There’s an insecurity I hadn’t known before. A fear of being alone. A quiet wondering: is this what aging feels like? Not just the slowing down of the body, but the shifting of the psyche. I feel boredom in ways I never did before. The days stretch longer, and I’m not always sure how to fill them.
I tried to fill the space with golf again, but even that feels different. My body reminds me that I’m not who I used to be. Two rounds a week, maybe three, and I’m spent. It’s not just physical fatigue—it’s emotional. I miss the rhythm, the camaraderie, the sense of being in motion.
I’ve also noticed a subtle loneliness creeping in. Not the kind that comes from being alone in a room, but the kind that comes from feeling unseen. I wonder if people still think of me the same way. I wonder if I still matter in the ways I used to.
And yet, there’s a part of me that’s curious. What if this chapter isn’t about productivity, but presence? What if I’m being invited to slow down not as a punishment, but as a gift? I don’t know how to accept it yet. But I’m listening. I’m trying.

