βby Leslie Fisher
[Note from Leslie: This is a life story I wrote and shared at my uncleβs 75th birthday shindig last year.]
Life really does have a sense of humor. We start out as tiny, adorable beings who canβt do anything for ourselves, and somehow, we end up older, wiser, and able to identify every bone in our body by sound alone. βThat pop? Left knee. That crack? Lower back. That noise when I stand up? Atmosphere escaping.β
Somewhere in between, we lived an entire novelβs worth of stories. Letβs take a gentle, humorous stroll back through them.
The Baby Years β Headliners of Our Own Show
We were basically soft dinner rolls with legs. We didnβt talk, walk, or contribute anything except bodily fluids and cuteness. Our main skill was producing laundry. People clapped when we burped. We peaked early.
Childhood β Dirt Was Our Vitamin
We lived outdoors. Sunburned, barefoot, and sticky. Bikes with wobbly wheels, trees that seemed climbable until halfway up, and drinking water from the garden hose like it was a fine vintage. Parents didnβt text us to come home. They yelled out the door, and we came running. It was freedom, and it was wonderful.
The Teenage Years β Feelings Everywhere
Oh, the drama. Every song felt like it was written about our life. Every crush was the love of the century. Every disappointment was tragic. We perfected the art of door-slamming and deep sighs. We believed we knew everything. Looking back, we can only say, βBless our hearts.β
Early Adulthood β A Sudden Plot Twist
Life said, βTime to pay your own bills.β We learned groceries cost money, cars make noises we donβt want to talk about, and coffee is survival. We called our parents to ask questions like, βIs this chicken supposed to be gray?β We built our lives slowly, sometimes clumsily, but with heart.
Marriage / Partnership β The Long-Term Team Project
At some point, we looked at someone and said, βYes. You. Letβs navigate all this together.β We learned that love looks a lot like teamwork. Sharing blankets. Compromising on thermostat settings. Negotiating whose family gets which holiday. We discovered snoring patterns, favorite chairs, and how to apologize even when weβre pretty sure weβre right. Love wasnβt fairy tales. It was choosing each other every ordinary Tuesday.
Family Life β The Busy, Beautiful, Exhausting Years
Then came the children. Sweet, loud, sticky children. We became chefs, chauffeurs, shoe-finders, counselors, and bedtime negotiators. We said things we never imagined, like: βStop licking the dog,β and βNo, the cat does not need a bath,β and βPlease donβt put that in your nose.β Our homes were full, our hearts were full, and our laundry baskets were overflowing. It was chaos, and it was beautiful.
Middle Age β The Era of Practical Wisdom (and Advil)
One day, standing up became a three-step process. We discovered the joy of supportive shoes, good chairs, early bedtimes, and quiet evenings. But we also gained peace. We knew what mattered. We learned how to let go. We found laughter easier and anger harder to justify. We softened in the best ways.
The Season We Are In Now β The Warm, Rich, Still-Going Chapter
And here we are. With stories. Real stories. Ones that still make us laugh, and some that make us pause and breathe a little deeper. Weβve lived through things we didnβt know we could survive. Weβve loved people fiercely. Weβve said goodbye. Weβve learned to carry joy and grief in the same heart. We may move slower now, stretch before we bend, and take stairs like negotiations, but we are still here. Still growing. Still living. Still laughing.
Closing Reflection
We didnβt live a perfect life. We lived a real one. Messy, funny, surprising, painful, joyful, unforgettable. And now weβve earned the right to slow down. To savor. To laugh about everything that brought us here. The journey isnβt over. Itβs simply softer now. Sweeter. Deeper. And thank goodness, we are finally wise enough to appreciate it.