”, and it’s a good thing. Wisdom, however, has a way of pulling the rug out from under our youthful illusions (“I’m going to be rich and famous.” or “Once I find my soul mate, everything will be perfect”.) Few of us manage to manifest all the dreams of our 20’s and 30’s, and when we do, the money or the success or the partner rarely measures up to our idealistic standards.

As enlightened LGBTers, most of us have looked at our own racism and homophobia, but let’s look at a more subtle form of discrimination and self-hatred: ageism. Straight and gay media lovingly promote the high-priced anti-aging products of their advertisers. They are unlikely to encourage us to love ourselves just as we are. Instead, we are brainwashed to think we are barely acceptable unless we hide or eliminate our gray hair, receding hairlines, love handles and wrinkled skin. Happy, secure LGBTers won’t buy overpriced anti-aging products; but scared and desperate people will…and do.

How can we escape the self-hatred of ageism? First off, be willing to identify old parts of yourself that you’ve suppressed. Those needs and desires can be very important for us as we pour the ”foundation” for the second half of our life. Ask yourself: what do I really care about? What do I want to spend my energy on? We are a generation of LGBTers who (in general) are better educated, healthier and more affluent than our forefathers/mothers. We may live for another 40 or 50 years. But, as one of my 40-something clients recently asked me, “What am I gonna do with all that time?”

I experienced my own midlife crisis when I was 41, a long-term relationship ended and I found myself unhappy in my job and newly single. While it was a time of great potential, it was as scary as hell. As a result of this midlife “crisis”, I found a good therapist, quit my job, dated a lot, and went back to college. It was quite an upheaval (I moved from the East Coast to the West Coast with no job, no man and few friends) but I doubt I would have changed my life so dramatically if I wasn’t “forced” to.

Some of us, in midlife, go through a period of reckless behavior. If we’re in a monogamous relationship we may have affairs or even end a long-term relationship. We may find ourselves drinking more, taking more recreational drugs, shopping and spending money we really don’t have and/or charging expensive vacations that will take us years to pay for. All these behaviors are ways of acting out and avoiding reality. They’re detours off the path. We can take them, but sooner or later, we have to face the music: we’re getting older and our lives have to change. How are we going to handle this?

Instead of acting out like some overaged teenager – kicking and screaming into your 40’s and 50’s – I suggest that you use this time to make your life even better. Take more healthy risks: try things that make you uncomfortable, like learning a new sport, going to social gatherings and starting conversations (rather than waiting for people to come to you), volunteering or even going back to school to switch careers.

At times like these, lean on your friends and family. These folks can be your rock. As you begin to change your life, you need them more than ever. Ask them for support, call them when you get scared, and hang with them when you need some comfort. It’s okay to be scared, but don’t wallow in self-pity. When you ask “Who’s going to want me now?” the answer needs to be: “I do”. If you don’t want to be with yourself, who else would want to be with you? Mid-life is the perfect time to start to please yourself by finding out what’s missing from your life (self-esteem, excitement, joy, spontaneity, fulfilling sex) and taking steps to have it.

If we are lucky, we get to be older. Because of AIDS, previous generations of our brothers and sisters didn’t make it to midlife, so let’s be grateful we’re still alive and use our 30’s, 40’s and 50’s to learn from past mistakes and set the course for our future: a future based on more than unwrinkled skin…a future based on wisdom and self-acceptance.

The advice contained in this article is for informational purposes only. Always seek the advice of your physician, or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of Content found on a Website.


life beyond therapy |Born in Northern Ohio (the oldest of four children), Michael Kimmel grew up in a small town of two thousand sassy farmers. He maintains a private psychotherapy practice and offer workshops for the Southern Californian LGBT community. Michael can be reached at www.lifebeyondtherapy.com

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  • egutopia44

    same for me. at 41 i lost my partner(he died) had nervous breakdown spent too much and slept around. now at 44 i realize life is about changes and striving for happiness.so i will keep on living and thank GOD everyday.

  • Tim

    It’s interesting to find an article like this on a site that promotes youthism by their use of “featured members” who are voted on by their popularity. I’m am 60 years old now, had my crisis at 40. The article has been a wake up call for me. I’m finding it hard to find and keep friends because of the fear that seems to run my life at times. My mother used to say “this too shall pass” and I will survive. God bless everyone. Tim

  • Kevin

    Great to read remarks from/about those over 40 experiencing “ageism”. I’ll be 65 but have a 20 something who found me! Hard to keep up with but what fun trying!!! He works hard at two different jobs everyday but still finds time for me.

  • David

    Hello!
    It´s been a pleasure to read this article, even when I am 19 and this looks so far from me now. I`ve also enjoyed the comments about different vital experiences people have written. I don´t think I can say I have “suffered” one of these crisis yet, but I know it will come sooner or later, just like death or birth, and it´s nice to learn from older people who has lived more life than me by now.
    I hope I haven´t sounded too mawkish, and sorry for my bad English!

  • Elzier

    It’s our clothes man! I’m 56 and started wearing knit sweaters, dress shirts, a neck tie, brighter colors. Young guys smile at me and romance has happened to me. It’s possible. I’m not the bar type, ever. I go where men are sober. I’d rather have sex with a sober senior, then a drunk whatever. My choice in men has changed also.

  • manotin

    I am 67 and living in a nursing home. Depression (Agorophobia) hit me hard in my late 40′s, followed by Anal cancer.

    15 years later, I am still here. If I have a motto in life, I guess it would be there is no beginning, no ending, only change. Stay in the flow.

  • Ron Pair

    Wow this really hit home for me. At 46 I started drinking more, having affairs and got into prescriptions and ended a ten year relationship and relocated to savannah. The grass is not greener on the other side.

  • CONRADO

    I’M GAY, 59 YEARS OLD AND NEGATIVE. SINGLE !
    I WANT TO ADD. . .BECAUSE OF AIDS THE ROLE MODELS OF OLDER GAY MEN NOW ARE FEWER THAN WHEN I WAS IN MY 20′S AND 30′S.
    I BELEIVE IT HAS MADE AN INPACT ON THE YOUNGER GAY COMMUNITY TODAY AND IT MAKES IT MORE DIFFICULT TO DEAL WITH AGINGAY FOR THEM.
    ITS AN AWARENESS THAT WE ALL GET TO.
    I’VE NEVER FELT BETTER AND MORE SECURE OF WHO I AM. LOVE IT !
    THANK YOU !
    CONRADO
    BTW IN SPANISH CULTURE ITS CALLED
    “THE THIRD AGE”

  • ken

    this is a hard one to swallow…in light of the gay culture that celebrates youth…its the gay bars that cater to the young hot guys..its the magazine that protray ..gayness as young, buff, and in shape. i dont know how many times I have been called ‘an old troll’ for just going into a dance bar here in our city.
    i find the community not too tolerant of the older guys looking for fun

  • Gary Dee

    My partner and I were together for 37 years, and when he passed away, this year, I pretty much resigned myself to being one of those older gays, a shadow in the community. NOT!!! As it turns out, one of the friends I’d made, on one of the social sites, has turned out to be more than a friend, over time, and we’re both seriously thinking wedding bells. One of the nicest things I’ve found about growing older is that you stop looking at the surface appearances and get more interested in really getting to know the person. Beautiful young people are an accident of Nature, but beautiful older people are a work of art, both inside and out.

  • TheMadPen

    What an insightful article – I’m 61 and just started going through some of the trials we put ourselves through. There is an organization call Golden Rainbow that is just wonderful in helping us get change our thinking – Thoughts are things too

    Phil

  • Guy

    My mid-life crisis at 39 was awesome. I came out, left my wife and daughter, quit my job and closed my business and took a job that required me to move half-way across the US– from NYC to souther Illinois. My forties were my most adventurous years; up to and including quitting a tenured faculty position to move to San Francisco at age 48.

    But the one that happened at 71 was (and still isn’t) quite so awesome. I lost a life partner, a job, a business and most of my savings and had to move back to my birth-town. I have a few family members to talk to, I am much more socially aggressive than ever, go to the gym regularly, am going to school to learn a new career, am trying to live within my means. It’s hard for me to accept it when people tell me that I am doing so well. I still feel that I would like to be rescued. It’s almost a year, and the first snow fell today. Your article helped me to see the beauty in that. Thanks

  • Jay

    Makes lots of sense. I’m 54. Made it though the AIDS crisis although I don’t know how that happened. This year was diagnoised with cancer. What a battle… the Chemo is brutal. Aged so much. I have alot of support from friends. Thank God for my “sisters” and one of my Ex’s. Can’t work. Too yong to retire although I have 27 years at the company. Can’t get disability considered curable. What a life!!

  • Joseph

    I have always said there are two kinds of people in the world. Those who wait for things to happen…And those who make things happen. I am 57 years old and I have never been one to wait. I now have a new relationship which is the first long term relationship of my life. I looked for years for someone like this and I found him on the other side of the world. I also have always loved myself and I am very happy in my own company… even after everyone else abandoned me when the money was gone. I have always been happy and consider myself lucky to always have a glass that is half full and never half empty.

  • ntsoco1

    All I have to say is this was great to read. I am going through what you went through at 41. I end my LTR, I come back to the midwest with no money,friends,job. I am still struggling. And I get to speak to a therapist for a few more sessions. But I keep getting caught up on guys over the internet who keep putting promises out there then rip them out. I have to take more stock in myself. So send me back a note if you can. Thanks

    • Ron Pair

      We are in the same boat. I also ended a ten year LTR. I am sorry I did that now he has moved on. I relocated to Savannah with no job or family. I have made a few friends but have not come out to them. I want to tell them but scared of rejection. I need to step up and be a man. If you want to chat my email is Flrpair1@aol.

    • Elzier

      Internet dating works superficially, and for me that was it. Sort of like pics on the wall. I had to see the man and find out if he was what his pic shows, but I had to listen to him to find out if he is honest enough. Not perfect, just plain honest. I prefer ordinary men, not a cavelier show off. Clothing is important. Not expensive, but has he at least been to the laundry. Cleanliness shows self respect.

    • deum

      cdeum2@aol.com, please write.

  • Ken

    Thanks for a thoughtful and helpful piece on aging and ageism. And most of all, thanks for printing a picture of a handsome middle age man — something so rarely seen in the gay press it’s both sad and ridiculous. Oh, by the way, I’m 53.
    Thanks, Ken.

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