Tag: Carolyn Leigh

  • Keeping the Old at Bay

    And I knew all of my life
    That someday it would end
    Get up and go outside
    Don’t let the old man in
    Many moons I have lived
    My body’s weathered and worn
    Ask yourself how would you be
    If you didn’t know the day you were born
    Try to love on your wife
    And stay close to your friends
    Toast each sundown with wine
    Don’t let the old man in
    — Toby Keith, Don’t Let the Old Man In

    I haven’t been a skating exhibition in years. Why would I? I didn’t know any active figure skaters, or at least I didn’t know I knew any active figure skaters. It turns out I did know one, and so we went to watch her skate last night. What I saw was women and men of all ages skating in synchronized acts of skill and grace. No Olympic-style jumps at this event, just large groups of people gliding across the ice not hitting each other. I was likely the person in the arena with the least knowledge of the sport and found it enjoyably unique. It turns out you don’t have to travel to faraway places to place yourself in an environment foreign to you—just step into someone else’s world for a few hours.

    We’re all getting older, friend. Given that reality, we must keep the old at bay. Do things that challenge the mind and body and spirit. Stretch in new directions while we’re limber enough to reach without injuring ourselves. Take Thoreau’s advice and rise free from care before the dawn and seek adventure. We aren’t getting any younger than this. Toby Keith, whispers his lyrics from the grave: Someday it will end. Memento mori. So don’t let the old man in.

    You can laugh when your dreams
    Fall apart at the seams
    And life gets more exciting
    With each passing day
    And love is either in your heart
    Or on it’s way
    — Frank Sinatra (Carolyn Leigh/Johnny Richards), Young at Heart

    They say that people who retire early age quicker than those who work well into their senior years. I say it’s not about the work, it’s about having a reason to get out of bed in the morning. What stirs the imagination? We ought to be leaping out of bed to go do that. Stack new experiences one atop the other and see where it takes us. Get off the phone, step away from the computer screen and dance with the world.

    Sure, we all have obligations and responsibilities. We have deadlines and commitments. Just now I got a notification to check in for a business flight. The work seemingly never stops, but if we aren’t careful we won’t notice our best years have slipped away without doing those things we most want to do. Watching those people skate around on the ice, some of them old enough to be the grandparents of some skaters who preceded them, was a great reminder to get up and get out there. Carpe diem.

  • Setting the Tone

    I had a professor in college who pointed out that the greatest books in history had great opening lines that set the tone for the everything that followed.  He pointed out the Bible as the most unambiguous example of setting the tone for everything else that follows, but you can’t forget the brilliance of Homer or Dickens or Melville.  Consider:

    “In the beginning, God created heaven, and earth.” – The Book of Genesis, Holy Bible

    “Sing in me, Muse, and through me tell the story” – Homer, The Odyssey

    “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…” – Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities

    “Call me Ishmael” – Herman Melville, Moby Dick

    I’d humbly point out that great songs have a similar tendency.  And since most people seem to have shelved their discipline of reading the classics after graduation, it may be an easier example to illustrate.  Consider the following immortal songs and how the opening line sets the tone for all that comes after:

    “Mother, mother ocean, I have heard you call” – Jimmy Buffett, A Pirate Looks at Forty

    “If you could read my mind love” – Gordon Lightfoot, If You Could Read My Mind

    “Something in the way she moves” – The Beatles, Something

    “Out of the tree of life I just picked me a plum” – Carolyn Leigh, The Best is Yet To Come

    “Don’t worry about a thing” – Bob Marley, Three Little Birds

    “Imagine there’s no heaven” – John Lennon, Imagine

    “There must be some way out of here” – Bob Dylan, All Along the Watchtower

    And so it is that I think about the words that set the tone for this blog, and took the immortal words of Henry David Thoreau that grace the home page of this site and made them more prominent.  For his call to action is also my own, and set the tone for all that this blog aims to be:

    “Rise free from care before the dawn, and seek adventures.” – Henry David Thoreau

    I realized somewhere along the way that this is exactly the way I try to live; rising early, seeking adventure in this day, writing about it when it deserves consideration (and perhaps sometimes when it doesn’t), savoring the day and then putting it behind me, that I might rise from care once again tomorrow.  This isn’t head-in-the-sand optimism, it’s a calling, and some days are more adventurous and free from care than others.  But string them together and you set the tone for a life more interesting.  What sets the tone for your life?  Be bold in your selection.