Turning 40: What I’ve Learned About Myself and Life So Far
March 14, 2024
Curls that tightened with the heat of Midwest summer, too-big adult teeth making crooked the smaller ones in my mouth, and an independence like wildfire in my bones. These are just a few of the things that define me but they’re only a fraction of who I am. Turning 40 has brought an unexpected grief that’s pushing me to reflect on what I’ve learned about myself and life so far. It’s surreal to reach a milestone birthday as this. Like, when did all my friends start talking about getting their hormones checked? Why do I prefer a night with a glass of Cabernet and a book? Are we doing the Botox? That being said, there’s also a settling happening in my spirit. As if I’m coming home. I hope my journey connects you in some way to your own.
A Quick Background
Raised in middle Missouri, I was born March of 1984 to a good girl and a rebel. But I wasn’t enough to keep them together and so they divorced just before I turned 4 years old. Each of them and my stepmom were all part of my growing up years and loved me fiercely. I never was given siblings but my cousins filled the gaps on long, muggy days at the farm where they lived. Like all good Midwest girls I learned to hunt, eat dirt-ridden strawberries from the garden, and how to hit a softball. As a teenager I lived for camp. Church camp, music camp, camp in Colorado with my youth group. And I never ever went without a camera. When I was 16 I took a few college classes where my mom worked, and studied the rest on my own. By second semester I had a full course load. That’s when I met my husband, who turned out to be the grandson of the founder of said Colorado camp. We married 3 months before I turned 18 {how?!} and have been together for 23 years. We now each own businesses and love on our 4 children, 7 chickens, 1 Labrador, and two barn cats. We’re a family that loves to connect over sarcastic humor and cards games. We travel, hike, go to concerts and rodeos, and tells stories over a good meal. I pray that never changes.
40 Things Out Loud
My parents did the best they knew how, and I love them for it.
I need the outdoors like I need oxygen.
I am an old soul and value the simple.
I am a high empath which means I feel everything.
Expectations can be deceiving.
The process is just as important as the result and often provides more growth.
Almost anything can be turned into an opportunity.
I never want to stop learning, taking risks, exercising, loving people well, or engaging life.
Quality > Quantity
I’m obsessed with people’s stories, but especially those of someone over the age of 80.
Grief and loss will always be familiar friends.
I am extremely loyal. I’ve been with my hair stylist over two decades!
Intimate, authentic conversations give me life.
The only person I can count on 100% of the time is God, who has held me in the darkest moments and brightest seasons.
The past is good information, don’t avoid it.
Rodeos, the farm, and country music are in my DNA.
I began therapy in my 20’s and have never looked back.
Laughing is my favorite and is extremely healing.
I know how a marriage falls apart, and I’ve seen how it can come back to life. Thank God.
Reading and traveling are the greatest escapes.
Death is actually just going Home.
My husband’s addiction taught me that every beating heart holds a wound, but not everyone knows what to do with the pain. Have compassion.
Boundaries are an act of love for yourself and others. Every healthy relationship requires them.
Pain is inevitable and a great teacher.
Humankind is not encountering any new issues, just new to us.
I. Matter. Took me 35 years to believe that.
Failure is allowed, and useful.
I will never completely end my illicit love affair with carbs.
My dad is my person, in the way there aren’t words.
I hate the feeling of falling, which means roller coasters and flying are stupid things.
I have developmental trauma, but it does not have the final say.
Parenting is the most self-sacrificing, beautiful journey I’ve ever walked.
I can cook as well as bake pretty damn well, and will always prefer to do so from scratch. {my kids care not and would still rather have Sam’s Homestyle nuggets in the air fryer}
Though I have dealt with a fair amount of fear, I have often been fearless in not letting it hold me hostage for long. There’s always a way through.
Relationships > everything else.
Self-care can be learned and is important.
I LOVE mowing. What I mean is redneck riding mower, ball cap, country music in the AirPods, and an ice cold beer when it’s done.
Anger is necessary. Living angry will eat you alive.
I’ll be on anti-anxiety medication the rest of my days, and I’m good with that. I choose to show up with a better quality of life for the people I love.
It’s not my job to rescue and fix everyone’s problems. I’m learning this.
The only things I care to take with me into the next 40 years are my faith, my people, and my memories. And herein lies my passion for photography: it tells the story of all three.
Grateful
Four full decades of living this life leaves a person inexplicably thankful. I GET to love and be loved, learn and teach, fail and grow. What a truly wild adventure. Thank you for reading these pieces of my heart.
“WHEN YOU GO THROUGH DEEP WATERS, I WILL BE WITH YOU.” – ISAIAH 43:2
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