Monday, 4 March 2013
Mental Accuity
The real "boogieman" of aging, for me, is the potential that my body will outlive my mind. As I remember my youth, I had an incredible memory. Even in my 50's, I was able to recreate the minutes of a day-long meeting from memory when the notes were accidentally destroyed.
Now, it's pretty usual to have the episodes of "what did I come into this room for?" And "going to the noun cupboard and finding it empty." I find the latter most disturbing as I'm a hard-core authors' name-dropper. I could always back up any argument by citing an expert on the topic. Now, I'll be about to sum up the thesis of a book I've recently read and I find it's like a fading dream - the harder I reach for it, the more rapidly it disappears.
It doesn't help that I'm continually being told that this is normal. My friends seem to be able to laugh it off. I only pretend.
It has a slight upside. Or maybe it's a bigger upside than I think. I have to stay silent in conversation until I'm really sure about what I want to say. And I have to listen a lot harder.
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