Getting old
Is the slow loss of shame,
Especially if you’ve spent your life
Being watched
And judged
And found wanting.
I wasn’t fat
But I wasn’t skinny.
So I thought I was huge.
My entire life was organized around my big ass.
I dressed in loose clothes,
I didn’t go swimming.
Young men on the street
Commented
On the size of my ass
All the time.
It never occurred to me
That they liked my ass.
It never occurred to me
That my ass was none of their business.
When I quit smoking
I gained more weight.
I’m told I was voluptuous,
I knew I was fat.
When I hit my forties
The comments stopped.
I could be on fire
And no man would see me.
I missed them
For a while.
It meant I was too old
To be sexy.
But in my fifties
I slowly realized I was free!
If no one was looking
Then I could just be me.
And me said,
No more dieting.
And then me said,
If you don’t like it don’t look.
And then me said,
No more hiding.
And then me said,
No more apologies.
My hair went gray
And I figured out that
If I used the right tone of voice,
Young men would do my bidding.
I’m not a grandma.
I’m not a mommy or an auntie.
I don’t need them to love me.
I need them to give me a seat on the subway.
Except for the poverty
And the wrinkles
And the impending decrepitude,
Getting old is lovely.
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