
Last year when I was going through a particularly tough time, Robin Whitlock, a college friend and former Episcopal priest recommended this book. The author writes in the intoduction, "This book is about the enterprise of embracing the blessings of this time and overcoming the burdens of it. That is the spiritual task of later life."
Whether or not you've lost a spouse, the second half of life brings many changes and adjustments. For many, it is a time of relflection, to take stock of what is behind us and what lies ahead. Children leave the nest. Aunts, uncles, parents die leaving no buffer between us and death.
Six years ago, I wrote in a never published post:
We have passed halftime and entered what may be the last quarter of our lives, but I choose to see this as a beginning–not an ending, an adventure–not a calamity. As a child, I was told I had an old soul in a young body; now I aim to have a young soul in an old body. To age successfully remember the 3 As: Acceptance, Adaptation, Appreciation.
Joan Chittister tackles all of these topics that I only touched on and tells us in depth how we can age successfully. Yes, this applies to everyone, because we all are aging, though not all aged.
After I read the book, I did some research on the author and learned that Joan Chittister is a Benedictine nun! Yet, her book is not at all preachy. The wisdom therein will benefit anyone who is searching for meaning in later life.
Thanks, Robin, for introducing me to Joan who was voted the most inspirational woman alive in a 2007 survey.
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