And, All I Did Was Fall.

Last week the surgeon told me that I’d see him every three months for this year, and every six months for year two, and that it would take a full year to get back to normal walking. That was a hard reality to digest. My heart sank in that moment. Will this ever end? This week I’m up to four minutes, and ten seconds per treadmill session, and I’m walking slowly. The latter is by choice. I decided to go for endurance rather than the speed, as it felt right for my body; it is wrong for my head.
Enneagram type eight people connect with their bodies more than the non-body types. I listen intently as my feet move on the treadmill, and I’m listening for smooth, even steps. As I do the mostly simple exercises, I listen, and count. Some sessions are better than other times doing the same repetitive thing. I must do it. It is challenging me to be enthused about something that, in some cases, I struggle to do. Keeping myself balanced is hard. Now, I’m being told that I have to do things that I can’t do without holding on to something. I’m scared of falling.
This break has caused a sobering feeling to come over me. My walking is more intentional. I’m more aware that I can slip and fall. I don’t want to have it happen again. I’m securing the home so that if I fall, people can get in with a secured lock system. I’m thinking of apps that enable certain information for me and about me, or maybe an iWatch that does more than show the time. Carrying the phone everywhere is difficult. It’s a reminder of what I’m feeling as I work through this process.
One of the developmental lessons that young adults learn—and here I’m speaking of adolescents and those in their early to mid-twenties— is that they are not indestructible. This lesson can be learned in any number of ways, and have varying outcomes for the young person learning the lesson. The developmental process of learning all of this is that you come to a realization that you can die.
As an older adult, the lesson becomes that you can die, and you’d better think about how to alter your life in a responsible manner. I’ve sobered up once again to a new life-altering reality. It is scary; it is annoying; it is something that challenged the ego, and we need to rebuild things. This isn’t something that is histrionic behavior: it is life telling us that it is confronting us in new ways.
As I rolled around the rehab center waiting for the leg to heal, I felt like I was wasting time, and that my carefully crafted schedule had been completely messed up and rearranged. The fall and break did the rearranging automatically. While I did walk out of the rehab center on my own, I still needed some assistance. Almost three weeks later, I returned the rolling walker and set out on a new phase of walking on my own. I’m home, unless a friend with a car comes by to take me places.
What I’ve modified is my sitting time. I also have to remember that failing to walk will cause me to walk with an awkward gait, and it all hooks into the recovery process. This growing-older-but-not-old process is different. Old is in the eighty to ninety range. There are books about all of this, and most of us don’t read them; we should read them when we’re young. When we’re young many of us don’t think about growing old, even if we have older people in our lives. We prepare for retirement but we don’t prepare for the aftermath of retirement.
This journey is one of the body and the soul. It forces me to be alert to who I am, and what can happen with every step I take. Unlike a recovering alcoholic who has done some type of recovery work and is aware of not taking a drink or using their drug of choice, there is no permanent community for growing older.
Our friendships and others we know can change on a daily basis. My mother had a friend give her a wall hanging that said something to the effect of “My friends are all dead and I suspect they think I didn’t make it to heaven.”
I have an ex-therapist who mid-career decided to specialize in geriatric patients. She was thinking ahead of her time, and I wish I had asked her what she’d learned. Once again, I pause, and I’m sobered by the fragility of life, and what I don’t know.
Somewhere I read that we should play while we’re young and do the work that we’d love to do when we’re old. The only problem with this is the aging process. I believe that society needs to teach children to take their time growing up, and to make life decisions that work for the person and not for having a lifestyle that looks good on the outside. I know people who would rather work with their hands, and who have a master’s or PhD-level of education. We need more plumbers, gardeners, welders, and more people in the trades. The trades are being abandoned.
Once again, I must stop, and I must think about my values and society’s values. It seems I’m thinking about my values a great deal more now. All I did was… fall.























