By a man who has come to the rather alarming conclusion that aging is less of a gentle evolution and more of a series of increasingly expensive inconveniences.

As you get older, you don’t just change—you are, quite unceremoniously, replaced. Bit by bit. Like an old car that still runs, but now whistles, rattles, and occasionally refuses to cooperate unless bribed with better fuel and a quiet evening.
Take going out, for example.
When I was in my teens, “going out” meant one thing: leaving the house with absolutely no plan whatsoever and considering that, in itself, a triumph of human existence. My friends and I would decide to go somewhere—anywhere. The destination was irrelevant. The activity was optional. The only rule was that it shouldn’t be illegal… or at least not obviously illegal. Grey areas, we found, were where the fun lived.
This is how you end up having a picnic at the end of a runway in an air force base.
And I must say, there is nothing quite like eating a sandwich while a fighter jet screams overhead doing Mach goodness gracious, rearranging your internal organs with the sheer force of its engines. Sensible people would run. We, however, laughed. Because at that age, you believe you are immortal, invincible, and frankly more intelligent than anyone in uniform.
We were not.
It didn’t end well. We were chased by air force police, collected like stray shopping carts, handed back to our parents, and then promptly introduced to a level of discipline that could only be described as… memorable.
In your 20s, the madness doesn’t stop—it simply gets a haircut and pretends to be respectable.
You still chase things, but now it’s love. Your first great romance. A dramatic, all-consuming affair that feels like destiny and lasts roughly five days before collapsing under the weight of reality and poor decision-making.
You also discover the fine art of academic panic. There is nothing quite like realizing at 2 a.m. that you have an exam—or worse, a paper—that should have been done yesterday. So you sit there, fueled by instant noodles and regret, producing what you sincerely hope looks like intelligence but is, in fact, desperation in paragraph form.
There are road trips that shouldn’t have been attempted, jobs you absolutely weren’t qualified for, and nights out that begin with confidence and end with someone asking, “How did we even get here?” while a bird watches from a lamppost, quietly judging your life choices.
Then come your 30s.
You still go out with your friends, of course. But now—brace yourself—you drive separately.
This is because everyone has somewhere else to be, someone else to answer to, or a lower tolerance for nonsense. The moment things become even slightly dull, people start checking their watches like they’re late for a meeting with the king.
“Right,” someone says, standing up abruptly. “Early morning tomorrow.”
No one asks why. No one questions it. They simply nod, as if this is now the law.
You talk about mortgages. About work. About that odd noise your car makes. Someone inevitably mentions back pain. And instead of mocking them, you lean in and say, “Where exactly?”
A squirrel darts past. No one chases it. This is how you know youth is gone.
In your 40s, the idea of going out becomes something of a theoretical concept.
You’re busy. Endlessly busy. Work demands your time. The kids demand your time. The house demands your time, usually in the form of a DIY project that started as “just a quick fix” and has now consumed three weekends, two arguments, and a trip to the hardware store that cost more than your first car.
You’re invited out and your immediate response is, “I’d love to, but…”
And there it is. The beginning of the end. The “but” carries everything—responsibility, exhaustion, and the quiet realization that staying home with a cup of tea is, in fact, the superior option.
Somewhere outside, a bird sings. You close the window because it’s letting in a draft.
By your 50s, something quite fascinating happens.
You become… honest.
Not polite-honest. Not diplomatic-honest. Proper, unfiltered, “I will not tolerate this nonsense anymore” honest.
You start noticing things. Entitled people. Bad manners. The general decline of standards. You look around and think, “This country… these streets… even these pebbles were better when I was younger.”
And yet—here’s the brilliant contradiction—you also insist that you had it tougher.
“Oh, we didn’t have all this,” you say, waving vaguely at modern conveniences. “We had to figure things out ourselves.”
You walked uphill both ways, in the rain, while being chased by consequences and poor decisions. And somehow, this made everything both harder and better.
Go figure that one out.
You complain about prices, about noise, about people who stand in the middle of doorways as if they’ve just discovered architecture. You develop strong opinions about things you previously didn’t even notice—like the correct way to load a dishwasher.
A small bird lands nearby. You nod at it, as if you’ve both seen things.
And then… your 60s.
I haven’t quite arrived there yet, but I imagine it’s where things become wonderfully selective.
You no longer pretend. You go where you want, when you want, and if something is dull, you don’t make an excuse—you simply leave. Or better yet, you don’t go at all.
Your stories become better. Longer, too. Slightly exaggerated, but in a way that improves them. That picnic by the runway? By now, the jet was closer, louder, possibly upside down.
You laugh more, but at different things. Quieter things. The absurdity of it all.
Because here’s the truth of it: it was harder before. It really was. Less convenience, more chaos, more chances to get into trouble—and we took them, gladly.
And yet it was fun.
Wild, ridiculous, occasionally painful, often ill-advised fun.
These days? Everything is easier. Smoother. Safer.
And somehow… a bit quieter.
Not worse, mind you. Just different.
Like a man who once sat at the end of a runway, laughing as a jet engine tried to rearrange his soul—and now sits at home, listening to the faint chirping of birds outside, thinking…
“Maybe I’ll just stay in tonight.”
Thanks for dropping by my little corner of the world. If the story gave you a chuckle or made you pause and think, a like would be mighty kind. And if you’re feeling adventurous, well, hitting that subscribe button is like pulling up a chair and staying a while—always room for one more.
I subscribe back, by the way. It’s my way of saying, “Welcome to the club—snacks are in the back, goodtimes up front!”
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