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Swimming Across That Great Big River: De Nile (Denial)

By Cynthia Hogg March 30, 2023 Health and Fitness

I started working with “the elderly” while still in high school. Beginning as a candy striper volunteer in a local nursing home, I also volunteered at a nursing home up the hill from my college while working on my degree in Social Work.

My first job after graduation was in a nursing home. While I did not specialize in geriatrics, it just turned out that my entire professional life – as well as volunteering on the side – involved working with that demographic.

And although I always enjoyed working with seniors and felt drawn to them, they always remained “the other.”

Never Saw It Coming

Fast forward 30 or 40 years, and here I am: I am suddenly that “other.” The problem is, I never saw it coming, even when I should have. I think I was so firmly ensconced in my role as the “fresh young thing” helping “old folks,” that I let a strong current of denial carry me along.

It went something like this: I am quite healthy, and if I continue doing the same things I have always done, I should be fine, right? It’s other people, people who don’t take care of themselves, who get old.

Me, get old? I don’t think so!

As a result, I failed to proactively take care of problems that ALL women (and men) face as they age. Some was by way of being naïve and neglectful, some was by outright refusal to follow certain recommendations from my doctor(s).

And My Attitude of Denial Didn’t Help

In 2015, at the age of 60, I fell from the top of a ladder onto a hardwood floor when the ladder buckled under me while I was painting. Although bruised, I didn’t have so much as a hairline fracture anywhere. It made me feel invincible, so when my doctor told me he wanted to do a bone scan because I was at a high risk for osteoporosis (small-boned post-menopausal Caucasian woman), I brushed him off. My bones are just fine, thank you. Osteoporosis is a disease of old people.

Then, during the polar vortex in February 2019, a quick and simple slip on the ice resulted in multiple fractures and revealed serious underlying osteoporosis. Suddenly, I was WAY behind the eight ball, as they say.

I had been swimming in that great big river – De Nile/(Denial) – and found that I was now drowning as one health problem after another piled up (blood clot, hypertension, irregular heart rhythm). Although only 64, I felt like I aged 10 years during the year it took to recover from my fractures.

I had all kinds of doctors telling me to do things I didn’t want to do and others telling me I couldn’t do things I did want to do.

Yes, Prevention Is the Better Way

And some of it could have been prevented or the severity lessened if I had paid attention earlier.

Four years later, I still feel like I am swimming upstream to regain my health. Why, oh why, didn’t I take my calcium and vitamin D, and exercise more? I learned, the hard way, that it’s so much better to prevent a health problem than try to cure it.

As they say, every great journey begins with a single step, and I have taken the first step: I have climbed out of that great big river onto the opposite shore and am no more indulging in denial. I am embracing my aging self, while fighting hard to make up what I lost through my foolishness.

I don’t intend to lose any more time – or bone density! – and have begun to fight as hard to regain and maintain my health as I once fought against the idea of aging.

While I once scoffed at the idea of eating six prunes a day for stronger bones, I now accept there is scientific evidence for it so I never neglect my prune intake. I have switched to drinking almond milk (more calcium than regular milk), improved my diet in other ways, and added new exercises to my daily routine – and stuck with them.

I See Progress

And I’m happy to report some good progress. I have actually been able to reverse some of my osteoporosis (hips, spine) to osteopenia. Still a problem to monitor, but progress nevertheless.

Although I didn’t get smart until I was 64, I’m still only 67 and from what I hear, that’s the new middle age. I intend to be in good enough shape to enjoy it!

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Did you experience any degree of denial as you moved through the aging process? How did it hurt you? What are you doing differently now?

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Bailey

Very nice article. I have always exercised and tried to eat “healthy”, however the last two years were taken up with caring for my husband with Stage 4 bladder cancer. Our eating habits changed, but we tried to eat as healthy as we could. Sadly my husband passed away in October and I am working on getting healthy again – mentally and physically. I am 71 and in pretty good shape overall, but of course could do better.

Marie

Excellent article. This resonates loud and clear!

SUSAN

This article struck a chord.i am 67 and have been working iacross 12 countries as education consulrant in third world countries. Love my job and my life. I have always been active, run 10km daily, tai chi, yoga, and hike. Like you I was pressured into a bone density test and it literally paralysed me with fear. Severe osteoporosis , in fact recommended wearing hip guards 24/7. I have done my research and still undecided about biophosohates, My thoughts are that it is next to impossible to build bone at my age. I went through menopause in my 3Os so its been a long time.

I was interested in your mention of reversing it to some degree in your hips. Would love to hear more.

Theresa Loftman

I could have written this article
🥺

Patricia

This sounds just like me! I turned 60 in 2022 and It hit me like a ton of bricks. I’m still adjusting to the fact that society considers me to be old, me a senior? I’m now retired and trying to figure out where I go from here. I also started having more health issues because, I thought I had time to get serious and lose the weight and eat right…now my bad habits are catching up to me. I have and am making changes now at 61 and looking forward to many more years of a healthy life.

The Author

Cynthia Hogg is a freelance writer in western Michigan who contributes regularly to Sixty and Me and Senior Perspectives magazine. She loves to travel and spend time with her grandchildren, especially combining the two. She is the editor of the newly updated blog www.skipgentravelguru.com.

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