Age Is Just a Number (Apparently Mine Is Variable)

I am very bad at guessing ages.
Not slightly off bad.
Catastrophically wrong bad.

Case in point: a coworker once brought empty boxes into the office. Baby diaper boxes. Without hesitation, I looked at her and said:

“Oh are those from your granddaughter?”

The room froze.

She stared at me in horror and replied, “It’s from my son.”

Ooops.

Later, I found out she was in her early-30s.

A generational leap had been made.
By me.
Loudly.

Then there was another episode at work. A new employee joined, and somehow age came up. I casually told her I was 70 years old.

She accepted it.
Without blinking.
No follow-up questions.
No skepticism.
Just a respectful nod like, “Wow. Good for him. “

In hindsight, this is where it gets uncomfortable.

Was I that convincing?

Maybe during burnout —when I was exhausted, numb, overextended —my demeanor really did age me. Maybe stress showed up in my face before I ever admitted it to myself. Maybe I looked older because I felt worn down.

Fast forward to now.

On the cruise, someone asked my age. I said 56. She didn’t believe me. Told me I looked younger.

And for the first time, I didn’t deflect or joke my way out of it.
I wondered.
Maybe this journey is showing on my face.
Maybe joy leaves fingerprints.
Maybe lightness is visible.

Age, it turns out, really is just a number.

But how we carry ourselves —how we feel, how we live, how we think— seems to do most of the talking.

Burnout can make you look 70.
Joy might shave a decade off.

Right now, I don’t know what age I look like.
But I know how I feel.

And for once, that feels younger than the number suggests.

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