Hey, girls! No, hi, I'm over here -- that woman who looks nice enough, if frazzled and distracted, but as if she wouldn't have anything to contribute to whatever super-important boyfriend-related thing you're talking about right now.
I'm the lady on the train, or behind you in line at the Starbucks, who is struggling with a gym bag, an oversize purse with unpaid bills popping out, and an Elmo plush toy, with unidentifiable white crud on her coat. I'm attractive enough, but I look as if I could use a good night's sleep and an eyebrow wax.
That would be if you thought to look, of course, which you wouldn't, because really, why would you? When I was your age (what an old person thing to say!) I wouldn't have, either. No hard feelings.
When I was you -- a young and fabulous center-stage type -- I swathed my (thinner, pre-partum) body in a DVF wrap dress, tossed a toothbrush and a clean pair of undies (never knew if I'd be at his place or mine) in my designer handbag, threw back some coffee and went off to work. Wherever I woke up, I'd twist up my sex-mussed hair, splash some water on my face, dab on some lipstick and do it all over again. I never imagined what being 40 would feel like, because it never occurred to me that I'd ever be 40. I didn't think I wouldn't be, mind you. It was just too boring to enter my brain, and it seemed like forever from now.
That was me in my 20s. Now I'm 43 and somebody's mother. Weird, huh? I don't exactly know how it happened, either, except that I was living my life and rocking my career and falling in love and having a great time of it -- oh, and I looked good -- and while I wasn't paying attention, I became (cue the soap opera realization music) middle-aged.
I'm not a fan of that term, mainly because it implies that you have exactly as long left to live as you already have lived, and since none of us knows when we're going to die (go ahead -- imagine that your life is halfway over -- depressing, right?), I don't think about it that way. Instead, I call myself a Formerly, because I'm Formerly what I was, but not quite sure yet what I am. I'm not young, but neither am I old. I'm an adult tween, caught in all the awkwardness that would imply. Imagine stepping in a wad of gum, picking your foot up to take a step and feeling a bit of pullback. That's how I feel much of the time. And there are a lot of me: I'm part of a legion of women who were recently shaken by the realization that they're no longer young, and are trying to figure out what comes next. We vent and joke and crack each other up on my site, Formerly Hot.
A lot of what we post about is the things we miss about being you. For me, it's mainly my looks. I look fine, but now that my once high-flying boobs have settled in, my face is creased with the strain of all the tremendously deep thoughts I've thought over the years and, well, let's just say my ass is not suited to those sweatpants you're all wearing with the writing on the backside. I used to feel being catcalled on the street was demeaning and threatening to my sense of self; now, I'm kind of jazzed on the rare occasions it occurs. Some of the other women miss being relatively free of obligations, having the energy to dance all night, and the idea that on any given day, anything could happen that could radically change our lives. When I'm feeling peeved at my husband or tired of the tedium of caring for kids, I particularly miss that last one.
But a midlife crisis? Nah. What I'm going through doesn't feel like a crisis. The penniless drummer ex-boyfriend showing up and crying at my window when I was 26 -- because he only realized he couldn't live without me when he had to live without me -- felt like much more of a crisis. I had a crisis a month back then, and I usually deflected the pain and craziness by working long hours, staying out all night with my friends, and finding a new penniless drummer to date.
What I'm going through now is more of a subtle transition, and maybe that's why my state of affairs doesn't seem to be inspiring screenwriters (a recent post on DoubleX bemoaned the fact that nowhere in the movies -- or on TV -- do you see Gen X women's mid-life struggles). Unless, of course, you count the cougar-crazed scribes on Courteney Cox's payroll -- that's one version of a woman having her midlife manic moment, but it's not mine, nor is it anyone's I know.
Instead, the realization that I was a Formerly came in dribs and drabs. One day, someone called me "ma'am" in IKEA. If he hadn't been so sweet I would have hit him with the ALÄNG table lamp I was carrying. Then I started to feel like the latest trends (ones which I had worn in high school the first time around) looked like costumes on me, not clothes, and I realized I had to dial it down. The next thing I knew, I could actually have a coherent conversation about mortgage rates, and not completely glaze over. Then I had children, and if anything will suck the hot right out of you, it's parenthood. All of these things, combined with the subtle changes in my looks -- and the way people treated me differently because of it -- added up to one thing: I'm not young anymore.
But here's a secret truth that few people will ever tell you: It's actually kind of cool over here on the other side of young. In fact, the things I thought were essential to a happy life, now that they're gone, turn out not to have been so central after all. Sure, I used to be hot -- not supermodel hot, by any stretch, but let in anywhere for free, men following me off of public transportation hot -- and now I'm, well, a perfectly nice-looking working mother of two in her 40s, which doesn't quite have the same ring to it.

I used to be hit on left and right by people, 99 percent of whom I'd never consider kissing. It was wildly flattering, even as I pretended to be annoyed by it, but in the end, whoopdie sh**: Now the only people who want to kiss me are ones I actually know well enough to kiss. No, I can't rock skinny jeans or wear sky-high painful shoes that make it hard to walk in or stay out all night in, but the trade off is that I don't have to rock skinny jeans or wear shy-high painful shoes or stay out all night. I get to have fun in the ways that I've learned over the years are fun for me -- hanging out with the wise and hilarious girlfriends I never have enough time for, eating amazing food without thinking (or worrying that) I'm fat, or just losing myself in a bookstore for hours, instead of generic club X or bar Y. Then I go home to people who love me, instead of to grumpy roommates who drink my soy milk without asking.
I'm not putting down being your age -- not at all. Enjoy the hell out of it. I sure did, even as I was limping home in the stupid shoes, drunk and spinning with the potential of it all. It was an electrifying time, and I flirted with the third rail. Now things feel more consistently good, as opposed to the bi-polar extremes that add up to youthful fabulousness. For all the things you lose when you hit midlife -- and there is definitely some stuff that sucks about it, those monkey lines on either side of your mouth chief among them -- there are waves of wonderful that you only find out about when you get here.
I could tell you, say, what a rush it is knowing I'm good at my work, rather than working for that pat on the head or that promotion, as I used to. I could also tell you that your friendships -- intense though they can be now -- will become even more satisfying in a few years, because we need less, and so can appreciate what people have to offer, even if it's not perfect. I could tell you that while you will be further from the physical ideal (lemme guess -- you think you're fat, even though you're gorgeous) you will give less of a crap about it, and you will have better sex, to boot. You may know what you're doing in bed, and how to please your partner, but after years of practice, you know better how to please yourself. It's less of a performance and more of an experience.
I could tell you all that, but you probably wouldn't get it, because it's hard to fathom that you will ever not be in your 20s. I couldn't fathom it either, well into my 30s! If some 43-year-old lady had said any of the above to me, on the train or in line at the Starbucks, I probably would have thought she was insane. I would have nodded politely and thought to myself, Wow, getting older is weird -- glad I don't have to think about that now.
And you don't. But when you do, think about this: You don't need to worry about a thing.
Stephanie Dolgoff is the author of "My Formerly Hot Life: Dispatches from Just the Other Side of Young" (Ballantine, August 17). Visit her on Formerly Hot.












Comments:
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Monday 17 May
By sabrina19585
Eli, I will try to not respond in kind and give you a paragraph full of your own attitude, but a short attention span isn't an excuse for shallow ignorance. She ISN'T complaining, and she IS acknowledging how good her life has been. She's also trying to tell you 20-somethings that if you're fortunate, when you fall from the lofty height of your current universe, you'll grow out of your obsessive superficial existence, age with grace, become more comfortable with who you are and grateful for what you have. And I'll include a cliche to make it easier for you to understand. You become older, wiser and happier. But clearly you're nowhere near ready to grow into a mature young woman. To even begin to do that, you have to get over yourself first.
Monday 17 May
By Audrey
If you would have read the whole article then you would have noticed that she says she is NOT complaining and that she loves her life now, and that there are somethings that she misses from being in her 20's.
Monday 17 May
By Kevin
So your bragging about your short attention span?
Monday 17 May
By wendy
I agree Eli
Monday 17 May
By RainaFecari6368
Your response is quite appropriate for the topic, as you are the 20 something year old that we were 20 years ago, which the author has admitted to being bored by such topics as aging, ." It was just too boring to enter my brain, and it seemed like forever from now.".....so, I will bore all of you 20 somethings with MY input on the topic....it didn't happen over night, however, the incident that I hold responsible for intervening my "ignorance", complete cluelessness of a metamorphosis in process occurred at our local grocery store. I was reaching for the cereal boxes on the top shelf in an over-crowded aisle and being 5'3", I naturally turned to the shoppers in the vicinity and typically wouldn't even need to ask (as there were always enough hero's readily available to rescue the boxes out of reach). Now, it was like I was invisible and somehow knew that I wasn't. I couldn't even catch eye contact to approach or gesture to the surrounding male shoppers. Now that I look back, I honestly feel sorry for that disconcerned, naive young lady that I was. I am relieved of the dramatic 20 something years, though without those years, being 40 something would be alot more painful! Oh, and YES, the sex DOES get better, lol!!
Saturday 22 May
By Opihi
Here's a warning for eli .... and everyone on this mesage board. Whether or not you like this article ....( I did ... and I'm an oldster who has been a journalist for over thirty years ......) ... you shoud be aware that all your comments on this and any other AOL board are being saved and listed under your "profile".
You probably didn't even know about that profile. It was automatically generated when you first wrote a comment on ANY AOL message board and were asked for your email address .... for "verification".
Apparently "verification" means " Set up Unauthorized Profile with Archives of all Comments" in AOL cyber-speak.
Oh yes. LemonDrop is picked up by Google Search If you used your real name .... you have just found out you are PUBLIC ...
Be afraid .... be very afraid.
Thursday 13 May
By bryseana
I'm from TN and I've been called "ma'am" since I was a kid. Even women older than I am call me "ma'am". But now that I'm 30 and I hear some 18 year old salesperson call me that I get paranoid. I know it's supposed to be respectful, but it sort of makes me feel sad. When you're in your teens and 20s you feel like you're life is just beginning. I don't want to be settled in or slowing down.
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Friday 14 May
By Teresa
I was never into skinny jeans or sky high heels as slim jeans were more flattering with the straight rather than tapered line and never a heel more than three inches. It's wedged platform shoes that I love more than anything when it comes to high heels.
As for how you get addressed I was first called 'Madam' at the age of sixteen when I entered a store for not giving my shopping bag into customer services to be held there until I left the store. Later that year on the bus I overheard a small child remark to her mother about my nail varnish using the word 'lady'. Barely out of childhood myself it made me feel quite old and grown up at the same time. Yet on the continent I went from jeune fille to Mademoiselle at the age when you go from Mademoiselle to Madam though sometimes Madam.
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Friday 14 May
By Fyfe
great article.. i have those same fuzzy memories of drinking too much, crying too much, spending too much and dieting too much all through my 20's. If there wasn't some huge saga ripping to my very SOUL then i wasn't embracing life. (or some similar nonsense) Midway through the 30's things are much calmer. Happier. More content. And yeah, my jeans don't fit quite the way they used to, but man, i can't wait to find out what i'm like at 40.
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Thursday 01 July
By Sheena
I appreciate this article and I appreciate what you just said! Im 25 and I look forward to my 30s! Im tired of worrying so much and not getting things accomplished because of my worrying.
Monday 17 May
By crystal
Me too Fyfe! I'm now 40 and my twenties were full of all that drama. Working way long hours and then going out all night with my friensds. I even had the "penniless drunk drummer-boyfriend at my window" in the middle of the night just like the writer of the article. Now I'm happily married with kids, volunteer for charities and the schools....And very happy with my calm, structured life. Who knew? My jeans do not fit the way they used to either, but I enjoy food more also!
Monday 17 May
By telula
Just had to comment on this article...made me experience warm and fuzzies and gut wrenching remorse simultaneously... and then I had to DRAG my 40-something friends down with me for the ride.. Woohoo!! Boy it was fun when we were HOT!!! Never felt so alive as to when we were spending too much, crying too much, drinking too much or laughing too much... even now in our 40s we search for something that still makes us feel totally alive.. although later in life, what can give us that rush changes signifcantly... Thank God for that eh? How many women wouldn't pay huge sums of cash to be 20-something again, but retaining the wisdom they gained along the way to 40-something?
Friday 14 May
By i. b. wright
pictures! we need more pictures to see what you're talking about!
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Friday 14 May
By Theresa
As a 27 year old Northerner, I hate being called ma'am. But, miss is quite fine.
Reply
Friday 14 May
By Mikala
The problem with the whole ma'm/miss/lady saga is that no one teaches men what to respectfully call a female when they do not know their name. Sometimes they need our attention for professional needs and believe it or not, many guys are respectful. Opinions?
Reply
Friday 14 May
By Mikala
The problem with the whole ma'm/miss/lady saga is that no one teaches men what to respectfully call a female when they do not know their name. Sometimes they need our attention for professional needs and believe it or not, many guys are respectful. Opinions?
Reply
Friday 14 May
By Greg
As a man I have experienced much of what she has in the article. The young girls dont look at me and the women my age want the young guys. When I was in my 20's and 30's I would have women coming out of the wood-works to date me. Today I dont even resemble the Adonis that I once was. It seems like it happened over night. I woke up and was over weight and treated like a creapy old dude. In my head I feel like I still have the swagger but no matter what bait I use, I cant get a nibble. Getting old sucks!!
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Monday 17 May
By VK
It's funny how our physical being doesn't quite keep up with our youthful minds! But that's all a part of moving on. It's all about being happy with where you are and accepting it. Now, the overweight part can be taken care of. Start working out, and eating better. And a bit of a makeover with the hair and clothes and you may be the older dude, but you'll be looking better than everyone else your age! Here's to all of the middle-age hotties!
Monday 17 May
By david
you are right on,my aunt told me long ago that there is no such thing as golden yrs she called them rusted yrs. we live in a youth oreiented soceity. just like the movie logans run there is no sant uary after 30
Monday 17 May
By cyclgrrl
Sounds like you need to hit the gym and lose some weight (note - hitting the gym won't do it alone, you need to lay off the carbs and beer). Women will be attracted to almost anything (short, tall, hair, no-hair, buff. slim, poor, rich) except an overweight guy. Good luck.