A few years ago the word "Ma'am" was very rarely directed at me. Then something shifted. People started using it more, I stopped getting carded, and my students stopped assuming I knew what a Wiz Khalifa was. Then it hit me. Holy hell, I'm middle aged!
The past decade has flown by so quickly, that I sometimes still write 2008 on my checks. Yes, that's right, I'm five years behind. Yet, here I stand. It really is 2013, I really do own a house which I share with a husband and, soon to be, two children! My children. When did I become somebody's mother? I keep finding white hairs, the weight doesn't come off as easy as it used to, and I really do need to use the facial creams those bitchy twenty-somethings with flawless skin hawk in the commercials. And yes, youngsters now address me as "ma'am."
The problem is that I don't feel like a grownup. Most of the time I don't know what the hell I'm doing. I still need to call my mom for laundry advice. I've never balanced a check book in my life. I still find myself giggling, "That's what she said," in my head throughout episodes of Downton Abbey.
So I think what old people say about being young at heart is probably true. Maybe nobody ever feels like a grownup.
All bag boys, drive-thru attendants, theater ushers, and children trying to sell me cookies, take note: On the outside, I may be a thirty-two-year-old pregnant lady toting a toddler while wearing clogs and a coat from LL Bean. Yet, do not let my ill-fitting jeans and Toyota Corolla fool you. On the inside, I am still a fabulous twenty-five, and you should treat me the same way as you'd treat one of those young ladies sporting Uggs and a lack of legitimate pants.
But yes, I would like to buy all the cookies, and I would like you to carry my groceries to the car, young man.
HA! Just wait until your youngest child writes about feeling "old"! Geesh.
ReplyDeleteMy fav blogger Mimi Thorisson @ Manger recently wrote, "I certainly have a little girl in me still, and an old granny. We all get along fine." Love that!
Ha! Sorry, Mom.
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