I'm 50 soon, and I can't believe it.
I'm not frightened, or anything, but it is hard to account for the passing of lots of years.
I guess adult life started at University, and I've spent it in full-time employment in education and with my wife of 25+ years have raised two sons I'm proud of.
I'm proud that they have independent ways of thinking. They're not 'alternative', but they take no conventional bullshit if it doesn't suit them, and that's how I wanted it to be.
My friends are mostly semi-pro and pro musicians - the best that my manor in Kent has produced imho - and they are mostly in their 30's. This causes no problems. We just get on because of our interests.
I know when I look at myself sniffing drawings of high-heeled shoes in my cabin that I look my age. Sometimes I look a lot younger, and then in the next shot I'm a 50 year old.
I think life has been great since my mid 30's. That is the typical time a man discovers cigars, I have read. I think adolescence in a boarding school could have ballsed me up good and proper, but I now find I laugh at it.
And, in fact, laughter is my default. If I get too serious, I suffer the glums, so I try to keep busy and happy.
I see my Dad in that way you think won't happen to you. I see him in my features when I shave. When my 16 year old comes into the living room, I see myself in the boarding school that nearly ballsed me up.
My dreams - unfulfilled - would be to spend time in Australia, and to spend time also in the south of France overlooking the Mediterranean. In a garden in the shade with a supply of beautiful cigars.
It's funny to think that retirement is not that far away now, and teaching gets harder every year. Not because of classroom management issues, but because of the utter crap that is dropped on schools by the government. Everything is made to be harder. I'm driving a party of schoolkids 15 miles to Dover Cruise Terminal for a Work Experience jamboree next month and I have more than 50 Health and Safety forms to fill out. It's ludicrous - but that reflects what the 'accountability' of teaching has become.
I'm in good physical health. I am a bit overweight. I feel no bad effects from smoking cigars. No chest wheezes. I feel the good things, the uplift, that people on here testify to through the Havana leaf.
I'm too old to change profession. I've been promoted within the place I work recently. I have a good salary for a teacher because I have time on the clock and responsibility cash.
I don't want to be overburdened by the day job to the extent that it would stop me having a wonderfully fulfilled musical life with my band. We are seven brothers in the band, really. We look out for each other beyond the gigs. I get excitement and pleasure from music, even at 49. The thing is it has taken a long journey to be in a band where I'm so happy. There has always been at least one waster, one goon, one tone-deaf member, one nutter who thought he/she was a Hollywood starlet, before now in other bands.
That's all gone now. We can all play well and love it. It feels great.
That's some of my DNA.
How do other people feel about their lot at their age?
Are you essentially happy?
I'm not frightened, or anything, but it is hard to account for the passing of lots of years.
I guess adult life started at University, and I've spent it in full-time employment in education and with my wife of 25+ years have raised two sons I'm proud of.
I'm proud that they have independent ways of thinking. They're not 'alternative', but they take no conventional bullshit if it doesn't suit them, and that's how I wanted it to be.
My friends are mostly semi-pro and pro musicians - the best that my manor in Kent has produced imho - and they are mostly in their 30's. This causes no problems. We just get on because of our interests.
I know when I look at myself sniffing drawings of high-heeled shoes in my cabin that I look my age. Sometimes I look a lot younger, and then in the next shot I'm a 50 year old.
I think life has been great since my mid 30's. That is the typical time a man discovers cigars, I have read. I think adolescence in a boarding school could have ballsed me up good and proper, but I now find I laugh at it.
And, in fact, laughter is my default. If I get too serious, I suffer the glums, so I try to keep busy and happy.
I see my Dad in that way you think won't happen to you. I see him in my features when I shave. When my 16 year old comes into the living room, I see myself in the boarding school that nearly ballsed me up.
My dreams - unfulfilled - would be to spend time in Australia, and to spend time also in the south of France overlooking the Mediterranean. In a garden in the shade with a supply of beautiful cigars.
It's funny to think that retirement is not that far away now, and teaching gets harder every year. Not because of classroom management issues, but because of the utter crap that is dropped on schools by the government. Everything is made to be harder. I'm driving a party of schoolkids 15 miles to Dover Cruise Terminal for a Work Experience jamboree next month and I have more than 50 Health and Safety forms to fill out. It's ludicrous - but that reflects what the 'accountability' of teaching has become.
I'm in good physical health. I am a bit overweight. I feel no bad effects from smoking cigars. No chest wheezes. I feel the good things, the uplift, that people on here testify to through the Havana leaf.
I'm too old to change profession. I've been promoted within the place I work recently. I have a good salary for a teacher because I have time on the clock and responsibility cash.
I don't want to be overburdened by the day job to the extent that it would stop me having a wonderfully fulfilled musical life with my band. We are seven brothers in the band, really. We look out for each other beyond the gigs. I get excitement and pleasure from music, even at 49. The thing is it has taken a long journey to be in a band where I'm so happy. There has always been at least one waster, one goon, one tone-deaf member, one nutter who thought he/she was a Hollywood starlet, before now in other bands.
That's all gone now. We can all play well and love it. It feels great.
That's some of my DNA.
How do other people feel about their lot at their age?
Are you essentially happy?
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