Transformation

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Aging has been an interesting transformation. Alongside the physical changes, I notice and appreciate the transformation of my grief the most.

My sister digitized an old video tape recording of my 30th birthday party; watching it the other day I saw much about myself that remains the same, yet I also saw many behaviors and beliefs that have been dropped. Modified. Replaced. Transformed.

The opposite of again is nevermore.

So…recently I began taking an herbal supplement to help balance out post-menopausal hormones…somewhere in the material I saw the line, “Feel like yourself again!”

That struck me oddly after viewing the video…feel like myself again? Like myself? Again? When?

Myself at 20 years old? Or 30? 50? I thought to myself, I wouldn’t even know what a former version of me would feel like now! And why would I want to go back? Or bring it forward to my present? No thanks. 

I realized in a flash how every age and stage of growth requires a necessary transformation. True to its definition, transformation does not refer to a return to a previous condition or state–it is most often used to indicate improvement, positive changes, and progress.


The opposite of again is nevermore. I will nevermore feel like a previous version of myself again.

Sure, I might daydream about having a pre-pregnant abdomen, or my daughter alive, but I AM never something that I will be again, and will always reside within a present, improved, positive and progressed version of myself.

Of all the random podcasts available, this morning I stumbled upon someone interviewing an HR gal-gone-viral, RaQuel Hopkins. My paraphrasing may be a bit out of context, but you’ll get it:

  • You can’t grow by remaining in pain…
  • The way you live is a choice… 
  • Mental health is not about comfort, it’s more about capacity.
  • Capacity matters more than comfort…
  • Coping keeps you functional…
  • Capacity is about what you produce…
  • It’s not about helping people feel better…
  • It’s about how do you become a better person?
  • Development makes you capable…

Her words encapsulate my final thoughts about aging, grief and transformation = development.

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