Grieving My Younger Body
This morning, as I sat down to my morning coffee, my Sweetheart began asking me questions about style choices for my website, which he is revising for me. After I managed to take a sip of the divine brew, we discussed various font and color ideas. Once that was done, and after a few more sips from the same cup of coffee, he asked me if I had photographs of myself doing yoga – he needed one for another website that he works on. I told him that I would look for a picture – I knew I hadn’t had any yoga photos in quite a while.
My quest took me to Facebook. Certainly, I have photos stored in Google, and I have some on an external drive somewhere, but I figured if I’d had a picture I thought was decent, I’d have shared it on Facebook.
I wasn’t disappointed. I found what we were looking for. Mission accomplished.
That wasn’t the end of it. Something else happened during my morning photo search.
I encountered images of my 10-years-younger body– dancing, being held overhead by one partner or another, standing on my head or my hands or my forearms, wildly spinning in a hoop, and suspended by silks 20 feet off the ground. The body in those pictures was a very different body from the one that is writing to you today.
My physical body was at its strongest between the ages of 40 and 52. I was a yogi and a hoop-dancer, I took up tap, modern, and contact improvisational dance, and I practiced aerial acrobatics and acroyoga. I was moving all the time. I was limber, strong, and balanced.
All of those things were visible in the pictures stored on Facebook.
As I sat there – coffee finished – looking at a picture of myself in one of many upside down shots, I felt the sadness of loss. Where did that body go?
Notice, please, that I didn’t ask, “Where did that woman go?” I am still that woman – older, maybe wiser, slightly less anxious, and far more content – but still the same woman.
My body though…my body is not the same. I am heavier, stiffer, less toned, physically weaker, and less stable.
There’s a part of me that wants to scold, “So what! It’s just your body! You’ve aged. Get on with it!”
Surely, there’s truth there. Still, there’s grief, and I believe that it’s necessary to acknowledge that grief without shame. If I don’t… If I fail to look at the truth – my grief – in the eye, then I will push it down and just put on a happy face. I won’t be any closer to acceptance, and without real acceptance – the ability to truly allow and let be – I won’t be able to move into the years I have left in my life with true health and real grace.
You see, to age well – to really move into these post-menopausal years full of honest joy and true wisdom – I have to center myself in the reality of the present moment. I cannot do that until I have fully allowed what is past to be past, and I cannot do THAT until I have allowed whatever feelings I have about that past – including sadness, anger, and fear – to rise, be seen, be heard, and pass on.
To fully embody the yogi, dancer, and artist I am NOW, I must see, love, and bid farewell to the way I embodied those things in the past. So today (and tomorrow, and however many days beyond that) I will allow my feelings to rise, to speak, and to pass on. At the same time, I will honor this body as it is NOW, in this moment. I will feed my body. I will give it yoga and movement. I will encourage my body to create and express. I will love my body even as I grieve what is no longer.
Fálki Heiðdóttir is a curious, middle-aged, sober, animist witch. Midworld Adjacent is a repository for her rabbit-hole meanderings about art, visions, and life on this blue, spinning planet. In the outer world, she is a soul guide, healer, teacher, artist, yogi, and web-weaver. She shares her work and offerings in News and Musings From the Nest. You can also find her at falconandacorn.com.
This post was originally published at falconandacorn.com





Beautiful meditation on one of the most obvious passages of time, Falki. I too have many photos of myself doing Yoga--younger, fitter, more flexible, and with far fewer aches. Yet in these pictures, I can see I'm striving. The very fact that I have several photo sessions of me doing Yoga--which were meant to promote my books--means I wasn't really doing Yoga; I was over there, not in the present moment.
Though I really do miss that fewer-aches body, I'm happier where I am now: here, doing what I'm doing. Thanks for the reminder that the packaging may change, but the person inside is stronger than ever.