Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:45. It's, very generously, middle of one's age. Elderly is anyone over 60.
You may think 60 is elderly now but trust me you won't when you are 60.
barack obama is 60. I still see him as the young president we had.
Anonymous wrote:45. It's, very generously, middle of one's age. Elderly is anyone over 60.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I seriously have no clue what you’re babbling about. Go back and read your sentence and try punctuation and break it into actual coherent sentences.
-1
Wow, who pee’d on your Cheerios this morning PP…..??! 😠
The OP is/was not “babbling” at all - he/she was only asking a question.
If you are to stupid to realize this > then you are even dumber than you sound.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a bit specific to individual people, but the period between having little kids and retiring is a good proxy.
My sister and I are two years apart in age. But, she had her last kid at 29 and I had my last kid at 43. She is now an empty nester and I have a 3 year old. We are both middle aged, but our middle age looks very different. She spent a few hours babysitting for me a couple of months ago and she needed a nap afterwards. She is probably in better shape than me because she has more time to work out, but mentally she is no longer able to tolerate the tedium of little kids that I deal with every day. In that sense, I am not yet middle aged because I can’t move on to that mental stage yet while my sister can embrace it.
That's not how it works. At 46, you are middle-aged. It's not dependant on how old your kids are. Having your kids late simply means you had your kids late. It has nothing to do with the stage of life you are in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:45. It's, very generously, middle of one's age. Elderly is anyone over 60.
We don't call people over 60 elderly, come on! 60 is the new 50....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a bit specific to individual people, but the period between having little kids and retiring is a good proxy.
My sister and I are two years apart in age. But, she had her last kid at 29 and I had my last kid at 43. She is now an empty nester and I have a 3 year old. We are both middle aged, but our middle age looks very different. She spent a few hours babysitting for me a couple of months ago and she needed a nap afterwards. She is probably in better shape than me because she has more time to work out, but mentally she is no longer able to tolerate the tedium of little kids that I deal with every day. In that sense, I am not yet middle aged because I can’t move on to that mental stage yet while my sister can embrace it.
That's not how it works. At 46, you are middle-aged. It's not dependant on how old your kids are. Having your kids late simply means you had your kids late. It has nothing to do with the stage of life you are in.

Anonymous wrote:I think it is a bit specific to individual people, but the period between having little kids and retiring is a good proxy.
My sister and I are two years apart in age. But, she had her last kid at 29 and I had my last kid at 43. She is now an empty nester and I have a 3 year old. We are both middle aged, but our middle age looks very different. She spent a few hours babysitting for me a couple of months ago and she needed a nap afterwards. She is probably in better shape than me because she has more time to work out, but mentally she is no longer able to tolerate the tedium of little kids that I deal with every day. In that sense, I am not yet middle aged because I can’t move on to that mental stage yet while my sister can embrace it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:45. It's, very generously, middle of one's age. Elderly is anyone over 60.
You may think 60 is elderly now but trust me you won't when you are 60.
Anonymous wrote:45. It's, very generously, middle of one's age. Elderly is anyone over 60.
Anonymous wrote:I seriously have no clue what you’re babbling about. Go back and read your sentence and try punctuation and break it into actual coherent sentences.