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Age Happens

by Philip Yancey

| 20 Comments

CIMG0004 (1)The Yanceys come from good genetic stock, as a recent trip South to celebrate my mother’s 90th birthday reminded me.  Her mother, born in 1898, lived through the entire 20th century, as did Janet’s grandmother, also born in 1898.

At the turn of the millennium we tried to explain this accomplishment to Janet’s “little Nanna,” then 102.  “Grandmother, you were born in 1898, so that’s the 19th century.  You lived through the entire 20th century.  And now you’re in a brand new century, the 21st century.  You’ve lived in three different centuries!”

She was silent for a moment, and I could only imagine the synaptic storm in her brain as she tried to absorb this news.  At last she came out with a response that none of us could have predicted: “Huh.  Seems more like five.”  She then sat down to play a few hymns on the piano.

Living that long gives one a unique vantage point on history.  When Janet’s grandmother died I figured out that she had lived under 20 of the 42 US presidents up to that point.  My own grandmother listened attentively in 1991 when I returned from a trip to Russia and described to her the changes taking place after the fall of communism.  “I remember when those boys took over,” she said, referring to the Bolsheviks of 1917.  “I never thought they would last.”  A teenager during the Russian revolution, she easily outlived Soviet communism.

When I asked my grandmother to name her favorite US president she quickly named Roosevelt.  “That makes sense,” I said.  “He led the nation in World War II, started Social Security…”

“Not that Roosevelt!” she interrupted.  “I’m talking about Teddy.  I went to see him campaigning in 1912.  He was such a handsome young man.”

DSC_0263Longevity is a matter of perspective.  A mayfly lasts barely a day whereas a bristlecone pine tree may survive several millennia.  On the trip for my mother’s birthday, we stopped by an ancient oak called the Angel Tree, estimated to be 400 years old.  When the tree first took root, that part of South Carolina was a wilderness where wolves and cougars prowled; now the region is known more for golf courses and beachfront condominiums.

Age happens, unavoidably, effortlessly.  All you do is get up each day and gradually the years accumulate.  Oliver Wendell Holmes likened the process of aging to a giant dog that gets into a room with you and grows until there is no longer any space to breathe.

As usual, Mark Twain had a trenchant observation: “When I was younger I could remember anything, whether it happened or not; but my faculties are decaying now and soon I shall be so I cannot remember any but the things that never happened.  It is sad to go to pieces like this but we all have to do it.”

Aging brings its own challenges, but it looks better when you consider the alternative.  In honor of all of us who advanced one more day today, here is a final thought worthy of contemplation, from Robert Baker: “As I grow older, I care less and less what people think about me and more and more what God thinks of me.  I expect to be with him much longer than with you.”


Discussion

  1. Mufasa Avatar
    Mufasa

    Mr. Yancey,

    You’ve done good work sir. Keep it up 🙂

    That is all,

    M

  2. Margaret Avatar
    Margaret

    To the quote of Robert Baker – YES!

  3. Vicki Bee Avatar
    Vicki Bee

    Well, I doubt any of them had a “growth” in their brain, as I have, which pretty much guarantees I won’t still be around at 102. Even though my Aunt Rosemary, my biological mother’s sister, is still alive in her 80’s. My biological mother died at 65. My biological father died at 67. Neither was a paragon of health so I have no idea how long I’m destined to live, unless they DON’T find a way to fix the “tumor” in my brain so that it doesn’t burst and fill the brain with blood, thereby precipitating a CVA (a stroke) for emergency reasons that will not fail in its mission to kill me. That’s the main reason I became a vegetarian.

    Quotes explained: I call a growth a tumor and so did the brain surgeon who treats me. My psychiatrist insisted on calling it a growth. Which is fine for him, since it’s not his brain in which said “growth” currently resides.

  4. Doris Serviss Avatar
    Doris Serviss

    Sorry to hear re: your brain tumor, trust you’re still doing well!
    I, too have read most all your books & am currently reading “Vanishing Grace”~~you’re a wonderful author & I enjoy so much hearing a bit of ur back-ground.
    I’m 80 yrs. old, & have a rare muscle disease which is slowly sapping the strength fr. me ~ but, I’m ready to go home to be w. Jesus, so will see u there someday, Philip!

  5. Philip Yancey Avatar
    Philip Yancey

    You write a most encouraging note, Doris, and have a great attitude in facing your own health challenge. I do need to clear up one point though: I don’t have a brain tumor! My overall health is fine, thank you. –Philip

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20 thoughts on “Age Happens”

  1. Well, I doubt any of them had a “growth” in their brain, as I have, which pretty much guarantees I won’t still be around at 102. Even though my Aunt Rosemary, my biological mother’s sister, is still alive in her 80’s. My biological mother died at 65. My biological father died at 67. Neither was a paragon of health so I have no idea how long I’m destined to live, unless they DON’T find a way to fix the “tumor” in my brain so that it doesn’t burst and fill the brain with blood, thereby precipitating a CVA (a stroke) for emergency reasons that will not fail in its mission to kill me. That’s the main reason I became a vegetarian.

    Quotes explained: I call a growth a tumor and so did the brain surgeon who treats me. My psychiatrist insisted on calling it a growth. Which is fine for him, since it’s not his brain in which said “growth” currently resides.

  2. Sorry to hear re: your brain tumor, trust you’re still doing well!
    I, too have read most all your books & am currently reading “Vanishing Grace”~~you’re a wonderful author & I enjoy so much hearing a bit of ur back-ground.
    I’m 80 yrs. old, & have a rare muscle disease which is slowly sapping the strength fr. me ~ but, I’m ready to go home to be w. Jesus, so will see u there someday, Philip!

  3. You write a most encouraging note, Doris, and have a great attitude in facing your own health challenge. I do need to clear up one point though: I don’t have a brain tumor! My overall health is fine, thank you. –Philip

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