Why I Love Being Old


I never thought I’d say it, but getting older is like unlocking the final level of a video game where you gain infinite power-ups and stop caring about pointless side quests.

I’ve become a superhero of selective not-giving-a-damn, and honestly? It’s glorious.

Take a couple of days ago, for example.

I was on my way to take out the garbage when I saw a man arguing with a woman because she’d left the window open in winter. He was gesturing wildly like he’d just discovered fire, ranting about her “lack of common sense.”

Younger me might have stood there, quietly cringing. Old me? I shuffled closer in my slippery house shoes and said, “Sir, if you spent this much energy improving your mental health, you wouldn’t need to gaslight women about open windows. Maybe she needed to air out your trash vibes!”

His jaw dropped faster than my neighbor’s Wi-Fi signal, and I shuffled off, leaving him speechless. Life’s too short to bother with crazy people .

That’s the beauty of my age. Nonsense? Snip. Toxic people? Bye. Dumb trends? Not today. If it doesn’t spark joy, honesty, or humor, it’s out faster than I can forget where I put my keys.

Speaking of joy, I’ve learned how to savor the little things.

This morning, I drank my coffee while watching YouTube videos.

One reminded me of my old coworkers, those professional squabblers who’d argue about who got the easy assignments and whose backside to kiss for a promotion.

I chuckled, knowing I’d never have to sit through another soul-sucking team meeting again.

Not caring what people think is wildly liberating.

Last week, I wore my floral pajama pants to the bakery. Did anyone care? Nope. Would I have cared if they did? Absolutely not. I used to stress over being “professional,” “smart,” a “good wife,” and an “amazing nurse.”

And for what? To get nods of approval from strangers in ties and hear my husband ask, “Is there more food?”

Not anymore.

But here’s the thing: ignoring nonsense doesn’t mean ignoring what matters.

I still call my relatives, even if they tell the same half-hour stories on repeat.

I try new things, like underwater swimming, even though a seal having an existential crisis looks better than me, LOL.

And I tell my friends I love them more often because you never know how much pain they might be hiding, knowing that you’re suffering too.

Looking back, I think my mom understood this.

She used to laugh when the vacuum stopped mid-cleaning and say, “Guess it’s snack time!” I’d roll my eyes and mutter, “Just finish the chore!”

But now I see her wisdom. Chores will wait; snacks—and moments of joy—won’t.

Oh, and my hair? I’ve gone full buzzcut.

Not because I’m trendy, but because some dirty old man at work kept “admiring” my hair while wearing the same pair of pee-stained white pants every day.

Let’s just say, I took away his excuse for creepy compliments. No hair, no harassment.


So here’s my advice: Age isn’t about wrinkles or gray hairs; it’s about realizing what’s worth your energy.

Call out the nonsense when it matters, and let the rest drift away like autumn leaves in the wind. And always, boundaries up, my house is MY CASTEL.

Snack from your fridge, not mine! LOL

Now, if you’ll excuse me, there’s an YT beautiful man to watch on and a glass of mulled Manischewitz calling my name.

Pro tip: Boil it until the alcohol evaporates, add cinnamon, dried lemon, orange, and a dash of pepper. It’s the only way I drink wine these days. Cheers!

My mom never loved the pressure cooker

My mom never loved the pressure cooker. While most moms embraced it in the communist country where time to cook was short, food was scarce, and families were large, my mom always said NO. Even though food was good, and meals were always on time, she refused to use it.

Why? Because more than seeking an easier time during those hard days, everything she did was about us. My mom’s anxiety was always high, though she never talked about it. But that anxiety kept us safe, as best as she could.

Today, I refused to trust my gut. From morning until evening, I said NO to it. NO, I do not want to listen to you! When your mind and gut tell you something different from others, and you already know that you process things differently, you say NO!

NO to my gut today!

Because I’m too tired to deal with everything in one single day.

What would my mom do? I wish you were here, mom, to tell me what to do…and to NOT trust my guts, BUT just live!

I refused a private room arrangement because of my gut!

NO private room in a socialist country—NEVER EVER! Irina taught me that!

When I called my friends, my call rings echo from a closed apartment. It’s not a coincidence or craziness. What happened before is happening again! My gut was right when I discovered it.

Anything else is people doing their jobs for their people, and me watching them.

People are the same! Life is the same! Freedom is the same! For ALL!

What would mom do? How do you convince someone, whose priorities are different from their own kids, that pressure cooking is dangerous for everyone? The time you gain today, you can lose it ALL tomorrow, as dangerous as it can be!

My dad bought a sophisticated pressure cooker for my mom, proud of his “state class achievement.” My mom took that “achievement,” and it became the grain holder for our ducks, geese, and chickens, and the pot for their water. She transformed the “brand name” pressure cooker gift into happiness for our animals and garden.

That’s what my mom taught me.

If you don’t have time, DO NOT COOK! Cook with time and LOVE! Meals are for soul life and health. And never use a pressure cooker as sophisticated as it could be!

It’s better not to cook at all, then! LOL. Eat out!

At the Filipino corner store, a man was selling cheap jeans from a bag. I smiled. People bought them. It’s a culture—the culture of poverty! I lived it in socialism!

Pressure cookers are part of the culture of poverty, where people hurry to gain control over an uncontrollable situation, driven by poorness!

Breathe with me and stay grounded.

My mom always kept her hands on the oven door handle for 5 seconds before starting cooking. To rest. To settle. After that, the meals would follow.

Today, I didn’t trust my gut at all! But I trusted MY MOM!

Moms protect their babies and teach them through life experiences and stories.

Now, you know that your gut is right. Don’t ignore it!

My Uncle -THE Spy

My uncle – THE SPY!

I was less than 6 years old when I met my uncle – “the spy.” It is not a joke at all. My uncle was a communist spy, one of the best communist spies. The photograph! My father was so afraid of him that we met him just a couple of times in my life, and always at the most critical moments. I wished to talk more with my spy uncle before he died, but it wasn’t meant to be.

Photo by Alex Azabache on Pexels.com

Let’s name him Петушок because it was his name, associated with a wine name. By the way, why are all spies drinkers? Easy to network, isn’t it?

My uncle had big eyeglasses with black trims. Since then, spies for me have had black eyeglasses trims, lol. So wrong! Only a couple of them had, lol!

But what made him so special was the way he talked with anyone. Calm, few words, and intelligent.

By the way, do you know that there are so many similarities between a spy and a gangster mobster? For it, a well-trained spy could act like a mobster.

He was a big smoker and a big coffee drinker. Turkish coffee always. And he had a passion for photography. Spy photos. With all of his cameras.

I even remember how a manual light for cameras looks like.

THE SPIES listen when others talk! The ordinary citizen will not! Because we are too focus on working for basic needs and too stupid. Intelligent people don’t do hard physical work on a daily basis.

You do it to pay rent, or you do it like mental “suicide”, in a country that appreciates stupidity in people, craziness, and obedience!

“YOU ARE NOT HERE TO THINK! We think for you! You are here TO OBEY! Welcome to COMMUNISM!”

But back to my uncle the spy!

He never told me about his work, never. But one day, the last day when I met him, he told me, “Do you know what I worked before? You MUST BE FREE, EVERY SINGLE DAY OF YOUR LIFE!”

I understood then that he was never free! And never will be! To be a spy is NEVER FREEDOM! Wherever you will be!

I looked at him and asked him to help me get hired! And he did!

But when a spy helps you get hired, you will enter a network of spies, even if you are not one! When you are young, it doesn’t matter.

With one exception: WHEN YOU WANT TO BE FREE!

Everything that a spy touches loses freedom!

For that, never stay close to a spy, ask a spy for help, or help a spy!

Otherwise, you become an ASSET! Or the spy will become YOUR ASSET!

And it is wrong, however you try to explain it!

Петушок – I remember when he gave me one of his cigarettes to smoke and drink together a Turkish coffee, made by my aunty.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

And I wished he were alive to ask him THE SECRET!

How and where could WE be alive, free, and happy when WE met SO MANY?

Maybe the coffee addiction is from him!

Photo by Veli Can on Pexels.com

And the passion for photography too!

But definitely, I DO NOT WANT TO BE A SPY!

People, life, and freedom are much more beautiful!