Photo by: Caccamo

Life's Too Short Not To...

Photo by: Caccamo

I never told a soul. Far as I know, no one knows. Till now.

Back in my college days – some three decades ago – I decided to cut classes one morning and head for the beach instead of the books. It was one of those bright, balmy, eighty-degree days for which San Diego is famous. Sapphire-blue, sun-soaked. Postcard-perfect. Especially for playing hooky.

I didn’t plan on bailing out of Western Civilization and Physical Anthropology 101. But I found myself chugging down the I-8 in the exact opposite direction of Mr. Asmov’s lecture hall. To put this in context, it was one of two days I “played hooky” in my entire scholastic career. I’m more of the “nose-to-the-grindstone” type. Steady. Responsible. Reliable. As impetuous and impulsive as a gimpy snail in a molasses factory.

So why did I suddenly decide to do something as utterly uncharacteristic as spend a gorgeous sunny southern California day at Point Loma, a peninsular seaside community separating San Diego Bay from the Pacific? I’m not entirely sure. Maybe I was tired of being “responsible and reliable.” Maybe I was in a rut and wanted to stir some spontaneity into my schedule. Maybe I wanted to “carpe diem.” Seize the day. Instead of the other way around.

It was a day worth seizing – wading, beachcombing, sand castle-building, tide-pooling. Soaking up some rays. Lunching under swaying palms. Sucking in huge chunks of salt-spiced sea spray. (Okay, I also finished two essays, a book report, studied for exams and updated my Day Planner to a year out. Nobody’s perfect.)

Know what I discovered on that hooky day at Point Loma? Playing hooky is fun. Delicious. I don’t remember diddly from most of my lecture notes or Day Planner, but I remember that “hooky day” like it was yesterday. There was something about seizing the day that was… soul-stretching. Refreshing. Recharging. Energizing. Effervescent.

I loved it.

I celebrate my fiftieth birthday in a couple days. It feels weird. Like I should fee… different somehow. Older. Wiser. “Mature.” Whatever that means. On one hand I feel I’m way too young to be that old. I mean, my mom was fifty! On the other, it seems my half-century status is supposed to result in pearls of wisdom and sage sagacity. Kind of like a modern Oracle of Delphi.

Truth is, I’ve never gotten the hang of that oracle thing. Most of what I’ve learned and gleaned in my five decades isn’t all that earth-shattering: Put God first. Honor your parents. Love your spouse. Hug your kids. Work hard. Serve. Eat chocolate. They say “you’re only as old as you feel,” which probably puts me somewhere in the Sesame Street demographic. Also, “age is all in your head.” Or hair. Or hips. Or… joints?

But like I was saying, “the big 5-0” feels weird. Like I’m suddenly fair game for the other half of that famous “Titus 2” equation. Well. I’m not exactly turning cartwheels over that “older woman” bit. There are still plenty of other “olders” out there, thank you very much. And if they’re real “olders,” I’ll pass.

Maybe you know the type. They rehearse their daily litany of moans and groans, aches and pains with the regularity of day following night. They’ve kept records of all the people who’ve wronged them over the years. They’re gonna get even one of these days. Or they spend so much time resting on their laurels and looking back at “the good ‘ole days” that “carpe diem” would give them whiplash.

These are the folks who take life and faith dead serious and you better too, bub, if you know what’s good for you. Wait a minute. This phenomenon isn’t unique to the Geritol crowd, is it? Some things transcend age:

  • Comparing kids, outfits, income and accessories so the other person always gets short shrift
  • Mammoth-sized me-ism
  • Excising “I’m sorry” from vocabularies like it’s malignant
  • Crammed closets compensating for shallow souls
  • External busyness hiding internal barrenness

There’s a sure-fire antidote to the above. It goes like this: carpe diem. Seize the day. Reach out. Get real. Laugh. Apologize. Live your life rather than a knock-off version of someone else’s. Hold hands. Play hooky once in a while. Grab your kids and scarf down that second banana split, guilt-free. (If you can’t find your kids or don’t have any, borrow some. Jesus did.)

While I’m hoping the cost of cake candles doesn’t break the bank this year, I have some regrets from the past 18, 262 days. Some shoulda-woulda-couldas. But I’ve never regretted that hooky day. Don’t tell anyone, but I sometimes wish I’d taken more.

A few things I can tell you from my perch here in the middle-age rafters is that raspberry white chocolate cheesecake tastes better when it’s shared. Lucy and Ethel in the bon-bon factory deserve an Emmy. Toothpaste can’t be squeezed back into the tube. It’s amazing how much less I know at age 50 than I did at 18. Family, faith and friends matter most. Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and forever. And while sapphire-skied, sun-soaked days are perfect for playing hooky, carpe diem is for every day. Life’s too short not to.

Kristine Lowder has authored ten books and worked in public relations and marketing, strategic plans and market analysis, as a staff writer and editor for a private university, a Children’s Ministries Director, and in a variety of volunteer capacities. She and her husband live in the Pacific Northwest with their four sons and one incurably amiable yellow Lab, Eve.

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40 Comments

Thanks for the beautiful article. We do need to seize the day...more. As a mom, we get so caught up in the routine of things and forget. Thanks for helping us all to remember!

I live my life every day like it's my last. I tell my friends and family I love them when they leave the house or I get off the phone. I eat some chocolate, hug my kids, my dog, go for walks, have my wine, enjoy a hot cup of coffee every morning. I've traveled, been to Europe, gone on weekend trips with girlfriends (too many to count), enjoyed nice dinners out with friends, buy myself jewelry and flowers (never waiting for someone to buy them for me), love my friends, enjoy my family...

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Great article. Carpe diem: Seize the day! Last April I resigned my corporate job and worked a summer job so after eight years I could visit family. Life is too short to wait on important things. Family is a blessing. I also went back to college and will be entering my junior year this fall. I now live on a shoe string but am full-filling a dream...

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Wonderful Article! As I get ready to turn 49 this year, I really needed to read your beautifularticle. Age has always just been a number...better with time and all of that! When it is your own age creeping up, you really have to STOP and tell yourself that life is too precious to worry about a number and your article reminds us to live it to the fullest!
Feeling Blessed on the edge of Fifty!

people are so busy doing life, that they forget to live there life.
Wake up, you only get 1 shot at this beautifull thing called life.
Smile, and say hello to a stranger today.

Kristine, I had a similar experience when I turned 50 (just two short years ago!) and I had to stop and think about my life for a second. I got some good advice from a friend who has been where we are and more. She is 80 years young! She told me that this can be the best time in your life! I believe her because of the shining example she is to all of the ladies in her Sunday School class, me included...

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I will be 42 this summer and having a bit of a hard time with this. I have 3 beautiful young children, a hard working husband and a great house. Why then do I feel like life is treating me bad? I guess because I have been fighting everyday to keep my house clean, the beds made, the dishes done, the floor vaccuumed ... when my 5 yr...

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Thank you for your refreshing words. I am close to 49, and now I am seeing that life shouldn't be so serious. I am trying to have more fun and worry less; life is too short to be so tight up. Relax, Love, Live, Laugh, Dance, and eat good foods; and most important find some ones to share with. : )

GOD BLESS YOU!!! You are wise beyond your years!!
I am understanding more each day what it means to balance life and all its beautiful details.Loving Life at 71 & 1/2 ... Rejoicing because THIS is the day the Lord has made!! His word says " Rejoice, don't worry about anything, instead, pray about everything, thanking Him in advance for his answers and we will have the peace that passes all understanding!!!
thanks, Gloria

Life is to short! I like that topic. Be happy of what your doing so life will be meaningful. Always think that life should be loved not to be wasted.

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