Life over at 40? LOL. Perhaps if you're Fat. Perhaps if you're stuck in a marriage of convenience. Perhaps if you're on your third decade of a five decade 9-5er. Boring. Perhaps if you're a Poor. For the rest of us it's going to be glorious.
Life over at 40? LOL. Perhaps if you're Fat. Perhaps if you're stuck in a marriage of convenience. Perhaps if you're on your third decade of a five decade 9-5er. Boring. Perhaps if you're a Poor. For the rest of us it's going to be glorious.
Exactly, I’m not sure if you saw the documentary, but that’s the age when guys lose their virginity! So super stoked for that!
Go Trump! I hear he’s pushing legislation that might get us laid by like 38, or 37 even!
Life over at 40? LOL. Perhaps if you're Fat. Perhaps if you're stuck in a marriage of convenience. Perhaps if you're on your third decade of a five decade 9-5er. Boring. Perhaps if you're a Poor. For the rest of us it's going to be glorious.
Exactly, I’m not sure if you saw the documentary, but that’s the age when guys lose their virginity! So super stoked for that!
Go Trump! I hear he’s pushing legislation that might get us laid by like 38, or 37 even!
His daddy paid for his first lays, and ever since his first construction scam he could paid for his own
Life over at 40? LOL. Perhaps if you're Fat. Perhaps if you're stuck in a marriage of convenience. Perhaps if you're on your third decade of a five decade 9-5er. Boring. Perhaps if you're a Poor. For the rest of us it's going to be glorious.
Now it's 1:50.8 and 31:20? Your BS gets greater by the week now. And you're still not a coach. You've never been a coach. Why don't you make a New Years resolution and stop this sheet? Reset.
This post was edited 9 minutes after it was posted.
I’m 51. Rock hard abs and buns. Hair that is thick and jet black like Ted Danson in the 1980s. Women swoon over me at work. Every day pushing new limits for workouts and dating. Life is bliss beyond 40.
My life has gotten better as I've gotten older. That's not unusual, although a lot of Americans seem to experience some greater stress during their middle years. There are tons of studies and surveys about all of this.
As for physical aging, I don't know. When I was forty, having stayed away from running during most of my thirties, I resumed training, thinking that I could return to sub-2:20 marathon shape within two or three months. It didn't happen. I ended up running 5,000 miles in one year, hoping that I would suddenly start running well. My training was as close to ideal as it had ever been, but my times remained considerably slower than they had been in my early thirties. For several years, I'd go out and run with the abiding belief that I could be as fast as I had been a decade earlier. I don't remember when I finally acknowledged that age matters.
Now, I don't really care about running speed. I have no desire to ever race again, and age-group competition sounds like a horrible complication to an otherwise uncomplicated and satisfying life. I still run, and I often mimic the running form of a great runner I've been thinking about recently. Today, it was Lasse Viren, and it felt great.
Oh, and as for physical aging outside of running, I don't recall feeling terrific when I was thirty. Running always left me tired and injured. I don't miss those days.
Something beautiful happens as we get older... we stop worrying about what other people think of us! We feel free to be ourselves.
Our 20s are stressful. We feel enormous pressure to succeed in school, our careers, and family life. Our 30s are stressful because many of us feel like we failed when we don't meet our lofty goals from our 20s. Or if we achieved our goals, we worry about keeping our gains and begin to realize that achieving our goals doesn't always = happiness.
Seniors are often some of the happiest people in the world despite their poor physical health. Aging can be fun!