Senior Connections Senior Connections Mar 2019 | Page 6
Body parts age at different rates
Curmudgeon’s
Corner
IVAN RACONTEUR • EDITOR
You won’t read this in any of the medical journals,
but here is a tip from the curmudgeon that may help to
explain some things we all experience if we live long
enough.
The problem with getting older is that various parts
of our body don’t all age at the same rate.
This observation occurred to me while I was resting
between bouts of agony as I tried to straighten up the
other day.
I had been wondering what I had done to deserve
such misfortune. I thought back to algebra class, where
the instructor told us you could solve any problem by
plugging the data into the correct formula.
The equation that I came up with was: throwing
bags of solar salt around with a cavalier attitude on
Monday = a demolished lower back on Wednesday.
That was when I realized the parts of our bodies
don’t age at the same rate.
When I was a young man, I moved a lot of freight. I
am familiar with the correct way to lift things, using
good mechanics and lifting with the legs rather than
the back.
I know these things, but I didn’t do any of that stuff
Monday. I was in a hurry, so I just grabbed the bags
and tossed them into the mobile command vehicle,
and when I got back to the bachelor pad, I grabbed
them again, took them to the utility room, and dumped
them in the hopper.
When I say I know the correct way to lift, I don’t
mean to suggest I have always done it that way. I cer-
tainly didn’t on Monday. The difference – and this
is an important difference – is that one can get away
with things in one’s twenties that one cannot get away
with in one’s fi fties.
That is how I know the parts of our bodies age at
different rates. In my mind, I am still a young man
capable of anything.
It is a perversity of nature that, when we are young,
not only do we have the energy and enthusiasm to do
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whatever comes to mind, but we are physically able to
do so with no serious consequences.
My head may still be young, but my back defi nitely
isn’t.
As a result, when I start casually throwing 40-pound
bags of salt around without paying attention to proper
lifting techniques, there are consequences, and they
are serious.
I suppose that is why young people tend to feel in-
vincible. In many cases, they can do whatever they
want without repercussions.
There is a statute of limitations, however.
Our bodies, though tolerant, have limits. At some
point they must say to themselves, “OK, we’ve giv-
en you several decades worth of second chances, but
since you apparently aren’t getting the message, we’re
going to give you some discomfort to help you remem-
ber you aren’t a kid anymore.”
The next time we go out and do something stupid,
our bodies snap into action and we end up like I did on
Wednesday, bent like a paper clip, with sharp knives
jabbing me in the back every time I tried to stand up
straight, causing muscle spasms of epic proportions.
The same applies if we try to eat (or drink) the way
we did in the halcyon days of our youth.
It might seem like a good idea at the time, but even-
tually, our stomach will unleash a plague of dyspep-
sia, giving us an impression of having swallowed a
sackful of bobcats, and reminding us we have used up
all our warnings.
The head is still young, but the stomach has aged,
and not very gracefully, as a result of the abuse it has
taken over the years.
I suppose this difference in the way the parts of our
bodies age is probably a good thing.
We need our heads to feel young and optimistic.
If our heads felt as run down as the rest of our bod-
ies sometimes do, we might never get out of bed in the
morning.
On the other hand, if the other parts of our bodies
didn’t age more quickly, and kick up a fuss when we
push too hard, we might continue to carry on the way
we did when we were young, engaging if risky, if not
fl at out dangerous, behavior.
I suppose the pain we feel is a mechanism of self
preservation. It is nature’s way of keeping us in line.
If we tried to go on forever burning the candle at
both ends as well as in the middle, our luck would
eventually run out.
Who knows? Maybe these little reminders from my
body will eventually make me smarter, so I don’t do
stupid things like throwing bags of salt around care-
lessly.
If my head was both young and wise, there is no
telling what I might accomplish.
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